weekend. we have live team coverage for you this afternoon. correspondents athena jones, rene marsh and brian todd are joining usbrian. you have been with these protesters all day. what is the mood right now on the president s 100th day in office? reporter: ana, the mood is really kind of jubilant. they re very happy with what they ve been able to accomplish here today. they got a lot of energy. check out the scene behind me, this is a massive puppet that these people constructed in north carolina around the chapel hill area and brought it all the way up here. they just had to squeeze it through kind of a chain link fence on constitution avenue to get it through here. this is supposed so symbolize mother earth. this was the gentleman who was instrumental in making it. jan berger, can you talk us to for a second? what made you want to bring this all way from north carolina up here? well, we thought it was different, important that one of the biggest issues that everybody faces is tr
a statement saying we don t want to scare our people but we have already said that mali will have to get used to situations like this. we must all remain humble. no one, nowhere is safe given the danger of terrorism. jan berger, i guess a realistic assessment of the situation there. yeah. i mean what we have seen in the last few years is that one person or a small group of people can wreak tremendous damage. so eight people acting in concert with support from others were able to paralyze an entire city. in boston a couple of years ago two guys were able to paralyze an entire city. so, i mean we can do a lot to try to prevent these things. we can improve our response when an incident happens. but i mean i don t think we re looking at a situation where we can, anybody really can say, you know, our country is going to put an end to this. chris hayes, in paris tonight
final report of the week. jan berger thank you for joining us. colonel schaefer we need you to join the discussion on the cyber war. coming up we have new information tonight about how french police discovered the location of the terrorists who planned the paris attacks. and the cyber war is now on between anonymous and the islamic state. and the author of this tweet, hate donald trump i m an american muslim and i already carry a special i.d. badge, where s your? that i.d. badge, of course, being marine i vation. former marine sergeant, tarib rasheed will join us. jake reese, day to feel alive
that s true in the tribalal areas of pakistan, true in mali and syria, iraq and libya and other places like that. if you look at the totality of deaths to terrorism the vast majority and nigeria as well, come in some sort of rebellion or territorial conflict. jan berger, what about this possible sense of competition between al qaeda and isis? is that present in a situation like this after isis has a big display in paris, al qaeda wants to have its own display like this? well, an operation like this probably was planned for some time so, they didn t just see paris and decide to pull this off. i think where the competition element comes in really is that particularly al qaeda, and the two groups that were claiming this attack saw a loss of
klux clan after he fired page in 2004 for yelling at female employees. he also says page became angry when he came back later to get the application and was told it was destroyed. we escorted him to the car on his final day, and i guess there was some paperwork he thought he had left on his desk, and he did. it was an application for the kkk. and i got that application and destroyed it. reporter: page grew up and went to high school in littleton, colorado. his grandmother and stepmother still live in denver. what has changed him, i have no idea. and obviously, we re never going to know. ted, pretty tragic there, but also that shocking revelation about his application for the ku klux klan. have investigators found more information from page, notes he may have left or anything like that? reporter: well, no big ah-ha discovery, according to investigators. there was no note left, no nothing on a computer. and that s really what is perplexing here. in fact, the police