20-minute announcement there would be a verdict. the crowd started building. hundreds of people came here. many saying they wanted to be here to witness what was going to be a moment of history. i don t think anybody thought jerry sandusky would be found innocent of many of these charges if any. i think the big question is whether he would be convicted of everything. all 48. here s the headline from the local newspaper. it says guilty and a picture of jerry sandusky with a blank stare on his face. one of the victims, hugging the lead prosecutor in the case, in tears and saying, thank you. it was that kind of night. that kind of trial. a lot of emotion and as you said in your introduction, this is an institutional problem. there s still a long way to go. there are still many cases to come. and ron, obviously, your point about the victim, the survivor standing there. hugging, finding some closure, but in it being a big story, it s about this entire town. in certain ways, ab
depth in my written remarks we re in the midst of standing up regime that will still take some time but the credit to it fault swap parts of products reported in the j.p. morgan was trading already come under antifraud and antimanipulation regime. three clear credit default swap entity is. later this year we anticipate seeking public comment on having a clearing mandate so that more of these trades will come into the clearing house. currently it s just dealers to dealers. later this year we ll have regime that actually i think dealers will start to register, but this bank was not yet as a swap dealer because we don t yet have complete rules to make that a true being and maybe in the end o 2013 you ll start to see the commencement of trade and transparent markets. this not trying to do against a clock but trying to get it balanced. congress gave us one year to get the job done and we re pushing on two years. i do think the job needs to get done but take ten 30,000 comments we
and back with me is karen finny and kathleen hall jamison and aisha from the action campaign. and i did watch the mini movie and see how the campaign is framing itself. and while there s still more to do, there s been real progress, because president obama never stopped believing in us and fighting for us. he took on the credit card companies, stopping unfair fees and hidden penalties, took on the wall street banks, too, fighting for tough new reforms to make sure that they never again wreck our economy. so, the president spends a lot of time in the or the president s campaign spends a lot of time in the video talking about his accomplishments and
an achievement of identity in the modern world. that was an important period for him, and first the shift from not an international, but an american, and number one. and then not w, table, msnbc political analyst karen finny who is the former director of communications for the dnc, and kai wright, editorial director of colorlines, and kathleen hall jamison head of the annen berg center for polic. okay. i confess i confess, i loved this story, because i felt like one of the things that excited a lot of us in the world of nerds when president obama was elected is a sense that a genuine intellectual was coming into white house, but you can never be completely sure on how someone frames themselves, and i actually thought it was sort of sweet in a little dorky way that
week s pop quiz. that is right. name that campaign. here to play are karen finny and kai wright, and kathleen hall jamison and let s play, name that campaign. what school is this? and this is for you, karen. oh, dear. this candidate used his anti-war credentials in the re-election slogan saying he kept us out of war. which president used he kept us out of war as the campaign slogan? i have no idea. [ laughter ] you are not going to give up. well, guess, because there is only 40-some-odd ones. i will give you a hint. he was awarded a nobel peace prize. carter. actually, it was woodrow wilson. oh. who knew? and we are a real fan of