communication plan, ally regime. bret: quickly, why not the derecognition? derecognition aspect has potential significance. if this trajectory continues, that is a logical next step. by the same token, having somewhere there who can communicate clearly, the president of the united states, that concerns the president of the united states has about this, has value as well. we want to resolve this in some way. being able to have that conversation is important. but there does come a point, where we clearly need to signal that just like we did with gaddafi, who has lost his legitimacy in the eyes of the president, there may come a point if the trajectory continues we have to take that step. i don t think it means more now than a symbolic issue and i think the cymballism symbolism is wrong. bret: more with the panel
about this and gaddafi and the threat facing him today. stay with us. for dentists, the choice is clear. fact is, more dental professionals brush with an oral-b tooush an any other brush. trust the brush more dentists and gienists use, oral-b.
the whole time. the lord brought us through it. reporter: the national weather service using words it doesn t normally use like obliterated. right now volunteers are going out to make sure people have food and water as they pick through the rubble. an example of what the volunteers are handing out. you can get a sandwich and a cookie. but people here will need more help than that. even after the physical damage is taken care of, people said what really hurt was they really lost are the memories, family history. bret, back to you. bret: the head of the federal emergency management agency was also on the ground in alabama today. craig fugate joined us moments ago from tuscaloosa to talk about what fema is doing and what he saw today. well, i ve seen a lot of tornadoes but i have not seen tornadoes that caused this much devastation over large areas as we ve seen in alabama. mississippi, alabama, other states hit. but in tuscaloosa in alabama, extreme devastation, and homes that ar
bret: back with the special foreign policy panel today. in syria, protesters chanting we are not afraid. despite 42 of them apparently dying today. what is next? let s go down the row here. this thing seems to be spreading and there seems to be splits with the syrian army. we should get the word out as much as we can. help them get the word out. they are our enemy and they caused trouble and added to diplomacy with 13 and maybe saudi arabia would be important. bret: mike? one thing i say is the arab league is so crucial in libbia, hard to get the arab league to play a role here. we should start talking to the arab league about what level of violence would be excessive. and we should start making
president that is well-funded they need to win the kitchal table issues they can talk about them tonight and next week in a debate thursday night on fox news. bret: it all begins. thank you. now let s talk with two democratic strategists about who their side fears most. joining me joe trippi and bob beckel. joe, start with you. the democrats look at this perspective field, and obviously there aren t a lot officials in yet. but who do the democrats fear most? right now, mitch daniels were to make the race governor of indiana. governor of indiana. yeah. i d be more worried about him right now. i don t see how he gets the nomination yet. we re not especially clear he is going to run. of the people out there talking about it, he is the one that gives me the most pause. bret: indiana governor mitch daniels said today he will sign the controversial bill that cuts off government funding to planned parenthood, the nation s largest abortion provider. a bill that came to us from th