complicate foreign policy? yeah. i think it can do both. i think though that if you re a diplomat, anywhere else, if these people were chosen to be cabinet officers and they re freely speaking what they think and the president is saying something dimpb different, there s still one government of the united states. with this caveat, as i said earlier, president trump tries to arrange the conversations to fit where he s going. others should interpret it that way, because add the end of the day, countries are responding to the main paint point of the whole nato disagreement, which is please pay your fair share. we will not carry this burden ourselves forever. all right. paul, thank you so much. good to see you. coming up, a cnn exclusive
from that hearing thinking i better not go on the website, because i will have a privacy problem. it s not true. there s no hippa involvement here, no requirement of providing health information. go ahead, congressman. well, i like frank, but he s wrong on this particular point. as you can see, my hands are clean. my paint point was that the obama administration claims that they re protecting privacy in what the individual sees when he signs on, but if you accept you re going to go through and fill out the application, what you don t see is a provision that says you have no reasonable expectation of privacy. that s in the hidden code. that s a conscious decision by somebody? the obama administration, not congressman pa lone, but somebody in the obama administration, and i think that s wrong. on the hippa issue, that s a privacy protection law passed in 1996, to protect people s
that ashes and burnt debris found in the oven where she claims to have done this leads some of them to think she may be telling the truth. bits of canvas, nails, wood, even residue from paint point to the possibility, jon, that she actually did what she says she did. prosecutors will ultimately decide if the story holds up and, if so, what kind of charges to bring in the case. back to you. jon: wow, unbelievable. so gone for good with, or so it would seem. reporter: it seems that way. jon: wow. rick folbaum, thanks. jenna: well, he was set to be a prosecution witness in the trial of accused mobster whitey bulger, but he just turned up dead. we just found that out during our show. his name, steven rakes. we re live with that story and some of the details surrounding it. also, a big battle brewing over booze. what the makers of adult beverages don t want you to see on the bottles. that s next.
congress has been given a classified white paper to review it take a look at these. adam green, do you buy what chief of staff of the white house says? what he said is that congress is informed. but that that ignores the paint point of what edward snowden did, which is reveal a crime by the nsa of lying to congress. it doesn t help to have an informed congress if that information is a lie. ron wyden, who has been on this show, and i assume you respect a lot, asked the national intelligence, does the nsa collect data on millions or hundreds of millions of americans. the answer, quote, no, sir. widen followed up, and he said no again. that s a problem. the duly representative over citizens, with an oversight, are not given the full information they need. you re right, dick cheney is the