of that attack. jon: the quote from the white house press spokesman jay carney, he says i m sure the white house is not preventing anyone from speaking. but senator graham seems to dispute that. reporter: right. he says point belong that they ve been told to be quiet. and they are fearful. so i think this will, from that interview on friday, that we had with senator graham and over the weekend obviously he talked more about it. others have talked about it. representative chaffetz and wolf, other members of congress are pushing forward on this and i think it will start to gather to steam here especially if you have some people like graham saying they are going to hold up things in the senate. i want to make one other point. another story is kind of connected to this. and that is the transparency with the osama bin laden documents recovered at the
that matters. it s popular music, i wouldn t know. you stick in the mud. we have no idea who that is but we support them anyway. i m feeling very kumbaya this morning. john fugelsang, political comedian and will cain is back, a columnist at theblaze.com and kelly goth, contributing editor for loop21.com and wrote a great moment. the gq candidate. my goodness you just made my publisher a happy camper. if you like political novels it s a fun one. i do. our starting point focuses on the supreme court, the centerpiece of obama s health care overhaul is on trial before the u.s. supreme court t will happen in about three hours and going to focus on the question, can government force people to buy something they don t want? it goes back to the commerce clause in the constitution created in 1787, the congress shall have the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several states and with the indian tribes. supporters of the individual mandate say maki