million-man march. we ll get a live report from cairo. and speak with former ambassador to the u.n., former governor bill richardson. more on the complete chaos at airports as americans scramble to get out of egypt. you re watching jansing & company. to london starts with arthritis pain. and a choice. take tylenol now, and maybe up to 8 in a day. or.choose aleve and 2 pills for a day free of pain. enjoy the flight. or.choose aleve and 2 pills for a day free of pain. but you can still refinance to a fixed rate as low as 4.5% at lendingtree.com, where customers save an average of $293 a month. call lendingtree today.
understanding of how democracy works. it s the largest arab nation in the world. and the fact that it s moving towards the possibility of a more democratic, more liberal state is good for america. it s good for the world. well, could elbaradei at least fill an interim position? i mean, what we ve heard, obviously, here s somebody who has been living in luxury wearing vienna and a lot of the people on the streets are saying he s lost touch with what our situation is. he was the former head of the iaea, nobel peace prize winner. he also seems to have managed to galvanize this disparate coalition of egyptian protesters to his side. at the very least he would be a very good transitional figure, someone that can allow for the possibility of a more democratic egypt. you see that happening, evan? yeah, i do. i mean, i think if you look at the mantra of the protesters here, you don t see a call for sharia. you don t see a call for religious law. you see people that are protesting for a
this crisis, especially how explicit to make their support of the protesters and how explicitly to call for president mubarak to leave. and so what you have yesterday was secretary clinton, is the needle moving several notches in favor of mubarak leaving, but still a hedge. of course, there are fears about who may take over. maybe there will be some radicals that we don t know of yet beyond the muslim brotherhood who could take power in cairo. of course, there is this deep conflict in the heart of american foreign policy for this administration and the last one. both wanting egypt s support and dealing with the fears and the needs of allies in the region, but also wanting a longer-term move to democracy. that longer term, though, of course, has shrunk down to the here and now because this change is happening right now. and we have this meeting that was set up before the egyptian situation exploded, and they have a lot of things on their agenda. but obviously, this will take precedenc
with students. and when i go out right now, you don t see as many students anymore. you see a lot more of the presence of the muslim brotherhood. and they seem to be slowly, slowly taking more of a leading role in this grass movement, this grass-movement demonstrations. we re going to talk a lot more about this. richard, thank you, and reza and colonel jacobs will be back in our next half hour. throughout the weekend, protesters around the u.s. stepped out in support of egyptians. in seattle, protesters carried signs that read down down mubarak and we ll shout until he s out. dozens gathered in cambridge waving egyptian flags, chanteding for mubarak to step down as they marched toward boston. similar protestes were held in washington, d.c., dallas and new york city. time for the your business present paren new
we share recipes. i m your coworker. neighbor. teammate. -friend. -friend. -friend. [ male announcer ] over 7 million people nationwide have talked to their doctor about chantix. chances are, you could be one of them. talk to your doctor. find out if chantix is right for you. the nor demonstrators in egypt is expected to hit a new