0 expanded several abusive programs. inside the white house they would deny the way he s framing this and claims it is not the president s fault that this got leaked. there are people in the white house nervous that snowden could have more sensitive documents. bill: meanwhile he has a google hangout. martha: senator rand paul with more harsh words on the government spy issue. he s been one of the most outspoken critics of this program all along. he was on sean hannity last night and had this to say. he s losing his moral authority to lead the nation. people don t like hypocrisy. he said he would protect our privacy. and he appeared to care. and he says he does, but he does the opposite. then you have the director of intelligence looks straight at a senator and says we are not collecting any data on americans and the truth is they are collecting a billion phone calls every day. martha: senator paul is heading efforts to file a class action lawsuit against the nsa. bill: you have got p
0 let me know your opinion. the guy fired off an absolutely horrible joke. let me know your thoughts. should he have his job back? cnn.com/brooke. jake tapper is up next with the lead. hey, everyone. this is what you unwittingly traded your private phone records for. i m here with the lead, the world lead. they monitored domestic phone records and e-mails. they reveal the specifics of how they claim they use the data to stop the terror system. did they have to do that? autism. could the answer be in the air that we breathe? a new study out today is bound to cause controversy. and the bur are lead. will the 38-year-long goose chase for jimmy hoffa finally end in a field outside detroit? welcome to the lead with jake tapper, their hands forces by nsa intelligence contractor edward snowden have been out there trying to justify the nags national intelligence association s hearing intelligence. top officials made their case. in recent years these programs together with other
the the kudlow report beginning right now. the head of the nsa says the snooping program works. it stopped 50 attacks including one on the new york stock exchan exchange. eamon javers has the report. the house intelligence committee is eager to explain why these programs are legal and effective saying that they ve succeeded in stopping terrorist attacks. here s the fbi s shaun joyce laying out an alleged possible attack against the new york stock exchange. take a listen. nsa utilizing 702 authority identified an extremist located in yemen. this extremist located in yemen was talking with an individual located inside the united states in kansas city, missouri. that individual was identified as khalid ouazani. the nsa served legal process. we went up on electronic surveillance and identified his co conspirators. this was the plot that was in the very initial stages of platting to bomb the new york stock exchange. we were able to disrupt the plot. we were able to lure so
here s what s going on today. the house intelligence committee is holding a hearing that s still going on. in that hearing they are hearing from u.s. intelligence officials, including the head of the nsa and the deputy director of the fbi, shaun joyce. these officials have been eager to explain why the nsa snooping programs revealed by the leaker last week are important and necessary saying they have foiled up to 50 plots. they are going to turn the details of those plots over to the committee, but one of those plots involved an attempt, what he called a nascent attempt to plot a bombing at the new york stock exchange. take a listen to next change from a little bit earlier this morning. would you say that this their intention to blow up the new york stock exchange was a serious plot, or is this something that they kind of dreamed about, you know, talking among their buddies? i think the jury considered it a serious since they were all convicted. okay. so clearly the o
Transcripts For CSPAN2 U 20101116 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.