elizabeth cohen, thank you. up next, our new segment, hit play, the day s best video. here s one of them. it is a bear in a car. lock the doors. this bear did. and then ripped apart the interior. more bizarre videos like this one next. and later, this day in history with a unique cnn twist just because we can. cnn classic is minutes away. when we made our commitment to the gulf, bp had two big goals: help the gulf recover, and learn from what happened so we could be a better, safer energy company.
discussion about the concept of self-radicalization and whether or not that s actually real, because of course there is an entire apparatus set up for individuals to become, quote, unquote, self-radicalized. there are videos. there is information. there is a chat room. if that apparatus is there, is it really self-radicalization or individuals being swept into an organization, a jihadi organization? so we ll be talking about all of this, looking into it, and also discussing the psychology of self-radicalization with a g.w. psychiatry and behavioral sciences professor. that s all coming up in 11 minutes on the lead. in 11 minutes. we ll look forward. jake tapper, thank you very much. and now some of the hottest videos of the day. hit play. get layed. a message plastered across a billboard in connecticut. 20 feet high. it s really an ad for a flooring
for revenge. instead i ask the american people to vote for love of country. you know when you lookk right there. you can see mitt romney looks very presidential and you lookk at the president of the united states and his much talked about likeability wearing thin. brian: it is a dead heat in the voting right now. meanwhile charles krauthammer talked about this with karl rove. gretchen: i did. brian: we put it in there. steve: hit play. i think that played right in the romney strategy and showed how obama remains. always on the attack. to be fair. he was quoting scott fitzgerald who said living well is the best revenge. revenge is not the best word to use in a closing argument.
subducting. so this subduction zone here is going under. the part that is japan here that this plays on begins to curl in, it begins to get stresses on it. go ahead and hit play. the stresses here get pushed in, pushed in, pushed in, and all of a sudden, at the very last minute right before the earthquake, and there is the earthquake, it pops. and when it pops, it pops the land pass pushes up the water and the water gets pushed out as a tsunami. so the story, and you ll find it on cnn.com, as well, is that after the earthquake, japan is now 8 feet closer to america than it was before the earthquake. because it was getting pushed, pushed, push, all of a sudden, japan popped to the east by 8 feet. they know this because there are a number of gps locations on japan and these little pins. most of them have moved about eight feet. it will be interesting to see if part of japan has gone up or down. there will be spots, there will
is pushing into japan, and going under japan s, it s called subducting. the subduction zone is going under. the part that was japan here that this plays on begins to curl in, it begins to get stresses on it. go ahead and hit play. the stresses here get pushed in, pushed in, pushed in, and all of a sudden, at the very last minute right before the earthquake, and there is the earthquake, it pops. and when it pops, it pops the landmass, pushes up the water, and the water gets pushed out as a tsunami. so the story, and you ll find it on cnn.com, as well, is that after the earthquake, japan is now eight feet closer to america than it was before the earthquake. because it was getting pushed, pushed, push, all of a sudden, japan popped to the east by 8 feet. they know this because there are a number of gps locations on