certificate. at the age of 84, she has to pay the state of wisconsin before she can cast a ballot. voting could actually cost ruth al frank much more than the usual 20 bucks for a birth certificate. her birth was recorded by the state register of deeds, but state register of deeds spelled her name wrong. way back then. it could cost $200, maybe more to get not just a birth certificate but one with the name spelled right. so she can get a state-approved special i.d. so she can vote. which she has been doing without a hitch for 66 years. i may never vote again. the state vital record division advised ruth al frank to buy the birth certificate with her name spelled wrong on it. they said she should see if the dmv in the state will say it s good enough to vote. quote, if she gets it, great. and if not, the further $200 or more. asked for comment, the
mexico-issued id that says that they can be visiting or be here legally. but now there s even pushback among latinos in this north carolina community. a group that says people who are here in this country legally don t need a special id, this resolution sends the wrong message. that s an immigration group that is solely against this. some people in the country or, rather, in north carolina are against it because they say it could lead to fraud, voter fraud, access of benefits like health care that people are not really able to get if they don t have an id. now, i want to make it very clear, this identification does not say that they are legally here, it doesn t say that they are here with any special, for school or for anything. it s not a visa, it s just an id issued by the mexican goth that says that government that says that they are mexican citizens. the resolution to be voted on in durham on monday, the city council getting inundated right
over his nearest rival ben carson in a national tracking poll. widening his lead by four points since a week ago. trump leads in the two latest new hampshire polls. the candidate today was asked by a reporter a variety of ideas, from closing mosques to special i.d. cards for muslims, which trump would not rule out. we re going to have to we re going to have to look at a lot of things very closely. we re going to have to look at mosques. we re going to have to look very, very carefully. less than two hours ago when asked several questions about a data base to track muslims trump said he would implement that. meanwhile, presidential candidate ben carson today compared refugees to dogs. for instance, if there s a rabid dog running around in your neighborhood, you re probably not going to assume something good about that dog and you re probably going to put your children out of the way. it doesn t mean that you hate all dogs by any stretch of the
imagination. by the same token we have to have in place screening mechanisms that allow us to determine who the mad dogs-r quite frankly. who are the people who want to come in here and hurt us and want to destroy us. it s foolish for us to accept people if we cannot have the appropriate type of screening. joining me now, colonel lawrence wilkerson, former chief of staff for the state department under general colin powell. a distinguished professor of government and public policy at the college of william and mary. colonel, your reaction to the kind of rhetoric that we re hearing from the gop field. trump talking about, well, not ruling out data bases or special i.d. cards as comparison to rabid dogs, talking about only letting christian refugees in. what s your response to all that? it doesn t surprise me, chris, especially coming from the more or less right-wing
children out of the way. it doesn t mean that you hate all dogs by any stretch of the imagination. by the same token we have to have in place screening mechanisms that allow us to determine who the mad dogs-r quite frankly. who are the people who want to come in here and hurt us and want to destroy us. it s foolish for us to accept people if we cannot have the appropriate type of screening. joining me now, colonel lawrence wilkerson, former chief of staff for the state department under general colin powell. a distinguished professor of government and public policy at the college of william and mary. colonel, your reaction to the kind of rhetoric that we re hearing from the gop field. trump talking about, well, not ruling out data bases or special i.d. cards as comparison to rabid dogs, talking about only letting christian refugees in. what s your response to all that?