actually, it s cruze e-co, not ec-o. just like e-ither. or ei-ther. or e-conomical. [ chuckling ] or ec-onomical. pa-tato, po-tato, huh? actually, it s to-mato, ta-mato. oh, that s right. [ laughs ] [ car door shuts ] [ male announcer ] visit your local chevy dealer today. now very well qualified lessees can get a 2012 chevy cruze ls for around $159 per month. e.p.a. estimated 36 miles per gallon highway. mcallen, texas. in here, heavy rental equipment in the middle of nowhere, is always headed somewhere. to give it a sense of direction, at&t created a mobile asset solution to protect and track everything. so every piece of equipment knows where it is, how it s doing or where it goes next. this is the bell on the cat. [ male announcer ] it s a network of possibilities helping you do what you do. even better.
pa-tato, po-tato, huh? actually, it s to-mato, ta-mato. oh, that s right. [ laughs ] [ car door shuts ] [ male announcer ] visit your local chevy dealer today. now very well qualified lessees can get a 2012 chevy cruze ls for around $159 per month. e.p.a. estimated 36 miles per gallon highway. during his first week at the limon correctional facility, inmate timothy schreiber has made no secret of his status. i am a sex offender. and his fellow inmates in ad administrative segregation have
world. i m fareed zakaria. we begin an important show with the most important topic today. the economy. to talk about it, we have no lesser an authority than president obama s top economic advisor, that s gene sperling, director of the national economic council. why isn t employment picking up? we ll ask him. then we ll go global. who should be the next president of the world bank? should it be an american, as always, or should it be opened up to emerging economies, in asia, africa, south america, nigeria s finance minister says she should be the bank s next leader, and she has some very influential supporters. we will talk to her. also, the new kind of warfare we re seeing pop up more and more. dirty wars. that s what the new york times s jeffrey getleman calls them, and we ll talk to him about it. first, here s my take. as many regular viewers know, i have been following the tense back and forth with iran very closely. i continue to believe it is the single most dange
the new york times. and comedian and actor, the outspoken bill cosby on politics and the man who killed trayvon martin. doesn t make a difference if he is racist or not racist. i m candy crowley and this is state of the union . first two break stories we are following, a series of attacks across afghanistan and a deadly tornado outbreak here in the u.s. let s start with those tornados slammed the midwest and the plains overnight. the national weather service says there were 121 reports of possible tornado touchdowns across four states. in the northwestern oklahoma town of woodward, five people were killed two children. in kansas, 100 tornadoes between last night and this morning causing extensive damage there were no reports of any death he is. twisters also caused massive damage in twist iowa in the town of thurman. three out of every four homes were damaged or destroyed. more severe weather expected across the midwest with dangerous conditions affecting wisconsin
passed along to the consumers, and not only that but the tobacco companies are also the ones who are supporting our schip programs as well. so, at this point they are paying for it as a result. so, until, you know trillions of people are not dying as a result. exactly. the point is that is a confluence of public pressure, public health campaigns, regulation and all sort of state regulation. mark, i want to sort of give you the last word on this issue about regulation. you did. you ll have to write another column and we ll have you back on the show. this is what you do for a living. you have too much knowledge. okay. what s the question? the question the question is about where how we start thinking about regulating this industry in a way that gets us to the middle place. that s what i think is interesting, because, you re right, we have the two polls either eating things wrong or buying the $9 tomato.