sort of said, gee, wouldn t things be a lot easier if nancy pelosi was speaker of the house? he is sitting down with republicans and trying to get consensus. senator john thune was at the dinner, and he will join us live to tell us what it was like in there. plus all of a sudden you couldn t see nothing, and then all of a sudden i just started spinning out of control for a long time, and then all of a sudden it just stopped. and then i, you know, all i could do was pray and ask the lord to, you know, not let me die. gregg: devastating storms tearing through the midwest. tornadoes flipping trucks, destroying homes. and more could be on the way. we re going to have brand new video of the damage, an eyewitness reaction and remember? [gunfire] martha: that is the scare yes,
according to the electronics communications privacy act of 1986 all we need is a subpoena issued without a judge s approval. we don t need a warrant to go in and look at these private communications. you don t have a reasonable expectations on privacy on your e-mails. the aclu and other privacy groups are saying, wait a minute, whether it is the irs or any other government agency that actually not true and it is unconstitutional. martha: doug, people send e-mails to their tax attorneys. people who are advising them on issues. so these, according to the irs, at least from what we re seeing here, could be obtained from them with a subpoena? martha, this is bone-chilling. one of the things i do, others do, is to ask my tax lawyer, my accountant, how should i handle something? how should i treat it? should i take a risk? should i not take a risk. i say this in context. i paid my taxes. i always do. martha: we want to get that up front. no red flags here at all. it is absolutely the cas
gregg: joel rosenberg, thank you for being with us. thank you. martha: major controversy that s brewing out there today, and it s over a new collection of barbie dolls. some say that these dolls are promoting racial stereotypes. julie banner the rah has that story for us and a couple of other things. yeah. buy your girls they re probably too old for barbies. gregg: i have any own collection. reporter: i believe that by the way. anyway, i ll get to barbie in a minute, folks. first, imagine be they made a tiger woods doll. that would sell, right? speaking of the price of tiger, watching him play just got more expensive. ticket prices are up 276% as the world s top-rated golfer enters the masters tournament. four-day badges on the secondary market are listed for around $14,000, that s up from $3,675 last year. oh, and did you vote more your
leftover pieces from the formation of the solar system, the lego blocks. if you could study it in detail, we would learn all kinds of things about our own origin, about where the earth and the rest of the solar system came from. gregg: fascinating. corey powell, always good to see you. thank you so much. martha: new concerns that al-qaeda may be playing a bigger role in the carnage in syria. so will this prompt the u.s. and others to act? the lawmakers today grilling our intel sources. we re going to tell you what we re learning about that. gregg: and north korea moving missile launchers to the coast. possibly preparing for a test launch. we re watching it. putting our pacific allies within distance. what this move could mean for the region, we ll tell you about it coming up. [ male announcer ] there are only so many foods
hurts workers of all ages? reporter: gregg, it hurts young people because they get a late start on adulthood. no job means no money to buy things and that is what hurts everyone. you re saying to this generation, you re going to be years behind where you should be and that forces young people to delay getting married. delay buying a house. delay buying a car. and, as we know, those are some big drivers of the economy. reporter: right now the unemployment rate for 16 to 24-year-olds, 16.2%. it is more than double the overall 7.7% rate. i spoke this week with evan mccann who graduated from iowa state four months ago. he wakes up 7:30 in the morn every day to send out resume s. 500 applications submitted on linkedin. zero job offers. only a fraction of employers write him back and ones he