they ve ruled it out. for the time being it s not on the table, it s not something actively being considered but they are ruling out nothing. it s always a possibility. now, the idea, though, at this point is to round up international support against syria. already the arab league is in on that. and the idea, according to secretary clinton, is to try to organize a so called contact group, similar to the one that encouraged and help organize the opposition in libya, if you remember. that group also helped organize nato strikes but that s something that does not appear to be in the cards, at least not yet, for syria. by the way, britain has also pulled its ambassador out of damascus, syria. back to you. jenna: we ll continue to watch this story, steve. in fact we have more on it now. thank you. you bet. jon: so the situation is getting more tense by the moment in syria, there s no letup in the blood shed, the conflict rages on. new amateur video is surfacing from the battered city of h
was planning something but i had no idea he was going to do this. reporter: susan s parents had custody of the two kids, his attorney for the family said this, they were planning a civil suit, a wrongful death case, but they didn t want to interfere with the criminal case as they looked into the disappearance of susan. jenna: there aren t words for stories like this. horrible scenes. it doesn t even do it justice. dan, when we talk about susan, though, let s talk about this investigation, trying to find where she is or what happened to her. where does that stand in light of the latest developments? reporter: well, details came out yesterday, they immediately got on the plane and they are out here now, they say that that investigation is still very much open, they re trying to determine what happened to susan powell. but of course, the truth may have died with josh powell yesterday. still, they want answers. he was the only person of interest in this case, from the beginning. they
cameras and with microphones in their hands, and they re hurting as well. people closer to it hurt, because this was something keeply wrong deeply wrong, this was something evil. let s not refer to this, please, in public as a tragedy. this was not a tragedy. this is a horrible murder of two little kids. let s not dress it up, let s not sanitize it. let s call it what it is. which is something deeply wrong, which is not a tragedy, which is something evil. jenna: well, we stand corrected. we called it a tragedy and the sheriff there makes an excellent point. dan spring ser live from the scene in grand washington. dan, what s the latest from there? well, jenna, alls will be performed, we also expect arson investigators on the scene, in the house behind me, they will be back to determine the exact origin and cause of the fire but they say this was no accident, this was planned, they re calling it a double murder and suicide. it all happened very quickly
income over recent decades, but there is no evidence those gains came at the expense of the middle class. the chances of starting out at the bottom and ending up in the middle class end up being something like 55 percent. if you re born in the lowest 20 percent, the likelihood is you re not going to end up in the lowest 20 percent. now, research from federal reserve banks and think tanks agree on that. a pew study foundation looked at more than three decades and found that over any 10-year period, quote, americans are much more likely to experience a large income gain than large income drop. the administration describes incomes as if they were as unchanging as a rock formation. extensive research, however, shows people are constantly moving up and down the income ladder, much like an escalator with some people going up and some people going down. now, the american enterprise institute looked at federal reserve data showing that between 2001 and 2007, 44 percent of those in the
there is an independent streak that runs very strong here and republican s republican chair royan caul says that means something, come time for the big game. i tend to o clock tong that a candidate who does very well in colorado is more likely to do better in the general election, especially given colorado s status as a swing state, along with florida and a handful of other key states that we have to win in the election. jenna: and this will be newt gingrich s first campaign stop in colorado. jon. jon: alicia acuna live in denver, thank you. jenna: facebook is getting renewed attention as it takes steps to launch publicly on the stock market. is the social network powerhouse getting a little too powerful, should it now be considered part of the mainstream media? our news watch panel takes a look, next.