now. it is 4:00 in new york. breaking news this hour. we are covering yet another mass shooting in this country. this one on the campus of the university of nevada las vegas this afternoon. it is still early, but minutes ago, police saidsuspect, now dead. as for victims, police say tre appear to betiple although how many exactly is still unknown. at least one of thes of the ooting, unlv s beam hall, the university s business school, mere yards from the student union. law enforcement is still asking people to avoid the area. joining us now, nbc news justice and intel correspondent, ken dilanian. former fbi agent, peter strzok and with me at the table, professor of politics and journalism at morgan state, jason johnson. ken, please fill in the gaps wherever possible. what do we know? well, about an hour ago, the university of nevada las vegas twitter account posted an alert that said university police were responding to a confirmed active shooter in beh, which stands for be
scalia made what he called the broccoli argument. here he is making it. let s listen. why do you define the market that broadly? health care. it may well be that everybody needs health care sooner or later, but not everybody needs a heart transplant, not everybody needs a liver transplant. that s correct, justice scalia, but you never know whether you re going to be that person. could you define the market everybody has to buy food sooner or later, so you define the market as food, therefore, everybody is in the market, tlvr you can make people buy broccoli. no, that s quite different. that s quite different. if you re taken to the hospital, you have doctors and administrators and all kinds of resources there for you, therefore, you re in that market whether you agreed to sign up for health care or not, and we re just regulating your role in that market.
cost for other people. that s unlike every other part of the market and i think that s the limiting principle the courts will find persuasive. you challenged the government s lawyer about this law and the precedent that it would set. scalia made what he called the broccoli argument. here he is making it. let s listen. why do you define the market that broadly? health care. it may well be that everybody needs health care sooner or later, but not everybody needs a heart transplant, not everybody needs a liver transplant. that s correct, justice scalia, but you never know whether you re going to be that person. could you define the market everybody has to buy food sooner or later, so you define the market as food, therefore, everybody is in the market, tlvr you can make people buy broccoli. no, that s quite different. that s quite different. if you re taken to the hospital, you have doctors and administrators and all kinds of
courts will find persuasive. you challenged the government s lawyer about this law and the precedent that it would set. scalia made what he called the broccoli argument. let s listen. why do you define the market that broadly? health care. it may well be that everybody needs health care sooner or later, but not everybody needs a heart transplant, not everybody needs a liver transplant. that s correct, justice scalia, but you never know whether you re going to be that person. could you define the market everybody has to buy food sooner or later, so you define the market as food, therefore, everybody is in the market, tlvr you can make people buy broccoli. no, that s quite different. that s quite different. if you re taken to the hospital, you have doctors and administrators and all kinds of resources there for you,