(Start Video)
Chris Hayes, MSNBC host (voice-over)
: Tonight at all-Hillary Clinton (D)
Presidential candidate: We have to fix our immigration system once and for all.
Hayes: Hillary Clinton threw a policy bomb during the campaign, while another Republican could declare his candidacy in violation of the campaign finance law. MIKE HUCKABEE (R)
Presidential candidate: please do so if you want to give millions.
Hayes: then separate the facts from the propaganda because ISIS claims that the Texas attack is a credit to them.
Also, when the new attorney general traveled to Maryland, Joy Reid reported on two battymore, Inner Harbor and inner city.
And the plight of Periscope from Mayweather/Pacquiao.
Unidentified woman: someone somewhere sees something they should pay someone.
Hayes: How Will Tesla's latest announcement change the world.
Unidentified male: This handy future reactor in the sky is called the Sun, OK?
You don't have to do anything. It just works.
It appears every day.
Hayes: everything is starting now. (END VIDEOTAPE)
Hayes: good evening in New York.
I'm Chris Hayes.
A few hours ago, something happened in the campaign, which is probably one of the most important factors in the whole cycle.
And, we have another contestant running for the campaign, which is an important day for the Arkansas campaign, due to the fact that two politicians with close ties to the country have released major news in a very different way.
First, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee announced his second run for the White House, with former Arkansas first lady Hillary Clinton making a major policy statement on a potentially decisive 2016 issue.
We started with the hope of Huckabee's hometown of Arkansas, where Huckabee made his statement, which happened to be the birthplace of Bill Clinton, who was advertising his 1992 campaign
Huckabee wants to be a social conservative option, although he is different in winning the Iowa caucus and the 2008 presidential campaign in seven other states, huckabee is facing more intense competition in securing social conservative votes-Ted Cruz, Rick Santorum, Scott Walker and others who want to lock in the same group of Republican voters(
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Huckabee: witnessing the slaughter of more than 55 million babies in the name of choice, we are now threatening the basis of religious freedom, making Christianity a crime, and asking us to abandon the principle of natural marriage in the Bible. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: The announcement of Huckabee is not all bad luck and darkness.
How the activity started. (
Start Video Editing)(MUSIC)(END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: Yes, Tony Orlando is at home, although Huckabee's performance is not as smooth as Tony Orlando's vocal style.
Huckabee told his audience that his campaign will be funded by small funders rather than billionaires before joining. (
Start Video Editing)
Huckabee: Now, rest assured, do this if you want to pay millions.
But I know most of you can't. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: While the Supreme Court has removed most of the restrictions on campaign funding, particularly through the head of the super PACs and the Federal Election Commission, her agency is basically unable to enforce the existing laws, just for the record, as the Washington Post notes, it's illegal to ask for so much money for $1 million and a candidate, which means, huckabee began his campaign with a possible violation of the campaign finance law.
This is not even the biggest problem for Huckabee today.
We will have more information in a moment.
But first we take you to Rancho High School in Los Angeles, where Hillary Clinton attended the student roundtable this afternoon and made a very important statement-to stick to a clear policy stance, supporting full citizenship for undocumented immigrants and vowing to do everything under the law to go further with President Obama's executive action on immigration.
Clinton announced at a high school that 70% of the students were Hispanic, which made her fully consistent with most Hispanic voters on a question that continues to give Republicans a headache.
Even Jeb Bush, probably the most suitable full immigration reform for possible Republican presidential candidates, would prefer to talk about the illegal identity of undocumented immigrants, and only provided conditional temporary support for any concept of the path of citizenship. (
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Clinton: Don't make a mistake: Today, there is no Republican candidate, either announced or potential, who clearly and consistently supports the path of citizenship, not a path.
This is the code for second class status when they talk about legal status. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: The spokesman for Nevada political correspondent Jon Laston and Emily List, Jesse McIntosh, joined me.
Jon, let me start with you.
I took part in a caucus at Rancho High School in 2008, and in the early days of that campaign, the caucus actually fell into a completely chaotic meltdown.
They are trying to run this core group but don't have the infrastructure in place.
But there are two things-Hillary Clinton has won a large number of Hispanic voters in the caucus, but she has taken a rather tough stance verbally.
Keep in mind that while she said she didn't like the driver's license, she was vague on the driver's license and she talked about the expulsion of anyone who committed any crime, no matter how small they were.
For her, how big a step has taken today in this campaign?
Host Jon Laston: Well, I think it's very shocking, Chris, you set it up very well.
You know, her campaign sent a signal to the media this morning that she will seek the path of citizenship.
This is obvious.
She had to point out the territory.
But Chris, as you said, quickly overtook this evolution today.
Not only does she support President Obama's executive order.
She said she would issue her own executive order, the necessary order under any law.
She supports family reunion.
She talked about tension.
She basically said everything typical dreamers or Hispanic voters in the photos wanted to hear.
You know, we always complain that politicians are not taking any position and dancing around these issues.
Not today.
She made her position clear, and I think she was luring the Republican candidate to chase her.
Call it amnesty, say it's illegal, say what you want to say.
She's looking into demographics.
Hayes: You know, Jon is important here. First of all, it's not cowardly --washy.
I mean, she has now set out a series of positions on Jessie that she has to defend, or are basically public, and they are on the record.
I remember when Mitch McConnell mentioned that the president had announced that he would wave a red cloak in front of the Republican caucus, I thought it was an inadvertent metaphor.
Jon believes that this seems to be what is happening here today, at least politically and in substance.
Emil List spokesman Jesse McIntosh: I think there will be a huge contrast between the parties because her position is very clear.
They split up and they either want to build the wall as high as possible and power it up or describe the migrants from Mexico these days with any incredibly disturbing images, or they are in camp Rubio/Jeb Bush, where they are basically stuck in the Democratic position.
Every time one plays the role of the other, it will be very bad for them, because as long as it takes up the position, Hillary has just taken up the position today.
I think we will see them in trouble throughout the game because they are not willing to go that far.
Those who have established a very clear position are a completely untenable position that is very disturbing to most Americans.
Most Americans understand that this country is based on immigration, and we don't feel -- we don't feel fear about immigration.
It's not building a wall.
This will not work for most people.
Hayes: Jon, it's also a symbol of what Jesse said to me.
Where is the center of the Democratic Party?
That's-it's a surprise statement, I think, because it goes beyond what the president did, but it doesn't happen, you know, ex nihilo.
I mean, this is the work of the people you mentioned, the immigration rights activist, the dreamers organized for 10 years, with the aim of pushing the Democratic Party on this issue.
Reston: It's very real, it's a symbol of what's going on in Nevada, and Harry Reid realized a few cycles ago about the change in population structure, Chris, the emerging Hispanic population, about 20% of voters were in November 2016 in Nevada, and, you know, I don't want to look at Hillary Clinton's heart, whether she believes it or not, it's purely political pandering, or a change with the past.
Chris, Republicans can say that everything they want can be true.
But all Democratic voters are concerned about where she is now.
Think about how many swing states and Hispanic populations might be key states like Nevada, like Colorado, like Florida.
So it doesn't matter if she really believes in this or if she has read the polls better.
This is a very, very important move.
As you have pointed out, she cannot leave at a later date because what she said to her is very firm.
Hayes: Jesse, is that all right?
Mackintosh: she put forward immigration policy and immigration agenda on family issues and did a very smart thing too. Seventy-
5% of American immigrants are women and children.
Now, when I say Mexican immigrants to you, the first thing you think about is probably one person.
You may think of someone who will come in to work and take care of the family and may bring in more than 75% women and children.
When she talks about this as a women's and family issue, she is directly linked to those who have experienced it.
That's why it's so smart, and that's why it resonates for a long time.
Hayes: Jon, Jeb Bush, I think he is widely regarded as "the most moderate" on immigration, and the word can be very, very difficult to bend.
He released a Cinco de Mayo announcement today in his very good Spanish.
How much-I mean, it seems to me that Jeb Bush has just pointed out that he is caught between understanding what the average voter wants and what the main voter wants, in my opinion, he'll try to overcome some ambiguity in some way, and it's just his personal story, getting married to a Mexican immigrant woman who speaks Spanish.
The question is, can this stand?
Reston: Yes, it's very interesting, Chris, because Jeb Bush will be in Nevada a week from tomorrow.
He just started standing up in Nevada.
Why is he in Nevada?
He will give a speech at the Clark County Republican Lincoln Day Dinner.
Now, Clark County Republicans, led by the kind of people who called for Reince pries to resign, many Ron Paul, all the tea party types.
It would be interesting to see what Jeb Bush said to the group.
This will be a difficult needle for the group to talk to Republican primary voters and maintain his viability in the general election.
I think this speech will be a very symbolic example of what he has to do.
It would be interesting to see what he's going to say.
Hayes: That's a good point.
Thank you, Jon Laston and Jesse McIntosh.
Thank you.
Hayes: Okay.
Mike Huckabee said in a presidential statement in Arkansas today that you didn't hear from many Republicans. (
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Huckabee: If Congress wants to take someone's pension off, let them end their pension, not your social security. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: Huckabee's economic populism, at least for the benefit of the elderly, flew in front of the Republican donor-class Orthodox concept, and the party's business department did not let it fall.
Hackby's growth club, which calls it a greedy club, launched an ad today attacking hackby's record of taxes and spending as governor of Arkansas.
The growth club says it will spend $100,000 to air in key early voting states in Iowa and South Carolina.
Rick Wilson, a Republican media consultant, is joining me now.
Rick, it's good to have you.
Rick Wilson, Republican media adviser: Thank you, Chris.
Hayes: I'm interested in this question.
I have a theory about Republicans and Social Security/health insurance that was back in the budget struggle as early as 2011 when the president sought a big compromise, and my theory is that John Boehner is very clear, his-The Republican foundation does not want to see social security cuts, nor does it want to see health insurance cuts, because the Republican foundation I don't really want.
They are too old and they like their current benefits, which I think Mike Huckabee used here.
Did I get it wrong?
Wilson: Well, look, I think it's even Republican voters who have social security and health insurance in their lives, recognizing that the system currently being built is largely unsustainable.
But I think what Huckabee does is what he does all the time.
He found a cheap way into the populist position.
He found the cheapest equipment he could buy in the shallow waters of populism.
He always goes to places where he tries to distinguish himself and finds this mythical niche in the Republican Party.
La Arkansas style from great Arkansas, you know, the politician with the stunt scream will work for him on the national stage.
Because most Republican voters who are starting to focus on Mike Huckabee realize that this guy is not an economic conservative or a limited government conservative, these are quite conservative in Republican primary politics.
Hayes: Yes, there's a quadrant-you know, I remember you would love the libertarian homepage in high school and do the quadrant ideology test, right?
Where did you fall? Right.
Hayes: That's right.
I was a left when I was young.
Of course you are.
Hayes: The point is, you can argue that there is no representative of this quadrant in American politics, basically conservative people in society who want to oppose same-sex marriage, you know, against abortion, you know, it's okay for the state to regulate individual behavior in some way, but economically populist.
This seems to be the target quadrant for Mike Huckabee, and bit remains to be seen if there is a vote or if there is a vote, but the donor class is so annoying that in fact they don't get candidates to get those votes.
Wilson: Well, look, Mike Huckabee will collapse regardless of whether the donor class wants him to collapse or not.
He is not a limited Conservative government.
This is the mainstream of Major voters. our people are limited government conservatives and fiscal conservatives.
They are now emerging factions of the party, and they have seen the decline of foreign policy hawks over the past few years.
They have started to come back a little.
But that era-or the evangelical populist realm that Huckabee is trying to occupy-is a smaller one in the past, and even a lot of people are told by a pretty person that you know, the strong limited government sees Huckabee as a limited person-and they review the record.
He keeps raising taxes.
He talked about tax cuts, but the figure was more than $0. 5 billion, which was the real gold and silver of the time in Arkansas.
This is a person who has no basic foundation on what most Republican voters are most concerned about, that is, financial constraints and limited government. HAYES: Yes.
Very interesting.
His record in Arkansas is very appealing at this point because he really-Wilson: Yes.
This is very interesting in history.
Hayes: It's interesting in history.
He did-you know, he did a lot of things that liberals hated and he did a lot of things that liberals really liked.
He was-he increased spending in certain areas that people didn't expect, and it always surprised me how many constituencies there were for this kind of thing.
You mean there's nothing right now, and I think we'll see how it turns out.
Rick Wilson, nice to meet you. Thanks a lot.
Thank you, Chris.
Hayes: Okay.
Next, ISIS contacts in Texas and what publicity reveals. (
Business break)
Hayes: on the show last night, I was pretty sure we made the history of cable news.
When the clip starts, it's not the cable news history that the media enters into my computer.
This is in a speech I host legendary artists, designers, power couples art mirror and Francois Mulley on freedom of speech.
At some point in our discussion, you may notice something that looks a little smoky.
In fact, it's steam.
Of course, in the early days of television, smoking was actually a requirement, but it could be the first smoking on live TV, and of course the first smoking on our humble show.
Last night, the executive producer of our show was very excited about it, and he personally captured and posted the GIF of the event to everyone via Chris Twitter feed.
If you would like to see this moment in the appropriate context, please visit our Facebook page Facebook.
Com/allinwithchris.
We released a whole great interview with Mr. legend.
Ms. SpielmanMouly.
Definitely worth a visit.
When you are there, we will love it if you like our page.
This is our favorite thing. (
Business break)
Hayes: Islamic State or ISIS claimed responsibility for the Texas attack that killed two attackers.
ISIS said on its radio that the men were "two soldiers of the caliphate ".
A lot of publicity added, "we told the United States that what is coming will be bigger and more painful and that you will see Islamic State soldiers do terrible things.
On Sunday, Elton Simpson and Nadir Sophie opened fire with assault rifles at an event in Garland, Texas, and people were invited to display cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.
A school district security officer was shot in the ankle, but a Garan police officer shot and killed two suspects.
It is not clear now whether the two attackers actually have any substantial links with ISIS.
But perhaps more importantly, how firmly ISIS seems to claim responsibility for the attack that the attackers were shot down so quickly and successfully.
Now share with me the latest news from Garland, Texas, foreign correspondent Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News.
Ayman, how much do we know about the actual operational connection between the two and ISIS?
Ayman mohyeldin, foreign correspondent for NBC News: Well, we certainly don't know a lot about that-to be honest, Chris.
This information does not appear to indicate at least the operational link between the organization and the two suspects.
According to Nadir Soofi's grandmother, she said that her son is unlikely to do so without the influence of others.
And another guy, Elton Simpson, was a man the FBI knew when he was on a terrorist watch list, in fact, he was sentenced to lying to federal authorities about his intention to travel abroad and join a terrorist organization.
Now, he is charged with doing so, but in fact, the judge finally dismissed his charges, or that the prosecution did not have enough evidence to confirm his charges as early as 2011, in fact, I want to join a terrorist organization.
So, he was finally released during his probation.
The investigation will now focus on a variety of evidence, including whether there is any business connection with the group, including transfers, training, perhaps associates or affiliates within the United States, which contributed to the attack.
Now, we have learned from our own reports that the guns used in this attack were legally purchased,, we don't know yet if there is an exact connection between the two and ISIS-Chris.
Hayes: Ayman, this is what you and I have discovered before, we have reported that ISIS is a phenomenon, it has two sides, right?
There are practical-there are actual forces that are actually fighting, holding positions, losing positions, occupying positions, sometimes ruling in a terrible way, usually in a terrible way in Iraq and Syria.
And then there's the global brand of ISIS, all sorts, you know, ideology, jihadist wants to connect with the world-whether they're really communicating with them or not. MOHYELDIN: Yes.
There is no doubt that ISIS has great command and control over the territory of Syria and Iraq that it actually controls.
It is definitely the main force on the ground and on many territories, if you wish.
When it comes to operations or cells that may operate in the West, if you wish, so far there is no strong evidence that ISIS, as an organization, it's behind the scenes of any of these attacks that we see at the operational level in Western countries-which means that those who carry out these attacks are trained by the group and they get weapons, any logistical support was provided.
In ISIS's own words, it seems to be a pattern in which they want to inspire the people of the West to attack.
This is a real threat.
This is certainly the main reason Western officials are worried about.
These lone wolf-style attacks can happen anywhere in the Western world and interact and engage with followers anywhere in the world, feeling that they now want to be inspired by the organization and carry out those attacks
So, as we 've seen in Garland, what we 've seen in Charlie Weekly and elsewhere, there's this promotional value in what ISIS benefits from.
It turned around and said to its recruiters that we are bringing the fighting to these Western streets and that we have the ability to motivate others to carry out these types of attacks, for law enforcement officials, this is the real challenge of trying to stop these people-because they are inspired by the lone wolf attack, which can be deadly or scary.
Hayes: Yes, because to some extent, yes, plots like what happened in Garland, Texas-they were less logistical than complicated until the scale and scope were reduced.
But they are also hard to find, because presumably you have one or two people involved, which makes it harder for the authorities to catch them. MOHYELDIN: Yes.
There is no doubt about this.
I mean, when we talk to law enforcement, they keep telling you that they are always worried about one person or those who act in pairs, maybe just like the Boston Marathon bombings, who can learn how to implement or manufacture deadly devices on the Internet and implement them in included environments that have a greater impact on fear factors and casualties.
This is therefore a major challenge for law enforcement officers.
They succeeded in preventing several people, dozens of people from leaving the United States, entering territory controlled by ISIS and gaining battlefield skills, but the challenge in law enforcement is that terrorists can only succeed once, and can't succeed all the time.
This is what we see in these lone wolf attacks.
Their influence is sometimes far more psychological than their ability to do it in terms of logistics and killing, but equally disastrous.
Hayes: Ayman Mohedin, thank you very much.
There are two very different Baltimore landscapes. (
Start Video Editing)
Unidentified male: build from around the world if you want to build.
Don't build only suburbs.
Don't build only in the center, and don't build only in the county.
Build it in a city where city residents go out. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: there are some neighborhoods in Baltimore where there is money and there is no money to put in. (
Business break)
Hayes: Well, you might remember that we did a little clip called click three.
It shows three of the most awesome things on the Internet every day.
This is the third project in May 10, 2013. (
Start Video Editing)
Hayes: Man, this, this refers to Ryan Gosling memes ending all Ryan Gosling memes, far more than all the "hey girls" or any Gosling imitators
Anyone?
Remember that?
It's Ryan Gosling who won't eat his cereal.
This is a series of vines, or a video of six second loops, and the title explains it all, isn't it?
As Entertainment Weekly said, a spoonful of grain slowly approached the goose's beautiful face, but sometimes tortured his face on the TV screen.
Creator Ryan McHenry said the idea came from watching movies, driving, and eating cereal.
This is a simple concept, but the results are amazing. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: Yes, it was just Ryan Gosling who didn't eat his cereal, Mihm and vines that caused a stir.
Ryan McHenry, a Scottish filmmaker.
As we mentioned at the time, he quoted McHenry as saying that the idea naturally came into being, "one day I was watching" driving "and" eating cereal," looks like Ryan Gosling is staring at my cereal.
Gosling mentioned this interesting meme in an interview.
We were all found and I posted my own version.
But on Monday, filmmaker Ryan McHenry was too young when he died of bone cancer. He was 27-years-old, 27.
In honor of him, people began to make such comments on Twitter, citing "we should all eat a bowl of grain in honor of Ryan McHenry.
"This," Ryan Gosling, will you eat a bowl of grain to honor Ryan mchenley, the creator of Gosling grain vines?
"Well, that's what Ryan Gosling did, and he paid tribute to his own vines and ended up eating his cereal.
Quoting this sentence, Gosling also wrote on Twitter, "I am sympathetic to all the family and friends of Ryan McHenry.
I feel very lucky to be part of his life in a way.
So we watched the goose's McHenry vines still not eat his cereal.
We hope he will be happy. (
Start Video Editing)
Do you like cereal?
Actor Ryan Gosling: I like it.
So we can keep feeding you cereal?
Goose: always.
Woman: talented.
Ryan Gosling, do you like it? END VIDEO CLIP)(
Business break)(
Start Video Editing)
Loretta Lynch, United States of AmericaS.
Attorney general: I think it's important that I also come here to hear the people on the ground, the people in the city and, frankly, the people who love the city.
As we all know, Baltimore has become a symbol of the many problems that plague many of our cities, which involve distrust by the police and the community. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: Loretta Lynch traveled to Baltimore today, a week after serving as justice minister, to meet with city officials, community groups and police.
She also sits with the family of Freddie Gray.
And highlight the community that was inconsistent with these people last month, the Justice Department on 25-year-
The death of the old in police custody and the national focus of Baltimore only highlight what residents have known for decades, a city struggle with huge racial and economic inequality.
Joy Reid, national correspondent for MSNBC, explained. (Start Video)
Joey Reid, national correspondent for MSNBC: the story of Baltimore tells two grim economic realities.
Since the 1980 s, the city's glittering inner harbor area has benefited from a lot of public investment, creating commercial appeal for tourists and local residents.
But there is another Baltimore, Baltimore, where Freddy Gray died and died.
Baltimore saw an investment in Inner Harbor and asked how an affordable city could keep it going?
In the streets and barbershops of West Baltimore, residents know that the neighborhood had fallen before Freddie Gray died.
Bob George Butler: The city has been condemned.
Like these abandoned buildings.
Not only did they Board these places, but they were also boarded, man.
Reid: in addition to that, the investment in the Inner Harbor took away the investment in the city center, where
The third residential building is abandoned and you have an anxiety that is ingrained in the African region of Baltimore
American Community
Butler: If you want to build, build from anywhere, not just build the suburbs, not just build an inner harbor, not just build the county, build the inner harbor
The city is like where the city people are.
What we saw in the riots was the symptoms.
When we see police brutality and excessive force, there is a deeper investment problem that appears in the city center, not in residential areas.
Reid: But some community activists understand the economic importance of the Inner Harbor and are trying to fight for one of these two batties one day.
Seema iyer, Baltimore community metrics Alliance: We need all the communities here.
We need the residential area here, we need the Inner Harbor area, we need it all.
As a city, we work together as an ecosystem.
The more communities like this, the more we can feel that the entire metropolitan area is theirs, and that will no longer be the story of two cities. (END VIDEOTAPE)
This is reported by MSNBC national reporter Joy Reid.
She lives in Baltimore with me now.
Joy, this is one thing, when I was there last week, people often wanted to talk about it, which surprised me, I didn't even ask about the investment in Inner Harbor, nor did they ask about the recovery in some areas, nor did they ask about the recovery in other areas.
What do people think about this?
I know, absolutely.
That's what we hear every day, like you, Chris.
I heard it too.
In essence, people look at Inner Harbor and think this is where all the wealth of this community goes.
It goes to the county, it goes to the city center, it goes to the port, but, you know, one of the challenges is that the other Seema Iyer is Seema Iyer because you know we also have Seema Iyer
She talked about the difficulty of even trying to rebuild places like West Baltimore.
First of all, you have to figure out who the owners of these abandoned buildings are and finding the chain of supervision for the property will be the first step in rebuilding the area, however, it is clear that the inner harbor belongs to the city and to the county.
So you have a problem with who owns the property.
So, do you have any questions about who will invest in the property?
How do you do this in a way that is not entirely gentle and makes the person present pay the price.
You will then find that the area of West Baltimore and East Baltimore is residential.
There is no local industry there.
These are purely retail residential areas, such as CVS.
So you have to find a different development.
So it's apples and oranges, but the people here will definitely look at the port, they will look at the brand new stores that are sparkling, and they will say what are we like?
Hayes: Yes, there are only a few maps here.
This is a child living below the poverty line of 2009 and 2013, so you can feel it.
You can see some areas where those people can see how severe child poverty is in those deep purple areas.
We are talking about more than half of the poor children in these areas.
Joy, this is the community in Sandtown, Winchester, I mean, it's as poor as the community in the United States.
Reid: Yes, absolutely no.
4 out of 10 of you spend more than 30 minutes a day going to work.
Think about it.
I'm not saying in the car, you're talking about people who are basically isolated from the city lifeline so that even if they can get a job interview, how will they get there?
One day when people said they had been waiting for the bus for more than an hour, we were there and it was the only bus to take them to the city center from east to west.
People are really angry.
They stood on the bus and stood in the corner waiting for the bus.
You have a train station in the West Baltimore area where CVS will not be spread all over the city.
It will only take you so far.
So you have some basic questions about being able to move people to work.
You have a high percentage of people back from jail in that community, so they can't even get an interview, let alone work.
These problems are so systematic that it is difficult to know where to start.
Hayes: I mean, we can say that too, not just Baltimore.
I mean, Baltimore's model of pursuing urban development has become a model for many places to pursue, including the big stadiums, the revival of the city center, hopefully college educated people will come to Metro university and college after graduation and stay, they create restaurants, services and start-ups.
But it's not clear yet that whether it's the Bronx I grew up in or West Baltimore, this model is a great help to very poor communities.
Reid: Yes, absolutely no.
Whether it's Brooklyn or Detroit, there's one thing that all of these communities have in common is that you have a bunch of poor people, basically, usually people of color or Africans --
Americans living in the center of the city used to be unpopular in town, right.
So in the early 20 th century, you hid all the poor and all the Africans --
Americans near the city center
But now this is the ideal field.
But what have you done to people who are already there?
How do you re-develop an area where there is no obvious economic benefit for investors, whether private investors or taxpayers?
So when you don't have an obvious return on investment, it's hard for you to find the answer.
You then enter these areas again, where you can see these houses in rows.
This did not happen in any riots.
This is already the case.
You don't even know who owns it.
Many of them are absent landlords who have long been absent.
You don't even know who this building is.
Therefore, the city must seize it through its own set of problems.
So there are a lot of problems to solve here.
Hayes: John? ph)
Also noted in our interview the other day that people need to work.
I mean, fundamentally, you will have a lot of poor people if you don't provide work for people.
Joey Reid lives in Baltimore tonight.
Great coverage as usual, thank you.
Still, look at the technology that allows thousands of people to watch the much-anticipated and expensive Pacquiao-I may or may not be one of them --
Mayweather fight for free. (
Business break)
Hayes: Well, the most creepy tech news of the week is the story of a rare talking doll that Thomas Edison invented and released in 1890.
Now, these dolls talk through a weigh wax cylinder-oh wow, it looks creepy as well-it's a wax cylinder recording that operates with a crank on the back of the doll.
They also happen to represent the earliest known recordings of American women's voices. S.
These dolls rarely exist until recently, and they remain silent because there is no safe and reliable way to play the recording without damaging the cylinder.
Enter technology.
Government labs have developed a way to play recordings without touching very fragile records, using a microscope to create incredibly detailed groove images and sound software to digitize the recordings.
As a result, nightmare fuel. Check it out. (
Start Video Editing)
Woman: Now I lie down and sleep.
I play the LORD my soul.
If I die before I wake up, I pray that God will take my soul away. Amen. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: now to be fair, for the contemporaries of the doll, looking back, the window of this early recording is more than just creepy.
Edison's talking doll was not the doll that made me itch the most in that time.
The production lasted only six weeks, according to the New York Times, because I quoted here that the children found the doll "more terrible than cute. ” (
Business break)(
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Unidentified Woman: I'm not going to park.
I'm going to break the wheel. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: when the new season of The Game of Thrones premiered with great fanfare a few weeks ago, it wasn't the full celebration of HBO.
Because users of Twitter-owned live app perisoft are apparently using it to illegally play the show, HBO has been prompted to publicly criticize the app and issue a notice of deletion of pirated streams.
It turns out that this is only the first time in a massive battle against piracy and mobile technology.
In the boxing match between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, which was broadcast jointly by HBO and show time on Saturday, thousands watched the rough low-quality stream on Periscope, instead of paying $100 to watch the battle.
For all those who have had a cable service outage during the race, streaming apps may also come in handy.
After the game, Twitter CEO Dick Costello wrote on Twitter that the game was so popular, who was the winner? Periscope.
Well, the organizers and broadcasters of this battle are not very happy with the performance of the app.
One of the sponsors has threatened to take legal action against individuals and companies that play a role in pirated broadcasts.
The Periscope, which is now on the defensive, is fully respecting intellectual property rights.
According to a Twitter spokesperson, the company received 66 requests for revocation from the copyright owner, of which 30 were disabled and others were stopped or no longer available.
This may not be enough to meet the needs of entertainment companies like HBO, which tend to take a more pre-emptive, less eccentric approach to copyright violators, with Periscope CEO at a technical meeting today(
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Kayvon keykpour, Periscope CEO: There are a lot of tools that should be there and there is a lot of time and development available to handle these things in real time, and we are generally interested in working with partners to address this issue.
It's like a new field, right?
Like, the proliferation of all these mobile devices, and the fact that I can now pick up my phone and stream, has changed the face of such a process in the past. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: While Periscope and similar apps are changing the pattern of media consumption-Lord, we don't know-a company is trying to change the whole way we power our cars, our families and businesses around the world.
Why a simple new device may mean that we are finally, finally, on the cliff of a long-promised revolution. That`s next. (
Business break)(
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Tesla CEO Elon Musk: this solution is divided into two parts.
The first part, the sun.
We have-we have this convenient fusion reactor called the Sun in the sky, okay?
You don't need to do anything, it just works.
It appears every day, and produces absurd power. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Musk: Tesla CEO Elon Musk is probably the most ambitious businessman of our time.
I think he must be.
He has created a zero-emission electric vehicle for Tesla cars.
Now, he is addressing the problem of solar power generation, which is the biggest obstacle to making solar energy a source of greater energy supply in the country: in fact, the sun does not always come out.
Solar panels do not collect much energy during the night or cloudy days.
But Musk offers consumers a new solution-Tesla powerwall, a battery for your home that stores power generated by solar panels and can actually save power for rainy days.
It can only store up to 10 KW, which may not be enough to power the entire home.
According to Tesla, your refrigerator ate only about half a day, but it seems to be a big step towards making solar energy a viable alternative to mass fossil fuels.
Not just daydreaming.
Powerwall is already scheduled to ship this summer, and the price of the 10 KW-hour model is relatively affordable at $3,500, plus the cost of installing and connecting solar panels.
Musk also launched a commercial version of the battery called power pack, which, in his words, is designed to be infinitely expanded. (
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Musk: with a power pack of 0. 16 billion, you can transition to the United States with 0. 9 billion, and you can transition to the world.
You can basically make all the power generation in the world renewable, mainly solar energy. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Hayes: David Roberts, David's staff writer, is with me now.
Shirley Palmer, business consultant.
David, let me start with you.
You just wrote an article about the inevitable nature of solar energy.
How big is the battery problem-how big is the problem?
How much progress has Musk made in this announcement?
DAVID Roberts of DAVID
COM: Well, I think most of what he did when he made the announcement was to open people up to that possibility.
I mean, at the moment, the battery is still too big to be too big and too small to allow solar power to dominate, it's not just a supplement
Other forms of power.
But, you know, with the continuous development of technology, solar cells will be smaller and more efficient, and other forms of energy storage will become smaller and more efficient, and in the end, it will not be a big deal stuck to your wall, it will be integrated into your home, and the solar cells will also be integrated into your home and your home, the building itself will be an energy harvester and a storage of energy, low-key and cheap.
Hayes: Shirley, part of the challenge we face is consumer acceptance, right?
What we're seeing right now is that solar is going through a huge revolution because prices have just fallen in a way we 've never seen before, right?
But there is this virus effect.
In fact, studies have shown that those who see solar panels are more likely to get them.
Shirley Palmer, technical consultant: I think it's a mission and a vision, right?
If you want to live a sustainable life, but the Tesla motor is a way of life, the power wall is a way of life.
It's too expensive, but do you know what's interesting?
It is on the cusp of financial wisdom.
It's not there. it's on the cusp.
But, as I like to say, today is the slowest pace of technological change you have experienced in your life.
So it will get there, but just at this minute, really, with the whole continuous output, you really can't get enough power from this thing to manage your house.
Forget this.
You can do it.
You're right, it's a bit viral, but it's a lifestyle option. HAYES: Yeah.
David, that's your point-the argument you put in the article is why solar is so different from everything else.
Why is it not like any other force. ROBERTS: Sure.
All other forms of commercial power generation are essentially the same, and it converts mechanical forces into current by rotating the turbine.
So everything else-coal, gas, nuclear, wind, hydro, they're all about rotating turbines.
Solar PV is the only commercial form of generating electricity directly from the sun, which means there is no need to move components, thus reducing maintenance and operating costs.
This is the only form of power that can eventually be reduced to almost any size.
I mean, Musk stressed that it can zoom in, but in theory it can scale down to square inches.
So you can imagine that solar energy is becoming ubiquitous in a way that is not possible in any other form of electricity.
Palmer: What's really important here is that you can't power American homes, you can't use it instead of a backup generator, and if you think about the distributed nature of solar energy in developing and emerging countries without a grid, this brings a whole new set of possible possibilities-you see, there are cheap batteries, and there are cheap ones, which are the cheapest ones, it does what we see in a period of time.
What I suspect is that once the Ji processing plant is running at full capacity, they will do a whole day at Tesla and they are making batteries, which will become affordable until it makes sense.
Hayes: GIGA will be an important factor in Nevada, announcing a big deal that they will make to make batteries.
David, I was told that they really think Tesla is a Tesla, a Tesla company, really a battery factory.
A battery company and a battery factory.
They understand that what people need in the future is batteries, they make-they have to solve the battery problem to make their cars, but the cars are attached in some ways.
This is actually the business of batteries.
Roberts: That's right.
I mean, in a sense, I think the best way to look at electric cars is as a form of portable power storage.
So, you can imagine a future where all of these electric cars are connected to the grid, so when the grid operators need extra power, they can get power from all of these distributed cars.
Power can be returned to these batteries when they do not need it, so that it becomes a form of distributed storage. HAYES: Yeah.
You also want to know how much people like Musk who set goals have an impact on their competitors, right?
Palmer: It will be very important because you already have a battery industry-look, we have a very fast curve of technological progress.
The slowest two things, literally, are battery technology-look at your phone and look around at your power supply.
Hayes: It's the biggest battle and everyone is trying to narrow, narrow, and narrow.
Palmer: You're running around the airport, charging, and everyone is charging their phones.
Of course, there are solar cells, because if you absorb 100% of the material, it will be invisible and it will be the largest solar cell ever, but we don't have it yet.
So, these must appear.
This is a big step forward.
I like the fact that Elon Musk.
He's Tony Stark of our time.
Yes, he-I like the way he performs.
This is a little uncomfortable.
Thank you, David Roberts and Shirley Palmer.
Well, it's here this evening.
Rachel Mado's show is now on.
This is a report card in a hurry.
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