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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBCW  June 29, 2024 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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thanks for thanks for joining us this hour. i'm going to show you something that i'm going to tell you what you're going to see in advance. i'm going to tell you in advance but even so, i'm going to venture a guess that you knowing in advance what is coming, you having me tell you in advance what you are about to see is not going to make it make more sense. let me just describe it ahead of time so you can get your head around it, okay? it's going to start with, i think it is like a bracelet, a decorated bracelet hitting the floor. it is possible that is like a mouthguard or something but that's so gross i don't even want to think about it. were just going to call it bracelet. a decorated bracelet hits the floor then there is a guy with fake fire■ç and that guy then
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shows us that he has teeth like this, like the james bond villain, the giant guy that had the metal teeth. has teeth like that and after we see the teeth like that, the next there is a guy who breaks a window with his head and then there is a guy who points. it goes on from there, but that's enough. let's just watch that part now and then we will do the next part. let's start with the bracelet thing. watch this. see? it is just like i said. bracelet, fake fire, metal teeth, head through the window andhen the guy who points. theoretically, it should help to know in advance what is coming in the sequence but it doesn't help that it's still
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just as weird but it keeps going. after the pointing guy, we then get a guy motioning like he's going to cut himself in the neck, then you get a guy who kicks the year, and inexplicably, you get the highlight, a guy with vampire teeth, and then the guy with the big fake vampire teeth punches the fake fire and two other guys do punchy things and then it gets really funny. i can't even describe it. there is an audio component and then there is donald trump, so started. roll it right from where the guy just points.■ç >> affliction band, july 19th, at the honda center live on pay- per-view. >> i will say these are tough
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looking guys. i asked one of them, how long what i last? he looked at me like i was kidding. that wasn't even nice, but it's an honor to have you in trump tower. i think affliction is going to do really well. >> i just want to say that we did not edit this and cut in a different goofy voice for it was supposed to be a tough guy voice. just, this is how it came out. play the actual announcement part again. listen to the voice here.■ç >> affliction band, july 19th, the honda center, anaheim, california, live on pay-per- view. >> affliction band. they expire -- apparently did not spring for the expensive announcer guy. they just have the intern do it. this is a thing that donald trump failed at in business. i did not know that this was another one of his failed business ventures until new york magazine wrote about yesterday.
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in reference to donald trump saying that a rally this weekend that he wants to force immigrants into fighting for entertainment. he wants a migrant cage match fighting league because sure, maybe the lions are all full maybe the lions are all full from the!káráurp's so time for new entertainments for him and his followers. in reference to that bizarre proposal that he made at a political rally this weekend, new york magazine noted that trump in 2008 formed his own mixed martial arts league with the vampire teeth and all the rest of it. >> i think affliction is going to do really well. >> spoiler alert. affliction did not do very well. trump was the face of it. he was the promoter. michael cohen was the coo. trumps mixed martial arts league hosted precisely 2 events in that it failed. then it folded. another in a long line of
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illustrious trump business ventures. this one was new to me, but he was operating the vampire teeth break windows with your head thing■ç, which failed, at the same time that he was operating trump university, which was shut down as a scam, as a fraud and a settlement the required trump to pay $35 million to the people who had and ripped off by his suppose it university. he was operating both the vampire teeth thing in the trump university scam at the same time he was also operating the trump foundation, which was also shut down as a scam. it was dissolved by court order and assets ordered redistributed to actual charities while trump had to pay millions of dollars in restitution. he was operating all of those at the same time he was of course running the trump organization, the family business that was built by his father. under donald trump's leadership, that business was found guilty of criminal fraud. it's cfo■ç i
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now in president trump himself will be sentenced in a couple of weeks after he was convicted of 34 felonies for using that same business to launder illegal campaign payments. with a record like that naturally, he is luxuriating in support from the business world now. because wow, what a businessman. i can't believe the boxer with the vampire teeth thing didn't work. seems like such a sure bet for a sport that is based on all sorts of punching and kicking and grappling, but not at all on biting, definitely get yourself a vampire teeth guy. that'll work. of the first presidential debate is -- that is a real thing. it's like really. sorry. affliction. ■ç definitely make it sound like it is something you might catch
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then ask people to come together in a big collective space to catch the affliction. i'm sorry. the first presidential debate is happening this week, which is weird because it's june. i can't speak to whatever advantage the two campaigns c and having the candidates debate now nearly five months before the election but it means that we are all getting set this week for this face-off between the two candidates and we have very different metrics to look at them we would usually have by the time a presidential debate rolled around well into the fall. polls don't really mean much at this time of the year. polls don't really mean much five months before voting. mosd e1ñvoters will even be paying attention to the race until well into the fall when debates used to normally be scheduled, but as they head into this weird very early debate, the relative strength of their campaigns is something we have to assess by sort of indirect measures, and one of the things that people have been using heading into this debate to contrast the
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candidates, to try to sort of measure the strength of each of their campaigns, sort of handicapped their chances at who is going to win the presidency, one of the things people have been using, you made a signal about this in the press the last couple of weeks, is the issue of fundraising. you've most likely seen a lot of headlines and attention to the overall financial contest■ç between these two candidates and if you've been paying attention to those headlines you've likely seen that the financial race between the two candidates used to favor biden but now, trump has reportedly caught up, and along with that bottom-line comparison of the two candidates, you are also seeing really outsized attention now to the very rich people of america, the kind of people who can donate 10, 20, 30, $50 million in one check without breaking a sweat and thereby potentially change the nature of the race.
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very rich people like that have started to write those kinds of checks. there is a rich man named timothy millan, who earned this headline in 2020 when he donated tens of thousands of dollars to help trump and republicans four years ago. the headline in bloomberg quote, timothy millan leads 2020 gop donors, defendant's use of racial stereotypes.■ç that was four years ago. this year, he is giving even more. he is made multimillion dollar donations to both robert f. kennedy junior and trump in the selection. the accumulating nature of his donations to trump in fact mark m is one of the largest political donors in u.s. history at this point. this comes on the heels of high profile gazillion dollar fundraisers for trump posted by right wing tech billionaires in california and of course, it comes on the heels of months of high profile trump support from tesla billionaire elon musk,
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who used to be thought of as a quirky business billionaire, as an eccentric inventor type, but now, he is basically the sky,■ç if this guy also have the resources to buy twitter then destroyed will also inexplicably been allowed by the u.s. government to operate crucial national security assets he has use to help russia's war against ukraine. this has been getting outsized attention in part because of the extremist lease of some of these very rich people who are now making a big show of supporting donald trump. but, it is also getting attention because it is one of the few metrics we have to assess the relative strength of these two candidates and their campaigns as they head into this very early, very weird first debate this week. it is also a getting attention, though -- the preferences of the business class and the donation behavior of the uber wealthy is getting attention ■ç
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also right now at not just because of its effect on the odds in the race, the likelihood of each of these candidates to win, it is also getting attention because of the substance of it because on what basis are these business folks and these very rich people making these decisions? because, the biden record and the trump record are real things that business people can look at and presumably make rational decisions about if they are, in fact, making decisions about this election for economic and business reasons, which is what the press keeps telling us. we have an income resident and somebody who was the last president, so they both have a term in office that we can look at, that we can measure against one another. they both have■ç observable records. why would businesspeople be turning against joe biden on the basis of his record, which is what we keep being told in
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the press heading into this debate? this is something where there again is an observable truth here. under joe biden, we just had the best year of american job creation in the 21st century. the last time we had a streak this long of unemployment below 4%, it was the early 1960s. under joe biden, the u.s. has the best economy in the world. literally, the envy of the world. in fact, the world bank just said that the u.s. economy is so good it is actually stabilizing the whole world economy. the u.s. stock market keeps hitting new records and then breaking those records and then hitting the ones that are even higher.■ç crime is at 50-year lows. we just have the largest single year drop in the murder rate that we have ever recorded. and, president biden keeps passing, keeps signing big legislation that is good for the economy, that is good for the business climate and he has been able to do it with bipartisan support, and that includes the big infrastructure
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bill for domestic manufacturing of computer chips and all these other things. i mean, this is the kind of business landscape hell-skate business leaders have been suffering through under joe biden, headlines like these. corporate profits it record high's economy boomed in fourth quarter of 2023 or this one. u.s. corporate profits soar áz%ythis one. money watch. u.s. companies just have their best year since before most of us were born. oh, the poor business guys. they really need trump back, don't they? and, even if they want to sail, it's not about the business climate, it's about being fiscally responsible, it's just that we are so worried about the debt and the deficit and
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that's why we want to go back to trump and get rid of joe biden i mean, tell me what the rationale is there. in reality, tell me what the rationale is because the committee for responsible federal budget, one of these nonpartisan physical watchdog groups put this out today which kind of put a fine point on it, right? that is who added what to the debt when you compare trump's term in office with joe biden's term in office and no, ■çyou can't blame covid. they actually break out the covid spending. that is in the lighter red color there so yes, donald trump and joe biden both spent on the pandemic. they had to, but even if you wipe that out, trump added trillions more to the debt and the deficit than biden did, regardless of covid. and, maybe you don't particularly care about the deficit and the debt but business guys almost always say they do. and so, what is the rationale along those lines for supporting trump over biden? as we head into this weird early debate this week, supporters of this business genius created an impression
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that trump has an advantage heading into the debate. at this point in the campaign■ç because of his business record, he is so appealing to all the other rich business guys who so appreciate his idea to book a guy with vampire teeth for her cage match business. they're trying to create an impression that there is support for trump in the business world because their economic and business reasons to support someone who himself is so good at business. in reality, the actual stakes in this election, the comparative record of these two candidates on the economy and business, those -- it does not favor the failed promoter of the affliction mixed martial arts league which promoted exactly 2 bouts before all the, and the man whose surviving company was convicted on multiple felony fraud counts and was named■ç in his own felo
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criminal trial for falsification of business records and by the way, his cfo is currently doing a second stint in prison. weirdly, his business record, his business environment record, his job creation record, his economic and fiscal record on the facts, does not support the idea that he should be winning support from people who prioritize those things. despite the massive spin generated by all these high profile ideological trump billionaires, we are starting now finally as of today, i think, to see a corrective in the narrative about what is really happening. this is the front page of the new york times to make it quick, ceos are frustrated. that does not mean they embrace trump. a number of prominent figures in silicon valley and on wall street have grown increasingly vocal in ■çtheir criticism of m biden, the price of former president donald j. trump or both. still, that shift mostly reflects movement among
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executives who already supported republican politicians. there is little evidence of a major shift in allegiance among executives away from biden and toward trump. that is on the front page. this is on the up edge page today. quote, recent headlines suggest that our nation's business leaders are embracing the presidential candidate donald trump. his campaign would have you believe that our nation's top chief executives are returning to support trump to president, touting declarations of support from some prominent financiers. it is far from the truth, though. they did not talk to him beforeç and certainly are not flocking to him now. quote, trump continues to suffer from the lowest level of corporate support in the history of the republican party. not a single fortune 100 chief executive is donated to trump so far this year, which indicates a major break from the overwhelming business and executive support for republican presidential candidates that dates back over a century. trump received a quote, frigid
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reception when he spoke to the business roundtable this month with no noticeable applause at any point during his quote, remarkably meandering remarks, according to cnbc and with trump assuming a subdued, if not hostile, posture. chief executives are not protectionist, isolationist or xenophobic and they believe in investing where there is the rule of law, not the law of rulers. whether or not business support is going to make the difference for either one of ■çthese candidates in november, heading into the debate this week there has been a concerted effort to create a false perception that trump has the whole business world lining up behind him. and, that is because his time in office compared favorably with president biden, which is not true on fiscal issues. it is not true on the business climate. it is not true on jobs and not true in terms of business leaders lining up behind these two candidates.
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but, that kind of false perception itself has consequences and heading into this debate and all the tension is going to get about the relative strengths of these two candidates and what they have to offer -- more than ever, it is worth getting these things right. joining us now■ç is my dear friend and colleague, stephanie ruhle. she is host of the 11th hour here at msnbc and senior business analyst to nbc news joining us from beautiful aspen, colorado because she is speaking at the aspen ideas festival. i asked her to be here tonight because she is the only person i know this speaks to ceos. stephanie ruhle, thank you so much for totally screwing up your show prep schedule and being here tonight. i know it's a busy night for you. >> thank you for having me. i am in awe of your lead-in. you have laid out exactly the
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sort of economic landscape of what we are looking like here and one of the main reasons you are seeing sort of this trump narrative that all these business leaders are backing me because remember, the number one thing they want to try to push and convince people■ç of i that the economy is terrible, and while inflation is a persistent problem, business leaders are not standing with donald trump in that business roundtable meeting, it's really important for your audience to understand, trump would have you believe corporate america invited me in. they wanted me to speak to them. it was the normal meeting that they have every year, and they invited both candidates. president biden could not attend because he was at the g-7, and his chief of staff was there, and donald trump as said since then they were clapping for me at the end. they were, because it was at the end of the presidential candidates remarks, and that is what a room does who is marginally courteous, but you just mentioned the reporting. i spoke to other people who basically said this thing was all over the place,■ç and it is
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break. pre-donald trump, the business community, sort of the c suite class was the republican party. you remember that al smith dinner years ago when george h.w. bush jokingly looked out of the room of business leaders in new york and said you are my base. that is not the case anymore. it was after charlottesville you saw the first business counsel in american history break from the president and say , i can't even be associated with him anymore. >> one of the reasons i think this is important heading into the debate is because i am not a person who knows a ton about the business world. i definitely don't think of myself for sharing all the same values as ceos and people on wall street and people who read the business section 1st and maybe don't even read the i don't think of myself that way but i also know politics reasonably well, when i feel like the perceptions of who the business community is with is an important thing even for
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people who are not themselves in the business world because you started -- oh well, these business people are smart. they must know what is going to be economically better for the country and that is, i believe, why they are trying to create this perception and that is why it's important for us to report of the perception is false. >> it is especially important this year because we've had this division. all of the positive economic data you just laid out is disconnected from how people feel because people have not been feeling good about the economy because they're coming off of covid, because of persistent inflation so when you keep pushing this narrative that the business community is standing with donald trump, it convinces people maybe badness is coming but ■çthere is a subgroup of very successful wall street financiers, you know, there is elon musk and elon musk backup dancers who have been very pro and notes broken pro trump in the last few weeks and i want to explain why. they know how good the economy is.
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elon musk and all the joe biden has done for electric vehicles, he certainly knows how good the economy is and how good the stock market is. however, they know that donald trump is transactional. they know that if they stand with donald trump now, if they are throwing fundraisers for him that if in fact he becomes the president, they're going to have a direct line into the oval office so it is as though they're trying to re-create kind of ■çputin's oligarchs her if they help trump now, he will take the call and give them the quote unquote get out of jail free past six months from now. that is not the fortune 100 ceos out there who have all of these constituents, but the small wall street universe, the nelson peltz, the bill ackman's of the world. they're putting on the trump show because they would love to have his kind of power and him in their back pocket if he were to win. >> yes, and the problem with the transactional leader like that with that form of
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corruption is that yes, you may get what you want when you throw in the last fundraiser, when you've given him the last million dollars but then somebody else comes along and does a bigger fundraiser for him and because it is totally transactional, you have no legitimate principle by an on anything. is just who is willing to pay for it most recently and to the largest effect and that is why the rule of law usually is a better idea for the business wor certainly in the medium and long term. stephanie ruhle, thank you so much for joining me from aspen. i appreciate it. thanks. >> thank you. >> all right, we have got much more to come tonight . we have a hugely busy week this week with all sorts of stuff screwing up my calendar and yours. we're going to talk about that coming up. stay with us. p. stay with us. she runs and plays like a puppy again. his #2s are perfect!
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calendars out calendars out and cancel all the plans and wanted to cancel anyway but you didn't
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have a good excuse. now you have a good excuse because the rest of this week is going to be bananas. first of all, tomorrow is election day in new york, utah, colorado and south carolina. this is going to be one of the most interesting, consequential and newsworthy primary and election days we've had all this year. in new york, there is a very high-profile race for democratic owman been e race for democratic challenged by george latimer. that race is now officially the most expensive house primary race in american history, nearly $25 billion spent on political ads. in utah it is a u.s. senate primary. this is the seat being vacated by mitt romney. republican voters will get to pick their nominee for that seat. longtime republican utah congressman john curtis is supposed to be the favorite to win that race but has had to fight to even get his name on the ballot, to keep his name on the ballot after he lost his party's official convention endorsement to a trump-backed mega -- maga
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candidate instead. tomorrow republicans vote in a runoff election to choose between a candidate(çnamed sherry biggs who has the backing of south carolina's republican governor. it will be her or a televangelist named mark burns who is backed by donald trump and has said that he wants to execute public school teachers for treason. that's nice. all of that is just what is happening tomorrow. the day after tomorrow on wednesday, we enter a whole new kind of crazy because wednesday, thursday and friday, all three of those days, the supreme court of the united states is scheduled to hand down more decisions, and they have a ton left, including another really big, important, very consequential reproductive rights decision. they have a
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huge decision dealing ■çwith th government's fundamental ability to regulate thing is, everything from the food we eat to the air we breathe not even counting the long-delayed decision we are still waiting for in the out i just donald trump immunity from the law case. we could get any or all of those between wednesday and friday, and then on thursday right in the middle of all that, there is this presidential debate, which is bizarre. this is the earliest presidential debate in modern history, so weird that this is happening five months before the election in june but why not. that debate will be hosted by our friends at cnn but this is important. even though it is being hosted by cnn, it's going to air live on all the networks including this one. so yes, hosted by cnn. you will see cnn host's moderators but you can watch the whole thing here live in real time with us on msnbc. i will be here with the whole msnbc team ■çto live coverage both before and after that debate. our coverage is going to start at 7:00 p.m. on thursday.
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again, you are going to be able to watch this anywhere, on all the networks. we hope you'll watch it with us. i don't know if we will make it fun, but we will at least make it our own in this msnbc brand of weird. i have one other big announcement to add to that. msnbc has just announced a new live event, and we've never really done anything like this before but we are giving it a try by popular demand. it is a live event. you can buy tickets and come to it in person. it's going to include a host of msnbc host including me. it is called msnbc live, democracy 2024 happening on september 7th. saturday september 7th in brooklyn, new york.■ç we will all be there. it is a whole day long event so you're going to be able to see all of us and also see the premier of an msnbc movie we are not saying anything about it yet but it is going to premiere at that event. anyway, if you meet -- want to meet all of us in person you can buy tickets to this event.
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we've never done anything like this before. tickets are on sale at msnbc.com/democracy 2024. i told you it's a lot. if you want to cancel stuff you didn't want to do anyway, lay me. i will send you a doctors note. we will be right back.■ç
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it's your time to cash in. so don't just play. stay... at northern california's premier casino resort. book your getaway now at cachecreek.com. started in started in kansas less than two months after the supreme court overturned■ç roe, after they overturned the constitutional right to an abortion, voters in red state kansas resoundingly stood up for abortion rights in the state and 59% voted that abortion should stay legal in that state. a few weeks later, democrats won a special election for an open
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congressional seat in the swing district in upstate new york with the candidate who made the loss of abortion rights the centerpiece of his campaign. a week after that in alaska, another democrat won another special election in the house this time flipping seat from red to blue also running on a pro-abortion rights platform. i should mention only 12% of alaska voters are democrats, but the democrat won that seat. then a few months later in november 2022 we had the first big nationwide election since democrats ran aggressive campaigns focused on reproductive rights, and in those elections in november 2022, republicans suffered historically poor results, the worst for an opposition party in decades. beyond the congressional races that they, there were five more states that put abortion directly on the ballot, and in all five of those states, voters moved toward abortion rights and away from abortion restrictions.
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reproductive rights victories continued the following year, affecting the race for the supreme court -- excuse me, seat on the supreme court and the race for kentucky governorship and race for control of the legislature in virginia. also, the state constitution in ohio where voters ■çchose to enshrine the right to have an abortion in the ohio state constitution. since the fall of row two years ago today, the political impact has been indelible and stark and remarkably consistent, and that has been bolstered by what the overturning of roe has changed in the minds of the american people. it's a new understanding that the question of reproductive rights is not just about accessing abortion. it is about what happens if you have a miscarriage, or you go
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into septic shock during pregnancy or you have any other dangerous form of complication, and you can't access healthcare because the state you live in has banned abortion.■ç one pollster telling the new york times today that before row fell, the percentage of the public that considered abortion personally relevant to them was as low as about 15%, but in the post road landscape we live in now, that is changed. more recent polling asked independent voters about the stories of women almost dying because they live in states that have banned abortion. the number of people polled who set the story will affect how they voted upcoming elections is 73%. now it is about pregnancy and everyone knows someone who had a baby or wants to have a baby or might get pregnant. it is profoundly personal to the majority of the public.■ç
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joining us now is amy klobuchar, democratic senator from the great state of minnesota. it's nice to see you. thank you so much for making time to be here. >> thanks, rachel. it's great to be on again. >> today is the two-year anniversary since roe is overturned. we know a lot about the human cost. we know about, for example, new research just published in the journal of the american medical association which says that it has adversely and seriously affect the infant mortality in that state with its profound abortion ban. what do you think is most important for the american public to understand on this two-year anniversary since the decision was made for the country? >> i think everyone remembers where they were when this thought to be licked opinion was -- he found out it was a real opinion. i was getting my hair cut and there was a line of four women and hairdressers and everyone in the place said, that ■çjust can't be true, then two years later, we know how true it is. 50 years of freedoms just
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thrown out the window. you have ivf affected. 8 million babies were born that way. you have contraception affected. you have a doctors in fear of criminal prosecution. you have women bleeding out in parking lots because they are told in an emergency room hey, you got to be more serious. we know you are in bad health but you've got to be kind of near death to be able to get the kind of treatment you need. one in three women are now living in a state with an extreme abortion ban. that is our current reality, rachel, but it does not have to be our future. that is what you see in the states all across the country with people turning out■ç on th prairies, people turning out for referendums and governors races and u.s. senate races and of course, the presidency, because it is so clear, and you are going to hear this on that debate stage, when one of the candidates donald trump said he is proud to be the person responsible for overturning roe , then you've got joe biden
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vowing to codify roe versus wade into law, so long as we elect these candidates and we know we need to take back the house and win the senate races. that is what is at stake in this election. >> i think that a lot of people who are strongly for abortion rights, whether they were before this decision were they newly are strongly for abortion rights worry that this is something that the supreme court has taken on that republican legislatures have ave blican legislatures have effectively taken it out of the hands of somebody like joe biden who supports abortion rights that when he talks about codifying roe versus wade i'm not sure people know what that means in terms of what it would do in all of the states where state laws for republican legislators and governors have enforced these bands. >> well, we know it is time to have a national standard, which is roe versus wade. that will guarantee our freedoms because what trump has now said is that he wants to
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return it to the states. what does that mean? look at what the states are doing. one state, texas, with that trump-appointed judge and yes, the judges are on the line here, the trump appointed judge banning mifepristone. you have another state■ç where they're going to criminally prosecute doctors. another state says they don't want to have people cross lines to get reproductive health care. state by state by state, you saw governors racing to their state house to see how draconian they could be to kiss the ring of donald trump. that is what is going on right now, so that is a clear difference. i think, as you showed with your points from across the country, people do see the difference. they know that there is one person who is going to stand up for them and then there is donald trump, was vowed over the years, everything he has said from yes, he would prosecute doctors to yes, he would look at a national band to yes, most recently hey, let's give it back to the states.
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look at the patchwork of laws we have had that have hurt the women of this country. >> minnesota senator amy klobuchar, thank you so much for your time tonight.■ç it is the anniversary now but we are also in this very acute political moment when i think people are really focusing in on how much this is tied to what happens with his next political decisions we make as a country. >> thanks, rachel. >> we will be right back. stay with us. stay with us. that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer. we really don't want people to think of feeding food like ours is spoiling their dogs. good, real food is simple. it looks like food,
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commonwealth of commonwealth of the northern mariana islands is the territory of the united states, but it is very far from the mainland u.s. ■çi think we can show you on a map here. this is the united states you see over there on the right side , that is pacific coast side of the american mainland. you see the state of hawaii way out there in the pacific ocean and then way further out in the pacific from hawaii, you find the northern mariana islands. their way out there, closer to australia than they are to the united states, and that is important. that proximity plays a crucial part in a big story that just broke this evening as we were getting on the air because at 9:00 a.m. wednesday morning, local time in the northern mariana islands in a u.s. federal courthouse in the capital of saipan, julian assange, the founder of
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wikileaks, is expected to appear and plead guilty to a single felony account of ■ç illegally obtaining and disclosing national security material and the really huge news here is that after he pleads guilty and that federal courthouse in the northern marianas islands, after he pleads guilty there, he will be allowed to fly home to his native australia as a free man. for the last five years, julian assange has been in prison in britain. he has been fighting attempts to extradite him to the united states to stand trial on more than a dozen charges that he illegally obtained and disseminated classified information on his wikileaks website. even once he and the united states department of justice reached an agreement under which he would plead guilty to one count, be sentenced to time served, there was still one last hang up■ç to be sorted out defendants, if they plead guilty to a felony, they have to do it in person. julian assange has always
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adamantly refused to set foot in the mainland united states, so that is for this compromise came from, the northern marianas. the northern mariana islands is where he will enter his plea. julian assange first made a name for himself leaking volumes of classified information on america's wars in afghanistan and iraq through the site, wikileaks. he then in 2016, published leaks material russian intelligence services had hacked from the democratic arty. russian military intelligence stole the material, then they used wikileaks. they disseminated the material for wikileaks in a specific effort to hurt hillary clinton's campaign and help■ç donald trump's campaign. donald trump, you will remember, happily accepted the help. he cited wikileaks nearly 150 times near the campaign, at one point just flat-out crowing, i love wikileaks. three years later when trump's justice department indicted julian assange, trump claims he knew nothing about this
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organization. the biden administration is the third u.s. administration to try to figure out what to do with julian assange. the obama justice department ultimately decided that the first amendment issues were basically two thorny. when the truck justice department indicted in 2019, many people feared it would have a chilling effect on the ability of journalists to report on national security and classified information. that said, lots of other people argued that what julian assange is doing ■çwith something other than journalism but when it came to the biden administration, it seems they just wanted to figure out a way to put this case to bed, and they have figured something out, and so on wednesday in a very unlikely spot in the middle of the pacific, the long saga of julian assange versus the united states and the united states versus julian assange looks like it is set to come to an end. at least, that is what it looks like from here, but watch this
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>> want to >> want to see me screw something up? look at this. on the left side there is the supervising producer, kelsey, who is a genus of everything we do, regular show, special coverage and podcasts and everything. on the right, the person whose face you cannot see in the demby gray sweatshirt, that is me, and i'm trying to record the latest episode of rachel maddow presents ultra and i'm not doing all that well at it. ç podcasts are very humbling. they're more difficult than you would think. at least, they are for me. fortunately, kelsey and i had help that they from orzo, the cat. but then, while they were mowing the desperation of their circumstances, they got some good news. i know lawyer, but then while
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they were mowing the desperation of their circumstances in prison, they got some good news. a new lawyer, who wanted to try to reopen the case. it is no wonder orzo the cat came over to help. i don't think this was photobombing by a cat. i think this was encouragement by cat.■ç i think this was get it right. come on, spit it out, you can do it, spit it out. how many times you got to restart the sentence? next to kelsey and the rest of the podcast team and most definitely orzo the cat, episode three was finally spat out by me. it is available now for free whenever you get your podcast. there are eight episodes of the podcast. take it from me or take it from producer kat orzo, who is a very good boy. that do t