tv The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC June 4, 2020 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
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misconduct, and poor police culture with extra money. >> that i think is a question, where you set that level, particularly when we're about to go through some really brutal austerity, unfortunately, unless things change in cities and states across the country. thank you very much, sir. >> good to see you again. that is "all in" for this evening. the rachel maddow show starts right now. good evening, rachel. >> good evening, chris. thank you, my friend. and thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. this is what the nation's capital looked like today. the statue of dr. martin luther king towering over protests against the police killing of george floyd. look at that shot. it's incredible. it was more than 90 degrees in washington, d.c. today. and humid. and a reporter for "usa today" saying people were being treated for heat stroke from the whauk
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from t from the white house to the mlk memorial a lot of people got on one knee while the names of african-americans who died in police custody. were read over the loud speaker. today marks the tenth day of the nationwide protests against the killing of george floyd, by police in minneapolis. today the police officers who were there, while he died, were arraigned in court. yes, huge crowds are still coming out in the major american cities, in philly, today, in los angeles, in austin, in houston, in pittsburgh, pennsylvania, today, there was a huge die-in, which is very eerie and powerful way to protest. but it wasn't only good-sized cities today. it was all over. this was mountain brook, alabama today. more than 500 people turned out in mountain brook, alabama
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today, to protest george floyd's killing. mountain brook alabama is a town that is 90% white. this is grand forks north dakota, a group of protester, 500 people deep, chanting george floyd's name on their march to the courthouse in grand forks. this was st. petersburg, florida today. about 100 people on their, lying on their stomachs in the position in which george floyd was killed chanting i can't breathe, i can't breathe. this was merrick, new york, today in the suburbs of new york city. the sound track you're hearing is car horns honking in pour as the protests in merrick passes the local train station there. in the nation's largest city, in new york city, today, thousands of people held a memorial for george floyd in a park in brooklyn, and there's one amazing moment that you should see, george floyd's brother terrence got up to speak to the crowd, and as he came up to the lectern, he took a few moments
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to compose himself, breathing heavily, taking in the size of the crowd, seemed a little bit overwhelmed, and the crowd was quiet for a long time, but then somebody said, we got you, and somebody else said we love you, and then this surged up from the rear of the crowd. like this roar, this crowd of thousands of people chanting to him, you are not alone. after the memorial and the vigil there, they marched into brooklyn. from brooklyn, across the brooklyn bridge in manhattan. so we're going to keep our eyes on new york this evening. america's largest cities. in its third night of curfew. we're keep can particular focus right now on the bronx where we're hearing reports right now that the police have been aggressive in this early evening, they have been making arrests among a group of peaceful protests, again, that is a scene that we are watching right now in the bronx, we will keep you updated as the situation develops there. we are also seeing large crowds
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coast to coast tonight. i think we've got a live shot here of seattle on the left, that's atlanta on the right, and but for most of the day today, our eyes have been on minneapolis, where george floyd died. today was the memorial service for him. held in the city, where he was killed by police. in terms of the scene at the memorial, there were stickers on the ground, outside the service, marking out areas for people to stand, urging everybody who came out to practice social distancing. but the crowd was just packed. thousands of people in the streets. people in mourning. they knelt when his hearse drove by, when his casket arrived at the memorial, minneapolis's police chief and police sergeant also knelt on the ground and powed their heads. a remarkable scene today outside george floyd's memorial in minneapolis. but inside, what happened during the service just knocked the
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wind out of you. reverend al sharpton, had the honor of delivering the george floyd eulogy, at the memorial this afternoon, and i don't know if you had the chance it see this today, i know everybody's daily schedules are still strange between working from home, or potentially being out at protests, or zooming with your boss, or trying to teach your kids algebra that you don't quite remember, so i don't know, you may have seen like a clip of this on twitter, you may have caught a highlight on the 6:00 news, but you should see it for what it was in total. so i'm going to play a, basically, i'm going to play the eulogy for you. i want to warn you there was some instance of some difficult language, but we would not be playing this for you tonight if we didn't think this was worth watching. just take a minute. pause what else you are doing. just watch this. >> let me ask those of you that, in the traditions of eulogies, need a scriptural reference, go to ecclesiasties third chapter,
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first verse, says to everything there is a time, and a purpose, and season, under the heavens. i'm going to leave it there. i saw somebody standing in front of a church the other day, that had been boarded up, as a result of violence. held the bible in his hand. i've been preaching since i was a little boy. i never seen anyone hold the bible like that. but i leave that alone. but since he held the bible, if he's watching us today, i would like him to open that bible, and i'd like him to read
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ecclesiastes 3. to every season, there's a time and a purpose. and i think that it is our job to let the world know when we see what is going on in the streets of this country, and in europe, around the world, that you need to know what time it is. first of all, we cannot use bibles as a prop. and for those that have agendas that are not about justice, this family will not let you use george as a prop. george floyd's story has been the story of black folks. because ever since 401 years ago, the reason we could never be who we wanted and dreamed of
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being, is you kept your knee on our neck. we were smarter than the underfunded schools you put us in. but you had your knee on our neck. we could run corporations, and not hustle in the street, but you had your knee on our neck. we had creative skills, we could do whatever anybody else could do, but we couldn't get your knee off our neck. what happened to floyd happens every day in this country, in education, in health services, and in every area of american life. it's time for us to stand up in george's name and say get your
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knee off our necks. the reason why we're marching all over the world is we would were like george, we couldn't breathe, not because it was something wrong with our lungs, but that you wouldn't take your knee off our neck. we don't want no favors. just get up off of us. and we can be, and do whatever we can be. but i'm more hopeful today than ever. why? well, we'll go back, jackson, stay on your tex.
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go back to the text of ecclesiastes, there is a time and a season and when i looked this time, and saw marchers were in some cases young whites, out numbered the blacks marching, i know that is a different time, and a different season. when i looked and saw people in germany marching for george floyd, it's a different time and a different season. when they went in front of the parliament in london, england, and said it's a different time and a different season, i've come to tell you, america, this is the time of dealing with account ability in the criminal justice system.
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steven, here's the goal. i want to march. now, i remember, young white lady, looked me right in the face, and said, nigger, go home. but when i was here last thursday, and i was headed back to the airport, i stopped near the police station, and as i was talking to a reporter, a young white girl, she didn't look no older than 11 years old, she tagged my suit jacket and i looked around and i braced myself, and she looked at me said, and said no justice, no peace. it's a different time. it's a different season. and if my bible-carrying guy in front of that boarded up church, if i got him to open up the bible, i want you to remember
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something, you know i was late last october, to an appointment, because the time changed. and i was still, my watch was on the wrong time. and there was a year that time goes forward and if you don't move your watch, you're going to find yourself an hour late, not because your watch was wrong, but you had your watch on the wrong time. well, i come to tell you that sitting in washington, talking about militarizing your country, thinking that you can sell wolf tickets to people who's had enough of abuse, i come to tell you, you can get on the tv, but you are on the wrong time. time is out for not holding you accountable. time is out for you making excuses. time is out for you trying to stall. time is out for empty words and empty promises.
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time is out for you filibustering and try trying to stall the arm of justice. this is the time. we won't stop. we will keep going. until we change the whole system of justice. our organizations have called this a day of mourning. naacp, the national urban league, legal defense fund, black women's round table, lawrence committee, all got together, said we will have a day of mourning. but then, we are going to come out of this day of mourning, because that, experts, those that know the legal field, have outlined a legal process, that we must enforce, everything from
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residence, it dealing with police background, and not being hit. we talked to governor andrew cuomo today in new york, he says we got to change 58 with the background stop of policemen, we need to find when they stop you, they can find out everything you ever did. why don't we know when policemen have a pattern? we got to go back to consent decrees. under the obama administration, they had put certain cities with patterns and practice under consistent decrees. with jamal brown, in baltimore, that they put it under constant decree, one of the first thing that happened in the next regulation is they stopped the consistent decrees. we have specific policies that need to happen. therefore, i'm glad martin iii is here today, because on august
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28, the 57th anniversary of the march on washington, we are going to back to washington, martin. that's where your father stood in the shadows of the lincoln memorial. and said i have a dream. well, we're going to back this august 28th. to restore and recommit that dream, to stand up, because just like in one era, we had to fight slavery, another era, we had to fight jim crow, another era, we dealt with voting rights, this is the era to deal with policing and criminal justice, we need to go back to washington, and stand up, black, white, latino, arab, in the shadows of lincoln and tell them, this is the time to stop this.
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we, martin and i talked about this, getting the faith leaders together, randy white, about the labor leaders, oh, no, we're going to organize in the next couple of months, in every region. not only for a march but for due process and it will be led by the floyd family. and it's going to be led by the garner family. and it's going to be led by those families that have suffered this, and knows the pain, and knows what it is, to be neglected. and it is going to be getting us ready to vote, not just for who is going to be in the white house, but the state house, and the city councils, that allow these policing measures to go unquestioned. we are going to change the time. i know that years ago, we told,
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reverend jackson told us, keep hope alive. and i know that president obama wrote a book about hope. but i want you to know that in my life, there's times that i lost hope. things can happen like this that will dash your hope. but as something that is sisser to to hope, called faith, faith is the substance of things. hoped for. the evidence of things unseen. faith is when you got a pile of bills and no money. but you say he will provide. all of my needs. faith is when you got no medicine in the cabinet. and you're sick in your body but you say he's a doctor that never lost a patient. and he'll dry tears from my eyes, faith is when your friends walk out, when your loved ones
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turn their back, but you say i don't believe he brought me this far. to leave me now. we didn't come this far by luck. we didn't come this far by some faith. we come this far by faith. leaning on the lord. trusting in his holy word. he never, he never, he never failed me yet, from the out house to the white house, we come a long way, god will, good shall, god will, god always has, he'll make a way for his children, go on home, george, get your rest, george, you changed the world, george, we are going to keep marching, george, we are going to keep fighting, george, we're going to turn the cuff george, we are
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doing, george, time out, time out, time out. >> you changed the world, george. a different time. a different season. reverend al sharpton delivering a eulogy for the ages today, at the memorial service today in minneapolis, for george floyd. at the end of that eulogy, what happened in that memorial is that reverend sharpton asked people to stand in silence, in very painful, very tearful silence, for eight minutes and 46 seconds for the length of time that the officer who has now been arrested for george floyd's murder had his knee on mr. floyd's neck as he died. that was what happened inside the service. two miles away from today's memorial service, in minneapolis, was another gathering at the actual intersection, the actual site where george floyd died. the audio of today's service and
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reverend al's eulogy was piped in over speakers so protesters and mourners could listen in live. that memorial service today was the first of what will be a series of events honoring george floyd, including one in north carolina, on saturday, where he was born, another one a public viewing in houston, texas, which is where he grew up, and then there will be a private funeral the following day, we believe that former vice president joe biden is expected to attend that. meanwhile, tonight, the tenth night of protests continue in cities all across the country. no sign of any of this stopping any time soon. of course not. why would it? i wanna become a real tattoo artist. yeah, probably not a good idea to tattoo children. i thought he was like at least fifteen. how old was he? ahhh! i don't want to do it! nine. you don't get to act crazy your whole life, just 'cause dad died.
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these officers are federal law enforcement of some variety. i would love to tell you more but they're not wearing any identifying badges, and insignias and nameplates and won't tell me where they're from or who they're with. >> when other country does this, in other overseas invasions that they don't want to call invasions, we call these little green men. people who are in military or para-military garb and serving that function, but nobody owns them. nobody says who they are. nobody admits who they are. the protests against the killing of george floyd have conditioned for another day, for a seventh straight day in dc, not just the dy national guard patrolling the streets and dc cops, it's not even just the national guard troops from ten other states that aren't dc that the white house flew in. there is also this strange other force on the streets. law enforcement officers maybe. at least it seems like they're law enforcement officers. wearing no identifying insignia
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for any law enforcement agency, no name badges, and in many case, even when they're asked by protesters or the press, they will not say who they are or who pays them. take these guys in helmets and tactical vests, a reporter asked who they were with, they would say only the department of justice. which is not really an answer. it's not like there is a generic department of justice police force that explains that. another reporter asked this group of gentlemen, in riot gear, if they were with the bureau of prisons, which is one of the federal agencies that has deployed some officers in washington. they responded to that question with one word. quote. maybe. maybe we're with the bureau of prisons. that's cute. i mean how do we know that these people are who they say they are at all? if they'll say anything at all. we just take their word for it that they're with the department of justice or maybe the bureau of prisons? and why are these guys wearing no badges, nameplates, no insignias? how does that help them in what
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they're doing in the streets? i mean there is a reason a police officer who has the power to stop you, detain you, use physical force against you, there is a reason that a police officer has a badge number and name in plain sight, the only reason an officer would take those identifying markings off is to avoid accountability for what they're doing, right? if they do anything wrong, it makes it a deniable offense, not just by them personally, if you can pick them out of a lineup, but also by anybody who might potentially be held accountable for having ordered that offensive or injurious or illegal action against you. if these are just randomly unidentifiable people with no names, and no agencies associated with them. what do you do if they violate your rights? or hurt you? how do you know who did it? how do you know who issued their orders? >> but the other and honestly darker prospect here, even darker than apparently federal law enforcement, being deployed in this fashion, against
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americans in american streets, even darker prospect here is this. i mean who is to say these guys are law enforcement? what's to distinguish these unidentified supposedly federal forces from random self motivated guys with guns who wants to come down to these protests and play civil war as private citizens or just hang out in dc with their military style weaponry and their off the shelf tactical gear? i mean especially in the middle of a big rowdy protest, how are you going to tell the difference between unidentified, unname badged federal officers and say this guy, who showed up at a protest in coeur d'alene idaho, with a gun bigger than him and two more strapped to his back and his side. ho you about this guy who decided to have heavily armed traffic control at a protest in casper, wyoming. just his own say-so. just an average guy with a gun stopping you in the street.
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or how about these rambos at a rally in new mexico who showed up in their words to protect people. if one of these guys shoot you, we're supposed to fall back on well, hey, maybe he was a cop? maybe he was a soldier? maybe he was but who knows maybe he was some random self motivated p.e. teacher with a readit account and a big weird gun collection, just submit to their authority, try not to get shot by them, and if you do. this week, one public official in an absolutely unique difficult position to deal with this kind of bizarre mystery use of force and show of force against american civilians is the mayor of our nation's capital who has to contend with large protests, lots of mayors have but also on top of that has had to contend with a growing and increasingly inexplicable federal security presence in her city streets while also being
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the target herself of white house vit troll. joining us is the mayor of washington, d.c. murie. bowser, thank you for making time tonight. i know you have a million things. >> thank you, rachel. >> let me ask you, about what i just described in terms of the federal forces in the streets of dc and what strikes me as strange and worrying about them. i have to ask if you have a different perspective on them, if you and your team in dc city government have more of a sense of who these armed men are, and why they're not wearing any identifying information. >> no, we have the same reaction as you do. and many americans might wonder how it is that this could be happening in america. and when you look at the nation's capital, know we are very unique. we are the nation's capital, a federal district and not a state. 700,000 people that pay taxes. yet we don't have two senators or full autonomy. and so because of our lack of
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statehood, the federal government can encroach on our city streets, in the name of protecting federal access. and so that's what's been done here. i think it's unprecedented that states troopers from other states have been brought into the district, and the unnamed other federal police officers. and you make a very good point. we know some of the agencies who are here, we don't know why they don't have any identifying marks, and none of them should be armed. >> do you know what the command structure is? there has been open source reporting and william barr, the attorney general, commented on it a little bit at his press conference at the department of justice, saying that the president had asked him to be in charge of these sort of policing and or para-military force, including some of them that he fully admitted were outside the
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justice department and outside any of the subsequent, any subsidiary agencies. do you know what the command structure is in terms of who these forces answer to? >> well, i think that there may be some confusion among the federal agencies. we think that attorney general barr has been designated by the president, to be the leader of the federal forces in washington. but let me also be clear, we, i don't want them to be confused with our police department, the metropolitan police department, 4,000 strong, that reports, that reports directly to me, so we are policing our city streets of the feds are focusing on federal access. except they grow. and they have grown. and they're moving around in these ominous outfits, and in vehicles, including helicopters, and humvees.
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>> i know that tonight, it is your first night in several days without a curfew in place in dc. madam mayor, can you just tell us, you've been through so much in your tenure, as mayor, and you know the history of dc, i know you're the fourth or fifth generation dc yourself in terms of your family. >> yes. >> how serious do you think the crisis is right now in washington? both in terms of the protest but in terms of the response to them and the way the federal government is treatsing your city right now. how different, how much more serious is this than the kinds of things that dc is used to having to cope with? >> well, we have to suffer the in dignity of not having two senators every day in washington, d.c. and what that means is we don't have two people fighting for resources for us, and we see the effects of that, during covid. and no one can remember however, when even our limited home role has been challenged, by the
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federal government. especially with something so important as policing. and that's what we've experienced over the last week. and while that is a concern for us, certainly, and we're fighting back, at every level, rachel, it should be a concern for every american, because they're moving on us hard and strong right now. but i think, and he's even said that this is practice. so who is next? so we need to watch these tactics, and make sure that he's pushing down on us now, and we're pushing back hard, and every american needs to be concerned about that, and be with us. because who is to say, that it won't be, it won't be another state next. >> muriel bowser, mayor of washington, d.c. madam mayor, you have so much on your plate right now. thank you for helping us understand what is going on in your great city. >> thank you. much more ahead tonight. stay with us. thank you. much more ahead tonight. stay with us never bothered me. until i found out what it actually was.
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what the president did, the peaceful protesters that were disbursed with tear gas, he then walked across the street to the church, was that the right thing to do? senator portman, do you think what we saw last night at the white house -- >> senator mcconnell, was what the president did last night the right thing to do? >> was clearing the protesters an abuse of power? i'm sorry? >> i don't have a comment. >> walk away. late for lunch. no comment. thank you. raise hands. shake head. look down. today, we saw the same dynamic play out with a new question. republican senators, apparently this one just as much of a stumper. today the rebuke of president trump's recent actions from former military leaders most
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notably a respected former defense secretary james mattis and that was the cue of course for everyone to look busy, quick come up with something not to say. let's roll tape. >> general mattis, he talked about a threat to the constitution. do you agree. >> i haven't seen it. >> general mattis has said that the president. >> i have a phone call. >> i'm focused on issues of real freedom, like china's human rights violations, and hong kong, and their concentration camps, full of uighur muslims. >> can you comment about general mattis? >> general mattis has some really harsh -- >> i haven't read it yet. so i wouldn't be helpful in answering it. >> haven't read it. got a phone call to get to. couldn't possibly be helpful. you want to talk about china? republican lawmakers doing
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literally anything to avoid discussing what transpired in the nation's capital this week and the horrified reaction to it, including from top military leaders. but even as any republicans clip clop in the other direction, a few voices are starting to speak out from inside the party and maybe those voices are getting a little bit louder? maybe? joins us is former republican strategist steve schmidt who i must tell you has been absolutely incandescent of his criticism of the president. thank you for making time to be here tonight. i feel like i really need to hear you on this. i need to hear where you are at on all of this stuff. so thanks for making time to be here. >> good evening. good to be with you, rachel. >> i'm sorry, go ahead. >> i think it is an astonishing scene of political cowardice at the senate lunch, each one coming by, i don't know, i don't know, i don't know, the former secretary of defense, in a legendary retired marine corps
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four star general, said that the president of the united states is a threat to the american constitution, what prompted him to speak out, well, what happened is there was a group of americans in front of the north lawn of the white house, on the street, peacefully protesting, exercising their rights, under the first amendment to the constitution of the united states, to peacefully assemble, to petition their government, and to speak. and what was loosed against them was state-sanctioned violence. those peaceful protesters were assaulted by law enforcement, so donald trump could walk across the street, and commit an act of sacrilege holding a bible upside
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down, because he felt humiliated from his cowardice and allowed himself to be evacuated from the oval office to the bunker, the president's emergency operations center. so this is a low moment and a dangerous hour in this country. and per your previous segment, rachel, we don't have secret police in the united states of america. these protests are about racial justice. and about the fact that too many of us are not equally treated under the law. but now, an essential part of this story is understanding who are these men. we don't have secret police. these men need badges. they need identification. the american people have a right to know who is funding them. their chain of command and who they report to. and this idea that the attorney general of the united states has suddenly become an interior minister, and a thug-ocaracy
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with a private militia of some type that reports to him is antithetical to american democracy and that is before we get to the threats of the president threatening the american people with the deployment of most lethal combat force in world history, to the streets of the nation that they swear to protect. military in this country serves the nation, not a man. >> steve, on the issue of the use of active duty u.s. troops against americans, in american streets we've seen a couple of interesting dynamic, we have seen general mattis, general john allen, admiral mike mullen, apparently general dempsey, former general of the joint chiefs will speak out tomorrow in an interview on npr's morning edition in the morning, we have seen all of these senior retired military officials, including some who serve very recently in the highest levels of the trump administration, speak out. and say the president shouldn't be doing this. at the same time, you've got the current defense secretary, mark
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esper, apparently completely flummoxed by the functioning of his own mouth, having no idea that he was participating in these political actions with the president, that he was putting the defense department's imprimatu on what the president was doing on the walk to st. john's church, a reversal and another reversal and another reversal in which these troops from ft. bragg are actually deploying into the streets of dc. i develop very concerned by the distance from the sort of principled stance being taken by former military leaders, and this chaos and differing and confusion that we're seeing from people who are actually in control who ought to be telling the president no when he asks them to do these things. >> you should be concerned. and we shouldn't underestimate the importance of all of these former four-star officers speaking out. these four-star officers, by custom and tradition, are loathe to speak out on political matters. they don't want to get involved.
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and they consider it part of their duty even in retirement to maintain the apolitical nature of the u.s. military. and there is very significant peer pressure, for example when a retired general like michael flynn goes out and as political as he was, he is rebuked by a lot of those colleagues. now they're speaking out because they feel honor-bound to protect the integrity and the honor of the united states military for donald trump. the secretary of defense has badly bumbled and stumbled his way through this. and he compromised, through his complicit appearance, with the president, saying hey, i didn't know where i was going. bottom line is, this is a man who is in charge of the most powerful military in the world. and we shouldn't hold him to a standard that we wouldn't allow for a 19-year-old infantry private, if he lost his rifle, or said to his sergeant, i didn't know where i was going. it's just unacceptable. so the secretary of defense has
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compromised the integrity of the u.s. military, whether it's an act of omission, a sin of omission, or a sin of commission, it doesn't matter. he needs to be prepared to resigning, to maintain the independence of the united states military, from the political machinations of the white house. there is no earthly reason why the world's deadliest combat troops should be deployed to american streets. that's why these retired officers are speaking out. this is an ill-liberal exercise by the president of the united states, who has had this jones 'ing since the moment he came into office to show that he is a tough guy and a strong man. but these are the tactics of putin and erdogan. again, the military serves the nation. it doesn't serve trump. this is the province of law enforcement. and of the national guard. active duty combat units of the active forces of the united
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states have no business being put into a domestic law enforcement situation. it's not their purpose. it will undermine the strength of the military. and the american citizens world connection to the most admired institution in the country. >> former senior republican strategist steve schmidt, my friend, thank you. it has been too long since you've been here on this program and since i've seen you. thanks for making time to be here tonight. we'll be right back. stay with us. stay with us around here, nobody ever does it. i didn't do it. so when i heard they added ultra oxi to the cleaning power of tide, it was just what we needed. dad? i didn't do it. #1 stain and odor fighter, #1 trusted. it's got to be tide. they get that no two people are alike and customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need.
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you don't find out today, tomorrow or the next day. it can be four or five days before any symptoms show. symptoms may never show, asymptomatic transfer. so if you had a viral spread through these protests, we are not going to see it in the numbers for a while. in the meantime we are making all of these decisions on reopening. so it's important that people act responsibly for themselves. you went to a protest, get a test. >> you went to a protest, get a test. new york governor andrew comeau speaking today. the delayed reaction, the lag before you show signs after being infected. in the great state of utah, this is what is going on.
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this is their daily newly confirmed coronavirus case numbers, which are skyrocketing. the epidemiologist is not saying this is not a typeo. she is saying we are in trouble. >> we have had a sharp rise in cases and it's not explained easily by a single outbreak or increase in testing. this is a statewide trend. we started loosening restrictions about three to four weeks ago. we knew this would likely increase cases in utah. this will increase hospitalizations in about a week. it's important for us to take action accordingly to prevent overwhelming our hospitals. >> the utah state epidemiologist
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warning that numbers are shooting up and warning that they need to stop now to keep the hospitals from being overwhelmed. there are a number of states that look like that now. dr. robert redfield said he's concerned that the american people don't seem to be heeding how serious this. he said he doesn't see enough people wearing masks when they come to work in d.c. i wonder why that is? the leadership leading to that. but there is like 20,000 new cases a day. our death toll is rising back up after having come down. california and texas have case number graphs that look like the
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materhorn. states like utah and arizona are pulling the fire alarm in terms of how rapidly their numbers are rising and how rapidly their hospitals are filling. in the south, carolinas, arkansas, mississippi, this is not good what is going on. the white house does not want to talk about the epidemic and they are basically walking away from the botched federal response as if this is fixed. we really are at 108,000 americans dead as of tonight and counting. it is getting rapidly worse in a whole bunch of states all at once. the federal government not working on it won't turn that around no matter how much they don't want to talk about it. it's got to be tide.
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we keep eyes on multiple ongoing protests tonight, that will do it for this hour. we will hand it over to the last word with lawrence o'donnell. >> james mattis certainly took his time to come out and tell us what he thought about donald trump. but when he did, he left no doubt about it. >> seems to have left a mark on at least one u.s. republican senator which
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