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tv   Symone  MSNBC  July 17, 2022 1:00pm-2:00pm PDT

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i'll be in the chair tomorrow. you can catch me from 10 to 12 noon and i will be and back in the chair saturday and sunday next weekend. simone states right now. unda >> good evening i'm michael steele in for simone sanders. breaking news out of uvalde texas. a new report just released a short time ago says nearly 400 officers rushed to rob elementary school the day of the mass shooting but systemic failures created chaotic scenes that delayed the response. 19 children and two to -- two teachers were killed. we have an update from uvalde. 187 minutes. that is how long it took president trump to call off the violent mob storm in the capital. it's the focus of thursday's primetime hearing of the day with the committee and learning new details about the testimony about trump's failure to act during those three hours of terror. plus, the latest post-roe
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strategy planned parenthood in illinois team up to expand abortion access. how that partnership could be a blueprint for other states with restrictive trigger laws. you are watching symone, and we've got a lot to talk about. we start with breaking news, a new report from a texas house investigative committee paints a damning portrait of the police response in uvalde were gunman murdered 19 children and two children in may. the committee learned that there were nearly 400 state and federal officers on the robb elementary school campus that day. yet surveillance footage released confirms officers waited for more than an hour before finally confronting the shooter. the report states at robb elementary law enforcement responders failed to adhere to
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their active shooter training and failed to prioritize saving the lives of innocent victims over their own safety. out of those 400 officers, as of now, according to the texas tribune, only one has been placed on leave. here with the latest out of uvalde is nbc's priscilla thompson. priscilla, when else is there in this report? >> michael, certainly another very difficult day here in this community. people began to get some of the answers they've been asking for, and demanding over the past several weeks. this report paints not a great picture of some of the failings here, and i wonder if this creates more questions and some of these families minds about if some of these mistakes had been avoided, might more of those victims been able to be saved? we are seeing in this report things like, the gunman had expressed violent tendencies and people knew he had
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purchased these guns, but it appears that nothing was done to stop this from happening as it relates to that. we are also learning that row 111 had a faulty lock, and many people near the faulty lock was on the door. we took a lot of extra effort to get that door locked, but there was never a work order or anything like that put into fix that in the weeks leading up to this very tragic event. i'm also just seeing that one of these classrooms was actually the former -- the fourth grade classroom of the shooter. this was his former classroom. some things in this report saying that he had a bad experience whenever he was in fourth grade. he may have been bullied. there may have been some sort of connection there. in fact, only a few weeks earlier he had talked about that with someone. all of this, i think, raising more questions and the families right now are in a meeting with committee members to try to learn a little bit more about this report and ask questions
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face to face before those committee members come out and speak publicly, but we did have an opportunity to speak with one of the victims grandfather as he arrived earlier today to pick up that report before it was released publicly. i want to play what he shared as he was getting his copy of the report. >> if i were these officers i would leave town. they don't deserve to be here. the report don't mean nothing to me. what happened has already happened. is there any change? has anybody been fired? is the chief still being paid law? what's going on? nobody else -- >> as we begin to speak to more families who have had time to review this report, it will be interesting to see if we see similar dealings emerge but it will say that man, vincent,
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grandfather of leyla he says that he doesn't know if you'll ever get the truth or if anyone will ever get to the bottom of what's really happened, but certainly this report is very concerning in terms of some of the mistakes that have been highlighted, michael? >> priscilla, in that sense, what do you think happens next? would do the families think happen next snow that this report has been released? >> i mean, in terms of what we expect to see for the rest of the day, we know that the committee is right now meeting with those families and finally getting to have a conversation about this face to face, and then they're going to come out in just a few hours and speak to the media and speak publicly about their findings and with all of this means, but having spoken to a number of different families in the community, i think the attention is turning towards accountability. they want to know which accountability is going to look like. are people going to be fired? are there going to be criminal investigations? that is where most of the
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conversation is turning to. over the past several weeks we've heard a lot of not wanting to rush to judgment and waiting until the investigation is complete until we really understand what has happened, and now we have that information, so it's a question of which are the people in charge of an in positions to make changes, be they systemic or sort of in terms of the people who are working in these jobs remains to be seen would action will be taken on that front, michael. >> nbc's priscilla thompson, thank you very much. there is a news conference with more details on the investigation at the top of the hour. we will take it to you live when it happens. in other news, we are following, after weeks of hearing details in the buildup of the january 6th riots, the january 6th committee will set their sights on what exactly president trump was doing or not doing during those 187 minutes of the calamity at the capitol. here's what congresswoman elaine luria said on cnn today
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about what we should expect. >> we're going through minute might minute during that timeframe from the time -- the stage of the ellipse came back to the white house and really sat in the white house, in the dining room with his advisers urging him continuously to take action, more action. not only was it a situation of not doing anything, but the infamous tweet at 2:24 pm, it egged peopleon saying vice president pence did not have the courage to go to the right thing. >> congresswoman gloria as we hear from witnesses who have not been included in previous hearings, new information could also emerge from the subject of the committees most recent subpoena, the united states secret service. the secret service that erased text messages from the day at the capitol riot after the homeland security inspector general requested to see them. the committee is demanding relevant text messages and any reports relevant to the january 6th. the secret insist there was no
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insidious motives and that the ratio happened because of a, quote, device replacement program, and quote. if they recovered texts these texts could prove crucial to lay out the events of january 6th and sharpening public understanding of the insurrection for to come. here to talk about that is democratic congressman -- how are you and other members bracing yourselves to learn more specifically about what trump is doing or not doing on january 6th? more than three hours of inaction by president trump. i know the capitol police, as well as the district of columbia metropolitan police department, in an urgent request demanded and baked for
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national guardsmen to be sent to the capitol once they were overrun. especially the capitol police. hour after hour it lapsed and no troops were sent to the scene. we were asking the exact same questions, democrats and republicans hold up in their offices or in bunkers, waiting for those troops to arrive. now we have learned that pat cipollone, kayleigh macadamia, mark meadows, mike pence's national security adviser, keith kellogg and ivanka trump were demanding that the president well the insurrection, send the troops, and he refused to do so. again, that points to that corrupt intent that i think is at the heart of whether crimes were committed by the president that day. >> i want to get your reaction to some comments from committee members, zoe lofgren, about the
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secret service texts. let's take a listen. >> you could imagine how shocked we were to get the letter from the inspector general saying that he had been trying to get this information and that they had in fact been deleted after he has for them. there was a statement made by the spokesperson for the department saying that it wasn't true, or it wasn't fair. and that they had pertinent texts, i said fine, you have them? we need them. we expect to get them by this tuesday. we need all the texts from the fifth in the 6th of january. i was shocked to hear that they didn't back up their data before they reset their iphones. that's crazy, i don't know why that would be. but we need to get this information to get the full picture. >> the congresswoman said they expect to get those text from the secret service by tuesday. what should committee members be looking for in those texts? >> after cassidy hutchison's
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testimony, she said that essentially the president physically lunged at the secret service and one of the secret service to take him to the capitol. it will be interesting to see what those text messages might reveal about that interaction, as well as just generally the days and events of what's secret service was doing with regard to helping to enable the president to continue his inaction, or maybe even urging him to send troops to the capital. but i think the most disturbing part of what you just played and congresswoman lofgren's piece, the secret service apparently deleted texts after the oig request of those texts. >> and the secret service has to be subpoenaed in this
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instance. as opposed to voluntarily producing them. that shows that there is something going on with a secret service and within the dhs. they have some explaining to do as well. these text messages can along or remain a secret from january 5th and sixth. >> we have 30 seconds left. if this turns out not to be the committee's last hearing this week, what else would you like them to examine for the future? >> i am not sure. i think that each time we see one of these hearings we learned more information. quite frankly, more information is then forthcoming and more witnesses come forward with additional information because they feel they have to either correct the record or at the record. i think this particular hearing, like the previous ones, may end up generating more leads and leading to more information that reveals what happened on january 6th. >> congressman raja kristen --
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much more to discuss on the january six hearing, just days away. my panel weighs in on what lies ahead for trump and his maga crew. plus, tackling gun violence in america can be -- for nbc teams and four cities are on the ground saying the real life impact of violent epidemic. all that and more, but first, my colleague, richard louis with other news stories. richard. >> good to see. you the stories we're following this hour, russia's defense minister directed troops to intensify military action in recent days. russian forces acted this weekend in the donbas region. officials say 150 civilians have died in the past week. the biden administration is extending the covid-19 public health emergency for another three months. the latest renewal comes as a
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highly contagious overcrowded variant spreads. cdc data shows more than half of the country is living in a high covid community area. u.s. basketball star brittney griner, in a russian courtroom presented medical documentation for cannabis use to treat pain. griner is fighting for her freedom after pleading guilty earlier this month. she was arrested at moscow's airport in february. authorities said they found vape canisters containing cannabis in her luggage. she faces up to ten years in russian prison. if convicted, international critics are saying she's being detained unlawfully. more simone right after this break. more simone right after this break. break. thank you wayfair. how's the puppy? puppy's perfect. yeah great decision!
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to the january six committees upcoming hearing. and so to do that i want to bring in our political panel. and i must all is a justice reporter for the nation, and one of my favorite guys. mike madrid is the cofounder of the lincoln project and doug jones is a former democratic senator from alabama. welcome to each of you. mike, you are here closest to the center of trouble. let me start with you. the subpoena for the secret service. that marks the first time the committee has subpoenaed any executive branch agency. one of the potential outcomes of that? >> broader than the potential outcomes is the fact that you just characterized it well. it's circling. the circle is getting smaller.
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it's tough for people that are watching this to realize that work is happening in a short amount time. you're seeing a shift in the electorate. americans are starting to realize that there is a lot of here here and we are keeping the evidence rolling out. i think it could be a critical piece of. that >> elie, thank you here is an interesting part of this, the committee will take a deep dive into trump's actions during the riot. it is the leading theory that we know of. what do you think they need to establish really to get this sucker home? to bring it home, to make that closing argument that i think the american people want to hear? >> it's going to be fire. let's go back to the secret service for a second. they are in trouble. they have an order to preserve evidence. it is spoilage when we don't preserve the evidence. you can ask attorney jones about what happens to people who spoil evidence after
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they've been asked to hold on to it. anyway, speaking about thursday, you ever see, michael, a few good men? you know how when tom cruise really starts to put the screws to colonel just up over the code red,? it is about the fact that santiago didn't call anybody, didn't pack anything, that is going to be trump on friday. we are going to see for 187 minutes, he didn't call a soul. he didn't do a thing to stop the insurrection and that's going to be used to infer his support for the insurrectionists and his unwillingness to defend america against his own people. >> like they, say he in trouble. congressman, in a recent interview with the wall street journal committee member and friend, adam kinzinger, -- subpoenas to trump and pence. what would compel them to testify. you know, what would get them in that seat? is there any reason for us to expect that they will show up,
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especially as it relates to potential prosecution of donald trump? >> hello! there is no way. if you think that there was a scuffle and the secret service car about going to the capital, you can't imagine the scuffle with his lawyers to keep donald trump from testifying. it's not gonna happen. and quite frankly i would be surprised if the committee ends up issuing subpoenas. you know what, you know what often happens with grand jury's or department of justice investigations? they issue an invitation. people have been asking to get their story out and do things, sent him a letter, ask him and tell him, the committee is inviting him to come testify. testify under oath. do not let anybody set the parameters, but invite him because if you subpoena then you're either gonna have to go to court or -- it just doesn't make sense. regardless, you will not see mike pence or donald trump in
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front of that committee and my opinion. >> no way, no how! it's interesting turn of the warm, this past friday, the ceo of overstock, patrick byrne, testified before the committee. he was one of the outside advisers who participated in that december 18th meeting at the white house,, urging trump to seize voting machines. let's take a listen to what he told nbc about his testimony. >> they treated me much more fairly. it was generally a bit of first elbows, but they were fair. the questions were fair, they really wanted to know. it surprised me. i didn't think they wanted me to know what happened. i thought they would come in here, they would try to construct another narrative. they reassured, me they let me answer the questions fully and they seemed quite interested. >> mike, what does that tell you, a, about the kind of witness that burn likely was about that committee?
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and b, the fact that, you know, he was surprised that they actually wanted to be honest about asking him questions? >> it's a lot friendlier than the committee -- burn was in there for eight hours. he was given up the good. he was corroborating this by all records, by all estimations, a very crazed meeting that was happening with sydney powell, with mike flynn, the wheels were coming off. the president decides to go forward down this crazy road that he was a part of. i think burn brings a certain credibility, as much as a witness as he's been to corroborate what we've heard anecdotally. he's the one putting the meat with the potatoes. we're going to start seeing a lot more of the tightening of the news. incidentally, a friend with someone who is romantically related to tina, the russian agent. was involved with the national rifle association. brought charges against by her
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own federal government. now, a member of the russian parliament, by the way. this person is a nefarious actor himself for him to be turning states evidence this way? it tells you a lot going on. >> it's an interesting twist. senator, you've expressed surprise that congress has not introduced the resolution from holding office again and here's what congressman -- had to say about that. >> actually, i began drafting one last december. i've already circulated with my colleagues would essentially finds based on the work of the january six committee that donald trump engaged in the insurrection -- from ever holding office again. the truth is we are awaiting the completion of the january six committee before we introduce it. the reality is keep adding clauses because every week we have more evidence of the former president -- >> cicilline went on to know that the resolution would only require a simple majority in
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the house and senate so how do you feel about this resolutions prospect and the chamber? >> quite frankly, i've always believed that that was the more appropriate way for congress to deal with donald trump. it was never going to be a conviction for the impeachment, the second impeachment. everyone knew that. i am not even sure that given what we've seen from republican leadership in congress and the united states over the evidence that we have seen the compelling evidence from the january 6th committee, i'm not sure that they would impeach now to get the necessary votes. a resolution would require democrats to vote, yet look, it's politically flawed. it looks like it could be a vendetta. it's not one of those things that i'm thinking anybody should take lightly but the evidence is compelling. that's why i raised it this morning. i'm glad it was raised with the congressman, because i think it's a way to deal with the democratic votes that we have in the house and senate right
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now. but the chips will fall will they will fall. >> elie, does biden's new -- before the committee trump associate? you've got 11 to no one. steve bannon is looking to make a move, here. his contempt of congress trial is set for tomorrow. how do you see this whole thing playing out? >> first of all, can we just give applause to the january 6th commission? these are people who were trying to stall the committee for 18 months, and they didn't want to talk to nobody, burned and want to talk to nobody. now all of a sudden when they see how bad it looks for them, now everybody says give me a microphone, i want to do my show. who knows? we are going to see bannon, he was in contempt of congress and ignored a lawful subpoena under a bonkers legal theory that a person who is not working at the white house still somehow
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-- sorry, a person who is not the president still had to claim executive privilege, and that claim was bonkers and i think that the department of justice is going to put the screws to him know. i think that this show is also -- senator jones was talking about the need for a house resolution. i'm still holding out hope that at some point, the department of justice gets involved in the game, because they are the law enforcement agency here, and you see when the department of justice starts leaning on people, people like ben and start squealing. people like stewart rhodes start talking. there is a lot that the fbi subpoena and a doj prosecution can do to loosen some violence around here. >> elie, mike, doug, thank you for being here. i really appreciate it. after the break, we are following the breaking news out of uvalde after scathing reports released by texas officials uncovering many systemic failures in the mass
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shooting there. gun violence is on the rise in some cities, but getting a little attention. i'll speak to nbc's kate snow who was embedded overnight and one of the hardest hit areas. that is next. s embedded overnight and one of the hardest hit areas that is next
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[whistling] this evening. a new report out in texas about the horrific mass shooting at robb elementary school in the town of uvalde. report released just hours ago details lauren forsman's failure at the federal state and local level. even though nearly 400 officers were on the scene, it was more than an hour before the army of officers finally confronted the shooter. by then, 19 children and two adults were dead. the report said, quote, other than the attacker, the committee did not find any violence in the course of this investigation. there is no one to whom we can attribute malice or ill motives. instead, we found systemic failures and egregiously poor decision making. texas house investigators will hold a press conference at 5 pm
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eastern, which we will bring to you live. the trauma of deadly mass shootings is getting a lot of attention these days, but many more americans dying in gun violence happen every day in the country. tonight, nbc news is doing a special report on this overwhelming toll of violence. one night in america takes a look at the crime in four cities, philadelphia, baltimore, houston and chicago. reporting teams were invaded with police departments and trauma wards overnight to get a firsthand look at the crisis and how it is affecting these communities. nbc's kate snow, anchor of the sunday edition of nbc nightly news joins us now. kate, it's so good to see you. you spent the night with a pastor, a community activist in chicago. tell us about your experience. what did you see? where did you hear? where did you learn? >> pastor donovan price, michael, is his name, and he calls himself a street pastor. would he does is listens to the police radio, looks at social media and gets notifications
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when there is a shooting in chicago. predominantly on the south side and west side of chicago in the neighborhoods he focuses on. he goes there. when he hears about a shooting, he goes, because he wants to help the families of the loved ones who are lost. he told me, i can't believe this, michael, he told me he's been to more than 1000 homicide scenes in the last 5 to 6 years. he tries to help the families in that moment with their grief, but also with the planning of funerals. with all kinds of things that he described, like going to the morgue. having to identify bodies. all those things we don't think about. i talked to him, michael, about what he would do. would he would say is the solution right now for the gun violence that plates our cities, and he said, you know what it is? it's that people, all of us in america, need to focus on what is happening, not just in mass shootings like eovaldi, that night, my night, by night and cities like this. take a listen.
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>> you are concerned that people just are not paying attention, right? >> it is a pick and choose. you know. when it happens over there, man, when it happens over here, that's them. that's what they do. that's how they live. >> do you mean when it happens in a big way, mass shooting at a school or somewhere more affluent, it gets more attention? >> definitely. definitely. >> we went with him and met a mother who had lost both of her sons in the last five months, michael. one in last december and won the day before mother's day. he had just bought her a cake when he was shot down. we also went with him to the hospital about one or two in the morning this morning. we were outside a hospital in chicago watching as a family was waiting, very tense outside, waiting for a word from their loved one and found out that he was deceased. this is what he lives with every single night, michael. >> this is amazing. a lot of stories.
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you are one of four reporters embedded across the country. tell us more about this initiative, and what we should expect to see tonight? >> you know, we could have picked so many cities, michael, but we sort of picked of diversity of cities. you showed them on the map. my colleagues was that a trauma center and maryland where they only tree trauma and increasingly treating people who have been shot. he actually saw someone be pronounced deceased. it will see that tonight. my colleague schwartz was in houston writing to all kinds of different scenes of gun violence, multiple scenes last night. then jessie kershaw is in philadelphia, where they had four people shot just before he started running along with police. i think you will see a pattern and again, it is our effort to try to shine a light on things that don't often have a light shined. because where the sunday nightly news, michael, and this happens a lot on saturday nights in the summer. we thought we just would spend
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these 24 hours looking at it and devoting about half of our broadcast of this tonight. >> incredible reporting. thank you so much, nbc's kate snow. one night in america airs tonight on nbc nightly news. up next, the abortion fight heating up. a ten year old rape victim at the center of the debate. and update on that case. new strategy for protecting access to abortion into states. access to abortion into states. for protectinng lasting gain scent beads. try spring daydream, part of our irresistible scent collection. access to abortion into states - i'm norm. - i'm szasz. [norm] and we live in columbia, missouri. it's important. we walk three to five times a week, a couple miles at a time. - we've both been taking prevagen for a little more than 11 years now. of taking it, we noticed clarity that we didn't notice before.
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givetosave.org to help save lives. one of the more tragic stories to come out after the supreme court of roe v. wade room involves a ten year ohio girl forced to travel in indiana for an abortion after allegedly being raped by a family member. even though that family member has now been charged with the
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crime, the indiana attorney general, tight or keto seems to be suggesting that the real villain of the story is the door doctor who performed the abortion. he has now been served with a cease and desist letter from the doctors lawyers. this comes after he went on fox news and suggested that the doctor did not report the abortion to the state. by the way, nbc news has obtained a copy of the report the doctor filed with the state of indiana. it spelled out the medical necessity for the abortion. i want to bring in jennifer wells, president and ceo of planned parenthood in illinois. welcome. this case as far from an isolated example. the columbus dispatch reports there were 52 abortions performed on children 15 and under in ohio in 2020. nationally in 2017. the latest year we have the numbers on, there were more than four and a half thousand pregnancies reported in girls under 15. about half of those --
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house planned parenthood approaching cases involving these young girls as they try to protect access to abortion? >> we are approaching these cases as we do all of our cases, by putting the patient at the center of care. i think it's important to note that this example, this ohio and indiana case reminds us that if all of these bans and restrictions on abortion or really about protection -- protecting children, this young rape survivor would be better protected by the law. she would not have been forced to travel to another state, and the doctor who performed care that was safe and legal in her state would not be getting harassed by the legal head of the state. this is less that abortion providers across the country are not surprised by, but we
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are really constantly disappointed in with the legal system and political system is doing to patients all over the country. >> your organization, planned parenthood in illinois are teaming up with planned parenthood in wisconsin to make sure women in that state could still have access to abortions in your state where it remains illegal. tell us a little bit about what you have going on there, and how will this partnership actually work? >> it started already. as a matter of fact, when the supreme court overruled roe v. wade just three weeks ago, there were patients in the waiting room at wisconsin health centers. patients who were then sent home and had to very quickly get care at and illinois health center. what we did in 2020 is we opened a house center in waukegan, which isn't near the wisconsin border, and we didn't that because we knew that patients would soon have no access to care in their home state of wisconsin.
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now we have medical professionals, doctors, nurses, medical assistance who work at planned parenthood of wisconsin coming to illinois, to our waukegan health center to provide care. so we have both affiliates, as we call them in the planned parenthood, our neighborhood affiliates, working closely together for patients who are forced to travel for care. >> do you see this arrangement as a blueprint for other states? is the goal to sort of set of these partnerships among the states that can help each other out? >> yes. i think it gives us an opportunity to provide care to patients no matter what their zip code. it is really wet planned parenthood is all about. we don't believe that patients care should depend on who they are or where they live, so we are open to these sorts of partnerships wherever it can help increase access to care. >> jennifer welch, thank you very much for being with us. after the break, a bizarre
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order your american made products at weathertech.com. kids don't always take the best care of school supplies. so save money shopping back to school on amazon. while they... 0oh... uh... figure their stuff out. ever notice how stiff clothes can feel rough on your skin? for softer clothes that are gentle on your skin, try downy free & gentle downy will soften your clothes without dyes or perfumes. the towel washed with downy is softer, and gentler on your skin. try downy free & gentle. let's head over to the culture corner. i've got some awesome culture critics with me today. frank ski is the radio host of the frank ski show. and rationally, and actress and
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author. thank you both for joining us tonight. okay. let's strap in, folks. get ready. we are going to start with one of the cringey's things on internet this month. singer and actor rayj posted a video of himself on instagram getting a tattoo of his sister brandi's face. it's all good. okay. maybe not so much, except that tattoo on his thigh, and it's a little bit weird. a tattoo on the thigh of your sister? i'm sorry, it's just downright demonic from my perspective. take a look at this. that's with the tattoo of brandi actually looks like, folks. that's brandi. no bloody eyes, no face tattoos. rayj responded to critics and said it's my leg and my sister. he also said brandi did not like the tattoo. even admitted it, i'm still getting used to it. frank, is this sibling love or
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sibling psycho? what's going on? >> in hollywood these days, nothing surprises me, and obviously, sometimes you hear about this when a sibling has passed away, but rarely do you hear about it when a sibling is still living. the crazier thing is the fact that, i don't know really how to explain it. this is a lot for me right now. >> it's a lot. look at that. if i did that to my sister, oh lord have mercy. let's see how long -- during an interview on kevin hart's peacock show, davidson said he wants a future that includes marriage and kids. okay. the actor and comedian did not specify where he wanted to start a family with, but we all know he is dating kim kardashian. so john, pete is 28. kim is 41. do we hear wedding bells and the pitter-patter of little feet in the future? >> i really do think that pete
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is very hopeful that kim kardashian will be his bride eventually. we all know, of course, kim kardashian is still going through this divorce with kanye west. they have four children. she recently had a baby yet surrogate, so i'm not sure how he foresees kim having a child, with kim kardashian and maybe if they decide to have a child, but the age difference is really big. he really talked about not wanting his child to be fatherless, because he lost his father at seven years old. he's a firefighter 9/11 attack. it really means something to him to bring a child into the world and bring a child into the world with somebody he loves. that scam, lets a great thing. if it's another woman, you know, it'll be a great thing as well. i wish him well, but the h difference is a big thing. i'm not sure he will get what he wants with kim kardashian being a mother of his child. >> i think you forgot something,
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rashan one, she's fine, too she's heller rich. if she was broke down and wasn't a her fourth marriage, i would think he's crazy. but it's kim kardashian, okay? it is not to worry about anything for the rest of his life. if they get divorced, it's going to be a record breaker. go for it. >> well -- yeah, i got nothing on that one, maybe. we will sit that wind down. we gotta talk about everyone's favorite hot mess and that's sneaky. police. it shows stars trolling doctor oz, and new jersey -- and his campaign to become the next u.s. senator from pennsylvania. snookie says she does not know why new jersey boy would move out of the state, but told us not to worry, and she knew should be moving back to --
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should doctor oz's opponent john fetterman count that as an endorsement? >> absolutely, he should. the bottom line is, politics is dirty these days, and we all know what's really going on here. at the end of the day, whatever it takes to win, that is when they do these days. listen, you don't come from new jersey and not get crowned like that. >> this is true and where shawnda would you think doctor oz take is going to be on this whole thing? do you think it's gonna be a it's just snooki and let's leave it. >> i think you should respond in another way. maybe he gets a celebrity on his side to endorse the fact of why he made the move. it's a big deal in new jersey. folks love her. regardless of what you think about her or not they love her. i think this is a big deal for fetterman's campaign. >> if we want to take bets on which celebrities will come out and endorsed doctor oz at this point? >> he already has the biggest
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celebrity. he's got the biggest celebrity, donald trump. would other big celebrity does he need at this point? >> frank, you could help a brother out. throw your hadn't? >> -- >> i don't understand it. it makes no sense to me how these candidates sometimes try to pull these artists to help them. a lot of times it winds up back firing. a lot of folks don't see it play out the way they think it should. you think the snooki has a bottom line impact on the race or just another moment? >> i think it does. >> yeah, me too, frank. i'm with you. >> it's new jersey! come on. it's new jersey! >> it is new jersey. frank ski and rashan lee. we're breaking the breaking news in uvalde texas. press conference at the top of
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the hour or investigators released a scathing report on the law enforcement response to the mass shooting at robb elementary school. we will carry that cap -- press conference live. stay with us. l. l. we will carry for immune support. boost® high protein. (vo) right now america deserves the network more people rely on. introducing welcome unlimited from verizon. l. we will carry press conference (fran) for real? (vo) for real, fran. $30 bucks. (fran) nice! (vo) yep. from america's most reliable 5g network. you can even keep your phone. (ned) easy peasy. stay with us (vo) and we'll help you cover the cost to switch. stay with us (ned) totally. (vo) everybody is, like literally everybody! the network you want, the price you love. only from verizon.
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in your state may have changed since 2020, and our plan your vote tool is here to successfully cast your ballots in the midterm primaries. get your information on the voting rules where you live, including registration deadlines, mail-in voting options, went to bring with your election day and more. head to nbc news dot com slash plan your vote now. thanks for watching, simone, i'm michael steele. you can watch simone right here on msnbc every saturday and sunday at 4 pm eastern. at anytime over peacock with episodes every monday and tuesday. you can found highlights and news about the show on instagram, twitter and tiktok. this is a live look at uvalde texas where we are standing by for that news conference in
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just a few moments of that damning report on the police response at robb elementary. right now, i will hand things over to reverend al sharpton for politicsnation. over to reverend a>> good evening and welcome to politicsnation. tonight's lead, systemic failure. tonight we are following breaking news that texas house investigative committee a few hours ago releasing its preliminary report on the horrific shooting that claimed the lives of two teachers and 19 children at robb elementary school in uvalde texas. two months ago. the committees leaders are slated to beginning -- after meeting with victims families today to share the report's findings. of course, we will take you live to the press conference once it begins. but the report it

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