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tv   Yasmin Vossoughian Reports  MSNBC  October 9, 2022 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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r review. kardia can do all that? all that and then some, greg! kardia also gives you access to heart health reports and automatic ekg sharing. what next? let's get some fresh air. been cooped up for too long. yeah... ♪♪ kardia mobile card is available for just $99. get yours at kardia.com or amazon. good afternoon i, am aaron oh heard in for yasmin vossoughian. we have a lot to cover in the next two hours ahead. a shocking racist comment at donald trump's rally. it didn't come from the former president. a sitting united states senator said, what has people so outraged. new developments the doj investigation of the documents at mar-a-lago, including a
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reported trade that trump wanted to make. next hour, i get a preview of this week's potentially final january six hearing from committee member member zoe lofgren. also ahead, gop heavyweights headed to georgia to try to help out herschel walker in the wake of his abortion scandal. we also following the latest on the explosion at a key russian lifeline to ukraine, how russia is dealing with it all. with an opec decision already having people at the pump, we will look at the state of the economy in their pocketbook. that is all coming up next. first, alabama senator tommy tuberville facing major backlash for making this racially charged comments about crime while campaigning with trump in nevada yesterday. take a listen. >> the democratic party, they have a majority. they could stop this crime today, they are some people say they are soft on crime. they are not soft on crime,
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they are pro crime. they won't crime. they want crime because they want to take over what you've got. they want to control what you have. they want operation because they think the people who do the crime are due out that. -- they are not out that? >> a lot to unpack there. let's head to ivan hillier for more in arizona. the president is set for more valleys today. von, the reaction is very intense in those comments. what are you hearing? >> right, erin. they are overtly racist comments from the senator of alabama. we are not seeing backtracking, which has become the case for donald trump and his allies over the past 24 hours. he's holding another rally in arizona today and bringing along the likes of marjorie taylor greene. this is what donald trump surrounded himself by. you heard the crowd there, they cheered at those words from tommy tuberville. i want you to hear tom --
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don bacon at a basket where she asked him about those comments. take a listen. >> congressman, there is a different way to say that. most people he heard those comments -- not just polite, but most people heard those comments being racist. >> that's not the way i present things. i have to be honest that we have a primetime problem in our country -- >> do you feel that those cross a racial line? to the cross racial line? >> i'm not gonna say they are being racist, but but you are saying people are playing with -- >> we've a 42% violent crime increase. >> this is erin, what you'll see play out here, is the question is are there any republicans who pushed back against such racist comments as that? of course. reparations of a serious conversation that the country has engaged in. we heard from the senator there,
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equating the reparations with crime in this country and black people. which is, of course, racist or not the subject of any normal political discourse. without reason to engage in -- appetite of a rally like that. >> it is amazing that they continue to defend the indefensible. let me ask you, what has been the reaction to trump's comments last night about the doj, mar-a-lago documents case? >> you heard donald trump last night at the rally in nevada. you should expect at this rally here in arizona, today, to continue to try to use these investigations as a maneuver to try and galvanize voters to come -- he is essentially made himself a political martyr. he has a history of doing that, yet again when we are talking to voters are here at the rally they are saying you know what? donald trump could be an office in 2024. there is a different subject to reality that donald trump is attempting his voters to live
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in, here. when we talk about these documents, of course there have been no charges that have been filed against him. it is our understanding that the national archives still believes that donald trump has outstanding records in his possession. -- they believe this is a witch hunt, must like the russia investigation. much like the impeachment investigation at the end of this term. that took place after the january 6th insurrection. they believe that donald trump is a martyr and that is why they are out here. they believe they are defending him. erin? >> thanks for your reporting on the ground, there. i want to talk more about that racist comment. i return to robert and al sharpton. host of -- on msnbc and president of the national action network. thank you so much for being with us on this sunday. first, your reaction to the senator's comment last night? >> it was patently racist. when you equate crime with
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reparations for what was done to african americans in slavery in 100 years of slavery into macro that had us as leaders the latest unemployment status we are almost 2 to 1 unemployed from institutional racism. to act like you can equate trying to make up for what the country did to black people because we were a black, acting like that is equal to crime. that we are in some ways equating having the right to do crime with the right to repair damage is done? that's just patently racist, as far as you can get. >> i would ask you to. i don't know if you saw me the press, don bacon went on with kristen welker to say he wasn't going to say that that comment was racist, but that in other words he would put in more politely. i'm not quite sure we are talking about --
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and he's the content that was so offensive. >> the content, acquitting, we criminalizing addressing what america did based on people. there was a fact. they ask is though -- only blacks. that in some ways we are demanding and saying that it's okay to equate what was down to us historically, that that's offensive enough insulting to all americans. it is absolutely inexcusable in the fact that no republican leader of any kind of gravitas give any kind of standing would denounce this shows why blacks have -- the republican party leadership up today in the way that they do. it is absolutely ridiculous acts like you can sacrifice a blatant racist reference.
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he brought our operations. nobody osbourne, it was at the end of an interview where reparations were brought up. he acquitted in his own way we're dressing americas racial past and present with the crime that is going on. the fact of the matter is, much of what's going on in the black manatee is against other blacks. it is doubly offensive. >> it is one ask you supportive about the strategy of the republican party over the past month or so. in september they, it was a two-week period where republicans spend more than $21 million in ads about crime. or than any other issue. let's take a look at those ads. >> -- mandela barnes want tenth cash bail, completely. he wrote the bill. aren't so wants to and cash bail. today mandela barnes, not to democrat, a dangerous democrat. >> john fetterman wants to release convicted murders from
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precious prison. -- eliminate life sentences for first and secondary murders. we know john fetterman luxury staff, but we can't let him free murderers. >> you have made the case before that when republicans talk about crime, they are really talking about race. how effective do you think adds like that are? we saw more direct comments, obviously, at the rally. it is the subliminal messages that are dangerous, too i suppose. >> the subliminal message is to acquit blacks and people of color, particularly black's, with criminal behavior. it is to stereotype us and justify a kind of social policy that excludes us, discriminates against us, and put us in a disadvantage that we have since our history in this country. i think that before the -- try to energize the base that
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they cannot explain their own communities why there is economic upheaval and tension that, because they are giving tax cuts the rich rather than dealing with workers rights in dealing with people in the white community that is working. i think that they are trying to scapegoat blacks for their own economic policies that -- in the interests of white working class. >> i'll sharpton, thank you so much for your insight. we sure to tune in for your politics nation with the reverence today and every weekend and 5 pm eastern on msnbc. some details on trump's attempt to make a so-called deal with the national archives over the documents he is given. -- these documents came last late last year to that document still determined show that he had been blocked by the fbi
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investigation into his 2016 campaign ties to russia, that he was angry with the national archives, and the records administration for their unwillingness to hand over a batch of dots sensitive documents that he thought proved his claims. in exchange for the documents, trump told advisors he would return to national archives the boxes of material that he had taken to mar-a-lago in palm beach, florida. trump's aides never pursued that idea. trump had representative from the archives did not respond to comment for this from the new york times animus nbc has not independently confirmed the story. joining me to discuss his federal prosecutor joyce vance, msnbc -- the so much for joining us. what do you make of this new reporting about trump's decision to make a deal with the national archives? a deal with documents that were his to begin with? >> the evidence continues to damage the former president
quote
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more and more as it unfolds. this is perhaps the most critical piece. something we can take away from this, erin, is that even those around trump in his advisers were not foolish enough to take this deal to justice department. two national archives. what a put on full display was fact that he knew what he had, he knew it was material he was not entitled to. whether it's technically extortion, some sort of otherness conduct nothing about this is -- for a former president. he's not entitled to engage in a backroom court to get materials he wants but is not entitled to. this deserves the highest level of scrutiny from the justice department and increasingly it has been more an issue of when, not if there will be prosecution. >> i want to tell you what trump said last night in mar-a-lago both the documents.
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let's take a listen. >> under the presidential records act, everything should come back in there is no crime. you negotiate. whatever you negotiate is fine, it's process. they make it sound like the greatest crime in america was committed. these are radical left lunatic's. they lose documents, plant documents, do you know that is? let's throw a couple of nice documents in there. >> those are enormous allegations that he is making, by the way. he has made them before. what are the your thoughts on what he said? ? >> former presidents what lies, lies, more lies there. these are statements that his own lawyers oppose having to make in court. treasury, the judge acting as the special master in mar-a-lago case had set a deadline for trump's lawyers to come forward with any
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statements about whether documents had been planted, in essence. that was overridden by district judge aileen cannon. trump's lawyers didn't have to make their statement on the record. trump is free to say whatever he wants to say, whether it's from the truth or not. here it's from the truth. to vance, thank you so much. coming up next hour, january six committee that we lofgren joins me for this week's hearing including whether we might hear anything about teen thomas's closed-door testimony. still ahead this hour, elections myers or the gop ballot and -- reveals the jaw dropping numbers of candidates who have denied or questioned the outcome of the election. plus, the latest jobs report that shows promising stability in confirms -- emergency surges in ukraine
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( ♪♪ ) (soft clattering) (soft thud) it is a scene we have become
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all too familiar with, devastation after attacks on civilians in ukraine. president zelenskyy's office says at least 13 people, including one child, have been killed after missile strikes on a residential neighborhood in
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zaporizhzhia, earlier this morning. nearly 90 others are injured as search and rescue efforts continue. meanwhile, the power line has been restored to the city's nuclear plant. the largest in europe after damage caused by russian shelling. erin mclaughlin is in kharkiv for us. erin, what do you have on the latest on these attacks? other any update on the numbers? >> well, ukrainian officials say that the death toll has risen to at least 20 killed in that overnight attack. dozens wounded, including children. the attack happened in the small hours of the morning. multiple missiles fired into residential areas. multiple structures, one apartment building, in particular was struck. a section of the building was completely collapsing. in the morning you could see in pictures, rescue workers pulling survivors from the
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rubble. one woman who survived the attack survived what it was like to be inside of the building at the moment of impact. take a listen. >> >> it's really horrifying. this is an area of the country that has come under regular fire, missile attack, from russian forces. just three miles away is the zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. then largest nuclear plant in europe. that is under russian control. the city is under ukrainian control, even the russian president vladimir putin has illegally annexed it and it has been a great source of concern especially considering the
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civil nuclear plant. >> we don't want to become immune to those images. it is horrific to see those innocent people and the destruction that ukraine has been ongoing undergoing for too long now. rushes on still dealing with the aftermath of the explosion that damage the bridge between russia and crimea. it is partially reopened, but what feat experts are saying is that much of the symbolic defeat is a strategic one, is that correct? >> yeah, that's right. but officials are saying they have been able to get the railway working again. i should say television showed footage showing a train moving on those tracks earlier today. we heard from the british ministry of defense on twitter, saying we weren't sure exactly how much damage was done from the explosion to the train tracks. those tracks were engulfed in flames at one point, potentially damaging the medal and their ability to carry
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allowed. that is potentially critical to this fight, because the russians are relying on the bridge to move heavy -- on a course on. ukraine's launched a counteroffensive. if you lose the ability to move supplies on average becomes very difficult to resupply the frontline. it is a strategic and logistic issue, but also symbolic issue. we heard from president putin claiming ukrainian special forces. however, ukrainians have not retrain a claimed responsibility. they are certainly celebrating it. >> there's some talk of actually trying to catch putin to change the name of the operation to an anti terrorist operation, as opposed to a special military operation. in. stay safe. reporting on the latest test
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launch from north korean test missiles. they were to launch early sunday, north korea time, just before the show was live yesterday. zach japanese and south korean officials condemned the actions, calling them a serious provocation. short brain missiles were fired towards the east in landed in the waters near japan. this was north korea's second missile launch in two weeks. coming up, republicans rushing to support herschel walker despite the growing controversy surrounding him. had the gop is defending the football player ahead of his tight race in georgia. >> i'm not a flawless person, i made my own mistakes in life. person herschel has to, we all have. and he's better to just be honest -- just be honest - like #6 the boss. pepperoni kicks it off. with meatballs smothered in rich marinara. don't forget the fresh mozzarella. don't you forget who the real boss is around here.
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times rushing to the defense of embattled georgia senate candidate, herschel walker. at this saturday rick stop, head of the senatorial committee -- and -- are set to campaign for a walk around in georgia, despite both men being strong and by antiabortion views. this, as more details emerged surrounding allegations of a former girlfriend that walker paid for her to have an abortion. nbc has not verified the story, but walker continues to deny all allegations. let's bring in nbc's aly rafael monday into. what can you tell us from with about the latest surrounding walker and his allegations, as well as this event with senator scott caught it on tuesday they are still showing up for the guy? >> that's right, well we haven't heard from the walker campaign since the latest round of allegations. up until friday, he had denied knowing this woman making these
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allegations. now, as recently as friday night finally acknowledge her existence, identity, and is also confirming that there has been communication tween his family in this woman. providing nbc news directly copies of the text messages between the woman and her family. despite this controversy, this week of october surprises, now we are seeing the gop heavyweights rushed to the defensive walker. we learned last night that nrfc chairman rick scott, as well as arkansas senators stomped tom cotton will be on the ground in georgia, rallying for walker on tuesday. this is just the latest sign of support from republicans as they try and flip this critical senate race. we know that democrats, hold control of senate by the slimmest margin. an easily divided, 50/50 senate. it underscores how important the races for republicans. in a statement nbc, scott says that i am on herschel's team,
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they picked the wrong georgia to mess with. i am proud to stand with herschel walker. on me depressed this morning, nebraska congressman don bacon also defended walker. he also added that it would really help the situation, help the case here, if he does acknowledged all these allegations and stop denying them. take a listen to what he told kristen welker on meet the press this morning. >> i think people make mistakes, if they acknowledge, some ask her goodness. none of us are perfect. i'm not a flawless person, i have made mistakes in life. social has to. we all have. i think it is better to be honest. >> and that is really what we are hearing from us republicans here on the ground in georgia. they are saying that these controversies are just a distraction from the issues they cared must be moved. economy, inflation, gas prices. it shows they are we're going
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to want to hear about on the main stage when raphael warnock and herschel face off on friday. >> just to be honest, we store that. that trauma had an arizona town hall for candidates running for governor. keri lake, who ordinances said was supposed to be in a holding room, was in the audience trying to force a debate with a democratic opponent katie hobbs. hobbs has refused to directly debate lake for her embracing fall security conspiracy theories of a stolen election. -- left the town hall when the provision went off. >> so, we have something in common. president trump and i lost a no action in 2020 because of a rigged election. when i'm secretary of state and van nevada we are going to fix it. if president trump will be president again in 2024.
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>> that was jim marchan, the -- running for secretary of state in nevada. parroting election lies last night and delivering a stark warning about 2024. nevada democrats are sounding the alarm about the racist chant begins to pull ahead of his democratic opponent. joining me is washington post reporter, amy gardner. amy, i read your article and frankly it is a little frightening. you really some analysis this week that says 299 nominees tonight election results and are currently running in every region of the country and in nearly every state. just two states, rhode island and north dakota, you can see there did not nominate an election denier for any office. how many of these 299 candidates do you need i really likely to win?
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that is a huge number. apparently, we keep hearing the same rhetoric over and over no one ever really loses. it is just all raked. >> the number that we have currently, of course the rains are changing as we are closer to the election, but the number is 173 of those nearly 300 candidates in a safe republican seats or in competitive seats and could win. it is a majority of the nearly 300 candidates who have certain or very good chance of winning in november. -- >> and he broke everything down beautifully in the article, but you said, quote that the proportion of election tires on the november ballot is particularly high into the battleground states. -- arizona, georgia, and michigan. the proportion is also higher among candidates for congress
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which holds the power to finalize or contest the electoral college count every four years. what are some of the most potentially damaging positions that these candidates could hold when it comes to their impact. that's in the next general election in 2024, it's hard to believe we're talking with that already because we're not even a midterms, but it's a real fear and concern. >> i would say that they're -- what we wanted to capture a broad spectrum of candidates that includes different, sort of, extreme positions when it comes to whether or not trump 2020 was rigged. and the far end of the streaming places like carey lake, who uses featured near video. the republican nominee in arizona who said that not only is the 2020 election rate, but that if she had been governor
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then, she would have not signed the certification. who also says that katie hobbs, her democratic opponent, current secretary of state, should go to jail for certifying it. that is the sort of most extreme aversion. marchand, secretary of state nevada, so that he wouldn't certify. it is nevada secretary of state -- but we have the power certify. he certainly would have other powers as secretary of state to affect the way the elections are administered in nevada. then, sort of out the other end of the spectrum are people who have -- in other ways, embrace the narrative perhaps sidestepped a direct question as to whether the election was decided. even some who say that, today, joe biden is president now. some cases, saying that we are
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will sidestepping a direct question from journalists about whether they believed the election was rigged. we felt it was important to capture the types of canada summer project, because those are clearly candidates who are trying to court favor with republican voters who can support president trump, who believe the false claims about the 2020 election, who felt it was important to bring such candid to account. we didn't include people who, without directly dodging the question or sitting that the election was rigged, embraced the idea that a lot more election integrity was needed. those are examples of candidates that we did not include in our survey. >> all right, thanks for clarifying that. it is a shame with everything americans had to deal with, that we are still parties are still using this as ammunition in this election. thank you so much for being here. >> up next. how opec's decision to cut oil
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production by 2 million barrels a day is already having an effect on gas prices. well last month's job gains says about the feds fight against inflation. we will be right back. l be right back. is that glitter? this table is on its last leg. y'all need this. you're kelly clarkson! a whole new look for a whole lot less. ahhh! -you're kelly clarkson! i am... and you need this. i love it! are we in a wayfair commercial? maybe. personal sauna. ok i need that. ahhhhh! ♪ wayfair, you've got just what i need ♪
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friday, the labor department releases september jobs report. the economy added 263,000 jobs and unemployment fell to 3.5%. why exactly are economists still convinced that we are headed towards a recession? joining us as i'm nbc's -- and kale and silver's -- after achieving this report, people will be clinking glasses. it is causing concern among economists on wall street. >> it is causing a lot of concern, aaron. here is why. in normal times, that would be
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a terrific report. everything going strong -- we have an economy that is still running really hot and needs to slowdown to get this inflation out of the economy. if you look at how things are going in the individual sectors of the economy, we added a lot of jobs in leisure and hospitality, but there are still some shortages in that sector. look at education, losing 29,000 jobs last month not because of job cuts but because a teacher shortages. all this points and more to inflation, economists say it's not going away yet. >> we've gone from a red hot boil to a very hot summer, which is not enough to keep away the underlying pressures in the economy for inflation. this is a report that, sadly, confirms that we are running out of workers. good news for workers, but not if they can't have weight gains
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that spoke with inflation. >> indeed, that seems to be the case. in the jobs reports, hourly earnings is up 5% from a year ago. that's good for workers as -- but we are likely to see an inflation report coming out later this week that shows inflation up 8%. people are not making and me. the answer to that is to raise interest rates some more. that's what the federal reserve is going to do. you can see what they have already done. you look at the treasury notes which, a lot of different interest rate hike -- they have more than doubled in the last year. those interest rates are likely to rise. the bottom line, economist i, is increasingly we are going to head to recession by the end of this year. now he said it's a mild recession and we are out of it by the second half of next year. in the meantime, brace yourselves, they say for a bit of a storm. aaron? >> thank you so much. we are going to turn to caleb right now. this is sort of hard to
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understand, because the fed kept raising those interest rates hoping that it would even things out a bit. it seems that they are going to have to continue that push which is concerning to all of us. what kind of a factor that going to have. is that the more we push up, the harder we are going to fall? >> great question. they have to raise interest rates in order to curb inflation, if you're looking for an effect that is having a look at the housing market. you've had seven straight months of decline and sales. retention is down -- that's a reduction in bill to buy. -- it makes the base on the 30 year. fixes of a straight unbearable mortgages as well to that half, but it raises the interest rates on a pr's on credit cards also 50% in just the past 12 months. money is causing more because of those raising rates, it's going to culiacán a, meet just hasn't happened yet. >> some of the reports, they
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talk about some of the industries that are seeing job growth. do you think that leisure and hospitality, especially, maybe not health care, but leads you not pathology is that going to go back down? if people are more conservative, estimating that there will be a recession whether it's minor or major, people are cutting back on those things like going out to dinner or vacation. >> great point. >> leisure hospitality was the collector hardest hit, the pandemic, for obvious reasons. it is also where we are seeing the most aggressive job growth over time. it is also where we are seeing the most aggressive wage growth. these are wages that are not ones you could feed a family on, we are talking about seven to $25 an hour. you have to work a couple of jobs to make a living on that kind of living. you want to see that higher pain professional services, health care, it's gonna be people leaving those professions as we need the more than ever.
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-- >> for every open available worker, which tells you that they are still flying away in the market. one of the reasons -- is raising the rates is to bring -- they hire less they pull back in, that's what they're trying to do. >> i'm afraid to ask this question, or at least hear the answer, what was the ceiling as far as how high can they can raise the rates? >> they've been pretty transparent, the federal reserve, about where they will take rates. they'll probably raise them to about four and a half percent by mid next year. four and a half percent is about a percent and a half higher than where we are now. expect a few more -- before the end of the year, then we will see with inflation moving meaningfully lower. we know we will get a big report this week. it will probably show of the are still at a year high. he raising rates. -- >> i do want to ask a quick question, because a four day
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work week seems to be having a moment which i think is welcome news to so many people. what impact would that have on the economy? you really think that companies are going to be receptive to it? they have sort of gone back and forth on whether they want people to return to the office. i can't imagine that remote working in a four day work week is going to work well with the lack of employers. who knows? people may be more productive, what do you think? >> we'll see. if we do go in a recession and have to cut labor costs, that may be one way to do it. i know a lot of the industries that i spent time in and certainly around new york in the big cities around america -- companies want their workers back in. if we do go -- they will want all hands on deck to get out of it. we'll see i, don't know if that's going to fly. >> we don't want the six-day work week, -- >> an impact that president my bidens marijuana pardons and whether it's the first step
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(limu squawks) yes! limu, you're a natural. we're not counting that. only pay for what you need. ♪liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty.♪ it's the subway series menu. 12 irresistible subs. the most epic sandwich roster ever created. ♪♪ it's subway's biggest refresh yet! some big news today, president biden pardoned all people convicted of possessing marijuana under federal law. [applause] >> signaling a marker step towards legalization. we are pretty sure that biden's
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approval ratings going to get high for the first time. >> two easy. sideshow host jimmy fallon having a little fun with the pardons, -- pardons for those convicted of federal marijuana charges. it is no joke for those whose lives are the facts. it's at the present for a future legalization like the decriminalization or changing the classification as a scheduled one substance. while it may just be the first tap, it is the most marijuana friendly action from a sitting president to date. joining me is jalen brown diana -- thank you so much for joining me on this sunday. i have to ask you, do you see this as real progress or is it more of a symbol of what could potentially happen next? like decriminalization at a federal level? they've been talking for years about having marijuana not be a schedule one drug like heroin.
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where does this put us? this is a step. >> a step forward, right? our country has been big and steps. the states have been making steps. we have valid in a should've's bulletin issued as which will go forward this november in five states. people are calling for the decriminalization of mary wanna and the president has taken one step i saw people tweeting, like, marijuana, weed is legal now. it is not. there are not a lot of people, any at all, who will get out of present prison for this. it only pertains to those who have been charged with simple possession by federal law. 6500 people, but they're not getting out, because they were charged with other things. we have to put it in perspective. i do think it is important for our governors to do the same
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thing. we know most people who are impacted by these laws, criminalized by these laws, are criminal understate and there's nothing the president can do about that. it is important for them now, it is also we know that there are states like texas where governor abbott is talking to do anything about it. he's not going to start pardoning people. it's important, because we have disparities to deal with. >> we make a good point. there is no continuity when it comes to these laws. they differ from state to state, he mentioned isolate texas that doesn't even have medicinal marijuana laws that give residents access. then you have somewhere like california that is much more aggressive. so, i want to ask you, as far as your organization is concerned you have called out that there is heavily disproportionate impact of marijuana laws and different groups of people. brightly people are almost four
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times less likely to be arrested for marijuana, but own over 80% of cannabis store fronts in illegal states. that's kind of mind-boggling. when needs to be done to address these injustices it's not only that white people are less likely to be arrested for marijuana possession, but now they are taking advantage of a booming industry in the united states. >> right, well one of the problems is that black people are more than three and a half times more likely to be arrested for marijuana. that is partially because black people are over policed. we have more police in our neighborhoods, so white people will get caught with weed as much and so that is important to understand and, really what marijuana is, is it's also a gateway. not a gateway drug, but a gateway to criminalization. police often use it as probable
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cause to do other things. stop-and-frisk people, stop them driving, search them, it satirist. it leads to greater criminalization for african americans in particular because we are targeted by the police. really, where we need to be going's of the country is changing. federal law has not caught up with it. it is still a controlled substance and people will still get charged with this under federal law, because after october 6th was the pardon date. anybody after that can still be charged. number one, you still need to beecher sure that these are controlled substances under law. the president's executive order does not pertain to people who are not in this country legally. this is also important, that those who are immigrants be should not be caught up in this and be in prison for something
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that we are legalizing across the country. we are going to see states moving more towards legalization and federalizing ball amid, to make sure that those who are convicted get expungement and are able to go home instead of having this burden on their records. >> judith brown diana's, thank you so much for that insight. we will check back. coming up next hour, donald trump on the campaign trail today is popping up a slew of candidates. the january 6th leery hearing is looming later this week. so we lufkin joins me next to talk about who we may hear from and if this could be, in fact, the panels last hearing. it's hispanic heritage month and -- where the latina vote stands in key battleground states. we will be right back. we will be right back. ...and recalibrate your safety system. >> customer: and they recycled my old glass. >> tech: don't wait. schedule today. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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