tv Alex Wagner Tonight MSNBC October 28, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT
1:00 am
believe just a few years ago. >> no one did. people in this space, in the investment space didn't think so. the solar cost dropped and curved. would look insane and almost anybody if you are back in time. >> the iea says now that solar power is the cheapest electricity in history. other reports say that 90% of the world lives in places where solar power issue brittany other power. this, is, like all new landscape. we are gonna be living in a whole new world. we already are. and it's gonna be a little bit better than the one that we fear. >> capitals, thank you. really, really appreciate. i'm thrilled to say that tomorrow for the first time since 2020, i'm gonna host a special edition of all in with a live studio audience. some very special guests. don't forget to tune in tomorrow 8 pm eastern, i am incredibly excited about that. that is all in on this
1:01 am
. welcome back to humanity. >>. >> yep. >> oh, i got one. >> me too, bro. thank you, chris. as always. thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. the list of tips reads like a training manual for undercover espionage. in person monitoring through the night is may not be feasible, but if undertaken should be done with caution and well armed as criminals caught in the act can be dangerous. now this is not mission impossible or even james bond or even rear window. this is a manual for poll watchers in michigan. the things being monitored here are drop boxes. the manual that details the tips
1:02 am
is 28 pages long. this is local chapter of a group called the america project. the spokes people for the america project, spokes people are these guys. former overstock.com patrick burn ander trump national security adviser michael flynn. which is particularly concerning. you probably remember michael flynn for a million reasons and none of them very good. and you might even remember the overstock ceo but the two of them together as a team calls back to one specific thing. in december of 2020, those two men were part of a small group that met with trum npt moefal office and tried to convince him to order the u.s. military to seize voting machines across the country. they even drafted an executive order for it. but this time those two are not marching into the white house and going after the election at
1:03 am
the national level. they're going after the most fundamental aspect of our democracy from the ground up. here is flynn this past weekend talking to a crowd of 5,000 people at a far right vent in pennsylvania. >> so my big thing, my big thing, it has been for a long, long time, but particularly in the last couple years, has been to get involved at the local level. if can you volunteer in a local
1:04 am
presinct, that's great. my wife and a tended the training. it took an hour. good questions. we're going to go now. go to our precinct captain and we're going to stand there and watch. we're going to observe. >> local action equals national impact. en that is not just flynn and his group. this is the new far right stop the steal strategy overall. there are groups like the election integrity network run by a former 2020 election lawyer. they claim to have trained more than 20,000 people around the country on election law so they can observe local elections. given the fan bases, almost all of those people are likely election deniers. and then there are groups like the one run by former tea party activist daniel shultz. it is aiming to get as many
1:05 am
election deniers as possible to sign up to actually work the local elections. and then there is a seemingliless group like michael flynn's, the ones calling for the medical monitoring of drop boxes and calling for people to be armed while doing so. all of this is coming more into focus as we get into election day. we know the damage this far right focus on local elections has had already. earlier this month a man was arrested in iowa for threatening a local election worker in maricopa county, arizona. he left voice mails saying i'm a victim of a crime. the crime was the theft of the election. do your job or you will hang. we'll see to it. torches and pitch forks, that's your future. in august, months before the election started, they reviewed over 1,000 hostile or harassing instances reported by election officials. 11% of those instances met the
1:06 am
threshold for a federal criminal investigation. that is pretty easy math. that means the department of justice found more than 100 instances of people being so hostile to election workers that their actions may be a federal crime. official worker resigns and the results may start will you. in pennsylvania, nearly 50 top election officials have left their posts. but all of this does not mean you should be hopeless. it doesn't mean that local communities and local election officials can't defend themselves. i mean, the law is on their side. just today one of the groups pushing for armed ballot box watchers in arizona and oath keeper affiliated group called the lions of liberty, now a group with an admittedly crazy logo.
1:07 am
today the lions of liberty released what they called an official stand down order. the lines of liberty decided to back off. in their words, operation drop box is officially closed. there is still plenty of other groups planning to harass and intimidate local elections officials and voters. she was the acting serving attorney general. she is a huge deal at the national level as an expert on domestic security issues. this week she gave a talk on elections and public safety. no the to national elections officials, but to the u.s. conference of mayors. mayors. she talked to them about the threats their citizens and their cities are facing and what they can do at the local level to
1:08 am
fight back. joining me now is mary mccord herself, former acting assistant attorney general and now executive director for the protection and advocacy and professor at the georgetown university law center. thank you for joining me. let me ask you, given your background and where we are right now, do you see these attempts to intimidate voters and monitor drop boxes, is this d.c. domestic terrorism 2.0? >> i think it's a national security threat. it affecting people feeling safe voting. and if if our democracy feels if we do not have assurance that people can safely vote, if people don't have confidence in the ability to vote if, they don't have confidence in in the fact that their votes will be counted, they might quit participating. the or they might be too
1:09 am
intimidated to participate. that is when democracy fails. and that's a national security threat. because that affects the u.s.'s, you know, presence in the world. historically it is looked up to as a real beacon of democracy. that is partly why we're successful militarily and in so many other ways. so, yes, it's about domestic extremism. >> when you drill into the national security threat that this poses, i'm interested to understand better how these groups that used to operate at a broader national level, like the proud boys and oath keepers, have reorganized and retrenched for the battle that lies ahead in november, can you talk about how the chapters have changed in the years and months since january 6? >> yeah. i think largely a reaction to january 6. the immediate aftermath there was incredible attention on some of these groups.
1:10 am
they have had significant numbers of people charged with crimes and we have a seditious conspiracy trial going on right now in washington, d.c., against members of the oath keepers. so there was a need to kind of, like, put on a new face and change the strategy. it doesn't mean there's not a national strategy. there's just not like a single public master running it. what we have a decentralized, localized, very grassroots effort. i think your clip of michael flynn explained it very well. i used a different example with the mayors, you know, focus on county over country. take capture your county. then a few, then maybe your state. but michael flynn said the same thing last week or earlier this week in pennsylvania about
1:11 am
getting in at that precinct level. mind you, the same disinformation about the 2020 election that fuelled the violence on january 6th 2021, that is the same disinformation today nearly two years after the 2020 election that is fueling all of these efforts to intimidate voters, to threaten and intimidate election officials, teen try to thwart people from exercising their fundamental constitutional rights to vote. and that's why it really is going to take that strong response. i mean, part of the reason for talking about this publicly is not to give attention to the bad guys about tout put them on notice. what they're doing is illegal, it's a crime under federal law. it's a crime under state law. it's not protected by the first amendment or the second amendment. >> as talk to people about this, how -- for lack of a better
1:12 am
term, how on top of are they? >> many matures and police chiefs, share you haves, they know what is happening in their jurisdiction. i don't think they always see how what is happening in their own community might fit into the bigger picture. and they don't know what tools and strategies may be available to combat. this one of the things i was doing along with former police chief chuck ramsey on monday was trying to, you know, sort of provide a threat picture for what those of us who are working with private researchers and paying attention to what is going on across the country, what we're seeing in terms of coordinated activity and even, again, like there is no one central coordinator as your intro showed. they're all encouraging the localized efforts. the so for law enforcement officials and public officials
1:13 am
of different local level, state level, federal level to have a good understanding of that, helps them direct different counter measures. you need to be preparing now. you need to be talking with the community. that means the local law enforcement, public officials, voting rights activists. the parties. you need to be getting on the same page with respect to protecting elections and election workers. and making strong statements about the illegality of voter intimidation. it's not always going to be appropriate to send law enforcement to polling places because in some jurisdiction that's can be even more intimidating than them not being there. in some places, law enforcement is not a problem. we have a movement right now
1:14 am
which is a group share you have that's believe they're the highest law of the land, subject to no other authority. and they're starting to meddle in election administration. that is something for people to be aware of. election officials to know and constitutional sheriff comes knocking and trying to ask a lot of questions about election administration, go talk to your city attorney or your district attorney or your attorney general. >> what can voters do if their at the polls. what practically is the correct counter measure if a voter feels like he or she is being threatened? >> they should be reporting it. what we do not want to do by calling attention to this is to dissuade voters from voting.
1:15 am
quite the opposite. but if they learn about thingors they see or experience things like people following them to their cars, taking note of their license plates, videotaping them, dropping ballots, asking them any types of questions about their qualifications, providing misleading statements about suggesting maybe that, you know, it may be committing a crime, if their depositing more than one ballot and to be clear that, is not a violation of federal law. they need to understand when they see this activity, they should be reporting it. they should be reporting it to local law enforcement officials or the department of justice, whoever they feel comfortable reporting it to. >> vote and report. that is my take away from all of. this mary mccord, former acting assistant attorney general for national security and executive director of the institute for constitutional advocacy and
1:16 am
protection and professor at the georgetown university law center. thank you so much for your time tonight. >> thank you. during a trip to syracuse, new york, to day, president biden met with schumer where the democratic leader was caught on a hot mike giving a president a frank assessment of the midterm's outlook for democrats. . in just a second i'll talk to former white house press secretary about what she thinks of chuck schumer's assessment. of chuck schumer's assessment.
1:19 am
ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com.
1:21 am
today america got good news about the economy. after two straight quarters are the economy sh rank, we learned that the economy grew by 0.6% over the last three months. now that may not sound like a lot, but that is sort of the point here. right now the biden administration is trying to pull off a tight rope walk on the economy, the economy grows too
1:22 am
much, it could drive more inflation. but if it shrinks too much, it could plunge the country into a recession. it's not an easy balance to strike. today's us in is thus very positive for the country and for the biden administration. and there is more. gas prices have fallen today for the tenth straight day in a row. the nearing $3 per gallon in some parts of the country. less than two weeks out from the midterm elections, the question is whether or not that kind of sound economic stewardship matters politically speaking at this point. candidates are focusing on the economy and crime. the white house is focused on talking loudly about what democrats have delivered and what republicans will not. here is the president biden's chief of staff ron klain earlier today. >> i think the most important thing i can emphasize here is that there is a choice about where we go from here.
1:23 am
are we going do things that control inflation next year or will republican leaders in congress succeed in repealing all those things, helping big corporations, cutting taxes for big corporations and seeing prices for consumers and families seeing the price goes up. that's the real choice between where the democrats are headed on the economy, where the republican congressional leadership is headed on the economy. >> can democrats actually communicate that message to voters in it time? should they be doing more? could they even be doing more? we have just the person to ask. joining us now is jen psaki, former white house press secretary and msnbc host. never tire of saying that, my friend. so it is a tight rope, right? it's complicated. the economy is complicated. the message is complicated. there is this good news, right? but then there is the reality, we keep getting the data points.
1:24 am
bloomberg reports that 41% of households said it has been difficult or somewhat difficult to cover usual household expenses. the highest since that question asked in 2020. and the share of people saying it's difficult is even higher in battleground states, nevada, arizona, and georgia. how do you say things are on the right track where for a lot of americans they are -- it's more complicated than that? >> no question. look, nobody talks about the economic data or most people don't. some people do. jarrod bernstein does. >> most people are not talk about macro economic data in their driveways. what they do know at the white house is what you touched on. it's all about how people feel and how they're feeling about the economy. now things that make you feel better, gas prices coming down and going to fill up your car and seeing that. that is a good sign. but the big question is whether this is going to be enough over the next couple weeks.
1:25 am
the last thing you'll say is what they're trying to do and you saw the president do it today is draw that contrast. i mean he says don't compare me to, you know, the almighty, compare me to the alternative. >> it's not patience and a will, it's also this trope that exists in american politics. politics are better on the economy no matter what, you know, reality and facts dictate and democrats are better on other noneconomic rated things, social progress, for example. so he is butting up against the clock, the complicated economic forecast, and these stereotypes for lack of a better term. that seems really intractable with 12 days to go. >> right. the other piece i throw-in there that is a big factor is the democrats are in control of the white house, the house, and the senate. they control what many people will feel like is everything.
1:26 am
when you feel frustrated, you're going to say who's in charge i want the other girl or guy. it's not a logical, wow, they have a better plan for inflation which the democrats do. and that's one of the challenges when you're the party of power. >> right. you own it. you literally own it. i want -- you have been out in the field. and getting important data that we should be discussing. i want to draw everyone's attention to some interviews you did while canvassing with planned parenthood. it is in braddock, pennsylvania. >> john fetterman's hometown. >> oh, boy. >> let's take a listen to jen psaki in the field talking to voters this election. >> josh schapiro, running for governor, he's going to protect health care and also going to protect our abortion rights which are important as well. the supreme court just struck down roe v. wade. >> yeah. >> so we -- >> that's ridiculous. >> so what is more important to you? what do you care about?
1:27 am
>> as a mother of four churn, the jobs. they say all the jobs are out. there but they don't want to pay enough for you to actually live off the jobs. i'd luke there to be, you know, more jobs available with the flexibility, you know, to be able to actually work and take care of your family and not have to worry about choosing one. i'm in that situation now. i need to go back to work. but i can't afford to pay for childcare. we're probably living off of maybe $400 a week. it is enough for four kids? >> so what strikes me about that conversation and in addition to feeling a lot of empathy for a mom that is struggling like that, is the way in which abortion is seen as a completely separate conversation from the economic conversation. and i wonder what more can be done to link the two. choices about reproductive freedom are health care decisions which have economic implications but also plainly kitchen table economics.
1:28 am
right there. choosing to have another kid or not. >> absolutely. and that woman, she's going to stick with me for a while. she cares about abortion rights. she wants her friends to able to get an abortion if they want. to but she's trying to live her life with four kids and can't afford to go to work because she conditioned afford childcare. that stuck to me because it's a reminder, people have a lot going on in their lives. to your point, what democrats really need to do is find a way to talk about this in a way where they're meeting people where they are. when you go to houses and talk to people in the communities, you've done so much of this too, there is no relationship between how people in washington talk about the issues and how talk about it with your friends and neighbors. and that was really what stuck with me from the day i spent with these canvassers in
1:29 am
braddock. no one is going to a door and saying we're going to codify roe. stick but. nobody knows what that means. they're also not going up to doors and saying we pass the inflation reduction act so stick us with. they're saying, we're for worker rights and women's rights. what do you by this that? and that connection is something that i think is often missing between washington and communities which is why it's so important to go out and talk to people. >> and the real world implications of having another child when you're not getting by with, for example, the four kids you have now. you know? the complications of all of that, i don't think have been understood in terms of the national narrative. then there is also this question, i wonder how you think democrats should think about this. the fear of losing the right to abortion is more important in
1:30 am
blue states. look, could that be contributing to the abortion question not being as motivating and resonating in some blue states where there are weirdly tough races, oregon, washington state, california? >> it may be. i also think the truth is that if democrats -- if roe v. wade were not overturned by the supreme court, we would be talking about an absolute slaughter in a couple weeks. it motivated people. it got people to register to vote. it's been an issue that democrats have made. it's line injecting caffeine into a democratic party that may need it. i think that is something people running these races are very focused on. but overall, without that caffeine boost, i think democrats are looking at an even more difficult night in a couple weeks. >> some people say we were always going to end up in this place. like if you look at the tea leaves in the early part of this
1:31 am
year, it was always going to end here. what is happening inside biden white house? >> you're making a new term. >> in terms of their communication strategy on november 9th? >> i mean, if you talk to them and ask them, and i did, they think we're going to win. there's a lot of people i have worked with and i have been in congress before and they know that if republicans take the house and they look at the polls, they're not covering their eyes or anything. what they're looking at is their agenda being overridden by lots of investigations, by impeachmentes, impeachments, impeachments. and while all of that may be bologna, bogus, silliness, it will be a huge oxygen suck for the agenda. while they're the cheerleaders, and they have to be. i wasn't surprised you about what they said.
1:32 am
they have to be the cheerleaders, they're also thinking what that will mean in 2023. >> jen psaki, my friend, always good to see you even when the news is not exactly where you want it to be for democrats. >> the there is still rays of light in the darkness. >> let's hope. >> jen psaki, former white house press secretary, msnbc host, thank you as always. >> thank you. still ahead this hour, it is not just dog whistles, anti-semitism has gone mainstream among republicans this election season. i'll talk with orin siegle and what happens when the party of law and order becomes the party that is literally defunding the police. the yes, really. stick around. the police the yes, really. stick around
1:33 am
1:37 am
earlier this week the official social media account of the gop tweeted this, quote, reminder, democrats want to defund the police accompanied with a nine minute video to support the case. republicans have been running this election season on crime being out of control and warning that democrats want to and will defund the police. >> 2020, murder in cincinnati at an all time high. >> homicides are up 91%. the. >> and greg's response, defund
1:38 am
the police. >> pelosi has her way, jones will join her to defund the police. >> voted against funding law enforcement. defubding the police. he is a defund the police democrat. >> a defund the police democrat. lock your doors! which brings me to a curious story out of texas where republicans are effectively defunding the police. you heard that right. republicans defunding the police. harris county, home to houston is the most populous county in texas and the third most populous county in the entire country with 4.75 million people. the governing body of harris county is the commissioner's court. it is made up of lekted county judges as well as two republican elected seats and two democratic elected seats. democrats currently hold the majority. and tomorrow is the dead line to adopt the new 2022 budget, one
1:39 am
proposed by the democrats. tuesday was the group's last meeting to sign off on that budge and fund critical city infrastructure. all that is to say that having a seat on that five person governing body is a big responsibility. but parentally not to republicans. because on tuesday, the two republican commissioners boycotted the meeting. the last sunt to approve that new budget and they were protesting the new fiscal year's tax increases. republicans on the commissioner's court were playing this game for months. the no show marked the sixth consecutive time depriving them of another quar yum saying that democrats were unable to approve that new budget forcing this year's budget to remain in place. the republican commissioners now stopped millions and funding increases for real you important things like flood control projects, a public health
1:40 am
system, and -- wait for it, the police. the harris county district toirn's was will lose out on a budget increase. the eight county constables will lose a combined $8.1 million. and to say this is not the best time to limit law enforcement in harris county from accessing millions in funding, to say that is quite an understatement. texas and harris county especially are reeling from the effects of a new republican backed law passed last year. "the new york times" reports a new gun law has led to an increase of spontaneous shootings in houston, they received a growing stream of
1:41 am
cases involving guns brandished or fired over parking antibiotics, loud music and bad driving and love triangles. there is a tipping point where everybody is armed. the paper continues in harris county, criminal cases involving illegal weapons possession sharply increased since the new law went into effect. the party of law and order, ladies and gentlemen. we'll be right back. and order, ladies and gentlemen we'll be right back. i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85,
1:42 am
and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80, what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. it has an affordable rate starting at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate lock
1:43 am
1:45 am
1:46 am
win thing we learned is donald trump has weird ideas about jewish americans, even though he hooz a jewish daughter and son-in-law. he thinks that americans are not totally american. when he talked to jewish americans and referred to benjamin netanyahu as your presume minister. he repeatedly referred to them as your country. of he accused american jews who voted for democrats of disloyalty to israel. after the worst attack on american jews in in history, a massacre four years ago today that killed 11 people at the tree of life synagogue in pittsburgh, trump showed up to pay respects and brought along the israeli ambassador. american jews don't have their own prime minister ambassador because they're americans.
1:47 am
trump never seemed to fully grasp that he was their president. then there was just a casual anti-semitism he dabbled in. during the 2016 campaign, you may remember he shared an image of hillary clinton with a jewish star on top of a pile of cash. subtle. and all of this stuff, it was more blatant with trump but part of the same meal that republicans elsewhere were dining out on. i mean, my god, the george soros stuff, the evil jewish puppet ear ruling the world. the democrats have been running with that for years. it's always been there. but this moment we're in right now, this feels different. and more dangerous. yes, there is the very public meltdown of kanye west as he calls for going def con three on jewish people, he had an
1:48 am
obsession with hitler and then nazis hanging a banner in l.a. saying kanye is right. and then there is donald trump saying this week that american jews have to get their act together before it's too late, what of that means. and the total silence about that from the republican party. and then there is the way anti-semitism is a animating narrative and line of attack from a number of republican candidates in this year's midterm campaigns, whether it is canned daut doug mastriano in history with rich ties to anti-semitic personalities or his counterpart in arizona kari lake who endorsed a wildly, publicly, anti-semitic candidate to quietly recind the endorsement under pressure. at least she recinded it. several other trump backed republican candidates never did. and it's not just the top of the ticket candidates either. this kind of stuff filters down.
1:49 am
in texas, the railroad commissioner is a republican running for re-election. his democratic challenger happens to be jewish. here is how the republican railroad commissioner capped off the pitch to voters on local tv this week. my name is wayne christian. i'd appreciate your vote for railroad commissioner. go to christianfortexas.com and vote for the only christian by name on the ballot. >> nice. i see what you did there. the only christian by name. >> but here's the other thing about what is happening with all this stuff. it is not a coincidence that all these folks who are dealing in anti-semitic trobes that they are also election deniers and pro authoritarian. open in their admiration for authoritarians like victor orbon in hungry.
1:50 am
one look at the history of europe or even at the present of europe will tell you that they're related. but now that insidious potent brew is here in america. joining us now is orin siegel from the anti-defamation league. thank you for being here. does this moment feel different to you on the outside? to me, it feels like things got extraordinarily more dangerous. >> the jewish community feels very vulnerable. you just commented and a whole series of ways that public officials, and entertainers are normalizing anti-semitism. it's coming at a time where we documented anti-semitic incidents targeting the jewish community nationwide, vandalism, harassment, assaults, are at an all time high.
1:51 am
it's in that atmosphere that we have entertainers that reach more people on twitter than jews on the planet earth. where we have former president who's are lecturing the jewish community about what they should be doing. it's no surprise jews are not feeling comfortable. todays ayou mentioned, the fourth anniversary of the deadliest attack against the jewish community in american history, they're asking what is going on. >> yeah. do you see this anti-semitism as a poison that cropped up on its own or a natural extension of the authoritarian embrace that you see in certain neocon right-wing circles? >> i think a lot of the anti-democratic effort that's we see in this country, efforts to undermine our constitutions are based on speaker theories. the more you dig in, you'll find anti-semitism there. it's the life blood of conspiracy theories. so normalizing anti-democratic
1:52 am
movements, conspiracy theories, in some ways normalizes anti-semitism because it is never far behind. the second issue is ability to reach people faster and more quickly than any other time in human history through social media. that is a normalizing factor. >> i was concerned that the mainstream of the republican party has embraced someone like that too speak to the republican party. how do you reconcile that kind of establishment republican response to someone like that in a moment wherer when combatting such toxic, racial anti-semitic language and behavior? >> it's inxplikible. it's not unique. it's not creative. it's ignorant.
1:53 am
it's dangerous. and at the same time we have cpac events, they're going to extremist events. literally. that are timed to be at the same time and further normalizing that. we know on the fourth anniversary we have to recommit ourselves to the families and the victims of that crime and say we need to stand up and speak loudly and clearly and hold people accountable who normalize this. >> whole people accountable. what happens if kari lake wins her race in arizona? the idea that who embrace anti-semitism or actors and principles, what are the implication there's for this country? >> anti-semitism is not the soul of any one political party or an extremist movement. it's the glue that finds strange bed fellows finding common cause. but what we need to do is what
1:54 am
we saw, frankly, literally in response to ye, have corporations, celebrities, social media, every day people say this does not represent us. >> that will be a good start. >> and not vote for those people as well if they're embracing anti-semitism. thank you very much. >> thanks. >> coming up, yesterday tesla ceo and world's richest man elon musk visited twitter's office to assure the staff there were reports of him firing 75% of the staff if he took over. those reports are not true. tonight, elon musk has taken over and he has started firing at least some of the staff. that story and the big change that's might be afoot coming up next. he big change that's might be afoot coming up next
1:57 am
1:58 am
1:59 am
breaking news. elon musk sealed the deal to take over twitter. david faber was the first to report that the deal is done and the current ceo and cfo of social media giant have left the building and not returning. "the washington post" reported that the two executives were fired along with two others including the head of legal policy, trust, and safety.
2:00 am
it appears that musk will be able to use a sink he carrying into at which time ig headquarters yesterday. he tweeted using way more than 280 characters. he promised that twitter obviously cannot become a free for all hellscape where anything can be said. he fired the head of policy and safety. so we'll see about that promise and whether a certain twitter account that once coined the term is coming back. that does it for us. will we'll see you again tomorrow. "way too early" is coming up next. >> republicans always have platforms. say this is what we're for. well, they can't tell what you they're for but they'll make sure that they'll tell you what they're
98 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
MSNBC WestUploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=472550360)