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let me bring in jamal jamal juma who's the founder and coordinator stop the wall campaign um who joins us now jamalalling apart um because as we're looking at the the number of days that have transpired there are still uh locations where the resistance fighters are engaged with the israeli uh regime forces. and um these regime forces are not able to get back what they have lost, particular starat comes to mind, but in the bigger picture, what does that show, uh, what are we looking at when it comes to this offensive and the gains that is very obvious that the resistance fighters cumulatively have made, yeah it has too many too many messages, i think that and we can understand lots of things around what's happened in there that this myth of israel as this like any massive power that's be defeated, that's became full apart, the second is like the the the most advanced like survillances and technology that israel had and this, and they invested like any billions of dollars with the in this, either mainly in the around gaza and in the west bank, and it it's also failed like and this is what they were m
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jamal lucky and joining us now from baby to both of you gentlemen. a very welcome and very grateful to have you on the program today, jamal. i'm going to start with you a reports telling us that a live at 11 on, so it has blah has no end to the conflict, to support how mass d, believe the reports. and what is the lebanese interest in joining this conflict? so sorry, jamal jamal. i was just asking you, the 11 on this has blah has now reportedly got into yells of and do you believe the reports and why, why would 11 on get involved now as well. the 1st the has the law show the some is really outposts in many is occupied territories and shrivel, which the needs have been claiming. since 1967, these studies metal combined during the uh, 6 days war back in 1967. and ever since levon on has been claiming these studies. so has the law show these uh outposts uh yesterday. and i believe that this is a message from his blood to the is it, is that if they step up, the confrontation with the palestinians has the law will activate on uh the, the northern frontier launch uh, a dikes uh, from south lebanon into the occupied gully. uh so this is the message that have been directed, of course the, the, the, is there any is had the, or bon bonded some, uh, the menus positions or the office goods of some lebanese villages. but uh, so far, uh, the, the situation is still u
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the number is even higher than 77 do we still have with us jamal wakiem yes yes jamal wakim, are you with us? yes, yes, i'm with you. great, jamal wakim, this is what's making the news when it comes to the us secretary of state, anthony blincon for the past couple hours, many are reflecting how he was in saudi arabia and with the saudi crown prince, he um is reported to have highlighted on halting hamas and its attacks, securing the release of hostages and preventing the conflict from spreading. the last part, preventing the conflict from spreading, what's your reading into it? uh, does that mean that in a sense israel can't withstand uh other fronts opening up against it? yes definitely, because in this case, actually if hamas, that is the besege in gaza, and that is whose for example, resources are very limited, was able to make incursions up to 40 kilometers deep inside. territories that are controlled by the zinis, this means that hizbullah as the allies from the north could go even farther and would be damaging the core of the design entity where the economic hub and the demographic concentration is mainly in the north and
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but jamal musiala really— national team. but jamalfuture. he could do with scoring a few more goals, they had dried up a bit. few more goals, they had dried up a bit he _ few more goals, they had dried up a bit he only— few more goals, they had dried up a bit. he only scored three goals in the second — bit. he only scored three goals in the second part of last season. only three _ the second part of last season. only three goals — the second part of last season. only three goals so far, one for bayern munich— three goals so far, one for bayern munich and — three goals so far, one for bayern munich and one for germany. a promising — munich and one for germany. a promising partnership developing in the germany national team withjamal musiala and florian wirtz. another player— musiala and florian wirtz. another player on— musiala and florian wirtz. another player on this list. there is talk that— player on this list. there is talk that one — player on this list. there is talk that one day they may link up not only for— that one day they
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know the son of jamal durra, do you remember jamal durra was trying to shield his son muhammad 23 years ago, when the israel shot. him directly and killed his son and injured him, jamal good point that you make, we should gather information on that and not just recite numbers and uh show the sensitivity and the credit that these marters deserve who have been killed as a result of what is happening, which is nothing short of uh, not only genocide, but also war crimes that are being committed by israel in certain instances, like what happened at this hospital, um, mona, the uh, retaliation or should i say the rockets that are being fired uh from the gaza strip is quite incredible that that is still happening in the midst of it being bombarded uh can you tell us more information on or give us more information on that uh one of the latest ones that i'm looking at is how tel aviv uh which years ago would have been hard to imagine is uh is has continued to be targeted by the resistance forces. this is exactly what we are receiving now we're receiving the israeli military. just revealed that a barage of rockets were fired from northern gaza ship into south israel in the nag
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i don't have a leg, azim doesn't have an eye, murat, hook, this farhad, lose your head, jamal, that’s right, jamalunderstand why it’s so rude, i’m actually an evil, vengeful creature, i can turn you into a toad or a spider, you won’t do anything to me, i am the owner of your teapot, i feed you dates, that’s it, peace, let’s bury the hatchet, these are sinbat and salara, they are so cute, aren't they? what and what and what? well, you're a villain and all that, but you won't kill them, will you? i’ll have to, i’ll kill, i’ll kill, it’ll be a pity, of course. russian grand prix, live broadcast, today on the first, let's see, it will be very interesting, love figure skating, adore figure skating, appreciate figure skating , i will steal, if you like stealing in vain, sometimes you wonder, in addition to your family, friends, children, someone else needs you, for an actor it’s the viewer, but your role influences the viewer, in order to do something you need to be either from birth desperate, or so that circumstances become desperate, but this is the most important piece, in which emotions arise insta
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joining me now is privacy and security expert jamal ahmed now is privacy and security expertjamal ahmed . now is privacy and security expert jamal ahmed . jamaly much. great to have you on the show . do we really need on the show. do we really need this in society? i mean, how accurate , how accurate are they, accurate, how accurate are they, for a start , there are for a start, there are challenges with accuracy. >> so we've seen in the us where someone has been put in prison because it's not accurate and there's an inherent built there's an inherent bias built into so if you're a white into them. so if you're a white male, then the chances of it being accurate are great. but if you're a if you're you're a woman, if you're someone from a minority background, you're someone someone from a minority backhasmd, you're someone someone from a minority backhas complexione someone that has complexion on your skin, accuracy starts skin, then the accuracy starts at decreasing to a point where it could actually become a challenge. >> and it's not just based on race. the challenges come. it matches against the database. race. the challenges come. it mat
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jamal bowman, congressman jamal bowman and some pulling a fire alarm. there was likely some folks kind of scratching their heads wondering what it was they were asking speaker mccarthy about. >> that's real serious, frankly reeks of the sort of stunts that republicans try to pull sometimes. don't be like republicans. >> the republicans want to make this -- they want to see how far they can run the trail on this here. we've not heard the last about fire alarm-gate from this weekend. >> and our very own peter doocey is asking about the white house. >> when president biden ever try to get out of a meeting by pulling a fire alarm? >> are you talking about something specifically? >> democratic member of congress pulled a fire alarm around a series of votes, no fire. is that appropriate? >> what i can tell you is i'm not talking -- spoken to the president about this. and so just not going to comment. >> and she is not going to comment. all right. jessica, is bowman dumb or lying? >> that's not a very nice choice to have to make. i am going to go with the nicest version of dumb then because i don't think that he's lying about this. this wasn't the building that the vote was occurring in in the first place. why he would be trying to stall a vote that all the democrats was voting for, that was going to pass overwhelmingly. the capitol police seems to jahlil that he tried to open the door first. do you think the sign on the door which says, push the door and then the alarm will sound for 30 seconds is a bit confusing. obviously he should know better. he was also a principal before he became a congressman. he knows about fire safety. push until alarm sounds,. >> if it's an emergency. an emergency. >> don't touch it unless it's an emergency. >> i lead with -- >> version of dumb. really bad part though is the nazi statement that came out from his team. so, they sent around first to lawmakers but then it got leaked to the press that the focus shouldn't be on congressman bowman's actions but the nazi republicans, blah blah blah he has issued a statement that word shouldn't be used. that's on bely not happening. it was a weird aside. when i saw it show up on twitter, i thought is this a real thing. >> it was a real thing, judge. the democrats were trying to stall and read whatever bill was about to come. >> there is no question and i disagree with my colleague on the left when she says why would he want to stall the vote? i will tell you why. because the day before he tried to stall it by pulling a fire alarm, he knows full well what happens when you pull a fire alarm, he as a school principal he had many fire drills with those kids. he text the day before, republican mathematics is causing catastrophic shut down that will force millions of working people to go without pay or lifesaving benefits and calling it fiscal responsibility as he condemned the republicans. they wanted to blame the republicans for a shut down. they wanted this to happen. that's why he pulled it so they can -- >> resolution. >> that's why he wanted to slow it down. and even the new york post an effort to sabotage budget negotiations by pulling a fire alarm in the house building, his disruption occurred just as the democrat leaders in congress were stalling for time. this is a concerted effort. let me tell you, when the defendants -- when the democrats criticize a republican for something that they themselves did, it just shows you how out of touch they are. do you know what, the sign on that door says emergency exit only. he's a congressman, he knows how to go through the tunnels from one building to the next, everybody who is in washington knows that. they didn't want the bill, they wanted to blame republicans. by the way, it's not just the 30 years you talk about in dc he faces six months for violation of the fire alarm pull. >> 30 years, greg. do you think he should serve time. >> every single year. there is -- i wouldn't dismiss the calling republicans nazis so lightly because if -- this is always been part of the strategy, if you call somebody hitler, call somebody a nazi why wouldn't you sabotage a vote? why wouldn't you rig an election, why wouldn't you create a witch hunt against the person you have been calling hitler, so they call them nazis to justify this behavior. anything is possible. no question, he tried to interrupt a government official business. this is probably the worse deliberate act since 9/11. the question is, does he go to prison? it's for how long. he was trying to initiate an insurrection on his own and he should be treated just like the january sixers which gets to my amazing comparison. when you think about the extreme whacky participants of what happened on january sixth, the nutee conspiracy are cysts, qanon suckers, misguided pirates, they weren't a sitting congressman. that is a key difference in these parties. on the right the freaks aren't in power. on the left, the freaks are in power. and if you want proof, compare how they create their own conspiracies. conspiracies origins on the right they bubble up from chat rooms, they bubble up from reddit, or nobodies in forums and chat rooms, right? and they are crazy and they don't really go anywhere. on the left their conspiracies are created by a cabal of institutions, right? and politicians who created the steele dossier. that came from hillary, right? the collusion, russian collusion suppressing hunter's laptop. these were all done by professionals, people that are high up in the party. so, on the right, the nuts remain nuts. on the left, the nuts become elevated and they end under running the country i think we should be really really frightened by that. this dude has to face the same consequences. he should not be -- he should be expelled, that's what you would do in school. as a principal, you would expel a student for pulling that so he should not be -- he should go to jail. >> when i pulled alarms in high school i was usually suspended. >> yeah. >> the third time was the expulsion. >> wait you did this regularly? >> all the time. get out a test, if there was a test i didn't study for -- of course i'm kidding. >> okay, good. >> i'm trying to save you. >> of course i'm kidding. martha, what do you think is happening here. >> is he dumb or is he lying i think that the proper course for him -- you know, the only thing that could have made him look better, you are dam right i pulled the alarm. do you know why, because i want to read the bill, i want to pause the process. so, that might have been one course of action. >> >> honestly. >> honesty could be helpful. if you wonder why congress has a 19% approval rating, right? just take a look at jamal bowman and the principal who pulls a fire alarm, fetter tan and the sweats, bobert and the groping, and santos and the lying. you wonder why people do not have respect for this body. case closed. >> can i throw in another option. >> it was consensual groping. >> whatever. >> groanup, please, lying, stupid or drunk. people who are drunk pull fire alarms usually around last call or if they get thrown out of a bar. >> don't have enough money to pay the bill. >> he might have been drunk. >> let's drug test him also. >> fine by me. would like to add there were republican congressman like this barry lattermilk who was giving tours the day before -- i get it, all right, everything i say is a hoax. >> confinement. >> that was debunked, jessica. it's been debunked. coming up, former president trump showing up in court and letting it rip against the liberal leaders trying to destroy his business. providing for your family is a top priority. but what happens when you need affordable health care?
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jamal bowman, congressman jamal bowman and the pulling of a fire alarm. i know there was likely some folks scratching their heads wondering what it was they were asking speaker mccarthy about. >> that is real serious and frankly wreaks of the stuns that republicans try to pull sometimes. and don't be like republicans. >> republicans want to make this -- they want to see how far they can run the trail on this here. we have not heard the last about fire alarm gate from this weekend. >> and our very own peter doocey is asking the white house. >> would president biden try to get out of a meeting by pulling a fire alarm? >> are you talking about something specifically? >> democratic member of congress pulled a fire alarm around a series of votes, no fire. is that appropriate? >> what i can tell you is i'm not talking to -- i have not spoken to the president about this. just not going to comment. >> and she is not going to comment. all right. jessica. is bowman dumb or lying? >> that's not a very nice choice to have to make. i am going with the nicest version of dumb then because i don't think that he is lying about this. first of all, this wasn't the building that the vote was occurring in in the first place. why he would be trying to stall the vote that all democrats were going to vote for, pass overwhelmingly. the capitol police hadn't released a statement which seems to affirm he tried to open the door first. the sign on the door which says push the door and then the alarm will sound for 30 seconds is a bit confusing. but obviously he should know better, he was a principal before he became a congressman. he knows about fire safety. >> that's confusing. >> push until alarm sounds for 3 seconds, door will unlock in 30 seconds. >> if it's an emergency. >> don't touch it unless i lead with -- version of dumb. really bad part though is the nazi statement that came out from his team. so, they sent around first to lawmakers, but then it got leaked to the press that the focus doesn't be on congressman bowman's actions but the nazi republicans blah blah blah he has issued a statement saying, he doesn't think that word should be used, et cetera. now of course it's going to get everyone hyped up, no, you need two-thirds of the house to expel him. that obviously is not happening. when i saw it show up on twitter, is this a real thing. >> it was a real thing because the democrats were trying to stall and read whatever bill was about to come. >> there is no question. and i disagree with my colleague on the left when she says why would he want to stall the vote? i will tell you why because the day before he tried to stall it by pulling a fire alarm and he certainly knows full well what happens when you pull a fire alarm, as a school principal he had fire drills with those kids. he actually text the day before, republican math matt particulars is causing catastrophic shut down that will force millions of working people to go without pay or lifesaving benefits and calling it fiscal responsibility as he condemned the republicans. they wanted to blame the republicans for a shut down. they wanted this to happen. that's why he pulled it so they can -- >> resolution. >> that's why -- that's why he wanted to slow it down and even the new york post an effort to sabotage budget negotiations by pulling a fire alarm in the house building, his disruption occurred just as the democrats leaders in congress were stalling for time. this is a concerted effort. let me tell you, when the -- when the defendants -- when the democrats criticize a republicans for something that they themselves did, it just shows you how out of touch they are. and do you know what, the sign on that door says emergency exit only. he is a congressman. he knows how to go through the tunnels from one building to the next, everybody who is in washington knows that. they didn't want the bill, they wanted to blame republicans. and by the way, it's not just 30 years that you talk about, in dc face 6 months for violation of the fire alarm pull. >> 30 years, greg. do you think he should serve time. >> every single year. there is -- i wouldn't dismiss the calling republicans nazis so lightly because if -- this is always been part of the strategy, if you call somebody hitler, if you call somebody a nazi why wouldn't you sabotage a vote? why wouldn't you rig an election? why wouldn't you create a witch hunt on the person you call them hitler. they call them nazis to justify this behavior. no question, he tried to interrupt a government official business. this is probably the worse deliberate act since 9/11. the question is, does he go to prison? it's for how long? he was trying to initiate an insurrection on his own and he should be treated just like the january 6ers which gets to my amazing comparison. when you think about the extreme whacky participants of what happened on january 6th, the nutty conspiracists, the qanon suckers, the misguided pirates, they weren't a sitting congressman. you know, that's the key difference in these parties. on the right, the freaks aren't in power. on the left, the freaks are in power. and if you want proof, compare how they create their own conspiracies. conspiracies origins on the right they bubble up from chat rooms, they bubble up from reddit, nobodies in forums in chat rooms and they are crazy and they don't really go anywhere. on the left it's their conspiracies are created by a cabal of institutions, right? and politicians who created the steele doss citi', that came from hillary. the russian collusion, suppressing hunter's laptop. these were all done by professionals. people that are high up in the party. so, on the right, the nuts remain nuts. on the left, the nuts become elevated and they end up running the country. i think we should be really really frightened by that. this dude has to face the same consequences. he should not be -- you know, he should be expelled that's what you would do in a school as a principal, you would expel a student for pulling that so he should not -- he should go to jail. >> when i pull alarms in high school i was usually suspended. the third time i think was the expulsion. >> you did this regularly? >> all the time. >> on a test, if there a test i didn't study for -- of course i'm kidding. i'm trying to save you. >> of course i'm kidding. >> martha, what do you think should happen here. >> is he dumb or is he lying? i think that the proper course for him -- you know, the only thing that could made him look better in this situation, you are dam right if i pulled alarm, you know why, i want to read the bill, i want to pace the pro process. that might have been one course of action. could be the principal who took fetterman in his sweats, bobert, santos and the lying, you wonder why people do not have respect for this body of the case closed. >> can i throw in another option. >> consent yule groping. >> grownup, please. >> lying, stupid or drunk, people who are drunk pull fire alarms, last call,. >> money to pay the bill. >> exactly. he might have been drunk. >> let's drug test him also. >> yes. >> fine by me. i would like to add there were republican congressman like this larry battermilk from georgia giving tours to janua january 6th insurrection u.ss. everything i say is a hoax. >> very confinement. >> that was debunked, jessica. we have to go. it's been debunked. coming up, former president trump showing up in court and letting it rip against the liberal leaders trying to destroy his business. but i wonder if you just take a few seconds to pray with me real quick. in the name of the father and son, holy spirit. amen. lord jesus, come to us now. help us to surrender ourselves completely to you. help us to listen to your voice. even when we're distracted or tired, we pray this in the name of the father and of the son of the holy spirit. amen. thank you so much. i just want to encourage you that if you want to join me in more prayer, check out hallow it's the number one prayer app in the world. ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ [bell ringing] and doug says, “you can customize and save hundreds on car insurance with liberty mutual.” he hits his mark —center stage— and is crushed by a baby grand piano. are you replacing me? 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[limu emu squawks.] only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ i'm javi, i'm 31, and i'm a fitness instructor. i saw myself in a photograph. and we were all smiling, and i looked closer, and i was like that- that's what everybody sees? i'm back, and i got botox® cosmetic. the lines were so prominent it's all i saw in the photograph, so now when i take photos, and i see myself in photos, its- it's me, i just have fewer lines. botox® cosmetic is fda-approved to temporarily make frown lines, crow's feet, and forehead lines look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow, eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history. muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins. as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. see for yourself at botoxcosmetic.com with the freestyle libre 2 system, know your glucose level and where it's headed. no fingersticks needed. manage your diabetes with more confidence. freestyle libre 2. try it for free at freestylelibre.us here's why you should switch fo to duckduckgo on all your devie duckduckgo comes with a built-n engine like google, but it's pi and doesn't spy on your searchs and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome, but it blocks cooi and creepy ads that follow youa from google and other companie. and there's no catch. it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. >> donald trump barn storming into a new york courthouse like an orange tazmania devil. releasing a tornado of i can't cults. the state's democratic attorney general letitia james is accusing trump of a $250 million decades long fraud scheme. the judge seen bizarrely smiling in court canceled the new york business licenses. today trump's attorney said that the judge agreed that transactions trump made prior to 2014 would be off limits. but if james is successful, trump could be banned from doing any business in new york. the former president isn't going down without a fight. >> this is a continuation of the single greatest witch hunt of all time and this is what we have. it's a scam, it's a sham. the bank's got back their money. again, there was never a default, never a problem. everything was perfect. there was no crime. the crime is against me. because we have a corrupt attorney, we have a corrupt attorney general, trying to damage me so i don't do as well as i'm doing in the election. >> we are wasting time on this trial. with democrat judge from the clubhouse, it's a disgrace. they ought to look for the murderers and killers all over new york. >> amen. democratic attorney general campaigned she was going to get trump. framed her efforts as fair. >> donald trump and the other defendants have committed persistent and repeated fraud. last week we proved that in our motion for summary judgment. today we will prove our other claims. my message is simple, no matter how powerful you are, no matter how much money you think you may have, no one is above the law. and it is my responsibility and my duty and my job to enforce it. >> all right, judge. you were getting started. in the break you said large portion of this case is already pretty much gone. what is your take on this? >> first of all, this is a case where the attorney general who swore her seoul purpose in running for the state's chief law enforcement officer would be to bring down donald trump, a person she didn't know but someone that she hated. so, she goes in this morning full bore and noticed tonight she didn't say a word to the press. and i will tell you why. she is so incompetent she couldn't figure out the statute of limitations. she is so incompetent and so full of rage and hate and anger that she included 80% of her crime that she considers a crime a civil case as occurring before 2014 which is barred by the statute of limitations. any first year law student will tell you this. she had a judge who is in complicit with her. and let me give you some of the courtroom -- the context of this. no cameras allowed in the courtroom. all of a sudden there are cameras in the courtroom with letitia james, with the judge smiling, because the judge allowed it. this is a game. this is election interference. this is the worse kind of haiti have seen acted out in a civil courtroom. now, simple -- and i will give you someone example. the simple claiming that mar-a-lago is worth $18 million only is we lied by the fact that a 5 bedroom home on the ocean on south ocean boulevard just sold for $53 million. now this 5 bedroom home is 7000 square feet. mar-a-lago is 62700 square feet. okay, it's on the same street. that's incredible how they will do whatever they want and by the way, they are going to spend 3 months to keep him off the campaign trail because what they are trying to do is squeeze all the banks who not only didn't lose a penny but made $100 million over a decade. this is an outrage. >> all right. jessica. you are nodding your head in agreement. >> i never felt such outrage myself. i feel exactly the same about this, except 9,000,000 feet differences. first of all, these trials, these cases and having cameras, et cetera, all benefit donald trump. he is a show man, he wants a show, he has talked about that repeatedly, he doesn't think that he should be off in a room where his people can't see him. what doesn't kill him makes him stronger. he has catapulted up in the polls since being indicted. we'll put that aside. donald trump campaigned in 2015 and 2016 over doing things like this. he told everybody, i'm the guy that can fix the code because i'm the one that knows every loophole and i have been taking advantage of them. so, we all know this was happening. to the mar-a-lago point and down the street there is this $53 million home but it is a private home whereas mar-a-lago is registered and for good reason because it's a club where you could go and party and stay as an income producing club which is taxed and treated differently. this isn't the appraisal of the county commissioner, whatever, this is what the trump organization said it was worth in 2020 they self reported that it was worth $27 million. and now he is going around screaming that they are framing him, then your own company framed you. it also seems that he doesn't -- and this has happened to him before, have a top notch legal team with him. he has the one lawyer that had to pay in advance because he cities everybody. then alina habba, she is on jesse's show a bunch of times. she forgot orion what happened, to check the box saying that they wanted a jury trial and then donald trump is complaining to the cameras and on truth social that it is unamerican to have a trial without a jury when his own crack pot team asks for that. >> can i point out one thing? >> sure. >> the sketch artist loves donald trump. >> it is incredible. that's my point. he is a show map, even a sketch artist who is probably a local new york dem can't help, he loses 20 pounds every indictment. >> it's really incredible, i have to point that out. jesse, how do you deceive banks, there is this weird thing -- >> i will tell you. i mean, this assumption -- banks don't check on the stuff you do. >> right. this is a financial assassination i can't search. the corporate death penalty. because he has $100 million property that the dems say is really $50 million. >> he said over 600 -- >> no, no. they are saying 40 wall street is a sky scraper. they got time warner cable headquarters in there, they have country wide insurance is 1.3 million square feet, jessica. one of the most iconic architectural marvels in southern manhattan. he has 50 tenants in there paying the company millions and millions of dollars and they are squabbling over embellishment. biden embellished his entire career. his entire career is made up. but this is a crime? is it he said he graduated at the top of his law school, he was dead last. every story biden says is made up. >> oh, my god. >> trump has a very fat target because he has done something with his life. you can't go after these democrats because all their money is made on insider trading. now look at this, these guys say they care about holding corporate people accountable? apple slaves to make this iphone. slaves. they have cheetos', they are employing illegal alien child labor. democrats didn't say anything. >> right. >> so, trump is like the biggest corporate threat. this is a message to all these businessmen, don't you ever think about running for president again. because we will destroy everything you built. and he did build things, jessica. >> he put his name on it. >> compare -- portfolio, the bidens to trump's portfolio. biden just got a bunch of l.l.c.'s to hide bribes from the chinese. >> it was under valued because he didn't include the brand value so add that to. >> so add that to it, jessica. >> in my day -- do you know what, just watch what has happened in this case so far. alvin bragg dumped this case. he didn't pursue this case, okay. now maybe we're figuring out why. maybe alvin bragg understood the statue of limitations wasn't going to stand up. do you want me to get him i will get donald trump? guns amazing, forward with this case and she has been embarrassed by this judge who would love to get this guy. right. but he looks at the case and says, oh, my gosh, why did you bring this to me? you have 80% of this that doesn't even hold up in the statute of limitations. so, they are so over exposed between bragg and how he handled it and letitia james. it's embarrassing for all of them at this point. the other side of this is, show me the bank that has been wronged, deceived. is isn't one. there is no injured party in this case. so, did they bring these kind of similar cases against other real estate developers, i'm not saying it's right to over value your property. the rubber hits the road when the valuators from the insurance company and the bank, this property is worth $80 million. sorry, it's not. they have teams of valuation people at banks and insurance companies. nobody is not understanding how much these properties are worth. there is a lot of cases that are up, he has 91 counts, criminal counts n one is blowing up in their face i think it is going to be an embarrassing. >> massive disclaimer on their assessment saying you decide what it's worth. >> that's right. >> all right. so, glad i majored in english. i don't know what is going on. rfk junior teasing a major announcement on a third party run for president. i hear it all the time. people tell me they'd love to buy gold. but because it's gold - they think it must be complicated. it isn't. not with rosland capital. with rosland... the entire process from start to finish is built on one concept... one... keep... it... simple. rosland capital - a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs, and our premium coins, can help you preserve your wealth. call rosland capital at 800-630-8900 to receive your free rosland guide to gold, gold & precious metals ira, and silver brochures. with rosland, there are no hassles, no gimmicks, and our shipping is fast and reliable. remember. keep it simple. make gold your new standard. call rosland capital today at 800-630-8900, 800-630-8900. that's 800-630-8900. we're traveling all across america, talking to people about their hearts. how's the heart? - good. - you sure? - i think so. - how do you know? let me show you something. put two fingers right on those pads. look at that! that's your heart! that is pretty awesome. with kardiamobile, you can take a medical-grade ekg in just 30 seconds, from anywhere. kardiamobile is proven to detect atrial fibrillation, one of the leading causes of stroke. kardiamobile is now available for just $79. order at kardia.com or amazon. bath fitter is a better way to remodel your tub. precise measuring means the perfect fit. the bath fitter tub over tub process means no mess or stress. a custom-made tub and seamless wall mean a watertight fit. premium acrylic means it lasts a lifetime. and all this together means a great value. bath fitter. it just fits. visit bathfitter.com to book your free consultation. >> so a major wrench is about to be thrown into president biden election run, they tried to make this guy go away, he isn't. robert f kennedy junior is expected to announce he will likely run as an independent, that looks like what this announcement is going to be. biden obviously generations of his family. it could be a move that changes the game for 2024. rfk junior polls in double digits among democrats, primary voters, watch this. >> i want to tell i now what i've come to understand after six months of campaigning. there is a path to victory, it's not through playing the game of the corrupt rules that the corrupt powers, the vested interests have rigged to keep us all in their cabal. join me in philadelphia on october 9th. there i will show you with our path to the white house and we can all participate in healing our nation. >> interesting. interesting music underneath that. the whole thing is interesting. rfk junior could play spoiler or do better than that if it works out his way. the top concerns about biden of course continue to be his advanced age and bill marr thinks it's time for biden to drop out. >> someone has to convince president biden if he runs again he is going to turn the country back over to trump and -- and go down in history as ruth bader biden. the person who doesn't know when to quit and so does great damage to their party and their country. >> very interesting. jesse, let me start with you. what is the impact of rfk junior getting in, the word is he is going to run as an independent. >> it you hads biden more than it hurts trump. i looked at video for rfk ralston ds, you will not see trumping looking at voters at rfk rallies. it is college students and black americans. that's not what i consider the trump base. okay. how about this. how about -- >> admitting now that black people are -- >> i'm talking demographically jessica or did that go over your head. >> black is a demographic. >> okay. trust me, they don't vote for trump, they vote for democrats. >> vote for trump in bigger numbers than any prior candidate. >> keep banking on the fact he is getting more and more black vote. >> trump is not in withing the black vote. redo better than last time. >> all right. >> when you see a crowd of black people with a crowd of college students you do not say that is a trump rally. i mean, come on, people. are we stupid here? jamals going on? let's say new hampshire, critical vote electorally. you see trump's name, you see biden's name and you see kennedy. kennedy is synonymous with democrat. everybody in new hampshire used to live in massachusetts, they are all boston transplants. he and this guy has boston coming out of his pores. who has a firmer grip on their base? is it joe biden or trump? donald trump does. donald trump absolutely does. have you ever meta trump voter that is like, do you know what, i'm really considering voting for kennedy, an environmental lawyer. >> actually. >> if you go on his website, wants to stop mining, logging and oil ex more asian. if you go on his website, rfk, junior who i like, also wants government run daycare. is he pro choice. i'm not saying trump people wouldn't consider voting for him. i would say overwhelmingly, this poll's for biden. >> he says -- and i know you have interviewed him. he talks about being the first podcast president. he has a lot of support among rogen l
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the door when it comes to their interest. uh, let's bring in uh jamal wakim and he's a university professor who joins us from beirout. jamal wakim, welcome to the program. uh, this operation at this point, is transitioning into or trying to transition into a ground operation. based on what israel has announced um at this point they're still progressing however with their airways which has resulted in uh so many civilian casualties that it's really not only sad but very shocking uh give us your idea of uh where this operation stands from the israeli perspective and where it wants to go? well uh thank you for having me on the show uh i would like to say that from the israeli perspective. uh, they have set an unachievable goal, which is to wipe out hamas and also to get rid of two million palestinians by pushing them towards sinai, and create a sort of alternative homeland for them in sinai, so these two objectives are unachievable and when when a certain power sets a certain unachievable goal, it destins itself towards defeat, this is to start with, so far, despite all the casualties and victims who fell on the palestinian s
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jamal boquin professor of international relations at lebanese university who joins us from beirout jamal boquin welcome to the program uh i'm looking at the latest that's uh i'm look down a list of events that have happened based on sources from. on uh in terms of what's occurring there, and uh, the uh military exchanges are not uh the way they were in the past days. now we are looking at what has been uh supposedly advised by the us and israel heating to, and that is uh for it to uh not go into the gaza strip and to tone down its war if that's possible, because we're still getting reports of of areas being bombed in order for the not to, in order for it not to jeopadize uh the issue of the captive. and also the us telling uh israel not to get engaged with with uh hezbollah and the resistance factions there, i'm wondering what you think about uh the approach that the us and or israel are using when it comes to hezbollah? well, i believe that israel first is trying to tone down its high retoric against gaza and this has been best expressed in the release. of some prisoners by hamas and it seems that this reflect indirect talks between the resistance in gaza and the zionist entity in order to resolve the situation without further escalation, so this has had an impact on the lebanese frontier which was a bit cooler yesterday than the previous days and we know that his was only willing to go into a full scale confrontation with israel, had it gone a full scale attack on gaza, which which is not the case so far, so and there are high expectations now in lebanon that the conflict will not erupt into a full scale conflict that would intail bombing of lebanese hinterland and in response, targeting of zionist hinterland, we had the iranian foreign minister was sin abdullahyan ali salam who has said that the us has actually sent it messages, i'm not too sure, i'm i'm guessing indirectly obviously getting to uh the iranian foreign ministry and the foreign minister that it has that it has said that it's not interested in any war with iran and it's not interested for a war to to break out and it has asked iran to take the... to ask other countries uh to uh somewhat not not get militarily involved which which i'm guessing would also involve uh maybe iran's influence or should i say um the fact that iran has good relations with hesbollah and resistance factions um that's pretty interesting uh coming from the us that um is providing israel with the weapons to to attack israel but telling iran take the lead to stop that from happening. uh, can you make sense out of it? well, i'm sorry, i'll ask the same question from you, actually, go ahead, sorry, i'm going to ask you that question, but it's for ali salam. go ahead, it's okay, um, the u.s. speaks with a forked tongue all the time, so if the that they're saying such a thing, um, is is not because they care or not because they want uh palestinians to stop being massacred, i mean this is a, this is genocide going on on live tv and everyone is crying for the murder, everyone is treating the murderer as the victim, it's because the us is afraid by all their calculations according to... their own military studies and exercises, they would be absolutely obliterated by iran even in a direct confrontation alone, forget about all of iran's allies and support across the region, which we have seen a preview of, the resistance factions have been turning up the heat on the illegal american occupiers in the region by targeting some of their military bases in iraq in their illegal occupation of syria where they're stealings. people suffer uh miserably under sanctions and lose out from their own oil rev revenue to make up for the sanctions. um, several spectacular uh retaliatory attacks against us occupation posts in the in the region or attacked by various resistance forces, so the us is really afraid to lose its grip on the region, um, and they and the zionist regime is uh integral to the uh kind of satanic world order um that is need that seeks to oppress and subjicate the peoples of the world spread corruption and immorality and uh keep people whom they view as inferior in a state of poverty and bloodshed um i think it's a it's a case of cowardice they're admitting their own reality and so they're trying to save face but it's never they speak with a fork they speak with a fork tongue because it's not like they're doing so out of wanting peace they don't want. they they're just going to resort to more uh indirect forms of war weather proxies as they did with supporting isis and alqaeda in the past in syria especially the very liberal hedenistic values which leaves the human heart to be empty in order to kind of weaken culturally and socially and religiously the nations that they seek to subjugate. all right so the question to you on this uh in terms of the us as the iranian foreign minister said uh saying to uh you know try to prevent this from getting out of hand take the lead um in the region um our guest there talks about that the us's grip in the region does the us have any grip left in the region especially after this war alota to have to have been executed so successfully um now uh with what's happened in terms of the sentiment against israel which reflects on the us well definitely despite the fact that that israel and the united states have received the civil blow by the strike directed by the resistance in gaza, however the united states still maintains a lot of power, it has huge influence in the region, not only in terms of its military bases scattered and various arab and islamic countries in the region, but also through its alliance with ruling elites in many arab and islamic states, so uh, we we need some time to see the influence of the united states wavering, however, the united states is not willing to go a full scale confrontation with iran and it's a... lies in the region, the access of resistance, and that's the reason why it's sending indirect messages that were revealed by the minister of foreign affairs of iran in terms of its core for appeasement in the region, especially that since last thursday, us military bases in iraq and syria have been under continuous attacks by the iraqist resistance and the syrian resistance in the region and the united states don't doesn't want to injure losses and any confrontation and that's why since the onset of this latest let's say round of confrontation it has tried its best to limit the confrontation to gaza and to control the some extremist officials in the zionist entity from going... into a full scale confrontation with the palestinian resistance in the ocupaid territories with lebanon, syria and with iran, so uh maybe the the the the the americans are serious about their approach and it's most likely that we wouldn't witness a further escalation of the situation. one evidence or one sign for this is the release of some hostages, usually usually hostages are released after the conflict is over or after the latest round of escalation during a certain conflict, while now the release of some hostages or prisoners of war uh is a sign that things might not go into a full scale confrontation and into further escalation of the situation. all right, let me ask you salam about a particular uh snapshot that uh is making the rounds and it's of these uh tents uh wraps uh with the israeli uh flag logo top of it of settlers who are inside these tents, and uh, the news depiction of this snapshot says that look, these are the settlers that are now homeless, they're trying to control the narrative uh for people who are not familiar obviously with the scenario when it comes to the palestine israel conflict, i mean this is occupied land, and then you have the settlers on tents making them like they're homeless, when it's the palestinians in gaza that are homeless based on the destruction that has happened. uh, tell us more about how you have seen uh, the way that the narrative in the media or through prints wants to depict israel being the victim. well, isn't it divine justice and poetic justice because what they're being subjected to is only 1% of what they themselves subjected palestinian since the early 1900s, especially in 1947 and 1940. with the various terrorist campaigns that saw mass murders and ethnic cleansing and displacement, so it was the native palestinian peoples of various different religious backgrounds who were living in tense because they were kicked out of their homes by terrorist occupiers who have come to displace them and take their lands. um, the the rhetoric that the defense minister use calling them human animals is not anything new, they're just announcing it out of something that... they may be kept quiet for only their inner circles and putting a friendly face to the rest of the world, but this is something that the palestinians have been subjected to, and so with when the media actually tries to portray military occupiers, because anyone above the age of 18, both men and women are either active duty military or reservis military, they are not civilians in the classical definition of the term, they are 100% armed occupiers and they are they are knowing well what? they are doing engaging in active military occupation, they're they're not, they're not going to vacation or anything like that, they're going to inflict violence upon people in order to take their land, and this is very obvious, so the media, it's not surprising because the owners of media, are either zionists themselves or sympathetic to the zionist cause, so they have they have that bias and and there's there's no way they're going. to uh stand by those the the people who are on the right side of the truth, they're standing by the murderers and the and the terrorists, and so it's not surprising that the this controlled media in the west, which proports itself to be free and independent, using some uh little bit of veneer and makeup on the surface level to make it seem so uh, but it really is just uh putting lipstick a pig, it's just nice way to make lies and deception. uh palatable to the public and unfortunately many people are brainwashed by it, but i believe that the media and the west is on it last like there's a massive awakening going on, there was a huge outpour outpour of support for palestine even among people in the west, various different religious backgrounds and ethnic backgrounds, so they are realizing that these the zionist is not just something that is bad for palestine, but is also bad for them, they're sending money to to the israelis to massacre and genocide gazan children, but meanwhile the new york city subway uh is either filled with suwage on one week or weekly stabbings on the other on another week, so the people are realizing that they should stop funding this genocide and use their own funds to uh keep their own countries in in in one piece. all right, i got a final question there for you jamalews of how china has deployed warships.
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jamal. the accusation and denial game went on for months. ben dismissed the accusation as baseless, presenting himself as victim of an international vendetta. digitor the murder of jamal kashoki. washington and ankara, on the other hand, instead of the crown prince, in de sonunda denilen yere geldiler, şimdi amerikanı senatosu ne diyor, evet sudi ikimini şimdi suçluyor, işte en son milletler daimi elcisi, ne dedi? iş artık belli bir yere geldi, daha bir çok şeyler çıkacak, buradan çok şeyler. kişilere kadar en alttan en üst sorumlu olanların hepsinin yargılanmasını ve, arası hukuk nezdinde gereken cezaları almasını istiyoruz. triggered an uproar in washington, unusual bipartisan fury in congress brought armed sales to saudi arabia to a halt temporarily. the current relationship with saudi arabia is. not working for america, they have been strategic allies and could be in the future, but right now it is more of a burden than it is an asset, and why not i say that? this uh country led by the de facto leaders, the crown prince has been a wrecking ball, and the koshogi instant is just uh one of many, but the most regreous and i think most people can relate to why we're up
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jamal and mohammed were among those who died. every child of palestine. now carries with them memories of explosions, of screams of horror by the inhumane, unconchionable actions of israel. five years ago, jamal
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jamal koshoji. the accusation and denial game went on for months. bin salman dismissed the accusation as baseless, presenting. himself as victim of an international vendetta, did you order the murder of jamal kashogi? absolutely not, this was heinous crime, but washington and ankara, on the other hand, insisted that the crown prince was involved in the murder and couldn't get away with it. they call for justice to be done. eninde sonunda denilen yere geldiler. Şimdi amerikan senatosu. ne diyor, evet suudi yönetimini şimdi suçluyor. İşte en son birleşmiş milletler daimi elcisi iki halei o bile ne dedi, isim vererek hem de söylüyor. ve bu işin diyor faili odur. buyur. iş artık belli bir yere geldi. daha birçok şeyler çıkacak. burada. gerçekleştiren kişilere kadar en alttan en üste sorumlu olanların hepsinin yargılanmasını ve eee uluslararası hukuk nezdinde gereken cezaları almasını istiyoruz 2018, the kushoji case triggered an uproar in washington, unusual bipartisan fury in congress brought armed sales to saudi arabia to a halt, albeit temporarily. the current relationship with saudi arabia is not working for america. they have been strategic allies and could be in the future, but right now it is more of a burden than it is an asset, and why not i say that? this uh country led by the de facto leaders, the crown prince has been a wrecking ball, and the kashogi instant is just uh, one of many, but the most aggreous, and i think most people can relate to why we're upset. as for the trump administration, it worked to shield bin salman from further scrutiny. we have no smoking gun that the crown prince was involved, not the intelligence community or anyone else. is no smoking gun, we have not changed that accountability for the murder is our expectation of everyone involved in the murders, accountability. uh is our position has not changed at all, and by the way, i have read all the until, i have personally read all the intelligence, i have read all the translations. trump made it clear that the u.s. saudi alliance was nothing more than an arrangement based on keeping global oil prices stable and negotiating lucrative weapons deals. in terms of the order of $110 billion dollars, think of that, $110 billion dollars, all they're going to do is give it to other countries, and i think that would be very foolish for our country, but there are other things we can do that will be very severe. in 2020, trump's successor joe biden threatened to turn saudi arabia into a global paraya over the murder. i think the report speaks uh, speaks for itself, and uh, i think you've seen uh today number of very uh important steps to uh recalibrate uh the relationship. first of all, the release of the report itself. and the transparency that that provides, this is a report that um uh that uh in a sense is not fresh off the printing press, it's been there uh, we uh released it, we were determined to bring transparency to this issue and to share with the american people uh, what we know, and again i think that report speaks, speaks for itself. in february 2021, a month after taking office, biden did follow through a campaign promise to release a us intelligent. report which directly blamed prince muhammad bin salman for khashoji's murder. despite the us prepared evidence, biden decided not to directly punish prince muhammad by imposing a travel ban or sanctions against him. after initially reviewing weapon sales to saudi arabia, by mid-2022, the biden administration resumed billions of dollars in arms sales and military support to the kingdom. at the same time, federal. judge dismissed the lawsuit against the crown prince after the biden administration recommended he be granted immunity. in july 2022, biden traveled to saudi arabia to meet the prince at home. the white house said biden had raised rashoji's case with the prince during their meeting. many, however, interpreted the visit as biden begging for lower oil prices. finally, we discussed human rights and the need for political reform. as always, as i always do, i made clear that the topic is vitally important to me and to the united states, respect to the murder of keshogi, i raised it at the top of the meeting, making it clear what i thought of it at the time, and what i think of it now, and it was exactly, i was straightforward and direct in discussing it, i made my view crystal clear, i said very straightforwardly, for an american president to be silent on issue of human rights, is this consistent with inconsistent. with who we are and who i am. i'll always stand up for our values. currently, the biden administration is trying to convince bin salman to sign a peace agreement with the israeli regime, while helping the kingdom launch a civilian nuclear program. it's a far cry from viiden's pledge during his presidential campaign to treat prince muhammad bin salman and his kingdom as a paraya for the murder of khashoji. more than dozen human rights groups. recently released a joint statement accusing the biden administration of helping aid bin salman's rehabilitation on the world stage and asking it to prioritize significant and genuine human rights improvements by the saudi government. five years into rashoji's death, his case is little discussed in major media outlets, nor even in turkey where local media once publicized his tragic fate. in 2020. turkey put 26 saudi nationals on trial in absensia as the saudis refused to hand them over to istanbul, but early 2022 the case was halted. last year a turkish court transferred its trial in absenture of the 26 individuals to saudi arabia, move slammed by human rights groups. turkish authorities said it was impossible to prosecute the case because the defendants were not there in person. however, human rights organiz türkiye durdurmuş oldu bu kararla beraber suudi arabistan'a yönlendirmiş oldu davayı eee yani hukuki anlamda nasıl bir adalet sistemin olduğunu hatta olmadığını bildiğimiz bir ülke suudi arabistan eee o noktada bir olumlu yani adalete yönelik adalet sonucu olacak bir eee karar geleceğini tabii ki se beklemiyor, ben de beklemiyorum, siyasi bir karar, yani bugün verilen burada bu mahkemede verilen karar siyasi bir karar. death, the us vaut to whole saudi arabia accountable, but in reality, washington has done the opposite, just a week before the death anniversary of jamalon released a statement on the occasion of saudi arabia's national day, expressing how the us greatly values the enduring relationship we have had with saudi arabia over the past eight decades. five years afterji's death, business as usual for the us and turkey, the two countries which mowed and grond for... months, they accused rightly or wrongly the saudi crown prince of orchestrating the gruesome murder, but by the looks of things, they've already compromise their claimed concerns for human rights midway. that lines this hour israeli regime keeps pounding the ghaza strip following large-scale operations by palestinian resistance of fighters in the occupied the onestop general says the palestinian operation turned israel's nightmare. into certainty stressing the normalization deals cannot stop the regimes collapse and in afghanistan taliban officials a say the death doll from devastating earthquake in the western province of harat has exceeded 2000.
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belonging to three brothers, jamal, isam and imad al fararra, civilians were inside, so far we counted nine men, women and children killed, isam and his family, imad's daughters, jamal son and his wife, taufiq, doctor taufiq just got married three months ago, this is the level of crime and discriminated crimes that are being committed, the three brothers have no... affiliation with hamas at all, the three brothers are hard working for their families and their political affiliation is nothing, nothing to do with hamas, this is now they are targeting everyone and anyone indiscriminately, everybody is in danger, even they are they are targeting medical crews, they are targeting journalists, so far 19 journalists, hospitals over 12 hospitals, most, the church of preferius was was demolished, but this crime of my... relatives who did nothing, they were hit by three bombs, three missiles of criminal f16, we are still whole bodies from out from under the ruble, and we don't know how many of our beloved relatives have been killed a crime, collective punishment under international law, but the world doesn't care, because israel is above international law, these madness must
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jamal roshoji. the accusation and denial game went on for months. bin salman dismissed the accusation as baseless, presenting himself as victim of inner national vendetta. did you order the murder of jamal kashoki? washington and ancora on the other hand, insisted that the crown prince was involved in the murder and couldn't get away with it. they call for justice to be done. eninde sonunda denilen yere geldiler. Şimdi amerikanın senatosu ne diyor? evet. suudi yönetimini şimdi suçluyor. işte. en son birleşmiş milletler daimi elcisi ik haley o bile ne dedi, isim vererek hem de söylüyor. ve bu işin diyor faili odur. buyur iş artık belli bir yere geldi. daha birçok şeyler çıkacak. buradan çok şeyler çıkar. after half decade, it's a proper time to see how serious the unit in turkey were about. ben ve hükümetim bu konuyle alakalı emri verenden gerçekleştiren kişilere kadar en alttan en üste sorumlu olanların hepsinin yargılanmasını ve eee uluslararası hukuk nezdinde gereken cezaları almasını istiyoruz. washington, unusual bipartisan fury in congress brought. sails to saudi arabia to a halt, albeit temporarily. the current relationship with saudi arabia is not working for america, they have been strategic allies and could be in the future, but right now it is more of a burden than it is an asset, and why don't i say that? this uh country led by the de facto leaders, the crown prince has been a wrecking ball, and the kashogi instant is just... one of many, but the most aggreous, and i think most people can relate to why we're upset. as for the trump administration, it worked to shield bin salman from further scrutiny. we have no smoking gun that the crown prince was involved, not the intelligence community or anyone else. there is no smoking gun. we have not changed that accountability for the murder is our expectation. of everyone involved in the murders, accountability uh, is our position, has not changed at all, and by the way, i have read all the intel, i have personally read all the... intelligence, i have read all the translations. trump made it clear that the u.s. saudi alliance was nothing more than an arrangement based on keeping global oil prices stable and negotiating lucrative weapons deals. in terms of the order of $10 billion dollars, think of that, 110 billion dollars, all they're going to do is give it to other countries, and i think that would be very foolish for our country, but there are other things we can do that will be very severe. in 20. 2020, trump's successor joe biden threatened to turn saudi arabia into a global paraya over the murder. i think the report speaks uh speaks for itself and uh i think you've seen uh today number of very uh important steps to uh recalibrate uh the relationship. first of all, the release of the report itself and the transparency that that provides. this is a report that um uh that uh in a sense is not fresh off the printing press, it's been there. uh, we uh released it, we were determined to bring transparency to this issue and to share with the american people uh, what we know, and again, i think that report speaks, speaks for itself. in february 2021, a month after taking office, biden did follow through a campaign promise to release a us intelligence report which directly blamed prince muhammad bin salman for khushoji's murder. despite the us prepared evidence, biden decided not to directly punish prince muhammad by imposing a travel ban or sanctions against him, after initially reviewing weapon sales to saudi arabia, by mid 2022, the biden administration resumed billions of dollars in arms sales and military support to the kingdom. at the same time, federal judge dismissed the lawsuit against the crown prince, after the biden administration recommended he be granted immunity. in july 2022, biden traveled to saudi arabia to meet the prince at home. the white house said biden had raised rashoji's case with the prince during their meeting. many, however, interpreted the visit as biden begging for lower oil prices. finally, we discussed human rights and the need for political reform. as always, as i always do, i made clear that the topic is vitally important to me and to the united states, respect to the murder of. shogi, i raised it at the top of the meeting, making it clear what i thought of it at the time, and what i think of it now, and it was exactly, i was straightforward and direct in discussing it, i made my view crystal clear, i said very straightforwardly, for an american president to be silent on issue of human rights, is this consistent inconsistent with who we are and who i am, i'll always stand up for our values, currently the biden administration is trying to... bin salman to sign a peace agreement with the israeli regime while helping the kingdom launch a civilian nuclear program. it's a far cry from viiden's pledge during his presidential campaign to treat prince muhammad bin salman and his kingdom as a paraya for the murder of khashoji. more than dozen human rights groups recently released a joint statement accusing the biden administration of helping aid bin salman's rehabilitation on the world stage. and asking it to prioritize significant and genuine human rights improvements by the saudi government. five years into rashoji's death, his case is little discussed in major media outlets, nor even in turkey, where local media once publicized his tragic fate. in 2020, turkey put 26 saudi nationals on trial in absentia, as the saudis refused to hand them over to istanbul, but early 2022, the case was halted. last year a turkish court transferred its trial in absentia of the 26 individuals to saudi arabia, move slammed by human rights groups. turkish authorities said it was impossible to prosecute the case because the defendants were not there in person. however, human rights organizations claimed the decision was political, a result of turkey and saudi arabia reconciling after the murder. hukuki süreci türkiye. durdurmuş oldu bu kararla beraber suudi arabistan'a yönlendirmiş oldu davayı eee yani hukuki anlamda nasıl bir adalet sistemin olduğunu hatta olmadığını bildiğimiz bir ülke suudi arabistan eee o noktada bir olumlu ee yani adalete yönelik adalet sonucu olacak bir eee karar geleceğini tabii ki kimse beklemiyor ben de beklemiyorum eee siyasi bir karar yani bugün verilen burada bu mahkemede verilen karar siyasi bir karar. the us vaut to hold saudi arabia accountable, but in reality, washington has done the opposite, just a week before the death anniversary of jamaleased a statement on the occasion of saudi arabia's national day, expressing how the us greatly values the enduring relationship we have had with saudi arabia over the past eight decades. five years after khashogji's death, business as usual for the u.s. and turkey, the two countries which moaned and groaned for months, they accused rightly or wrongly the saudi crown prince of orchestrating the gruesome murder, but by the looks of things they've already come احنا بنيجي هنا عشان اهلنا محتاجين 90% من الاطفال اللي بيعملوا في قطاع غزه هو بيعمل عند اللي هو قريبه من الدرجه الاولى يعني يا عند ابوه يا عند انا بطلت من ال المدرسه عشان اجيب لها خبتيه وابوي مصاري وعشان اشتطي ابوي اللي هي كمان ماكينه وهي مكينه هنا واقع كله واقف هو المصنع كان يعني زي ما تقول كان في حوالي 15 عامل او 12 عامل بعد الحصار والهذا كله وقف هناك ما يقرب من 35 الفريج موجودين عاطلين عن العمل نظر قطعی جمهوری اسلامی این است که دولت هایی که قمار عادي سازی با رژیم صهیونیستی رو برای خودشون سرمشق و شیروه کار قرار میدن ایننا ضرر خواه
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palestine solidarity campaign director ben jamal says enoughis campaign director ben jamal says enoughediate ceasefire. so that necessary humanitarian aid can be safely delivered to the people of gaza. we are here today to assert the truth that violence will ultimately not end until you address the root causes of violence, and that is israel's decades long imposition of a system of military occupation and apartheid upon the people of palestine. and we are marching to downing street to deliver a message to our political leadership that you need to end your complicit support for this system of oppression . oppression. >> in other news, tributes are being paid to sir bobby charlton, who has died at the age of 86. he was a key member of england's world cup winning team in 1966 and a club legend at manchester united . his family at manchester united. his family said sir bobby passed away peacefully in the early hours of this morning. in a statement, united described him as one of the greatest and most beloved players in the history of the club . the environment agency is club. the environme
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jamal simmons, former communications director for kamala harris, and also a cnn commentator. jamal, basically -- you really could argue that this was years in the making. >> it was used in the making. establishment republican party has done a deal with the sort of antiestablishment rogue forces, where anger is really the testament of how you are true. we talk about people being moderate. but they are not moderate in the sense that we may think of it of, oh, they have positions close to the. center they're just not yelling and screaming all the time when trying to overturn the system. and so i think what kevin mccarthy has done a sort of proven that it is sometimes better to think about doing important things than it is to think about just doing an important job. he has had a job. but he did not actually get very much done when he had the job. and i think -- i imagine that there will come a moment from him in the dark of night, a little bit away from now, where he thinks, i probably should have done a little bit more. >> i doubt it. >> -- a lot of self-refraction self-reflection. i -- came up with the young guns. kevin mccarthy always wanted to be speaker. obviously, his ambition await his dignity, apparently, because he made this deal with mack matt gaetz, and other troublemakers, to essentially sign his own death certificate, whenever they wanted. and so he is leaving the way he came in. really -- with matt gaetz holding his faith in his hands. don't be surprised if you lose them the way you get them. >> it's so funny. because he actually talked a lot about, first of all, this job being such a thing for him, from since he was a child, and how he did not get a job as an intern, but then he got a job as a speaker, to your point. very important to him. it was brought up on the floor today. >> yes. >> i want to play this, for mccarthy, we are -- he had plenty of blame for the conservatives, of course, in his conference, but also on the democrats. take a listen. >> i think today was a political decision by the democrats. i think the things they have done in the past her the institution. they just started moving people from committee. they just started the other things. my fear is the institution fell to them. because you can't do the job if you are eight people. you have 94%, or 96% of your entire conference, but eight people can partner with the whole other side. how do you govern? >> i am honestly trying to understand that. because he was the one who agreed to that rule that gave 3%, 6%, whatever percentages of the conference, all of this power. >> yeah. there is no way around the fact that this is a huge win for matt gaetz. this is just this -- if you think about this from the perspective of whoever the next speaker is, they have to be thinking, is i really have to take this matt gaetz seriously. because he is really willing to blow it all up. it gives him a lot more leverage. and it ends up in some strange way being an own goal for the democrats. like corona, mccarthy, he was not the worst a speaker could get. he was not the most radical you could get, right? it could be the case that we get replaced someone, somebody we're, somebody that is more friendly to the matt gaetz and marjorie taylor greene's -- >> and more calm potent -- competent -- >> -- >> -- some kind of brokered deal, power sharing agreement and -- couple dozen democrats refrain from voting or say, hey, we will actually keep you from getting ousted. democrats, at this point, are the party of good government and this is just bad for the country, to have a leaderless, riderless house when you are 45 days away from defaulting on the national -- >> do you think there is any truth to the criticism that -- mccarthy makes it -- that democrats should have, for the good of the institution, stepped in here? >> i think there was a deal to be had. >> but isn't -- >> it is on kevin mccarthy, where he would have to do something. it's also true that his conference would turn on him if he said, hey, guys, the democrats are going to bail me out. but this would have been good for the country. the fact that you have a different coalition coming together and making sure you have a speaker of the house. what we have is instead chaos. it's terrible for the country. anyone who -- is lying, because this has never happened before. you know what? among the house republican caucus knows who the next leader is going to be. they are having this conversation right now. and who wants this job? to your point, they have to make it so the next speaker cannot have a motion to vacate with one, two, three, votes. it has to be double digits or higher to have any kind of security. but can they get that kind of concession for the hard-liners? >> i will tell you what they are doing immediately one of the pro tem's official acts -- nancy pelosi and tell her to vacate her office and matt gaetz is already criticizing the pro tem speaker. so, it's going great, guys. >> -- middle fingers to the other side on the -- >> but you know what is honestly -- correct me if i am, wrong s. e., not what mchenry is known for his being a flame thrower. >> no. people think he's very a sober middle of the road guy. but he has been thrust into this -- >> but to the question that andrew just asked, who would want this job? one republican, troy nehls of texas said, well, you don't have to be a member to be a speaker. let's call him donald trump. i have seen that. i think hannity was -- >> so was dawn don jr. -- >> -- >> -- here you have a guy who helped launch the january 6th insurrection against the house of representatives, and people who were deaf a casing inside the congress, the congressional building, who could possibly be the speaker and in charge of the capital police, who were injured in the january 6th insurrection. this is peak republican silliness. >> it says, a lot, though, about trump's a shadow looming over this chamber right now, no matter what, which way you look at it. >> yeah. if trump were gone, the entire republican party would change overnight. the shadow that he cast over the whole party, they are just so few people willing for any reason what so ever, to say they are not loyal to him. you see what happens to chris christie. you see what happens to any republican that even hints at this loyalty to donald trump. he is still the elephant in the room for republicans. and that -- it's a fundamental character trait of the party now. >> that's what i would like to double down on is, there is the sense that after trump recedes from the scene, republicans will somehow snap back to their senses. it's not happening. this party has become beholden to its base, and the base likes it. the base is now running the asylum. and that is not going to reverse itself. >> yeah, and look. trump may have created some of these characters, but they are here now. and they are doing their own work with or without him. thanks everyone. standby for us. kaitlan? but >> i think the idea of trump becoming house speaker is a bit of a fever dream from some republicans. but who knows? there are a lot of options on the table. -- cnn capitol hill reporter melanie zanona, and leigh ann caldwell, reporter for the washington post. -- not going to happen, by that is kind of hard to overstate the level of chaos knowing what is happening in that building behind us, and what today means when you step back and look at the fact that kevin mccarthy, after 269 days is no longer house speaker and they have no clue tonight who is going to be next. >> yeah. it is entirely shocking and stunning. and yet it's also completely inevitable. when you talk to republicans after that 15 rounds of speaker votes that kevin mccarthy had to go through, they say, this is not going to be good for kevin mccarthy. the fact that he empowered those members to be able to call for a vote to oust him, a single member to be able to oust him, people warned him against that. members of his own leadership team said this is not a good idea. this is going to be a threat that hangs over your head and, he fought for months to try to keep this rebellion at bay. but the chickens finally came home to roost today for kevin mccarthy. and that is the reality that they are now dealing with. but i will tell you, even though it has only been a few hours, we are already hearing that there are members who are scrambling to shore up support to run to replace government dorothy. steve scalise, the number two republican, is already making calls. he's -- and jim jordan i entertaining a potential speakers bid. so, there are some moves being made behind the scene, but the big picture is who can get to 218? who can corral that same conference that was responsible for taking out kevin mccarthy? and that person is going to be taking on the same challenges that kevin mccarthy did. >> -- whoever is going to get that job if someone next we can actually get that job, they are facing, i mean, today we are 40 days away from the government running out of money again after they just passed that short-term bill. they are going to be taking those same exact hurdles. >> yeah, absolutely. and when kevin mccarthy was asked tonight what he would recommend to his successor, he actually said, change the house rules. we don't know if that is going to be definitely on the table yet or not. but it gets back to the challenges, the institutional challenges that kevin mccarthy and others thought were essential to the problem here. it also sets up a problem that there is a right flank of the party who has no interest, really, in funding the government or passing short term government spending bills. they want to do it at levels that could never pass a democratic-controlled senate, that could never get signed by a democratic president. and so there is a level of lack of real-ism here. and so, if someone else can do it better than kevin mccarthy that is a very high bar. we will see if someone is elected if they are able to do so. and is it because it is less of a personality conflict? or if it's actually really a policy conflict? >> yeah. and when we had tennessee republican congressman timber checked on here earlier, i asked if he favored keeping that motion too -- and he seemed to vote lean toward -- accountability. i guess we saw their version of that today. do you expect, melanie zanona that -- could be? >> listen, if they are going to try to change the motion to vacate they are going to need democratic votes to do that. that was -- talking about saying, depending on today's vote goes maybe we need to revisit this issue. but you heard bob good talking earlier on our air. he said it, yes. any candidate that the speaker and going to get my vote is going to have to make the same commitments that kevin mccarthy did. so, it is not clear who is going to be able to lead this caucus in conference better than kevin mccarthy did or any easier than he did. but, i think to leigh ann caldwell's point, there was personal differences between, especially, matt gaetz and kevin mccarthy. they just did not trust kevin mccarthy. he's made a lot of -- nancy mace, for example, i think she was a surprising vote in some ways. but she he had been saying he -- >> that's really where the issue is. >> and she has been saying that pretty publicly. he was harshly critical of her. what do the next seven days look like in the building behind us? does anyone know? >> they actually left town until next tuesday. so, they are not even going to be here. but what is going to be happening is you have already had different factions of the party starting to meet. there are some groups who met tonight. there are some groups who are meeting tomorrow. and these ideologically similar factions are going to be talking about who they want their next speaker to be. we will see if they are going to be able, if these different parts can come together to find a consensus candidate. there are five or six names that are being floated out there, as melanie zanona he said. some of these names are already starting to make news, to do it. but it is going to be a real back channeling discussion and we'll fight over who is going to be the next speaker of the house. because they are going to have their first gathering as an entire conference next tuesday. >> -- that decision. >> -- an explosion and an already deeply fractious conference. we will see what that looks like. leigh ann caldwell and melanie zanona, great reporting today by both of you. thank you for joining me. abby, it's going to be an exciting week for capitol hill reporter. maybe exciting is not the right word. >> yeah. look, eight more days and seven more days, and nobody in congress really doing any more work -- than sorting themselves out -- the american people have -- thanks, kaitlan -- it seems kevin mccarthy is blaming democrats were losing his speakership. i will ask one of those democrats, congresswoman ilhan omar what he thinks of the end of mccarthy stint as speaker. >> pursuant to clause 12 a of rule one, the chair declares the house in recess object to the call of the chair. >> more on this historic news tonight. the house, for the very first time ever, removing speaker kevin mccarthy. so, what comes next for the people's house? and joining me now to discuss this is democratic congresswoman ilhan omar. congresswoman omar, thank you for joining us. >> it's great to be with you. >> earlier tonight, the now former speaker kevin mccarthy -- he essentially blamed democrats for why he no longer has his job. he says that it was a political decision for democrats to side, essentially, with matt gaetz today, to vote him out of the speakership, and that he seemed to say that that was sort of a wrong decision for democrats to make because you all voted to keep the government open this weekend. what is your response to that? >> mccarthy can blame math. matt gaetz. he can blame democrats. but at the end of the day, he needs to blame themself. when he was first elected speaker, the rule he agreed to end the deals that he made is ultimately what destroyed his speakership. he decided to say yes to one person, bringing a motion to vacate the chair. he said yes to so many backroom deals that ultimately made his conference feel like he was a liar. and he made deals with democrats that he refused to fulfill, which made it hard for any single democrat to believe in the fact that he was somebody that we could continue to work with. >> more democrats and republicans provided the votes as we can to keep the government open. and your colleague, congressman jim clyburn, said that when mccarthy showed up on the sunday shows the next day, blamed democrats for taking the country to the brink, that factored in. what was the reaction in your caucus meeting to mccarthy's comments over the weekend? >> yeah. i remember most of us watching it this weekend, just dumbfounded by the idea of this man, who literally needed more democratic votes to pass his own continued resolution that he himself as speaker brought to the floor and could not provide his own conferences votes to help pass it was on tv, talking about how democrats want to shut down, how democrats were obstructing, when he only gave us about five minutes to be able to read this continued resolution that he was expecting us to vote for. people really got a sense of the fact that this is a man who cannot be trusted. this is not somebody you negotiate with. this is not somebody that you can save. and they ultimately understood that leader hakeem jeffries has been freelancing as the speaker, because it was him that helped make sure that we fixed the battle around the debt ceiling. it was him that made sure we put up the votes to stop the country from shutting down. it was him that has been leading the house floor in trying to provide critical and crucial votes to pass anything of substance. and so, we were unified in saying, we, as democrats, are going to have the back of the leader, and that we have, within our caucus that continuously shows up and leads the way, and we are not going to save a man who has created a mess for himself. it was going to be up to his congress conference and himself to figure out how to get them out of the chaos they created. >> are you concerned that this process now, being back opened, would usher in a new speaker who might be even less palatable to democrats than mccarthy was? >> that is what their worries should be. this is, again, the mess that they created by agreeing to these rules passing them, and allowing for so many within the conference to be emboldened to take the speaker out. for democrats, we know that we have not had speaker mccarthy be someone whose word we can trust. as you know, there was negotiations with president biden. there was negotiations with chuck schumer. there were negotiations with leader jeffries. all those promises and negotiations, mccarthy reneged on. and so, for us, it is about keeping the integrity of the house. it is about remembering that, when you are an elected official, your word is all you've got. people have to be able to trust what you say is what you will do. and we do not have that kind of partner and a leader that we can -- in that kind of way, within speaker mccarthy. and now he no longer is the speaker. he happens to continuously make history and all the wrong ways. we look forward to seeing who they end up choosing, and we will make our decision going forward. >> cnn is reporting tonight also that republicans who are on this bipartisan problem solvers caucus, they are threatening to quipped the group en masse because they are angry with -- their democratic colleagues on that problem solvers caucus who did not bail mccarthy out today. what is your reaction to that? >> i don't know what problem they expected to solve. i am not part of the problem solvers caucus. and to me, it looks like they were expecting democrats to solve the problem that they created for themselves within their conferences. and i think that is not a reasonable expectation, if we were having internal issues within our colic's caucus, i don't think a single democrat would blame republicans for not helping solve that problem. and so, it's just tradition that you figure out how to run your own house. in this case, you run your own caucus. you won your own conference. and the majority usually is the one that decides who the speaker of the house will be. and this majority has failed in that. this majority has failed in governing. and this majority has failed in sending a speaker that the people can trust. >> all right, congresswoman ilhan omar, thank you very much. >> thank you for having me. >> joining me now shermichael singleton, karen finney, former congresswoman barbara comstock, and sophia nelson, house gop -- we've all been chomping at the bit tonight, reacting to everything. -- in how we've been reacting to every single interview. it's intense because it's a very intense moment. none of us have seen anything really like this before. and here we are, barbara, in particular, look, republicans look very dysfunctional right now and they are being viewed as if they are punishing mccarthy for bipartisanship this past saturday. how are you reacting to all this? >> this was a maga civil war. so, i think once kevin made a deal with matt, this was bound to happen. today you saw maga at its worst and you look at the biden harris twitter feed, it's all filled with little ads they meet with megunticook republican party day. matt gaetz and nancy mace, and all these guys who were attacking republicans today, they provided great fodder for democrats. so, joe biden is the winner today. but maga also showed how they are not fit to govern while, at the same time, donald trump was in his trial today, they were attacking some poor little clerk showing mcgahn is unfit to be in the judicial branch. so, the only place magoffin doing a horrible job is, micah is not in the >> i'm going to take it one step further and -- republican -- this is the message, the republican culture of dysfunction and chaos. it starts at the top with trump and it goes -- i mean, just look at what we have seen. we literally have people going home, and we have people -- know speaker of the house -- >> -- saying that. because, look, what job most people have where you can say, all right, nothing is going right. everything is going -- >> congress -- >> -- >> you know what? i just had the whole weekend off, but then -- you know what? i'm not feeling like doing the job. so, i'm going to go away for another week. no. nobody, except for republican members of congress, apparently, think that this is a good idea. here is the other thing. we are talking about all this blame on democrats. and poor nancy pelosi is getting attacked. kevin mccarthy is blaming her. she is in california to attend a funeral, by the way. of senator diane feinstein -- >> senator feinstein, her very dear friend. and if you keep thinking about it -- you know what? eight republicans could have joined democrats and made hakeem -- jeffries >> -- they would not do that. come on, they -- democrats -- they can could have voted present. they could have not shown up. -- solve the politics in this and i understand why. if i were democrat, i would have done the same thing. because it makes the republicans -- >> -- to understand, by voting president, it would have lower the threshold -- >> yes, absolutely! >> yeah, but laura -- >> -- lower the threshold, making it almost impossible for matt gaetz and seven others to be victorious and vacating the speaker. democrats had that option -- >> but it is not the democrats job -- karen finney, it is not the democrat's job to keep republicans from killing other republicans. it is -- to take our responsibility seriously. >> i understand that. what i'm saying, politically, they could have. -- the message is going to be, republicans are chaotic. the cannot govern. that is a palatable message -- >> -- >> did not do that -- >> so, so -- >> look, everyone. i said chomping at the bit. we've got to talk one at the time -- there is a -- losing their minds. not me. >> -- we have 18 republicans who are not in districts -- quite a few of them are likely not going to win next year. you have matt gates who, for the most part, is more than likely going to maintain this position for whomever -- states gillies, who, i think it will become. in order to change the rules, you are going to have to -- too late in the process and the -- so more than likely you are going to have the same issue in the next 45 days if they don't get what they want. >> what is your thought, congressman? >> -- in order to change the rule so that one person can't call to vacate the speaker, democrats would have to -- >> -- they said that they would do that. and i think you have a lot of these moderates who aren't ma maga -- they've been calling these guides the knuckleheads that they are. and it's very frustrating for them. because they are the people who are governing. a lot of the people that you saw today, the bob goods, the matt gaetz's, these are people who don't pass bills. these are people who don't want to -- these are the people who support donald trump, the eight trillion-dollar budget buster guys. so, they are all their whining about the budget. they are the ones who want donald trump back in their, who does not want to cut any budgets. so, they are full of it. and they are all jokers who don't know how to work with anybody. you would not want them -- you don't want them in congress. you wouldn't want them to your children. you -- >> but laura, the question is -- >> they need adult supervision, and they don't know how to run anything. >> sophia nelson, just to this point -- there are calls now for speaker matt gaetz to -- in a majority of the -- here is the question. republicans have to decide, and i like steve scalise, i think you probably do too. they have to change the rules. but republicans have to make a fundamental change, this week, next week, whenever they are talking to each other. and that is, they want to govern. if they want to be bomb throwers and they want to be disrupters, they are doing a great job of that. but it is going to cost them the 2024 house. i think they are going to get beat badly, look at the -- those seats they are talking about. i don't think they have a shot anyway. and they are making it a lot worse. then that causes a problem for whoever the nominee is. i don't think it is going to be trump. i'm going to say that i national tv. i -- >> now money for the rnc or -- >> -- name up to be speaker of the house as well. look for that to happen as well. >> who is it going to be? >> in fact, in january -- actually right in donald trump. but look, i think the republican party, the brand of the republican party has been so badly damaged by donald trump and then again by the impact of what the maga wing of the party has done, to just the brand of the party. i do want to take a quick second, though, on the other side of the house, in the senate, i was honored to be there where we have our third black woman in the united states senate, laphonza butler -- something positive did happen that. they somebody lost a job -- what a silver lining. that were my heart for a minute. >> everyone thank you and stand by for a moment here there's so much more ahead for our breaking news coverage. mccarthy by the way saying, forget it. he's not running for speaker again but will he resign his seat in congress. hear his answers on that in just a. moment plus breaking news tonight, out of baltimore. reports of an active shooting at morgan state university. an arm multiple victims details ahead. tonight the judge and donald trump's fraud trial is issuing a gag order against the former president. it bans him from speaking publicly about members of the court staff, this is after trump posted about the court clerk on social media. here is what he said, on his way out of court today. >> but i'll be back tomorrow, good day. >> what time? >> what about the gag order? but >> i'm back now with my panel, we are joined also by westchester county new york just or toonie, mimi broca. mimi, this is an extraordinary move by this judge. lots of people want to put gag orders on trump, in this case he decided to do. it do you see the rationale here? >> absolutely. i understand why it should be looked at as extraordinary but first of all, i read and i don't think it's gotten out there much in the public discourse about this. the judge actually did warn trump yesterday about this. judges often give warnings. before they issue an order like this. it's also very narrowly tailored order. this is a very specific post that trump made about an actual person sitting in the courtroom who he posted personal information about her. >> somebody just doing their -- job >> exactly. that is when you see the judges, you see merrick garland doing interviews and speaking out even more. people who are the public face, the judges, the attorney general, the tourney general of the united states, the federal cases. jack smith. you see the principles, the people who are the public face really taking action and speaking out when he starts to go after the every day career prosecutors, court clerks, people doing their jobs. because that is not fair to them. and it's very dangerous. i think this was completely appropriate. >> this is part of a pattern, if it were just a one-off it were one thing. trump consistently attacks people who part of the system, whether it's election workers, or courtroom workers. it almost seems like the intent is to raise the bar for what we think is out of bounds, for someone to do when it comes to just what is appropriate behavior? >> a fortunately is done just that over the last seven, years he's normalized sore all sorts of bad behavior. he's the leader of this anti-institutional movement that has countered the republican party, when you look at these judges, or clerks when they do their jobs. they are representatives of the institutions that trump in many way is railing against. unfortunately, for a lot of americans they don't feel like the institutions have been responding to them for the last number of years. his bring it down message, has been resonating for years, and now unfortunately, is no closer to getting any weaker as far as we can tell. >> jamalp is basically making this a dane the campaign press conference, he's out there every single day. he is daring the judge to do something. the judge did something in this case because it was a court officer. but he's literally attacking the judge every day. >> he is, let's think about this from the trump side as a political strategy. they don't really have a lot of other options. he can't campaign today, because he has got to be in the courtroom. so instead of trying to get around being in the courts, he goes to court, he makes outrageous statements. he supplies the dopamine for his people to keep them i am up. what's happened, like any other environment, the more he stimulates them, the more he has to do to keep them stimulated in order for them to see him as being the real truth taylor, the only one that saying things that no one else is saying. >> i don't even think it's that strategic, i think he just can't help himself. he loves to call everyone nasty. he's the pygmy of nastiness.
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jamal simmons, former communication general for kamala harris and also cnn political commentator, jamal. this moment, kevin mccarthy basically protected for himself by giving that gets a lot of power back in january. you really could argue, that this was years in the making. >> it was years in the making. the establishment republican party, has done a deal with this sort of, anti establishment rogue forces, where anger is ruling, the testament of how much your true. talk about people being moderate, they're not moderate in the sense of when they, have positions that are closer to center they're just not yelling or screaming all the time, are trying to overturn the system. what kevin mccarthy is done, is proven that sometimes better to think about doing important things, then it is just doing an important job. he had a job but he didn't get very much done when you have the job, i imagine there will come a moment for him, in the dark of night, a little bit away from now, where he thinks i probably should have done a little more. >> i doubt it. >> that would require a lot of self-reflection, listen, i know the young guns. i came up with the young guns. kevin mccarthy wanted to be speaker. this was where he wanted to get. his ambition outweighed, his dignity apparently. he made this deal with matt gaetz and other troublemakers to essentially sign's own death certificates and whenever they wanted. >> he is leaving the way he came in, really with matt gaetz holding his faith in his hands. don't, be surprised if you lose them the way you get a. >> it's funny, because he talked a lot about first of all, this job being such a thing for him, since he was a child. how he didn't get a job an intern, but then he got a job of the speaker. to your point, very important to him. it was brought up on the floor today. i want to play this from mccarthy where he basically, try to put all the blame, not on, he had plenty of blame for conservatives but also on the democrats take a listen. >> i think today was political decision by the democrats. i think they things they have done in the past, hurt the institution, they just started removing people from committing, they just started doing other things, my fear is the institution fell today. because you can't do the job, if a people, you have 94%, or 96% of your entire conference, and eight people can partner with a whole other side, how do you govern? >> i'm honestly trying to understand that, because he was the one who agreed to that rule. that gave 3%, 6% whatever percentage of it is all of those power. >> yes, i there's no way around the fact that this is a huge win for matt gaetz. this is, if you think about this from the perspective of whoever the next speaker is. will they have to be thinking is, well i have to take this matt gaetz seriously. he is really willing to blow it all up, it gives them a lot more leverage. and it ends up in some strange way being an own goal for the democrats. like it or not, mccarthy he was not the worst a speaker can get. he was not the most radical you could get. it could be the case that we get replaced someone worse. someone that is more friendly to the matt gaetz's, and marginally taylor greens. >> and potentially more competent right. >> i agree with coleman, i held out hope that there would be some kind of, brokered deal power sharing agreement between kevin mccarthy, in the democrats. have a couple dozen democrats refrain from voting, or say hey, we'll keep you from getting ousted. democrats at this point are the party of good governing, this is bad for the countries to have a leaderless rudderless house when you are 45 days away from the defaulting -- >> do you think there's any truth to the criticism, mccarthy makes it, that democrats showed up for the good of the institution, stepped in here? i >> think there was a deal to be had. >> isn't that mccarthy's deal to make? >> it is on kevin mccarthy, where he would have to do something. it's also true that is conference with turn on him, if he said hey these democrats are gonna bail me out. but this would have been good for the country. the fact that you have different coalition coming together, and making sure that you have a speaker of the house, what we have instead, it is chaos. it's terrible for the country. anyone who says they know what is going to happen next, is the lying. this is never happened before. no one among the house republican caucus knows who the next real are leaders gonna be. they're having these conversations right now. who wants this job? to your point, they have to make it so the next speaker cannot have a motion to vacate with one to, or three votes. it has to be double digits are higher to have any kind of security. can they get a concession from the hard-liners? >> i'll tell you what they're doing immediately one of the the protons first official acts, patrick mchenry, was the email nancy pelosi intel it of vacate or office. and he is already criticizing the proton. speaker >> but he is exactly where his caucus is, which is basically middle fingers to the other side. >> which you know honestly, correct me from wrong, not what mchenry is known for. being a flame floor? >> but the people think he's a sort of sober middle of the rolled guy, but he's been thrust in this impossible situation. >> but the question you asked, who would want this? but one republican thrown out of his said well, you don't have to be a member to be a speaker. let's call in donald trump? . i think kennedy was just talking about that. so >> was don jr.. >> if we are not just ousted a speaker for the first time in his history, i would say that's crazy? top >> the poetry around that is really obscene. here you have the guy who who launched the january six in secretion against that house of representatives, people were deprecating inside of congress, the congressional building. who could be the speaker, and be in charge of the capitol police who were injured in the january six interest? this is peak republican silliness. >> says a lot though about trump's a shadow looming over this chamber right now. no matter which way you look at it. , if trump were gone, the entire republican party would change overnight. the shadow that he cast over the whole party, there just so few people willing for any reason whatsoever, to signal that they are not loyal to them. you see what happens to chris christie, you see what happened to any republican that even hints at disloyalty to donald trump. he is still the elephant in the room for republicans. that is a fundamental character trade of the party now. >> that's what i'd like to double down on, there is a sense that oh after trump receipts from the scene the republicans will come back to their senses. it's not happening. this party is beholden to its, base in the base likes that. the bases running the asylum, and that's not gonna reverse our sets out. >> trump may have created some of these characters, but they're here now. they're doing their own work with or without him. thanks everyone, stand by for us caitlin? >> i think the idea of trump becoming house speaker is a bit of a fever dream from some republicans, who knows, a lot of options are on the table. joining me now is cnn hill capitol hill part of, and political reporter for the past imposed. the idea of trump being a house beaker it's, not going to happen. it is kind of hard to overstate the level of chaos right now, what is happening in the building behind us? what happens when you step back and look at the fact that kevin mccarthy is no longer house period and we know of no clue was gonna be? next >> it's entirely shocking and stunning, and yet also completely inevitable. when you talk to republicans, after that 15 rounds of speaker votes that kevin mccarthy to go through. they said, this is not gonna be good for kevin mccarthy. the fact that he empowered those members, to be able to call for a vote to oust him, a single member to. awesome member of his own leadership said this is not a good idea, this is gonna be a threat that hangs over your head, and he fought for months to try to keep this rebellion at bay. the chickens finally came home to roost today for kevin mccarthy. that is the reality that they are now dealing with but i will tell you, even though it's only been a few hours. we're already hearing that there are members who are scrambling to show support to run to replace, steve scalise the number two republican. he's already making qualities. lining up support. he's getting people nascar. jim jordan is entertaining essential striker. there are moves being made behind the scenes, who can get to 2:18, who can corral that same conference that was responsible for taking out kevin mccarthy, and that person is gonna take on the same challenges that kevin mccarthy did and maybe even worse. >> whoever does get that job is, they are facing today or 40 days away from the government running out of funding of, there is just passed a short time belt. they're gonna be facing the same exact hurdles. >> absolutely. when kevin mccartney was asked tonight, when he would recommend, is his successor, he actually said. change the house rules. i don't know if that's gonna be on the table yet or not but it gets back to the challenges that institutional challenge that kevin mccarthy and others thought were central to the problem here also surged hope there is a right play to the party who no interest in funding the government or passing short term government spending bills they want to do it at levels that are could never pass a democratic -controlled senate. that could never get signed by a democratic president, and so there is a level of lack of real-ism here. if someone else can do it better than kevin mccarthy, that is a very high bar. we will see if someone is elected, if they are able to do so, and is it because it's less of a personality conflict? or if it speak actually a policy conflict? >> when we had tennessee congressman republican tim -- on here earlier i asked if he favor keeping a motion to vacate with one mode barge, and he leaned to it yes, he wanted to provide accountability. we saw that version of that today. do you expect melody that republicans with other make concessions of the next house speaker? >> they're gonna try to change the motion to vacate, they're gonna need democratic votes to do that, that was the conversation i heard republicans talking about, saying depending on on debase vote goes, maybe we need to revisit the issue. you heard bob good talking earlier on air. he said yes, any candidate that is speaker, in order to get my vote has gonna have to make the same commitments that kevin mccarthy did it's not clear who's gonna be able to allude the caucus, the confluence better than kevin mccarthy are a better any easier than he did. but to the point, there was some personal differences between matt gaetz and kevin mccarthy, they didn't trust him, he made a lot of promises, nancy mace was a surprising vote, she had been saying he made provinces to her that he didn't keep. that's where the issue is. she's been saying that publicly, he was largely critical of her. what do the next seven days look like? in the building behind us? does anyone know? >> they have left town, next tuesday, they're not even to be here, but what is going to be happening, is we've already had different factions of the party starting to meet. there are some groups that met tonight, some are leaving tomorrow, these i do logically similar factions are gonna be talking about who they want, their next speaker to be. we'll see if they're gonna be able to at these different parts can come together to think of a consensus candidate there are five or six names that are being floated out there as melanie out there is some of these names are already starting to make moves to do it it is going to be, a real back channeling discussion and a real fight over they're gonna have their first gathering as an entire where they're hoping to come to that decision they just had an explosion and it deeply fractured the conquer. >> great reporting today by both of you thank you for joining me. >> abby it's going to be an exciting week for capitol hill reporters. maybe exciting's not the word. >> we'll look seven more days are eight more days and no congress in washington doing any work, except sorting themselves out. the american people have something to say about that i'm sure. thank you caitlin. >> coming up next for us it seems like kevin mccarthy is blaming democrats for losing his speakership, i will ask one of those democrats, congresswoman ilhan omar what she thinks, of the end of mccarthy stint as speaker. on this historic news tonight the house for the first time removing kevin mccarthy. what comes next for the people's house? >> joining me now to discuss this, is democratic congressman ilhan omar. congressman thanks for joining us. great to be with you earlier tonight the now former speaker, he essentially blamed democrats for why he no longer has his job he says, it was a political decision for democrats to side with matt gaetz today to vote him out of the speakership and that, he seemed to say that was a wrong decision for democrats to make because you all voted to keep the government open this weekend what is your response to that way, mccarthy can blame math he can blame democrats the end of the day he needs to blame himself when he was first elected as speaker, the rule that he agreed to and the deals that he made what ultimately what just write a speakership he decided to say yes to one person, bringing a motion to vacate the chair, and he said yes to so many backroom deals that ultimately made his conference feel like he was a liar. and he made deals with democrats that he refused to fulfill, which made it hard for any single democrat to believe in the fact that he was somebody that we can continue to work with. >> so more democrats than republicans provided the votes this weekend to keep the government open. and your colleague, congress congressman jim clyburn, said that when mccarthy showed up on the sunday the next day and blamed democrats for taking the country to the brink, that factored in. what was the reaction in your caucus meeting in the caucus meeting over the weekend? >> i'm eating i remember most of us watching or watching it this weekend, just dumbfounded by the idea of this man who literally needed more democratic votes to continue his own continued resolution that he himself as speaker brought to the floor and could not provide his own conferences, votes to help pass, it was on tv talking about how democrats wanted to shut down, how democrats were obstructing, when he only gave us about five minutes to be able to read this continued resolution that he was expecting us to vote for. people really got a sense of the fact that this is a man who cannot be trusted. this is not somebody you negotiate with. this is not somebody you can save, and we ultimately understood that need leader hakeem jeffries has been freelancing is a speaker because it was him that helped make sure that we fix the battle around the debt ceiling. it was him that made sure we put up the votes to stop the country from shutting down. it was him that has been leading the house floor in trying to provide critical and crucial votes to pass anything of substance. nd so we were unified in saying we as democrats are going to have the back of the leader that we had with our caucus, that continuously shows up and leads the way, and we are not what it's gonna be up to his conference and himself get them out of the chaos they created. >> aren't you concerned that this process now being back open would usher in a new speaker, i even less palatable to democrats and mccarthy was. >> that is what their worries should be. this is, again, the mess that they created by agreeing to these rules, passing down, and allowing for so many within their conference to be emboldened to take their speaker out for democrats we know that we have not had speaker mccarthy be someone whose word we can trust. s you know, there was negotiations with president biden, there were negotiations with chuck schumer. there were negotiations with leader jeffries. all of those promises and negoiations, mccarthy reneged on, and so for us it is about keeping the integrity of the house. it's about remembering that when you are an elected official your word is all you've got. people have to be able to trust what you say is what you will do. we did not have that kind of partner and leader that we can believe in in that kind of way within speaker mccarthy. and now he no longer is speaker. he happens to be continuously making history in all the wrong ways. we look forward to seeing who they end up choosing, and then we will make our decision going forward. >> cnn is reporting tonight, also that republicans were on this bipartisan problem solvers caucus, they are threatening to quit the group en masse because they are angry with democrats. their democratic colleagues on that problem solvers caucus who didn't bail mccarthy out today. what's your reaction to that? >> i don't know what problem expected to solve. i'm not part of the problem solvers caucus, and to me it looks like they were expecting democrats to solve the problem that they created for themselves within their conferences. i think that is not a reasonable expectation or if we were having internal issues within our caucus. i don't think a single democrat would blame republicans for not helping solve that problem. and so it's just tradition that you figure out how to run your own house. in this case you run your own caucus. you run your own conference, and the majority usually is the one that decides who the speaker of the house will be, and this majority has failed in that. this majority has failed in governing, and this majority has failed in sending a speaker that the people can trust. >> all right, congresswoman ilhan omar, thank you so much. >> thank you for having me. >> joining me now at the table, michael singleton, commentator karen finney, former republican congresswoman barbara comstock, and former house gop investigative committee counsel. look, we've all been champing at the bit tonight, reacting to everything and you can see this panel right now, america acting to every single interview, it's a chance because it's a very intense moment. none of us have seen anything like this before, and here we are well. look, republicans look very dysfunctional right now. they are being viewed as if they are punishing mccarthy for bipartisanship this past saturday. how are you reacting to all this? >> this was a maga civil war. once kevin made a deal with maga, this was bound to happen. so today you saw mega at its worst. and when you look at the biden harris twitter feed, it's all filled with little ads that they made with maga attacking republicans today. so matt gaetz, nancy mace, and all these guys who, attacking republicans today, they provided great fodder for democrats. so joe biden is the winner today. but maga also showed how they aren't fit to govern. while at the same time, donald trump was in his trial today, talking some poor little clerk, a showing maga is unfit to be in the judicial branch, so the only way maga hasn't been doing a horrible job is maga is fortunately not in the white house right. now >> undertaken a step further. in 2006 democrats won in the midterms, but talking about the republican culture of dysfunction and corruption in chaos. it's lots of talk with trump, just look at what we have seen. we literally have people going home and we have no speaker of the house, -- >> i do want to cut you off bu t, i want to understand. at what job do most people have where you can say, nothing is going right? [laughter] >> congress, congress -- i >> just had the whole weekend off, but you know, i don't feel like doing the jobs only to go for a way for another week. no, nobody, except for republican members of congress, apparently, think this is a good idea. but we were talking about all this blame on democrats, and poor nancy pelosi is getting attacked, kevin mccarthy is blaming her. she's in california to attend a funeral, by the way, -- >> for senator diane feinstein, her very dear friend. >> and if you think about it, how come democrats didn't jump in to save republicans? you know, what it republicans could've joined democrats amin hakeem jeffries speaker of the house. >> they wouldn't do that. come on, they would know that. democrats could've voted present, they don't enjoy. but i'm not gonna get into voting into why they voted the way that. if i understand. if i were democrat, i would've done the same stunning. >> by voting president it would've lowered the -- >> yeah but, laura -- >> what would have lowered the threshold, making it almost impossible for gaetz and luxhaven others to be victorious in vacating the speaker, democrats had that off option. they didn't choose that option. >> it's not democrats job, but kieran, it is not democrats job to keep republicans from killing other republicans. it's not their job. that's our job, to govern and to take our responsibilities seriously. >> i understand our but i'm saying politically they should have. i am sure where they didn't because the message is going to be republicans are coyote chaotic and they can't govern. >> they didn't do. that you did that. >> wait, everyone, i said champing at the bit we've got a top one in a time. we're losing our minds. but it's not me. what's your point? >> my point is simply. this i think you have 18 republicans who are in districts that flipped joe biden 2020. quite a few of them are gonna like unlikely to win next year. you have matt gates who, for the most, part is more than likely going to maintain the same position, for whomever become speaker, if it's steve scalise, we think it will become, in order to change the, rules were gonna have to get democrats to jump on board with republicans because it's too late in the process. the congressman can speak to this better than i could. more than likely you're gonna have the same issue in the next 45 days, if they don't get what they want. >> what's your thought, congresswoman? >> and whether they're going to have to? >> in order to change the rules someone can't call to vacate the speaker without joining some republicans. >> i'd be nice if they would do that. now you have a lot of these moderates who aren't maga people, and even politely trying to sit there and say, they've been calling these going local heads that they are. and is very frustrating for them because they are the people who are governing. a lot of people that we saw today, the bob goods, the matt gaetzs, these are people who don't pass bills. these people who don't want to vote for budgets. they don't want the government open. these are the people who support donald trump, the eight trillion dollar budget buster guy. so they're all they're whining about the budget, and they're the ones we want donald trump back in their, who doesn't want to cut any budget. so they are full of it, and they're all jokers who don't want to work with anybody. you wouldn't want them in congress, you don't want them to your children. they just are not -- >> the question is -- >> they need adult supervision. they don't know how to run anything. >> at this point, there are calls now for congressman matt gaetz to be ousted why some because there's a real criticism happening right now that a select few were able to best majority of the republicans. here's the question the republicans have to decide, and i like steve scalise, i think probably due to, as well. i think he can govern. they have to change the rules. but republicans have to make a fundamental choice in the conference this week, next week, whenever they are talking to each other, and that is that they want to govern. if they want to be bombs hours and they want to be disrupters, they are doing a great job of, that but it's going to cost them the 2024 house. i think they're going to get beaten badly. look at the district in new york in other places where those seats, i don't think they have a shot anywhere in the making it a lot worse. that causes a problem for whoever the nominee is. i don't think it's going to be trump. i'm gonna say that on national tv. >> nominee for the rnc? >> for the republican party. i don't think it's gonna be trump. i think people will put his name up to be speaker of the house. look for that to happen as well. >> who's it gonna be? >> in january during two of the 15 rounds of voting, a couple of people did actually write, and donald trump, but look, i think the republican party, the bread of the republican party, has been so badly damaged by donald trump and then again by the impact of what the maga wing of the party has done, so that just the brand of the party, and i want to take a quick second though. on the other side of the house, in the senate, i was honored to be there where we have our third black woman in the united states senate, laphonza buckler, sworn in by the vice president of the united states of america, so something good happened. >> what a silver lining. that just warms my heart, karen finney. if you're kevin mccarthy you're like, thanks karen finney. everyone, thank you. standby for a moment here. there is so much more ahead of our breaking news coverage. mccarthy, by the way, saying forget it, he's not running for speaker again. but will he resign his seat in congress? hear his answers on that in just a moment. plus, getting some breaking news tonight out of baltimore. reports of an active shooting at morgan state university, and there are multiple victims. details ahead. you're probably not easily persuaded to switch mobile providers for your business. but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? it's true. plus, when you buy your first line of mobile, you get a second line free. there are no term contracts or line activation fees. and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network nationwide. wireless that works for you. it's not just possible. it's happening. here's why you should switch fo to duckduckgo on all your devie duckduckgo comes with a built-n engine like google, but it's pi and doesn't spy on your searchs and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome, but it blocks cooi and creepy ads that follow youa from google and other companie. and there's no catch. it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. >> tonight, the judge in donald trump's fraud trial is issuing a gag order against the former president, it bans him from speaking about members of the court staff. this is after trump posted about the court clerk on social media. here is what he said on his way out of court today. >> be back tomorrow. good day. good day. >> what about the gag order? >> i'm back now with my panel. we are joined also now by westchester county new york district attorney, mimi rocha. so, me, this is an extraordinary move, i think, by this judge. lots of people want to put gag orders on trump. in this case he decided to do it. do you see the rationale here? >> absolutely. i understand why it should be looked at as extraordinary, but first of all, i read, and i don't think it's gotten out there much in the public discourse about this, they don't actually did warn trump yesterday about this. so judges often give warnings. before they issue an order like this. it's also a very narrowly narrowly tailored order. it is a very specific post that trump made about an actual person, sitting in the courtroom, who he posted personal information about her. >> literally just doing their job. >> exactly. and that is when you see judges, that is when you see merrick garland doing interviews and speaking out even more. it's people who are the public face, the judges, the attorney general, of the united states, the judge in the federal cases, you see the principles, the people who are the public face, really taking action and speaking out. when he starts to go after he every day career prosecutors and court clerks, people doing their jobs because that is not fair to them and it's very dangerous. so i think this was completely appropriate. >> this is part of a pattern. if it was just one of the one thing. but trump consistently attacks people that are part of the system, whether it's election workers or courtroom workers. and it almost seems like the intent is raise the bar for what we think is out of bounds for someone to do when it comes to just, what is appropriate behavior. >> unfortunately he has done just that over the last several, years he is normalized all kinds of bad behavior. he's a leader and an anti institutional movement that has captured the republican party. so when you look at these judges or clerks trying to do their jobs, they are the representatives of the institutions that trump, in many ways, is railing against. unfortunately for a lot of americans, they don't feel like the institutions have been responding to them over the last number of years. his burnett down message has been resonating for years and now it unfortunately is no closer to getting any weaker as far as we can tell. >> jamalp is basically making this a daily campaign press conference. he's out there every day. he's daring the judge to do something. the judge did something in this case because as a court officer he literally attacking the judge every day. >> he is. one way to think about this, from the trump side, as a political strategy is, they don't really have a lot of other options. he can't campaign today because he's got to be in court. or he's going to be in court. so instead of trying to get around being in the courts, he goes to court, he makes outrageous statements, and then he supplies the dopamine for his people to keep them amped up. and so i think what has happened is, like in any other environment, the more he stimulates, them the more he has to do to keep them stimulated in order for them to see him as being the real truth teller, the only one who is saying the things that nobody else will say. >> i don't even think it's that strategic. i think he just can't help himself. he loves to call
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jamal. the accusation and denial game went on for months. bien salman dismissed the accusation as baseless, present himself as victim of an international vendetta. did you order the murder of jamal kashoki? absolutely not. this was heinous crime. washington. and ankara, on the other hand, insisted that the crown prince involved in the murder and couldn't get away with it. they call for just to be done. eninde sonunda denilen yere geldiler. Şimdi amerika senatosu ne diyor? evet. suudi yönetimini şimdi suçluyor. işte en son birleşmiş milletler daimi elcisi iki alei o bile, ne dedi, isim vererek hem de söylüyor. ve bu işin diyor faili odur. buyur iş artık belli bir yere geldi, daha birçok şeyler çıkacak, buradan çok şeyler çıkar. ben ve hükümetim bu konuyla alakalı emri verenden gerçekleştiren kişilere kadar en alttan sorumlu olanların hepsinin yargılanmasını ve... uluslararası hukuk nezdinde gereken cezayı almasını istiyoruz. case triggered an uproar in washington, unusual by partisan fury in congress brought arms sales to saudi arabia to a halt albeit temporarily. the current relationship with saudi arabia is not working for america. they have been strategic allies and could be in the future, but right now it is more of a burden. and it is an asset and why i say that? this uh country led by the de facto leaders that crimp prince has been wrecking ball and the keshogi instant is just uh one of many but the most regious, i think most people can relate to why we're upset. as for the trump administration, he work to shield in salmon from further scrutiny. we have no smoking gun that the crown prince was involved, not the intelligent community. or anyone else, there is no smoking gun, we have not changed that accountability for the murder is our expectation of everyone involved in the murder, accountability is our position has not changed at all, and by the way, i have read all the, i have personally read all the intelligence, i have read all the translations. trump made it clear that the u.s. saudi alliance was nothing more than an arrangement based on keeping global oil price. is stable and negotiating lucrative weapons deals in terms of the order of $10 billion dollars, think of that $110 billion dollars, all they're going to do is give it to other countries, and i think that would be very foolish for our country, but there are other things we can do that will be very severe. in 2020, some successor joe biden threatened to turn saudi arabia into a global paraya over the murder. i think the report speaks uh speaks for itself, and uh, i think you've seen uh today number of very uh important steps. to uh recalibrate uh the relationship, first of all, the release of the report itself and the transparency that that provides, this is a report that um uh that in a sense is not fresh off the printing press, it's been there uh, we uh released it, we were determined to bring transparency to this issue and share with the american people uh what we know, and again i think that reports speaks for itself. in february 2021, a month after taking office, biden did follow through. a campaign promised to release a us intelligence report which directly blamed prince muhammad bin salman for khashoji murder. despite the us prepared evidence, biden decided not to directly punish. mohammed by imposing a travel ban or sanctions against him, after initially reviewing weapon sales to saudi arabia, by mid-2022, the biden administration resumed billions of dollars in arms sales and military support to the kingdom. at the same time, federal judge dismissed the lawsuit against the crown prince after the biden administration recommended he be granted immunity. in july 2022, biden traveled to saudi arabia to meet the prince at home. "the white house said biden raised's case with the prince during their meeting, many, however interpreted the visit as biden begging for low oil prices. finally, we discussed human rights and the need for political reform. as always, as i always do, i made clear the topic is vitally important to me and to the united states, respect murder of keshoke, i raised it at the top of the meeting, making it clear what i thought of it at the time, what i think of it now, and it was exactly, i was straight forward and direct." in discussing it, i made my view crystal clear, i said very straightforwardly, for an american president to be silent on issue of rights, is this consistent inconsistent with who we are and who i am. i'll always stand up for our values. currently, biden administration is trying to convince bin salman to sign a peace agreement with the israeli regime while helping the kingdom launches civilian nuclear program. it's a far cry from v's pledge during his presidential campaign to treat prince muhammed. and his kingdom as a paraya for the murder of. more than dozen human rights groups recently released a joint statement accusing the biden administration of helping aid salman's rehabilitation on the world stage and asking it to prioritized significant and genuine human rights improvements by the saudi government. five years and death, his case is little discussed in major media outlets, not even in turkey, local media. once publicized his tragic fate. in 2020, turkey put 26 saudi nationals on trial in absentia, as the saudies refused to hand them over to istanbul, but early 2022, the case was halted. last year a turkish court transferred is trial and absenture of the 26 individuals to saudi arabia, move slammed by human rights groups. turkish authorities said it was impossible to prosecute the case because the defends were not there in person. however, human right. oldu bu kararla beraber arabistan'a yönlendirmiş oldu davayı yani hukuki anlamda nasıl bir adalet sistemin olduğunu hatta olmadığını bildiğimiz bir ülke suudi arabistan eee o noktada bir olumlu yani adalete yönelik adalet sonucu olacak ee karar geleceğini tabii kimse beklemiyor ben de beklemiyorum eee siyasi bir karar yani in reality washington has done the opposite: just a week before the death anniversary of jamalt decades, five years afterjis death. business as usual for the un and turkey, the two countries which moaned and grown for months, they accused rightly or wrongly the saudi crown prince of orchestrating the gruesome murder, but by the looks of things, they've already compromised their claimed concerns for human rights, midway.
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jamal hoshoji. the accusation and denial game went on for months. bin salman dismissed the accusation as baseless, presenting himself as victim of an international vendetta. did you order the murder of jamale en son birleşmiş milletler daimi elcisi. iki haley o bile ne dedi isim vererek hem de söylüyor ve bu işin diyor faili odur buyur iş artık belli bir yere geldi daha bir çok şeyler çıkacak buradan çok şeyler çıkar. see how serious the united states and turkey were about what they called justice for jama ben ve hükümetim bu konuyla alakalı emri verenden gerçekleştiren kişilere kadar en alttan en üste sorumlu olanların hepsinin yargılanmasını ve eee uluslararası hukuk nezdinde gereken cezaları almasını istiyoruz. unusual bipartisan fury in congress brought armed sales to saudi arabia to a halt a it temporarily. the current relationship with saudi arabia is not working for america. they have been strategic allies and could be in the future, but right now it is more of a burden than it is an asset, and why not say that? this uh country led by the de facto leaders, the ground prince has been a wrecking ball. and the kashoge instant is just uh, one of many. but the most aggreous, and i think
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jamal zebedeh, juma al-tahleh, waleed shamli, hazem al-khatib and other brothers, who made great efforts to reach the first domestically built palestinian missile that can be launched and targeted from gaza prof. jamal zabedeh, who is a doctorate in mechanical engineering from the state, has made an indescribable effort for this work
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jamal bowman is facing a criminal charge. congressional correspondent aisha has the latest from capitol hill. >> reporter: good evening. we're learning tonight congressman jamal bowman of new york has been charged with a misdemeanor in dc superior court. he will be in court tomorrow morning at 9:30. he will also, as you mention, have to surrender to u.s. capitol police to be fingerprinted. the charge is for falsely pulling a fire alarm three weeks ago during a house vote on a gop bill to keep the government open. at the time, you'll remember house democrats were trying to stall that vote according to court documents obtained by fox news, bowman told police that when he did this, he didn't tell anyone he pulled the fire alarm and simply just left. now, he just reacted to fox news moments ago about this charge saying that he has struck a plea agreement and he claims capitol police agree with him that he did notes obstruct those house proceedings. watch this. >> i'm happy for a quick resolution. i pulled the fire alarm as i was going out the door. i shouldn't have done that. i have to pay a $1,000 fine in three months as long as i stay out of trouble the case wi
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um let's turn to jamal juma, he's a founder and coordinator that that stop the well campaign if we have him with us in order to uh get some of his thoughts onto what's happening jamal welcome to the program are you with us yes i'm with you have the us president that came and visited tel aviv and visited uh israel and spoke to netanyahu that we understand that they had a war. uh cabinet uh meeting that took place and iran's leader has said that uh you know it's the us that is actually devising the plans uh with iran's president to have stated that uh the us has actually taken over uh israeli execution of uh what it has to do on the ground uh what what do you make of the us uh and top of that joe biden saying that he believes that uh israel was not responsible for that attack on the hospital what do you make of the u.s. and its involvement at this point given the visit that the us president made to israel. yeah, i think it's not shocking for us as the palestinians, we know that our main enemy that all this long years and decades was the united states, the one who's backing israel to the bones with the with what they are doing and give its immunity against all its cri
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jamal khashoggi to street dedication ceremony on a stretch of wilshire boulevard outside the consulate of saudi arabia. a sign declaring the space jamal khashoggi square reads, "a journalist and advocate for human rights slain by the saudi government.” in washington, d.c., the national press club held a moment of silence to remember khashoggi and other journalists whose killings have gone unpunished. joining the ceremony was michael omer-man, director of research for israel-palestine at dawn, the organization founded by khashoggi. >> whereas jamal's world, today, unfortunately that no longer seems to be the case. it is most apparent in saudi arabia but not only. following the killing, we saw how the u.s. government tried to redefine accountability in order to shield him from scrutiny. this is on its optimal. jamal was murdered for the power of his ideas and because even in the face of mortal danger he refused to remain silent. amy: and those are some of the headlines. this is democracy now, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman in new york joined by juan gonzalez in chicagojuan: welcome to our listeners and viewers around the world. amy: pressure is growing on britain and the united states to pay reparations and apologize for expelling residents of the chagos archipelago in the indian ocean half a century ago so the united states could build a major military base on the island of diego garcia. diego garcia is located halfway between africa and indonesia and about 1,000 miles south of india. the u.s. base at
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jamal sees violent radicals looking forvio a place to live and thinks my district's perfec t. >> new york is always looking for more terrorist sympathizers who vote democrat. s and >> but fire marshal jamal wants to vet them. so we don'bofire mar t accidentally fly in hamas. joe biden, who says he has nodel idea what his son does forlyn, a living who s, isn't the kind y i want. >> vetting refugees from the gaza strip. america is the land of immigrants. my ancestors fled religious persecution in england, but thee united states welcomes immigrants who assimilate to palestinefuza and strike you as people who can easily assimilate herimilate.e. of jew and there are a lot of jewishis people here in new york. why doesk. far marshal jamalt to bring palestinians to new york? we have enough problems. >> let's not import a million people who cheered the 911 attacks into new york. >> democrats want to deprogram trump's supporters, but now want to let in refugees who've been programed to kill jews since kindergartenats want. if you vote for trump, you're in a cult and don't believe in democracy. but if you elect hamas and are obsessed with spilling jewish blood, you're just an innocent civilian who needs a free,ndergt one way ticket to manhattan. innoote fo what happened last te a western country took in palestine in refugees?n refu >> well, i'll tell youge. in 19 92, denmark let in over 300 palestinian asylum seekers. >> none of other arab countries wanted them. didn't go well. asylum-snone otwo thirds of then refugees became criminals and a third of their children were convicted of crimes as well. >> and most of them wound up on welfare. so if i'm biden n and i'm sendig egypt billions, i'm sending the saudis billions, and
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let's bring in jamal jeffer, former associate white house council to president bush, he is now founder and executive director of the national security institute. there are great fears jamal this war, battle between israel and hac hamas could expand and bring more players from the middle east on to the battlefield. what are the chances. >> to be clear there are already other players, iran has long backed hamas, they have attacked israel. using iranian provided intelligence, and information and money and weaponry, iran is involved in this conflict. that is a huge part of the problem that is driving this fight. jon: i believe president biden said in his interview withi did not believe that iran had fore knowledge. >> it is hard to believe, we know that in the last 24 to 48 hours, iranian senior officials have met with hamas leadership, and while they have gone back and forth about their position on whether they would get directly involved, they have long been involved in a proxy war, not just against israel but also the united states, they funded at least two terrorist groups, in iraq, during our time there. killed hundreds of americans with iranian made explosive p penetra
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jamal bowman to be expelled. i have to say, i think i can do one better. i don't know if you saw this post from the coup leader himself, trump, who is now calling for jamal bowmanobstructing an official congressional proceeding. i mean, this is like the death of irony, right? the trump of all people, a defendant accused of obstructing a congressional proceeding, is now conceding that obstructing a congressional conceding is actually a crime. can you just imagine the reaction of trump's lawyers when they saw that confession? >> oh to be a trump lawyer for the one week that you are a trump lawyer before you switch it to someone else. by, the way quick. think republicans would have voted to impeach and convict trump, clearly, if he just pulled the fire. alarm not by sending i'm off to the capitol to fight like -- >> if they could only find him doing something as dangerous as pulling the fire alarm. exactly. , mehdi great to see you as always, friend. great show, enjoy the rest of your evening off. tonight on ayman. gop in disarray. far-right house members are pushing to oust kevin mccarthy from the speakership. and some progressive democrats, well, they are jumpin
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jamal's office said pulling the fire alarm is the last shoug republican goes.s should y about. >> they should worry more about in their ranksld. s in >> aoc agrees.r she says fire marshal jamal wasa trying to escape probably from . their fire for filing a motion to expel a member who, in a moment of panic, was trying to escape a vestibule. give me a break, wolpe said. >> fire marshal jamal was a hero. those republicans wouldn't let him read.ught t >> when you people pull stunts, i tend to thinho republik that y be more full of it than than he is. you know i, people will pull ths kind of stuff and you only have 3 minutes to read it. yoi kind of think, oh, all righ. well, maybe because i know i would have pressed everythingg if he told me i had to get in now to press one hammer and geor tt the door to open,pem because i know you would expect me not to be there to votet . >> so you don't know. why won't capitol hill polic wha release the video? fire marshal jamal mistaking a fire alarm for a door handle. men with horns and animal skins were wallpapered on my screen for years. i can't see 15 seconds of a democrat yelling fire in a crowded theater. tvclay travis is the founderd hs of outkick and he's here. all right, clay, what the fire alarm, when you pull, it opens doors. >> yes.ou thi you thinnkk that's the best you could? jes were the other 434 members hou of the house o
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jamal. bring in the magnolia cupcakes for reverend al because it is the rev's big day. thanks, jamal.g to my grandson. he will be delighted. >> oh! that's good. do you have any birthday wishes? >> i just hope that we just keep doing what we do here every morning and that's informing people and showing that you can disagree without being disagreeable. >> happy birthday, reverend. the birthday wish that we all hope for is that you're here every day for a long, long time to come. thank you. >> happy birthday! we love reverend al. enjoy the cupcake. come on, you can have a little bite. just a little bite. just a little bit. all right. that does it for us this morning. thank you, all, so much for joining us. we will see you first thing tomorrow morning. ana cabrera picks up the coverage in 90 seconds. what causes a curve down there? is it peyronie's disease? will it get worse? how common is it? who can i talk to? can this be treated? stop typing. start talking to a specialized urologist. because it could be peyronie's disease, or pd. it's a medical condition where there is a curve in the e
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