rights biggest driving the racist agenda. and just hours from polls opening in pennsylvania, we ll pictures of a republican candidate marching next to proud boys on january six help or hurt her? and a presumptive democratic now nominee for governor joins me live. all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i am chris hayes. we start this week in morning and in shock, after the brutal and sadistic murders of ten people in a buffalo supermarket over the weekend. they were victims of a single shooter and his gun, the poisonous vision of america. the racist ideas espoused in the shooters white nationalist manifesto, the wrong kind of people why people, question people, coming into this country to replace so-called white judeo-christian values. now, this vile racist conspiracy theory is as old as time. and the oldest white in this country is the fact about who the we, and we the people are. who counts as a real american? and on one side, there s a vision of americ
for our country mobilizing for that war was this conundrum of where all the workers would live, who worked in these newly built and newly retooled production plants? in an already crowded city like detroit, for example, the government of 1941, realized that they re gonna have to quickly add hundreds of thousands of units of housing in order to bring in hundreds and thousands of new workers to staff these defense production facilities that were being retooled from civilian detroit, or in fact newly opened to make more material in that city. and that math is easy to see, right? you need to build a whole bunch of new stuff. you need a whole bunch of new or retooled or expanded facilities to build that stuff. you need a lot of people to work in those facilities, so they need a place to live. the math is simple, right? on paper, that s all very rational. that all just follows. it s very logistical. it makes sense. in practice, though, it was its own kind of war. while detroit resi
opening in pennsylvania, will pictures of a republican candidate marching next to proud boys on january six help or hurt her? and a presumptive democratic now nominee for governor joins me live. all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i am chris hayes. we start this week in mourning and in shock, after the brutal and sadistic murders of ten people in a buffalo supermarket over the weekend. they were victims of a single shooter and his gun, the poisonous vision of america. the racist ideas espoused in the shooters white nationalist manifesto, the wrong kind of people, white people, question people, coming into this country to replace so-called white judeo-christian values. now, this vile racist conspiracy theory is as old as time. and the oldest white in this country is the fact about who the we, and we the people are. who counts as a real american? and on one side, there s a vision of america as a pluralistic nation across line of language, race, culture
has always that our greatest advances in american history? and it should be the backbone of the democratic story. heather mcghee, has always, great to hear from you. thank you so much. that is all in for this night. the rachel maddow show starts right now. good evening, rachel. good evening, chris. thanks my friend. much appreciated. and thanks to atone for joining us this hour. happy to have you here. thanks t in world war ii, whee u.s. needed to quickly ramp up production of more time material, you know, blaine s, tanks, guns, ammunition, uniforms, everything. the government open defense production act cities all over the country. factories, they either we told the existing ones, but they both knew once. and in some places, they were particularly large defense production facilities, either a large number for joe plants, or a bunch of new ones that were built. one of the things that emerge could quickly as a bottleneck
quickly, what do you think about the critic i ve seen, which is that, look, democrats and liberals are talking too much about demographics. that their version of this narrative is, well, the country is getting less white, that means we win, right? so like, that is hurting this segment of the population as a kind of almost kind of electoral threat. well, i mean, i don t think that that is something that most elected democrats actually say in public, as opposed to the greatly placement theory that you hear all the time from the right-wing, right? i don t think that s the way that most good politicians see how they re gonna make it to 50 plus one. i do think that we need to create a broad multi racial populist coalition, that is willing to fight for one another, instead of against one another. is that quest racial solidarity has always that our greatest advances in american history?