because it is a concern, as you said, as it s close to the affluent neighborhoods. it s something they don t want to see, and people want to be necessarily herded into shelters either. let me just tell you it is a profound crisis here. this is just in the city. there s over 50,000 people living on the streets, who have pitched tents and a lot of different places. and we do absolutely have to get people off the street right away, but my concern is that our city kind of has two choices to go, are we gonna go back to failed strategies, which is really just about hurting people and incarcerating a percentage of folks, or are we going to build the type of housing that is needed, and address the underlying problems? and so, that is a very big issue. and we have to involve every single level of government, that s one of the things i bring to the table, especially with my federal state county and city relationships. this should be interesting. are you ready for a runoff, if it ha
innovating things like the city of kansas city is doing, sowing among gun manufacturers here. and in cincinnati, we re working with atf, department of justice, to use data back science, in order to take implicit bias out of it, and put more violent criminals behind bars. we re also sending mental health professionals to nonviolent 9-1-1 calls. but we can t do this alone. we need state action. we need federal action. because this is a federal problem. you know, all the rhetoric, all the blaming, that s for d.c.. mayors have to drive results in our cities, and republican and democratic mayors are saying, we need help from the federal government and from our capitals, to take guns off the street, not put more guns on the street. since therei mayor, aftab pureval, thank you very much for your time tonight, sir. thank you. that does it for all in on this monday night. rachel maddow show starts right now. good evening, rachel. good evening, chris, thank you my friend. much appr
was a blatant attempt to use force, to destroy american democracy and the rule of law. that s what made that day so uniquely terrifying, such an existential threat to the democratic order. the organizers, the rioters, wanted to topple the rightful government, and install a wrongful one, using mob violence to do so. the president backed them on, as some of the people closest and participated in the planning. in the variety of wannabe paramilitary groups, they view january six as a testing ground for precisely this undertaking, for using force, violence, intimidation and the threat there of, to overturn the democratic order. today, we saw a big development in the case against one of those groups, the proud boys. department justice charged the longtime leader of the proud boys, enrique tarrio, and four of his top lieutenants, with extremely rare charges of seditious conspiracy. as the indictment alleges, quote, the purpose of the conspiracy was to oppose the lawful transfer of p
by allowing people to conceal, carry anywhere they want to. law enforcement was against this. but my response to that is it s madness. it s absolutely madness to put more guns on our streets, to exacerbate the problem even more. there are people who say, particularly i think people that are sort of committed to this kind of gun maximalist view, that what you are doing right now as a kind of blame shifting, kind of a scapegoating, which is democrats and big democrats cities, there are the ones who have a problem with gun crime, or crime more broadly. and they re trying to push blame off on gun manufacturers, that are a, or law-abiding citizens. what do you say to that? mayors don t have time for that crap, right? 255 mayors from across the country, including republicans, signed this letter, urging senators to take action, urging them to stop the violence, to help us, give us the tools, as mayors, to reduce the violence in our cities. look, mayors across the country are doing what we
enough. we re gonna do something. and instead of doing anything to reduce the number of guns in our streets, lawmakers in columbus are making it worse by taking away the training, and by allowing people to conceal carry anywhere they want to. law enforcement was against this. but my response to that is it s madness. it s absolutely madness to put more guns on our streets, to exacerbate the problem even more. there are people who say, particularly, i think people that are sort of committed to this kind of gun maximalist view, that what you are doing right now is a kind of blame shifting, kind of a scapegoating, which is democrats in big democrats cities, there are the ones who have a problem with gun crime, or crime more broadly. and they re trying to push blame off on gun manufacturers, that are a, or law-abiding citizens. what do you say to that? mayors don t have time for that crap, right? 255 mayors from across the country, including republicans, signed this letter, urging