and odd and frivolous behavior and showing disrespect for the norms of society. in the haight ash bury district illegally smoked illegal substances threatened to make love and not war and let it known they trusted no one over 30. jesse: haight ash bury one place in the country where you could get high and flaunt it in public. over a half century later san francisco s hippy generation gave birth to this. excuse me, ma am, you know there is a drug rehab here, right? can you use drugs somewhere else. she ain t doing drugs, man. she got a meth pipe in her hand. stop your drug habit maybe you wouldn t get evicted. come on, you have got to do that somewhere else, bro. get up with that, bro. you are out in front of a building right now. this is where people live. we got this business we are trying to run here and you are making it look kind of bad over here. can you guys clean it up a little bit and go somewhere elsewhere w. this stuff? because it s getting a little out of
trump alibi from trump tv. and the new project that gives me genuine hope in these insane times, when all in starts right now. w. good evening from new york, i m chris hayes. all of the sudden there is a lot happening in the department of justice investigation into the january 6th insurrection. in just the last few days, there have been a bunch of developments, some of which we are going to get to in a moment. but before we do, it s worth stepping back and looking at the bigger picture, because i think the significance here is, a large. for seven years now, we have been covering donald trump and he has basically been always enmeshed in controversy and scandal. he has always been surrounded by investigations and also allegations of criminality. serious ones. that is how he has lived his entire life. right on the edge of the law, both before entering politics and after. and there has always been this perpetual sense that trump manages to wriggle his way out of every jam. partl
for the first time the january 6th committees moved beyond washington tomorrow. until now, the committee has been delving into the actions of those surrounding then-president trump, what he knew, and when he knew it. now it s what did trump himself do and what is a criminal act. and you can be sure, this moment will be part of the focus. all i want to do is this. i just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have because we won the state. that is just a really short clip of the one-hour call between then-president trump and georgia secretary of state brad raffensperger four days before the capitol insurrection. it is key to the question of how far donald trump went and how much of a role he personally played in the efforts to overturn the election results in georgia and six other states. raffensperger is set to testify before the committee tomorrow. so too is his deputy gabe sterling and a third republican, arizona house speaker rusty bowers. he also resiste
u.s. citizens home? well, in fact, the state department put out a statement saying that they have seen photos and videos of these two u.s. citizens reportedly captured by russian military forces in ukraine. we are closely monitoring the situation and our hearts go out to their families during this difficult time. we are in contact with ukrainian authorities, the international committee of the red cross, and with the families themselves, due to privacy considerations, we have no further comment on these cases. this is typical of state department statements about, for instance, i have seen it before with americans being held in syria as well. there clearly is a lot of back channel communications going on, but state department officials on these very sensitive issues tend to be quite tight lipped. jake. yeah, ben wedeman in kramatorsk, ukraine, thank you so much. joining us is bunny drewky, the mother of one of the americans being held captive in ukraine. you just saw his pi
residents ares safer at billr cosby s house now. [laughter] to tackle issues like mass shootings and nightly murders, i think we should go to the very beginning. cosmos, 13.8 billion years old. but you didn t think i meant literally the beginning. i figure we will start there and by my estimate we should be done with this model walk by the time the debate runs out of gold. [laughter] to see what evil looks like now it s a backdrop of history. 30 years because something did. sure we ve had horrible violenc for centuries, genghis khan killed millions of people, but he also fathered a time. historians call him. imagine the father s day card when he was around. he didn t get that nickname fro not spraying for breeze after h is the bathroom, he was truly terrible. that he s not around to hear me ripping on him. and then, there are the world wars. one, which i guess led to two, bet you didn t think i d be thi thorough, did you? i m regular julius socrates. the good news, it seems t