Out of that. you need to do things to address it also, a lot of this is happening at the mid easy for me to say, municipality level, happening with, you know, mayors, and police departments but ultimately the president knows this, anything that happens on your watch, the white house ends up winning. jennifer palmeri, and brendan buck, i really appreciate it happy weekend holiday. i hope you both are going to be doing something fun and that the easter bony, whatever your religious leanings are, stops by and leaves a little chocolate. thank you both so much. tensions are boiling over in the middle east as three of the world s biggest religions trying to observe one of the most sacred weeks of the year. the rockets being launched into israel and how they re responding next. you re watching chris jansing reports only on msnbc (vo) don t worry. sell and buy in one move when you start with opendoor. (woman) yes! (vo) close in a matter of days.
Now part of the tragic list of statistics tracked by the gun violence archive. there have been 129 mass shootings across the u. s so far this year. keep in mind in 2020 to the u. s sites. 1/100 mass shooting on march 19th. the previous year. we hit that grim milestone in late march as well. so if you re keeping track of the math were on record or surpass what we saw the last two years from 2018 to 2020 to the u. s didn t see 100 mass shootings until may. the gun violence archive, which, like cnn, tracks these things that defines a mass shooting as an incident in which at least four people are shot. excluding the shooter. we want to bring in albany clayton. she s the leader , reporter on the guns and lies in america. project for the guardian. ebony. thank you so much for sharing your time and expertise with us, one of the things that we have reiterated it is unusual about this case is
Someone s agenda about being gay, being black, whatever. or anything. anything. yeah. let s bring in jelani cobb, dean of the columbia university school of journalism. another key thing about this, and i m really excited to talk to you about, later on in april, you are putting on a conference about sort of democratizing the press. when i hear about book bannings, right, when i hear that people are going into a local library and saying, hey, i don t want kids to have access to tony morrison, i don t like this book, i think the press is next. what s to keep those people from saying, those old issues of ebony and jet are a problem. what s the danger of these attack on broo books to our ove press and what could that mean to young people into college have access to. these are straight down the middle first amendment issues,
appreciate it. i m joined by jason van tatenhove, a former spokesperson for the paramilitary group the oath keepers. when the leader and another member of the group were convicted last year, he testified during the public hearing of the january six hearing in july. so your experience with the oath keepers, it s fascinating, the leader of the oath keepers, stewart rhodes, he lived in your basement. he did for eight months. first of all, what attracted you about the oath keepers, initially? originally, it started with a healthy distrust of the government? it evolved over time, became much more radicalized and much more open to you saw that happening? yeah, we saw a shift from what i would term kind of a libertarian anarchist book up to what we saw a bony ranch and then a progression of armed standoffs. what was roads like?