daybreak to assess the damage after two tornadoes touched down like last night and an historic election in mexico 6:00, a.m. here in washington alive. look at new york city on this monday morning. good morning, everyone. i m kasie hunt. it s wonderful to have you with us former president donald trump will be sentenced for his crimes on july 11, just days before he said to me, nominated for president at the republican national convention in an interview with fox over the weekend, trump claimed he is just fine with going to jail but in one of the most volatile divided moments in modern history, here s what he said about how his supporters might react i don t know that the public would stand it i don t i m not sure the public would stand for it with a house arrest or i think i think it d be tough for the public to take you know, at a certain point, there s a breaking point boyd there s a breaking point. he says, i spoke to democratic congressman adam schiff about those comments
for what she s done, they should lock her up hillary clinton has to go to jail. ok. chest to go to jail, you shouldn t lock them up. lock up the lock-up. hillary okay. that was through the bikes and the for could measure. so he s i mean, he said he s trying not to say it adds certain extent we can it s i almost want to put it into the category of nothing matters because it seems like this is the thing we ve been fighting with narrower are so many years when donald trump has been on the stage, he did say it now he s trying to say he didn t say it but the real and none of this is like none of its productive harb, things are productive. you know, i just feel like i ve seen before, you see it often with white folks convicted of white-collar crimes, that the moment they get pulled into the system, all of a sudden, it s biased, it s rigged, it s corrupt. i don t want to pay my taxes anymore. i can t believe i m a part of this and so on.
When Volbeat were starting out 20 years ago, frontman Michael Poulsen would go down to Copenhagen’s Sex Beat Records and give its owner, Thomas Andreassen, his band’s merchandise in the hope that the shop would stock it. “Michael would say: ‘Do you want to have our T-shirts in the shop and hand out some of our promos?’” Andreassen says today. “Demo CDs were not registered for sales, so I would put them in customers’ bags as giveaways.” Two decades on, very little has changed apart from the premises. Thomas still runs this compact, basement-level institution (named after an old Gun Club song) packed wall-to-wall with brand new shrink-wrapped vinyl and CDs. And today his old friend Michael Poulsen is leaning on the counter, perusing the vinyl LPs he’s already collected from the shelves. In other respects, an awful lot has changed. These days Volbeat are