a member of congress, becaus she took a - she was so naughty, so islamophobic, and so races tha even gop leadership in 2020, could not back her when sh decided of course, the run for congress from georgia s deep red 14th district. republican leader, kevin mccarthy s office said that he comments were poorly, and he had no confidence in them. and fight the values of equality and decency that make ou country great. and he backed her primar opponent as extreme as you think trum was, extreme as you think th republican party was in 2020 marjorie taylor greene was way way more extreme but is that still the case sadly, shockingly, far from it that is the thesis of a ne book by the new york times magazine contributing writer robert trapper whose continuous reporting has written that it s not as if sh has gravitated towards the gop and congress over the last 1
we re back with the white house veteran and writer david from and emily from the new york times magazine. david, we have tried to lay out some of the emerging evidence from this report today, as well as one of the most important attended audiences according to the committee, which is attorney general garland, who has the ultimate call. your thoughts. you did a fantastic job laying out this timeline and showing how the time goes beyond january 6th both forward and back. and stretches back in to days before when the trump people had their scheme to try to overturn the elections at the house of representatives. i would suggest it even goes farther than that. you have to understand that the first trump impeachment and the second trump impeachment are the same story. mm-hmm. donald trump took away from the results of the 2018
i like that. singleton was nominated for two academy awards, best original screenplay and the youngest person ever nominated for best director. it was an era when a lot of people were playing attention to black film. there s this famous moment when the new york times magazine does this cover story. you really had for the first time a large collection of black filmmakers documenting what was going on in the culture. you got to be ready to go down, stand up, and die for that shit like blizzard did if you want some juice. blizzard? blizzard ain t sticking up for nothing now. that s because we wasn t there to back him up. if we was there if we was there, there would be five dead instead of one. he s a phenomenal actor. we had a similar vision of what we wanted to do as young men coming into this whole entertainment world together. my attitude was, i got my robert de niro, i got the dude i want to do multiple movies with. people don t realize how theatrical the gangster
oil? i think it s an all of the above approach. i think the president has really focused on number one we are facing a global crisis with this unprovoked war from ukraine. at the same time the president has said let s look at all of our options. carbon capture and sequestration, the reduction of our dependency on fossil fuels, the infusion of clean energy and the market potential that clean energy possesses, so i think the president is doing a good job of walking and chewing gun at the same time. we didn t get in this mess overnight. we re not going to get out overnight so i believe what you re seeing is a good steady transition in a way that doesn t jeopardize our national security and our ability to be globally competitive. michael regan, epa administrator, thank you very much. really appreciate you being here. thank you so much. please come back. i will. let s bring in david wallace wells, columnist for the new york times magazine and author of uninhabitable earth, li