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that seeks to deny the real fears in the communities. as a result of historic racism exacerbated by a former president and media allies who describe the coronavirus pandemic as the china virus or kung flu for more than a year up to and as recently as this week. the right is doubling down on the violence trutherism with this comment from congresswoman chip roy. >> we believe in justice. there is an old saying in texas find the rope and get a tall oak tree. you know, we take justice very seriously. we ought to do that. round up the bad guys. my concern about this hearinging is that it seems to want to venture into the policing of rhetoric in a free society. now we are talking about whether talking about china, the chi coms, whatever phrasing we want to use, if some people say we think those people are the bad guys. i think the chinese communist party are the bad guys. and i think that they're harming people. >> those remarks prompted an immediate outcry, among these colleagues in the house and roy refusing to walk back the comments or apologize. here's the statement to nbc news. apparently some folks are freaking oults that i used an old expression about finding all the rope in texas and a tall oak tree about carryinging out justice against bad guys. i meant it. we need more justice and less thought policing. we should not turn america into an authoritarian state like the chinese communists who seek to destroy us. no apologies. the rest of the gop cosigning the toxic mix. it is not totally clear why they have chosen to solidify the standing as the party that tolerates race baiting but the words they choose to stand by have consequences. "the washington post" reports on the year that got us here and the direct result of the anti-asian slur introduced by president trump. as the coronavirus spread last february, the w.h.o. urged people to avoid terms like the wuhan virus or the chinese virus. president trump didn't take the advice. on march 16, 2020, he first tweeted the phrase chinese virus. that single tweet researchers later found fueled exactly the backlash the w.h.o. has feared. it was followed by an avalanche of tweets with #chinese virus. but in the atlantic today our friend alex wagner describing a reckoning. asians heard the racist language of the previous president and may have wondered whether there's an increase in violence. the same impulse that's targeted black and brown skinned americans for generations. across the country in california and new york and now this week in georgia there has been. the slurs have always been there and the violence but the impunity and lawlessness feel new. for the first time in my life asian politicians, celebrities and activists are in conversation about lateen and explicit racism. asian-americans have been paying attention and they're ready to putt up a fight. the very real fears in the asian-american community as preparing to meet with members of the atlanta community. let's start with the favorite reporters and friends. geoff bennett in atlanta for us and alex wagner, co-host of "the circus" and the reverend al sharpton is back host of "politics nation" and president of the national action network. alex, i have read your piece twice now and breath taking and titled "our asian spring. "talk about it. >> i think to be asian in this moment is reconciling the pain and injustice that i think we have all been living but maybe are newly awoken to and i use the example of my mother and wasn't allowed to use the burmese name going to school but when he was enrolling in high school they asked my grandfather what is her english name as though it's improper to be called the burmese name in school and she is known to this day to all of her burmese friends and family as maureen, an adopted name. we accepted that duality as a family. and in this moment, it really crystallizes for me the ways in which asians of all stripes but so many asians have answered to the wrong names, put up with soft or lateen bigotry and seen family members put in harm's way because of the rhetoric of the president and has been happening for decades and this moment feels different because they have witnessed what black and brown-skinned brethren have been doing, they have seen agents of change, the tools that are at our disposal and they are ready to stand up and do something about it and in that way it's a terrifying moment, of course, but it is also really exhilarating. >> geoff, the president and vice president have singled out this day, this trip, this week for their first joint travel. the right is talking about sex addiction and the motive for this mass shooting is at this hour unclear but the victims, put the names up. the six of the eight victims are asian women and the son of one of them, randy park, 23 years old said of his mother, she was a single mother who dedicated her whole life to providing for my brother and i. the rest of the family is still in south korea. quote, she was one of my best friends and the strongest influence on who we are today. losing her has put a new lens on my eyes on the amount of hate that exists in our world. what is the president and vice president's message there to this community today? >> reporter: hearing any son have to say that about his now dead mother just takes your breath away. on the way down here deputy press secretary said that the president when he addresses reporters and makes remarks later this hour the president will meet the moment we are in and just think about the moment we are in. aapi hate, stop aapi hate tracking instances of anti-asian hate found some 3,800 instances of violence in the last year aloren, since may 2020 when in any other given year there's 100. that's a 380% increase. and those violent attacks didn't happen in a vacuum. they were happening at the same time during which you articulated in the open of the show, that rhetoric from president trump. so now president biden and vice president kamala harris find themselves in a position to really have to undo all of that, undo it with the rhetoric but to also do it by marshalling a whole of government approach to stop it. i was talking via text with a person now in the room with the president and vice president and asian-american elected leaders here in georgia and community advocates and a thing this person said to me is that they welcome the empathy from the president, from president biden. but what they really need are resources, that will yield results. president biden is calling on congress to pass the covid-19 hate legislation that would make it easier for folks to report instances of anti-asian hate and marshal more resources and one way and requires congress to do that work. we know how that may or may not go so there's a heavy lift here and compiling facts and evidence in this case in atlanta it is worth noting and i think alex spoke to this beautifully, the way people feel about this is not contingent on the facts of this specific case. not in this moment. so that is what president biden is going to try to address. trying to meet the moment as it was said he would. >> whatever the investigation yields, rev, it is the toxic combination of hatred and easy access to guns that led to the death of eight individuals there in atlanta and it is also true as alex writes about and geoff reported that asian-americans and earn coming on the show made the point that they have mostly suffered silently. this is the fault of us in the media, as well. there is not a particularly robust conversation about the hatred toward asian-americans in this country as a result of the rhetoric. i remember donald trump calling it the kung flu and the asia virus and getting pressed by white house reporters. i think members of the cabinet also used that term and he said it this week on fox news. so you have been in this fight against hate for decades. what does this feel like for you in this moment? >> this front shows us that when you have an atmosphere, a climate of scapegoating, based on race or nationality, then you have those that will be incited to move forward and do something in that regard. there is no other explanation between the increase in the violence and the picking on all the way to the killing of asian-americans other than the rhetoric coming from the white house. why all of a sudden this uptick? many of us have been raising this before what happened in atlanta. state senator of new york and i did a thing together three weeks ago on this issue and now we have what happens in atlanta, whether they call it a hate crime or not, this man went to three different places that was mostly populated by asian-american employees. they're not the only ones that have institutions that deal with sex or deal with sex-related kind of massages or whatever they do. so clearly it appears it was targeted but taking the particular case away, whether you look at this increase and look at the fact that asian-americans have been the ones that have been pinpointed by the sitting president of the united states with falsehood, there is no such thing as kung flu. there is no such thing. so this is a purposeful, derogatory insult and i think that it was important yesterday -- we had all of the new york city mayoral candidates come to the headquarters and important for african-americans and latinos and others that know what hate is to stand up with asian-americans now because we know what it is and in many cases they stood with us with george floyd back to sean bell in new york. i can tell the activists that have been there and we need to be there for them and the president needs to be unequivocal to deal with hate crimes and deal with it in an unrelenting way and show the difference between a provocateur in the white house. >> i was thinking of resembling a presidential library for the former guy, the biggest exhibit would have to be the lies. i think the "the washington post" by the end counted 3,500. people are getting killed. how do you combat the toxicity with the green lighting of overt open racism? >> it is not just green lighting. i think there's an embrace of this kind of rhetoric. it is almost as if those who defend trump's words and the cat gorization of the coronavirus of kung flu to draw strength from it. it animates a part of the base which is what's so toxic and dangerous about it. right? it is not just we are saying these things and you try to cancel our conversation. it is we enjoy saying these things. they are a source of pride, being able to raise a spector of lynchings, using the bigoted stereotypes against people who are politically incredibly important and can be the differencemaker in states like california, for republican seats, or georgia for democratic senate seat. it is not just willfully ignorant. it is painful and destructive and what should be of concern is not just a haphazard use of racist rhetoric. it is an endorse. of it. the fact is you have congressmen saying how dare you? and that chasm between what is right and legal and progressive and good for the country and what ultimately just plays upon our darkest, worst impulses to divide ourselves, that chasm seems as deep and as cancerous as it has in my lifetime. >> i want to push you to speak to the sort of rocks that some of these politicians are hiding under. it seems that he tried to hide under the -- some of the policy fights with china as sort of a reason for race baiting. we have policy challenges with all sorts of countries but there are not these kind of -- 3,800 that we know about and there's a whole lot of underreporting with asian-americans of hate speech and racist attacks against them. pull that string out as they seek to sort of find a permission structure for as you say not ceasing the rhetoric. >> look. the biden administration is actually this week taking a particularly aggressive stance with the chinese. the fact of the matter is i have a 75-year-old mother who lives in long island in a swing district and i am worried about her being able to be safe on the streets. that's not america and the very fact of the matter is there are hundreds of thousands if not millions of other sons and daughters who are worried about their parents. that is an american problem. not a democratic problem. it is an american problem and to refute that with some ideas of foreign policy and where we stand in the geo political theater is nothing but an excuse. it is a band-aid to try to whitewash what is at the core racism. >> geoff bennett, seems to be the animating character. i spoke to a white house official this morning. it seems like the things that are about the soul of the country are impossible to ignore and she acknowledged that that is basically behind his desire to speak out and be on the ground there today. talk about how personal this is not just for the president but the vice president, as well. >> reporter: yeah. we'll start with the president. i remember inauguration day. i spoke to a person close to president biden and sought office three times before and now elected almost at 80 years old and not how he thought it would go and mentioned the fact that given joe biden's deep abiding faith that moments have a way of finding you, when you're ready and when the universe needs you and in so many ways joe biden's life has made -- so well equipped him for the moment. you called him the consoler in chief. he is called on to do that as it relates to the pandemic and now given the moment with this anti-asian-american hate. yes, as you speak about kamala harris, the first person of south asian descent to hold national office, when she speaks about this it's in an authentic, specific way and the two of them i think find this moment and be able to speak directly to it in a way that other elected officials have either chosen not to or just have not been able to. >> rev listening to both geoff and alex describe how deep rooted the commitment to not changing course is on the right, i'm struck by the conversations we had before merrick garland was confirmed as the attorney general, being the comforter in chief, it is a big, big part of it and operationalizing the prosecution of hate crimes. i spoke to someone who was a former justice department official and the sort of deep knowledge of the white supremacist and domestic extremism threat in the country. how important is it in your view to make sure that it is known and that understanding how this justice department views hate crimes and the prosecution and investigation of them as a priority, how important is it to hear to there's new management that sees them as top priorities? >> it's extremely important because it says in an era that we're dealing with, with the heightened attacks on the asian-american community, with the still -- those of us that had marched and dealt with the summer of 2020 around george floyd and other situations and let's remember we are days away from the trial of derek chauvin who put his neon the neck and caused the death of george floyd from happening, so all of these issues of hate related crimes are front and center and it gives the country some security if we know we have a justice department that is sincere about looking at the criminals a suspect of it while you have a president that knows how to console the agrieved while there's an independent investigation going on. i was in the room when then candidate joe biden and his wife dr. jill biden met with george floyd's family the day before we did the last funeral in houston. flew in and met with them for an hour and a half. i saw firsthand how he consoles people in their pain and i'm sure that's what he will do to the leaders in the asian-american community today. i don't know a minister that was better at it. i have been around other presidents. he is probably the best i have seen in just making people feel like he cares and to have presidents and attorneys generals that act like it doesn't concern them is to give the message to people that you don't consider us human and that we're just collateral. you make a comparison between this president saying i'm going to go -- i was going anyway to deal with the vaccines but i'll meet with the leadership and let them know that they matter and i'm going to call for the flags at half staff and compare that to someone yesterday talking about the tallest tree and bring us all the ropes and that shows you the contrast in american politics today and it is disgraceful. >> sure is. geoff bennett, life in atlanta. we can't promise we won't call on you in the next two hours. alex wagner and the rev are sticking around. the record of the fbi vowing to keep on digging in that investigation into the insurrection on capitol hill as members of the gop for some reason continue to down play the events and what happened that day. plus to that point, republicans dismissing more legislation that should have been a slam dunk even in this climate. underscoring the tensions on the hill among members. and of course, as we have been discussing waiting for remarks from president biden following the meeting this afternoon with members of the asian-american community in georgia. all those stories and more when we continue after a quick break. e protein you need with less of the sugar you don't (grunting noise) i'll take that. yeeeeeah! 30 grams of protein and 1 gram of sugar drink, play, and win big in the powered by protein challenge! hi. so you're the scientist here. does my aveeno® daily moisturizer really make my dry skin healthier in one day? 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>> it's my family. my general, my sergeant. i agree with them. >> how about you? how do you feel in this moment? >> i feel prepared. am i nervous? yes. not for myself but for my children. right now, i feel that our country's more in danger from the domestic terrorists than we are from foreign enemies. the original civil war has nothing on what's coming. >> do you think they know that they're the subject of the terror warning sent to law enforcement agencies across this country? >> no. it is truly through the looking glass. they believe that they are the true patriots, the thing standing between america and the abyss, they are the ones fighting for the light, if you will. right? like they believe they're the jedi warriors and the other side the death stars and that's where you think, oh, like getting out of this, combatting this cancer is going to be incredibly difficult because there is no recognition of the sort of evil doing at the heart of that ideology. there is no recognition that it's anything but -- the people that are the foot soldiers of that movement believe that they are the ones with the full hearts and the clear eyes and the reasoned thinking. right? trying to explain to them the ways in which perhaps the opposite may be true i found was a fool's errand. >> it speaks to the kind of things that elizabeth newman talked about, the deradicalization that's needed in our country among our friends and neighbors. this goes beyond the threat -- it is an extension of white supremacy hiding as the ugly underbelly on the edge of our politics as it always has. this is now a militarized force and mated by white nationalism in large part but it is a clear and present danger in the views of the intelligence and law enforcement communities in this country. >> which is why you must have a committed law enforcement community that is going to deal with them in a very firm, unapologetic way. you have people that have been raised and trained to feel like they are the ones defending what is right and that it is their obligation. you have white supremacists that absolutely believe that they are superior to anyone that is not white. you just saw in the clip where this man referred to the civil war as something they would outdo. what was the civil war about other than to keep people enslaved? they have this perverted view that you cannot rationalize. you must prosecute and keep them away that have done criminal acts while you try to convert people. i'm a minister. you convert people. you lock up criminals. they are criminal and terrorist and ought to be treated as such. we can deal with their therapy once they're incarcerated. >> what role does the information, the disinformation ecosystem play in the structure and their belief that they're the good guys in this? >> it is huge. it crystallized the world view. the disinformation that you are hearing around -- there is a media ecosystem that builds up that conspiracy paranoia and builds with fox news and on the internet and talking to that militia group, the georgia 3% security force, they name checked tucker carlson, sean hannity and seen as a mainstream news source and more fringe sources like i said on the internet but unwinding that, they have a paranoid world view with a vast amount of information and seems incredibly real. that's where we're at in the united states today. people get to choose their own reality. and that is a function of both sort of political tribalism and technology and we need to deal with the sort of root cause of that disinformation and we need to be explicit about it. >> it seems to be the connective tissue between everything that ails us. we have vaccine hesitancy. it has the roots in history but the vaccine hesitancy among 49 -- 30% that's hesitant, 49% of them are white republican men that describe themselves as trump supporters. the disinformation around the insurrection led a dozen republicans to vote against giving medals to the police officers who protected everybody and that capitol police suffered hundreds of physical injuries and i'm sure will suffer from decades of mental trauma. the disinformation also seems to have out in the open as one of its features, not the bugs, overt racism. how do you push back against that? >> the first thing we must do and underscore is we must protect those that are targeted by it and i honestly believe that sometimes we rush to understand the illness and forget that they are victims out there as in atlanta, as in george floyd and others that we -- the government must first protect while we deal with the mania that has been put in a lot of these -- that have become terrorists and have become the groups. the first job of government which is why attorney general garland now becomes important is to protect the victims. these people are serious about doing race wars. they are serious to the point that they would try to stop the confirmation of an american presidential election. we need to protect the country from them by doing what is necessary to prosecute them and take them where they cannot be of danger. then we can understand them but we have not had a firm government move forward which is why with the fbi director said that you played at the beginning of this segment is important saying this will not be tolerated and we are going to protect the real americans who are the purported victims. what they have had for 40 years is the president of the united states sanctioning them and now they need to understand the government of the united states is against them and sees what they do as criminal. because they have had this four-year love affair with the opposite feeling. >> unbelievable state of affairs. thank you both. a little bit of news here. alex whose courage and clarity as a journalist in a league of its own and moral clarity about the moment is as well sitting in this chair helming the hours next week while i take a little spring break with my son. you all have that to look forward. thank you, alex, so much. >> oh boy. >> i'm thrilled and so grateful. thank you so much. to prepare you should read her new piece in "the atlantic" online. tension is at a boiling point among members of congress. how rhetoric is gettinging in the way of legislating and what can be done about it. we'll ask a member next. ye risk on this position. you two are all set. have a great flight. thanks. we'll see ya. ah, they're getting so smart. choose the app that fits your investing style. ♪♪ advil dual action fights pain 2 ways. it's the first and only fda approved combination of advil plus acetaminophen. advil targets pain. acetaminophen blocks it. advil dual action. fast pain relief that lasts 8 hours. if you smell gas, you're too close. leave the structure, call 911, keep people away, and call pg&e right after so we can both respond out and keep the public safe. if you see wires down, treat them all as if they're hot and energized. stay away from any downed wire, call 911, and call pg&e right after so we can both respond out and keep the public safe. i believe some of my republican colleagues and one in particular wish harm won this lae body. i take no joy in introducing this resolution but any member who incites political violence must be expelled. and i'll do everything i can in my power to protect our democracy and keep all of my colleagues safe. >> democratic congressman jimmy gomez on the resolution to expel marjorie taylor greene from congress. his legislation co-spore sonned by 72 house democrats calls greene's very presence in office a direct threat against the elected officials citing reports of her support of violence to members of the government and nancy pelosi. joining us is eric swalwell. we have all the bases covered there. talk about why this step is necessary to expel her from the body. >> good afternoon. it's bad enough that we currently are in a state where america's greatest enemies are within our country right now, 20 years after the greatest threat was outside our country, but we also are seeing that some of the greatest enablers of these domestic terrorist enemies are within america's legislative body the congress and people like marjorie taylor greene and others that perpetuate this big lie that the election was stolen and embrace qanon and all of the groups affiliated with them like the ones that alex was talking about earlier on the segment you had. that's dangerous. we have metal detectors now. the security posture at the capitol looks like a fortress and it's because so many of my colleagues like miss greene refuse to denounce the terrorist groups and in fact do nothing but enflame and inspire them. >> what's going on when 12 of your colleagues vote against medals for the police force that protected all of you? >> i presided over that vote. my two brothers are police officers. my dad was a police officer. we owe our lives to the police officers who saved us on january 6. i can't imagine why you would vote against that. the stated reason was they didn't like that the word insurrection was in there. too bad. it was an insurrection that came to the capitol. i think it is more of a consciousness of guilt. just today 14 members, many of the same who voted against giving the police that honor, voted against denouncing the military coup in myanmar. so you have a coup caucus sort to speak. they like the coup in myanmar because it was successful and the one they inspired was not. >> can you speak about the ideological underpinnings then in your view of this mod erp republican party? "the new york times" wren on house members with associations, contacts and ties to some of the very same groups under scrutiny by the fbi for the insurrection. the report this week from odni and dhs and doj about the russian disinformation campaign just says in black and white that they were targeting willing or accomplices in the government, in the high profile public places and right wing media and it is easy watching reels of tape and having covered this for the last year to figure out who that was. why is the modern republican party afraid of using the word inrecollection, pro-coup as you're saying and against treating russia as the adversary they are? >> because it looks more like what they subscribe and how they practiced. i was raised by two republicans who believe that we should have small government, lower taxes. that was the mantra that still inspires my parents and my brothers or my wife's parents and everyone in our family. today it is not a republican party of principles. it is a party of cultural grievances. it is a party that instead of looks at what we can do to better use the taxpayers' dollar in a way to take on the pandemic they want to exploit grievances of the american people and another phenomenon i have seen since being in congress is that it's a pro wrestling culture. they don't look at constituents but as fans and they think that they can just hit me on the head in the ring and then they'll come up to me and slap your back, hey buddy. it's sickening. they think it's just for show and that's what's so disturbing about congress right now. >> keeping to that theme, yesterday the house passed the reauthorization of the violence against women act. a 1994 law protecting or providing resources for victims of domestic abuse. every democrat voted for it. 172 republicans voted against it. if you want to be a cartoon that's me nevada lent you would be the republican. is there debates around policy anymore up there? >> no, no. it is all about show and this week if you keep score the republicans stood against women, against cops and they stood up for coups. >> that's pretty remarkable. i want to get your thoughts. the president and vice president are in atlanta today. you and i both hail from part of the country whose strength is its vibrant asian-american population. san francisco bay area. san francisco suburbs. what are your thoughts about not just the tragedy this week, eight people gunned down, six of them asian-american women, but the response and the instantly polarized and politicized response? >> i appreciate the response from the biden administration and leaders in congress who have spoken up who face discrimination themselves. andy kim, a second term member talking about his experience at the state department not trusted to work on certain asian country desks. that exists and is real and we should have a conversation about that but we have to take responsibility as leaders for our own rhetoric and when former president trump and republican leader kevin mccarthy call it the china virus and enflame a situation, that has consequences and contributes to the violence against this community. 37% of my district is of asian descent. >> yeah. it's amazing state of affairs. congressman, thank you for spending time with us to talk about it all. we are grateful. next for us, some changes to help districts open more fully across the country. that is next. tonight...i'll be eating loaded tots for march madness. 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>> yeah, the studies that really led to today's announcement have been building over time, nicole, and we've had studies from abroad and now four studies that have been profiled by the cdc with some additional studies outside of those that have illustrated that when you do things like keeping masks and you notice that dr. walensky will say something called layers of protection that you can then reduce to three feet, and what that means -- and these were studies done in little kids, kindergarten, grade school, that when you put masks on properly and enforce it, that you enforce hand washing and to, you know, not have contact sports, et cetera, layered protections, that you can reduce to three feet, and that the transmission risk is incredibly low, and i say that because it's not zero, and i think this gets to, nicole, this uncomfortable kind of nuance where we're going to have to accept some risk, but it won't be zero, and we'll have to decide how we get comfortable with that as a society. >> well, and society seems to be willing to take a whole lot of risks on the recreation side. there are images filling our screens of spring breakers, tsa is reporting some record numbers of travelers. is that safe? >> i think that -- no. i think that we've certainly seen how we have hot spot surges and we've already been talking about, i'm really troubled by some data, eight states so far have seen increases in cases, so kind of a reverse of the trend nationally with manhattan alone, nicole, showing a rise of a new york-based variant that is now eclipsing the other variants and showing an increase in cases, so no, it's not responsible, but i also think that we need to remind people that we're -- if you're fully vaccinated, you can get together with people. you can hug them. you can kiss them. children can safely go to school in-person if those protections are in place. our society has decided, though, and so have democratic and republican governors, that we don't need to follow the science-based guidelines, we're just going to reopen and so a lot, again, is left to the individual, unfortunately, to determine how to navigate their risk. >> but in a perfect world, i think most doctors and scientists agree that keeping all of those safety measures in place until we're all vaccinated is the way to follow the science, right? >> yes. yes. and the debate becomes, i'll be honest with you, if people can keep six feet of distance in schools, that's great. i've been to classrooms where, nicole, that means that they can't have all the kids in one classroom. that means that teachers can't be in there. so, this is unfortunately another example where we have made our education the last priority and we're forcing people to kind of choose, unfortunately, between their health and their education. that's not fair, and so i do think the three feet is helpful. i think we need to support it with ways to get better ventilation and also ways to get students and teachers to feel safe. bottom line, vaccinate teachers as quickly as possible and staff as quickly as possible. do not delay. all states need to do it. >> dr. kavita patel, these conversations are so important in this period where i think you're speaking to everyone's anxiousness but we're still waiting to have everyone vaccinated so thank you for balancing those two. the next hour of "deadline white house" starts after a quick break. don't go anywhere. we are just getting started. t g. we a jreust getting started. network at a record pace. we were the first to bring 5g nationwide. and now that sprint is a part of t-mobile, we're turning up the speed. upgrading over a thousand towers a month with ultra capacity 5g to bring speeds as fast as wi-fi to cities and towns across america. and we're adding more every week. coverage and speed, who says you can't have it all? 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what happens after all of his millions of supporters hear that and their frustration and anger builds about the lockdowns or the other challenges of the pandemic? what happens to those kinds of smears? >> i was at the house judiciary subcommittee hearing on violence against asian-americans, and we had professors present studies and reports that showed there was a link between the racist rhetoric of the former president and the increase in hate crimes and hate incidents against asian-americans. when the former president uses terms like kung flu, racist terms in describing this virus, it gives people more permission to attack americans who happen to be of asian descent. i am not a virus, and there is really no evidence whatsoever that asian-americans somehow transmit this virus more than anybody else. in fact, you'll more likely get the virus if you don't get vaccinated, in you don't wear a mask and if you don't social distance. >> well, and the largest group of vaccine hesitant americans are trump-supporting males. i want to ask you about something journalist alex wagner talked about in the last hour. she's out with a new piece in "the atlantic" and it's called, "the asian spring." and the -- sort of her premise and what she talked about is really for the first time, she's worried about her mother, who lives in a swing district in long island. she's seen sort of these stereotypes of asians as the model minority and others have spoken about this all week long. is this a moment where you're hearing, one, anecdotes of violence against people in your own life that you know, and two, a different view about the importance of speaking out about it. >> for many in the asian-american community, none of this is particularly surprising. there has been a history of violence against asian-americans. whenever our country feels threatened, unfortunately, sometimes ethnic groups get scapegoated, including asian-americans, so you had the whole yellow peril hysteria, followed by the chinese exclusion act, then you had the internment of japanese-americans. in the 1980s when japan was rising and americans feared the loss of jobs, vincent chen was murdered and now you have this pandemic. so, for asian-americans, we are very aware of this history, and we're frankly many of us are scared and angry right now. >> what will the president and vice president hear from this community which is obviously reeling in the wake of just days after this shooting that targeted six asian women at these day spas, but what do you think the sort of policy changes are? it has to be more than attention. there's new leadership, obviously, at the justice department and new or redoubled commitment to prosecuting hate crimes, but what do you think the community wants to hear from the president, new president and new vice president? >> i think it is a very good step that the president of the united states and the vice president are meeting with asian-american leaders in georgia. last year, i wrote a letter to then attorney general bill barr asking the department of justice to do more on hate crimes, that letter was signed by 150 bipartisan members of congress. bill barr ignored the letter. under the biden administration, not only have they not ignored the issue of hate crimes but the president actually issued an executive order to combat hate crimes against asian-americans and in the house of representatives, we have multiple pieces of legislation to strengthen and add additional resources to the hate crimes prosecutions and investigations. >> congressman lieu, please stay with us but i want to bring into our conversation eugene robinson, pulitzer prize winning columnist for the "washington post" and sam stein from politico. eugene robinson, i want to ask you to pick up on this idea of a new president who takes seriously the role, the traditional role of a president as someone who goes and comforts a grieving community, but also a new justice department that as the congressman is saying, sent a letter to the former guy and didn't hear much. >> well, it's like night and day. i mean, we had a former president, now fortunately former president who popularized and insisted on this incendiary, awful, racist rhetoric about the china virus, about the kung flu. literally giving permission to hate asian-americans, giving permission to his loyal supporters to hate asian-americans. it's shocking, and he ran a justice department that was not interested in using its civil rights division to pursue discrimination and to pursue racism and to pursue hate crimes. it just -- it simply was not. and so now, the switch has flipped to the exact opposite. we have an administration that gets it, that understands how racist former president trump's rhetoric was, understands what damage it did. it's horrified by the killings in atlanta and i hope will use the weight and power of the justice department and the presidency to do everything it can to end what is really a frightening and disturbing increase in violent attacks against asian-americans. >> you know, sam, we have, for the last, you know, i don't know, four years sort of focused on the white house as the story and there's perhaps no week that crystallizes how different this white house is and how toxic the last one was, not just as a washington story but as a force, a malevolent force in american life, and you've got -- i've tuned into right-wing media this week and they're spending a lot of time on sex addiction because the reason for this shooting is really important to them, and we should say again, the motive is yet to be determined but six of the eight victims of the homicidal shooting were asian women, and asian-americans have been the targets of 3,800 known reported incidents of hate crimes, hate violence, this year. there's also a lot of reporting that suggests that there's underreporting of violence and threats against asian-americans. so, sam, just talk about this as sort of a -- not just a new president but a new tone and a new approach toward some of these darkest forces in american life. >> well, i mean, it's just what eugene said, right? you can't imagine a starker contrast in tones and approaches to these types of hate crimes from one president to another. i remember you and i, nicole, talking about the tree of life shooting, which obviously impacted me personally as a jew, and i remember in the aftermath of that thinking, well, what is -- where is the trump administration going to come down on this? there's ambiguity about how he would approach it, questions about ultimately he did, i believe, go to pittsburgh, but the idea that you would even sort of wonder what the response would be was in itself noteworthy because traditionally, a president has approached these situations with a very sympathetic, empathetic playbook, and trump was an aberration for that. we saw it with the charlottesville riots too. we saw when he was unwilling or unable to call out the proud boys or what happened in the aftermath of the shooting in kenosha. so in all these instances, we sort of dealt with the trauma by ourselves without the president getting involved for four years and now we have a different president. i don't think everything can be put at the feet of the president. obviously, these are complex issues that are not just about politics. they're about our society, culture, news media, ecosystem as well, but certainly the tone is set from the top and what we're seeing right now is just a demonstrably different tone from our commander in chief. >> well, eugene, they're also about guns and the shooting that sam left out, tragically, there are too many for any of us to remember but the other one is el paso, which for me really thrust into the spotlight how radicalized deranged people with guns were by racial animus, and i think that the legacy -- and a lot of it predates donald trump. we should say that. but the permission structure to put it out in social media, to put it out on right-wing media is a feature of the last four years. >> it is a feature of the last four years, and the other feature of the last four years is, you know, a justice department that just doesn't take it seriously, that doesn't move affirmatively against these sorts of attacks and slightly similar but kind of different vein, for example, they wouldn't call out right-wing domestic terrorism. it's just the number one terrorism threat we face. and so, here, you know, we have a clear case. this assailant didn't just pick any businesses to target. he didn't just pick any spas to target. he went to three businesses owned and operated by asian-americans. period. so, that should put to rest any question about whether or not this was a hate crime. this is deliberate. and those were deliberate choices that he made. and i hope and expect that the biden administration will understand that and will take this seriously moving forward. not just to deal with this but to deal with the -- just the whole atmosphere of hate and distrust and aggression that asian-americans are feeling right now. and you know, i wrote about this yesterday and since then, i've heard from asian-american activist friends who are just telling me stories that are just -- that are blood curdling about what's been going on. >> congressman, do you and people that you know in the asian community, do you feel threatened walking around the streets or walking around d.c. or walking around your community? >> i have told my parents to be more careful. i know a number of asian-americans do feel more threatened. at the same time, i think it's important to note that the asian-american community is now having a political awakening. we now have more asian-american members of congress than at any time in u.s. history. according to the u.s. census, asian-americans are the fastest increasing group in america. since 2000, the number of asian-american voters has more than doubled and according to pew research, about two years ago, the number of immigrants from asia region exceeded immigrants from any other region to the u.s., so this growth is continuing. >> it's really important point to end on. congressman ted lieu, thank you so much for spending some time with us today. eugene and sam are sticking around and when we return, president biden's trip to georgia also included a meeting with the leader of the fight against the republican assault on voting rights and democracy. how president biden and stacey abrams are working together to defend the right to vote. that story's next. plus, an exclusive new interview with the daughter-in-law of donald trump's long-time money man. she's talking with prosecutors in new york as they focus in on trump's finances. and that heated exchange between dr. fauci and rand paul which illustrates just how anti-science the republican party now is. we'll talk about what science can do about that next. "deadline white house" continues after a quick break. don't go anywhere. continues after a quick break. don't go anywhere. really make my dry skin healthier in one day? it's true jen. this prebiotic oat formula moisturizes to help prevent dry skin. impressive! aveeno® healthy. it's our nature.™ try the body wash, too. we are hoping things will pick up by q3. yeah...uh... it's oudoug?ure.™ [ding] never settle with power e*trade. it has easy-to-use tools and some of the lowest prices. don't get mad. get e*trade and start trading today. wealth is breaking ground on your biggest project yet. worth is giving the people who build it a solid foundation. wealth is shutting down the office for mike's retirement party. worth is giving the employee who spent half his life with you, the party of a lifetime. wealth is watching your business grow. worth is watching your employees grow with it. principal. for all it's worth. alright, guys, no insurance talk on beach day. -i'm down. -yes, please. [ chuckles ] don't get me wrong, i love my rv, but insuring it is such a hassle. same with my boat. the insurance bills are through the roof. -[ sighs ] -be cool. i wish i could group my insurance stuff. -[ coughs ] bundle. -the house, the car, the rv. like a cluster. an insurance cluster. -woosah. -[ chuckles ] -i doubt that exists. -it's a bundle! it's a bundle, and it saves you money! hi. i'm flo from progressive, and i couldn't help but overhear... super fun beach day, everybody. president biden's visit to georgia to meet with asian-american leaders amid a wave of attacks against asian-americans and in the wake of a devastating shooting that left eight dead including six women of asian descent also brought the president to the state that marks the front line in the war over voting rights in america. the president and vice president meeting today with a woman who arguably did more than anyone else to flip the state of georgia blue in november and to secure democrats their majority in the senate. one stacey abrams. white house is thanking abrams for her work even as she is working tirelessly to rally democrats and activists to fight voting restrictions proposed by republicans who are using trump's big lie of a stolen election as justification to undermine voting rights and democracy itself. abrams and other activists can claim a small victory today. georgia republicans are backing off their plans to eliminate sunday voting and no excuse absentee voting. but republicans in georgia and their counterparts all across the country are still trying to erect barriers to vote, even as "the washington post" analysis comparing voting rights to gun rights underscores just how hard it is to vote in america already. "the washington post" reports, in 34 states and d.c., one has to wait longer before voting than before obtaining a rifle. it's also the case that far more states require voters to register before voting than require a permit for purchasing a rifle. the pattern is consistent. buying a rifle through a private sale tends to be easier in most places than casting a vote. let that sink in. we're back with eugene robinson and sam stein. this is stunning piece of reporting from your paper, eugene. >> yeah, it is stunning, and it is ridiculous, and you know, how many times do we have to have this discussion? you know, this young assailant allegedly that day decided to -- on tuesday, went to a sporting goods store and bought himself a gun and then allegedly committed this rampage, killing eight innocent victims, and it's the most familiar story that we tell here because it happens again and again and again. it is so ridiculously and obscenely easy to obtain a gun with no effective background checks, no -- no effective barriers whatsoever, and that, you know, that has to change. how are we going to change it? maybe now with democrats holding power, we'll be able to focus and concentrate on this. tougher gun control laws are something, especially background checks, universal background checks. something the american public supports by, like, 80%, yet it doesn't get done and it's not just frustrating. it's beyond frustrating. it's just tragic. eight innocent lives. he bought the gun that day. just incredible. >> that's a disgrace. i mean, it's a laughingstock and a disgrace the world over. the other half of the disgrace, though, is that the piece describes voting as something that's harder than buying a rifle in america. an equally embarrassing disgrace the world over, sam stein. >> yeah. we, you know, we have a tortured history in this country of trying to restrict access to the polls. we've moved forward in some cases, but in recent times, it's been a feature of republican-led legislatures to try to restrict voting access, and this was so obviously going to happen in the aftermath of trump's election loss. i mean, it was just -- it was evident when, as soon as they started talking about this mysterious, erroneous voting fraud that had taken place in just randomly in these critical states that trump lost but nowhere else, it served as the predicate for these lawmakers to go forward and try to push these incredibly restrictive new sets of laws, and we're seeing it in various states that had no role in the outcome of the 2020 elections. now, there's two things to think of here. one is, on occasion, these efforts do backfire. i'm not saying this is a rationalization for doing these laws but on occasion, they so rile up the targeted voters that they go out in numbers that they didn't expect. that doesn't mean you should put these laws in place but it does have the potential to backfire. the bigger question that confronts biden and democrats is what do you do about it federal legislatively. there's a huge bill that passed the house, and it will get some sort of hearing in the senate at some point in time, but the question that faces the party is, one, how do you prioritize it, and go, are you willing to either break it up into pieces that you think can pass by 60 votes, or are you willing to sacrifice the filibuster to get it done through a simple majority, and do you even have a simple majority? so those are big existential questions that await the party. >> eugene, sam gave us plenty to chew on. in stacey abrams's fight in georgia, she has explicitly moved to try to get the business community there on the record and our friend, greg bluestein tweeted this today. the metro atlanta chamber, the state's most powerful business lobby, is supporting steps that maximize voter participation, removing obstacles, and maintaining election integrity. the atlanta chamber statement is the strongest stance yet on voting restrictions from corporate georgia. so, big companies headquartered there, among them delta airlines and coca-cola and this has been something that stacey abrams turned to. this seems to be a really important focus for bipartisan efforts to ensure that corporate america doesn't cosign voter suppression. this feels significant in that regard. >> it is significance especially if corporations use the dollar, their dollars, and encourage their executives to use their dollars, their campaign donation dollars in ways that support voting rights and denying them to politicians who want to constrain voting rights, who want to disenfranchise voters. that's significant because you know how important money is to politics. you know, to sam's point, i was -- i thought democrats were right in the covid relief bill to insist on keeping everything together to do the big, you know, go big rather than piecemeal. on voting rights, i think it's, my personal view is somewhat different. i just think voting, access to the polls and dealing with these attempts to disenfranchise voters, primarily voters of color, this is an existential question for not just the democratic party but for our democracy, and i think democrats should consider just the voting rights part, separating that out and bringing that up and sending it over to the senate and saying, here, either vote to disenfranchise millions of voters of color in this country in a new jim crow effort to deny the vote that black people, hispanic people, asian-americans and others, or stand up for democracy. and make that a pure vote. i think that's something they should at least consider. >> sam, i want to -- i mean, one of the other pieces of this, and i will refrain from giving the democratic party any advice. i think people put a lot on the biden white house and on the democrats, because it's not clear that the republicans, what they're there for. they shot down a vote to give medals to the capitol police, so i only say this in the spirit of there's only one party up there that looks interested in protecting our democracy. getting republicans on the record for specific voter suppression measures, it may be more clarifying in terms of having the public understand just what republicans are against, and just to expand on this sort of opportunity, perhaps, this is some "new york times" reporting. how to counter the republican assault on voting rights. this is from an opinion piece. the florida state senate recently heard testimony about a proposed bill limiting the use of dropboxes, and adding other limits on mail voting. democratic and republican supervisors of elections testified against the bill. state election law administrators, among them many republicans, are very wary of these harshly restrictive measures which complicate the voting process and in creating the likelihood of, as one supervisor of elections said, long lines, chaos and confusion are unpopular with republican as well as democratic voters. you know, to be even blunter than bob is here, there might be some republicans who actually want people to come vote for them, and when you put hurdles in place, structural hurdles to voting, it could backfire spectacularly. >> totally. that's very true about mail voting too, which has traditionally been something that republicans have excelled at. just happens that their voters are much more comfortable and used to the process of putting their ballots in mail and sending and dropping it off. that had not been the case for democrats up until this cycle when covid, of course, changed all the dynamics and made the idea of mail voting much more appetizing, put it that way. so, you know, there are obvious unintended consequences and that doesn't even get into what i was alluding to earlier, which is there's a hugely motivating factor for a lot of these communities that are targeted by these laws to say, you know what? i will be defiant of this restrictive legislation. i'm going to go and wait eight, nine hours. now, it's abhorrent that they have to do that, of course. but it is a motivating factor. so, it doesn't surprise me in the slightest that there are local republican officials saying to their brethren, hold on one second, let's think this through. perhaps we don't want to restrict our own communities from being able to vote. perhaps it's not, you know, morally righteous for us to do anything like that and perhaps it could even backfire. >> it's also, in this current climate, you know, how bad are these laws? they're so bad even some republicans at a local level are against them. eugene robinson, sam stein, thank you so much for being part of these conversations. earlier in the week, we told you about the former daughter-in-law of donald trump's long-time money man. well, this is where it gets juicy. she is talking to prosecutors in new york, and her attorney says she refuses to be silenced. when we return, we will hear from jennifer weisselberg in her own words about what her ex-father-in-law knows and what he could tell prosecutors about trump's business dealings. that is next. lings. that is next ♪ ♪ we made usaa insurance for veterans like martin. when a hailstorm hit, he needed his insurance to get it done right, right away. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa these are real people, not actors, who've got their eczema under control. with less eczema, you can show more skin. so roll up those sleeves. and help heal your skin from within with dupixent. dupixent is the first treatment of its kind that continuously treats moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis, even between flare ups. dupixent is a biologic, and not a cream or steroid. many people taking dupixent saw clear or almost clear skin, and, had significantly less itch. don't use if you're allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur, including anaphylaxis, which is severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems, such as eye pain or vision changes, or 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recommendations. so it's like my streaming service. well except now you're binge learning. see how you can become a smarter investor with a personalized education from td ameritrade. visit tdameritrade.com/learn ♪ if you smell gas, you're too close. leave the structure, call 911, keep people away, and call pg&e right after so we can both respond out and keep the public safe. if you see wires down, treat them all as if they're hot and energized. stay away from any downed wire, call 911, and call pg&e right after so we can both respond out and keep the public safe. for the very first time today, we're hearing from a major figure in a potential criminal case against our most recent ex-president. this week, we told you about allen weisselberg, the trump organization's cfo, the money guy, who's said to know more about what's behind the curtain there than anyone outside the trump family. the key to the case, as one former federal prosecutor put it. it's clear why manhattan district attorney cyrus vance jr., who now has trump's taxes in hand, wants allen weisselberg to flip and testify against trump. well, today, as we said, for the very first time, a former member of the weisselberg family is speaking out publicly on camera. he's part of the conversation -- here's part of the conversation between our nbc news colleague tom winter and jennifer weisselberg, whose marriage to allen weisselberg's son ended in 2018. watch. >> reporter: how often, in your time around the weisselberg family, did donald trump's name come up? was it kind of a constant presence of who he is and who they were working with, or was it something that was not a normal part of discussion? >> it absolutely defines who they are. every day. >> let's bring in nbc's investigations correspondent tom winter who had that exclusive interview with jennifer weisselberg. also joining us, our friend, marketing and branding expert donny deutsch. first, tom winter, congratulations on getting this interview, and second, why is she speaking out? >> congratulations also to my colleague, adam reese, who i worked closely with on this. when you look at why she's speaking out, she has been involved with a bitter divorce with her ex-husband, barry weisselberg, allen weisselberg's son who you were discussing just moments ago, nicole, and there is an ongoing not only a divorce battle but a custody battle. she currently does not have custody of her kids and based on our conversation, she's speaking out in part as a result of that ongoing effort, and there's more reporting to be done on that and that's something that we might get into at a later date. i think why is nbc news speaking with her is an equally valid question, and i think it boils down to three bullet points as we weighed doing this interview and in the course of our reporting. first, wanted people to understand, and you have been looking at the pictures here while i've been speaking, just how close the weisselbergs are to the trumps. this is not a relationship that is perhaps what would be a normal workplace relationship. they've been at personal events together. allen weisselberg's relationship in particular very symbiotic with the entire trump organization brand, the de facto number two, somebody who's been a cfo for decades, most cfos, if you're lucky, hang around for five or ten years in a major company. at some point, you want a change. you want a fresh approach. you want fresh eyes just from a standard business practices standpoint, so he's been there for a very long time, and then three, nicole, is we've discussed in the past, you know, when donald trump has had his associates get caught up in legal troubles, i'm thinking paul manafort, i'm thinking lev parnas, george papadopoulos, the line from the president has been, well, they only worked for us for a couple months or that was the coffee boy or i was never with them or hardly know who they are and ten pictures come out with that person around the president. if, and it's still an if, there are charges here that involve the former president of the united states, i think it's important for people to know and understand as we report this just how close this relationship is and if some day a member of the weisselberg family pleads guilty, and, again, we're not saying that that is something that's going to happen or that they'll even be charged, it's important for people to know how very close they've been to this with barry, allen weisselberg's son, still or in the process of managing the ice rinks and the carousel at central park and then jack working at ladder capital, who has a lot of the debt that donald trump owns. so, just important figures here, wanted people to understand kind of the flowchart, if you will, at the trump organization and why this is important. >> let me show some more of tom's interview. >> what's that business dynamic like? based on your experience of seeing it inside trump tower itself. >> allen would not take an hour or day off if donald was in the office, because i think he felt like he had to be there all the time, but also, they are a team. he discusses everything. his office is right next door. he discusses everything with him, his opinion, and donald trusts him to continue the legacy the way his father set things up. it doesn't change. >> you know, donny, the personal sort of pressure points are interesting, and i'm glad to have that out in the open for all of our viewers, but i think what is undeniable is that everyone who has been entangled legally with donald trump has acted in a way that hasn't been forthright. you had manafort flipping and then unflipping. you had mike flynn pleading guilty in court two, three, four times to felonies and then getting pardoned and engaging in, you know, untoward behavior. and there were only a couple people, i think, who under fear of committing perjury in front of the mueller investigators sort of treated the rule of law as a serious thing. what may be happening now in the post-trump presidency is that this cy vance investigation is dealing with people who don't have those trump protections of a pardon or of a heavy hand over the justice department. >> yeah, nicole, last year, i brought up allen weisselberg on this show and he is where all the cards will come tumbling down. tom, great story, tom, talked about him as his chief financial officer. i want people to understand that this is not a sprawling corporation where you have got these corporate fiefdoms. he's sitting in the office next door in this little dumpy office, figuratively with a green visor on in the most personal way, knows where every single body is buried, and what was so, you know, compelling about tom's piece is that it involves the kids, and the kids are tied up in the business, and jack involved in ladder capital, the way you flip a witness sometimes, even if they're willing to kind of go to jail and take one for the team, you go after their wife, go after their kids, they're not going to. so, this is the guy, weisselberg, and he will be very prominent in the history books that will bring the whole thing down. the american public is going to be hearing a lot, a lot, a lot, and separately, michael cohen spoke to cy vance's office for the eighth time today and i spoke to michael earlier in the week and he thinks that something's fairly imminent, that they are really, really going fast. this is not something long in the future, and mr. weisselberg will be front and center as tom has been hinting at. >> with -- can you tell us how michael cohen and weisselberg interacted? i remember allen weisselberg had some limited immunity around that campaign finance case, i believe, the one that contributed to michael cohen going to jail. but how did they interact, and what's -- where do you think the intersection is between what michael cohen is being asked about and allen weisselberg's exposure? >> allen will know a hundred times more than michael. allen really kept protecting trump and there were a lot of things that when michael was talking to congress and he spent so many hours ahead of time before and he spent dozens and dozens of hours with prosecutors, there are certainly financial things he didn't know because weisselberg kept things so close to the vest, so even his personal attorney, michael knows certain things but for everything that michael knows, weisselberg knows a hundred. >> that's remarkable. and tom winter, when you sort of step back and look at where this case might be and where cy vance, everything that he has in his possession and the pace with which michael cohen has been in there as donny said, eight times, where do you think that probe is? >> first off, going through millions of pages normally would seem like a herculean task and, okay, check back in with us in two years, tom. i think we need to remember here that there are a lot of grand jury subpoenas that were issued prior to cy vance's office getting these tax returns. if you look at the president's past financial disclosures, it's almost like a road map for reporters, frankly, to make calls and figure out who might have received a subpoena, seemingly anybody who's had a document that has financial numbers on it and trump over the last five years or so in new york city, so i think there's a lot of legwork that was done prior to those tax documents being handed over, so i think they have a general sense of which direction to go, and i think right now, they're talking with the likes of a michael cohen or jennifer weisselberg to talk to -- speak with people, and i think particularly in cohen's case, walk us through how things are, give us a tip on this, what does this -- what do you think this document means? and i think you're kind of at the stage where you're getting your ducks in the row before you start bringing in people to the grand jury, perhaps that process is already started, and then at that point, you're locking people into their stories and figuring out, okay, if we're going to pull some levers, which levers are we going to pull? >> it's remarkable. nbc's tom winter, thank you so much for sharing that interview with us. donny is sticking around. when we return, fighting back against the rash of republicans who are anti-science. that is next. and we continue to wait for president biden's remarks after meeting with leaders of the asian-american community in atlanta. stay with us. n-american communi atlanta. stay with us we look up to our heroes. idolizing them. mimicking their every move. and if she counts on the advanced hydration of pedialyte when it matters most... so do we. hydrate like our heroes. ♪♪ ♪ hey now, you're an all-star, get your game on, go play ♪ ♪ hey now, you're a rock star, get the show on, get paid ♪ ♪ and all that glitters is gold ♪ get 5 boneless wings for $1 with any handcrafted burger. only at applebee's. plaque psoriasis, the burning, itching. the pain. with tremfya®, adults with 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waste. please help us get every bottle back. when you buy this plant at walmart, they can buy more plants from metrolina greenhouses so abe and art can grow more plants. so they can hire vilma... and wendy... and me. so, more people can go to work. so, more days can start with kisses. when you buy this plant at walmart. ♪♪ if we're not spreading the infection, isn't it just theater? >> no, it's not. >> you have the vaccine and you're wearing two masks, isn't that theater? >> here we go again with the theater. the other thing is that when you talk about reinfection and you don't keep in the concept of variants, that's an entirely different ball game. that's a good reason for a mask. >> why's he so mad? that was senator rand paul yesterday, so mad. so, a republican, he's not an infectious disease expert, and he's still fighting with dr. fauci, this time on masks. it's the latest example of this baffling and really obnoxious superiority from the right over the experts and the kind of anti-science mentality that the science have been warning helped get us here. that anti-science attitude is often an example set by donald trump. moments ago, the associated press reported that trump's mar-a-lago club in florida has been partially closed and some of its workers are quarantining now because of a covid outbreak there. to fight back against the resistance to science, neil degrasse tyson writes science needs better marketing. he writes, imagine the ad campaigns. we fly through the air at 500 miles per hour seated in a cushioned chair inside a 100-ton metal tube 30,000 feet above the ground because of science. most people used to die at 65 or 45 or younger, but we don't anymore because of science. in that future, covid-19 would never have become a pandemic. everyone would have understood the risks of transmission. joining our conversation, perfect person, dr. libby roy, medical director of isolation and covid sites for housing works in new york city. donny is still with us. dr. roy, this war on science, i think in donald trump's absence, it's clear it is a part of the modern republican party and when you see the numbers of vaccine hesitancy in among republican men who describe themselves as trump supporters, it feels like a problem. you know, let's dip in and listen to the president here in atlanta after a meeting -- and vice president. >> over the past week, the president and i have traveled across the country to mark the passage of the american rescue plan, to tell the american people about how 100 million checks are on their way, about how 100 million vaccines have now been administered. big news. now been administered. big news. good news. and we plan to come down here to georgia to the place that made it possible to share that information. and then tuesday night we learned that eight of our neighbors were killed in a heinous act of violence, violence that has no place in the state of georgia or in the united states of america. and we were reminded, yet again, and the crises we face are many, that the foes we face are many. as the president and i discussed with our aapi community in a meeting earlier today, whatever the killer's motive, these facts are clear. six out of the eight people killed on tuesday night were of asian descent. seven were women. the shootings tack place in businesses owned by asian-americans. the shootings took place as violent hate crimes and discrimination against asian-americans has driven dramatically over the last year and more. in fact, over the past year, 3,800 such incidents have been reported. two of three by women. everything from physical assaults to verbal accusations. and it's all harmful. and sadly it's not new. racism is real in america. and it has always been. xenophobia is real in america and always has been. sexism too. in the 1860s, as chinese workers built the trance continental railroad there were laws on the books in america forbidding them from owning property. in the 1940s, as japanese-american soldiers defended our nation, more than 120,000 japanese americans were forced to live in internment camps, an obvious and absolute abuse of their civil and human rights. asian americans have been attacked and scapegoated. people who are perceived as muslim know what it was like to live in our country after 9/11. for the last year we have had people in positions of incredible power skate goating asian-americans. people with the biggest pulpits spreading this kind of hate. ultimately this is about who we are as a nation. this is about how we treat people, with dignity and respect. everyone has the right to go to work, to go to school, to walk down the street and be safe and also the right to be recognized as an american. not as the other. not as "them," but as "us." a harm against any one of us is a harm against all of us. the president and i will not be silent. we will not standby. we will always speak out against violence, hate crimes and discrimination wherever and whenever it occurs. and it is now my great honor to introduce the president of the united states, joe biden. >> thank you and good afternoon. sorry we're a little late but we had an opportunity to meet with leaders of the aapi community downstairs and it was heart wrenching to listen to. as many of you know, we originally planned to hold a rally to thank our supporters. but given the events in the recent days, we didn't feel it was appropriate, so we canceled that rally. but we want our supports to know we'll come back and hold that rally another trip. but today we want to speak about something else. i said from the beginning of my campaign for president that we needed to come together, that we needed to unite as one people, one nation, one america. i said in my kickoff speech in philadelphia, i said that very same thing when i spoke at gettysburg. i said that in my inaugural address. and i believe within every fiber of my being, there are simply some core values and beliefs that should bring us together as americans. one of them is standing together against hate, against racism, the ugly poison that has long haunted and plagued our nation. the vice president and i, as i said, met earlier just before this with leaders from the asian-american community here in asia. we talked about tuesday's mass shooting, about another example of public health crisis of gun violence in this country. eight people killed. seven women. six were of asian descent. all fellow americans, each one of them we murn. their families are left with broken hearts. the investigation is ongoing and the vice president and i are being updated by the attorney general and director of the fbi working closely with governor kemp and the mayor and local officials. too many asian americans have been walking up and down the streets and worrying, waking up each morning the past year feeling their safety and the safety of their loved ones are at stake. they have been attacked, blamed, scapegoated and harassed. they have been verbally assaulted, physically assaulted and killed. documented instances of hate against asian-americans have seen a skyrocketing spike over the last year, let alone the ones never reported. it's been a year of living in fear for their lives just to walk down the streets. grandparents are afraid to leave their homes. small business owners targeted and gunned down. attacks on some of the most vulnerable people in our nation, the elderly, low-wage workers and women. in fact, asian-american women suffered twice as many incidents of harassment and violence as asian-american men. we're learning again what we have always known: words have consequences. it's the coronavirus, full stop. the conversation we had today with the aapi leaders and that we're hearing all across the country is that hate and violence often hide in plain sight. it is often met with silence. that's been true throughout our history. but that has to change because our silence is complicity. we cannot be complicit. we have to speak out. we have to act. in my first week in office, i signed an executive order directing federal agencies to combat this resurgence of xenophobia. the department of justice is strengthening its justice with the aapi community to prevent these crimes. in addition to its other work to take on violent extremists and domestic terrorism. i'm calling on congress to pass and get my -- to get to my desk the covid-19 hate crimes act. and the house just passed the violence against women act, a law i authored more than 25 years ago. it was one of my proudest legislative achievements. i called on the senate to quickly pass it and get to my desk. but for all the good the laws can do, we have to change our hearts. hate can have no safe harbor in america. it must stop. it's on all of us, all of us together to make it stop. something else should bring us together, and that is a belief in science. science isn't something that should divide us. there is nothing political about it. there is nothing partisan about it. one of the america's best examples of commitment to science is head quartered right here in atlanta. the centers for disease control and prevention. the cdc represents the best of this nation, brilliant minds, deep faith in science and a strong commitment to public service. we came here to thank them for all the work they do and especially the work they have done over the course of this pandemic. we owe them and their families our gratitude. we wanted to convey to them the absolute commitment to give them everything they need to do their work and get it done, free of politics and guided by science. because of them, we're making real progress. we just met my goal of administering 100 million shots before my first 100 days in office. we did it in about 60 days. we're not stopping now. the american rescue funds, more vaccines, more

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