to the committee s probe and it s the first conviction of anyone for the defying the committee. they guilty verdicts are now putting the spotlight on others who have to find the committee subpoenas, including secret service agents who have lawyered up with private counsel. as the probe into the text messages. which are potential evidence turned into a criminal inquiry. all of that is making a blockbuster week for the january six committee. it used a second primetime hearing to show it excruciating detail that trump consistently and repeatedly resisted pleas to condemn that maga mob that was the filing the capitol. the mob was accomplishing president trump s purpose, so of course he did not intervene. here is what will be clear by the end of the hearing, president trump did not fail to act during the 187 minutes between leaving the ellipse and telling the mob to go home. he chose not to act. joining me, now charles clemente union at msnbc legal analyst and civil rights att
on new reporting that shows its resources are at a breaking point. plus this. in point. plus this. she doesn t know that we don t have a home, because to her. i m sorry. to her, wherever i am is her home. the reality of being kicked out of your home. why so many american families struggled to keep their homes during the pandemic, despite a federal ban on evictions. also, this hour. maybe we can find five more republicans who want to enable same-sex marriage to be supported. let us hope so. the world did not come to an end with the supreme court decided on roker felt which was the same sex marriage issue. and the world and come to an end . why senator hirono earlier on msnbc, how likely is congress to protect marriage equality, and what else is at stake. i m going to ask the lead plaintive, jim obergefell d, who led the fight in that supreme court. case and, please hold for the president. what we know about a new phone call between joe biden and john. stuart plus, an e
There is a long history of Girl Scouting in Alexis Hatch’s family. “My mum was a Girl Scout and so was her mum, and then her mum,” Hatch said. And now,
moratorium went into effect. this idea that evictions would actually really be paused. we wanted to take a look at it. we obviously tenants like alexis, are the heart of the film, and where we centered the story. we wanted to get the 360-degree look. we also captured the experience of the landlords, and the judges, and the lawyers, and the social workers, and even the constables who showed up at the door. so i think we were really trying to capture this unique window in time, over the course of the year. both for this film and also for a future historians and journalists to look back on, and really see where if there were lessons from this moment could be applied in the future. now let s play a clip of a landlord in california, diane golden. when the pandemic first happened in march, i was like everybody else, what does this mean?