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today it s a different kind of discrimination, but it s still discrimination. joining me now is arizona state senator anna tova, democratic leader in the senate. senator, thank you for being here. thank you for having me, reverend. the entire country is looking at arizona right now. how could lawmakers there justify this kind of discrimination? you know, this is an extreme bill that arizona does not want or does not need. so i was very disappointed to see that the gop has brought forward such a bill that will have discrimination for all arizonans. it truly is a sad day in arizona. now, senator tovar, several republican senators who voted for the bill seem to be backtracking now. listen to this. sometimes we make a mistake and need to correct it, and that s what we re doing right now, trying to correct an error. it s been bad pr for the state. it s a mistake, and we want to
not a monster. i mean, that s important to me that you know that. maybe dunn was confident that it would work out. because of how broadly the self-defense law protects the use of deadly force. at his trial, the jury instructions read, quote, the danger to michael dunn need not have been actual, as long as he believed that the danger was real, and he had no duty to retreat. so the danger didn t have to be real. he only had to believe it was real, and he had no obligation to retreat from this imaginary danger? what kind of law is that? there are now 25 states with stand your ground laws on the books. and now in florida, the state where it all began, they re actually trying to expand it. a house committee just approved a bill that would expand the law to include the threat of force, not just the use of force itself. supporters say the bill could help someone like marissa alexander, who was imprisoned after firing a warning shot in self-defense. but critics say it opens the doo