thank you. shannon: now to our legal panel, jonathan turley and thomas dupree, former principal deputy assistant attorney general. welcome back. tom the, let me start with you. what do you make of that? that filing by the special counsel says clearly this guy changed his story, and that s how they got to the superseeding indictment which leveled more charges to the president with respect to that security camera footage. yeah, it s intriguing. maybe a harbinger of what s to come. you look at the georgia case alone, you have neary 20 defendants, and i suspect as the months play on and a lot of these co-defendants face the prospect of criminal incarceration themselves, they re going to start changing their testimony, they re going to start having second thoughts, in some cases they might flip, they might cooperate with the d.a., so i think this is a bit of a moving target, and i think it s going to take some time before things start to shake out and we kind of figure out what every wi
cases with you. thank you. shannon: now to our legal panel, jonathan turley and thomas dupree, former principal deputy assistant attorney general. welcome back. tom the, let me start with you. what do you make of that? that filing by the special counsel says clearly this guy changed his story, and that s how they got to the superseeding indictment which leveled more charges to the president with respect to that security camera footage. yeah, it s intriguing. maybe a harbinger of what s to come. you look at the georgia case alone, you have neary 20 defendants, and i suspect as the months play on and a lot of these co-defendants face the prospect of criminal incarceration themselves, they re going to start changing their testimony, they re going to start having second thoughts, in some cases they might flip, they might cooperate with the d.a., so i think this is a bit of a moving target, and i think it s going to take some time before things start to shake out and we kind of figure o
tom the, it s a valuable voice to have with us this morning. i mean, i have a teenager, rachel has teenagers, you know, many people watching do. what s going on? all we can do, our hearts go out to the people involved in these instances and our fear and our mind think about our own children. thanks for being with you, will. i have a couple teenagers myself, and a lot of this really started a lot more violence and what we call optional dedefines oppositional defiance behavior post-covid from kids being locked down. they did not develop proper communication skills because when you re not with other people, you can t develop those things. empathy, civility and emotional regulation come with that. secondly, and i underscore this in my new book, by the way, secondly, kids are spending almost all they have time in front of screens. everything is caught on a camera, and the more we see something, the more we normalize it. there s tons of violence, and i think a lot of them just don t
civility and the important things that we want our kids to have. will: yeah, one last thing really quickly, tom, these are happening in public schools. you re sending your kid to be educated, at a minimum, you hope, to be safe, and then you hear stories like out of jersey where there s bullying that then leads to a suicide. i m going to assume your answer s communication, but, i mean, as a parented, if this is going as a parent, if this is going on, you ve got to know. not only that, you know, we have to protect, you know, the innocent kids, okay? and in new jersey, i worked in a public high school as a counselor for 25 years, and new jersey has some of the strictest, most comprehensive anti-bullying laws. and i don t know the details in terms of whether or not they ran an anti-bullying investigation in that school, but to your point, will, we need to be able to send our children to school and let them feel safe. will: no doubt about it. no doubt about it. parenting, public schools
realize this is bad stuff. will: yeah. as you were describing that, tom, about what happened during covid, i couldn t help but think, well, we had this problem regardless of covid. living through a screen, not communicating with other humans, you know, in my estimation the proliferation of prescription drugs for children. it s like everything is used to basically take all empathy out of a child and dehumanize everyone else in the world. if. yeah, 100%. really, you know, the foundation of this is parenting, okay? so i will promise you that every one of these kids there s something going on in terms of parenting for those kids. and if even if they do have two parents at home, what i see in my experience as therapists is most teenagers are literally reclusive. they re spending all their times in their bedrooms by themselves. participants, what you really need to do is spend quality time with your kids. that is probably the most important thing for them in terms of developing, you know,