rally goers with a message that that kind of hate, division, it s not welcome in washington, d.c. and i think again with this relatively nonviolent except for that one sort of momentary standoff here that will go down as the lesson of today. as we re speaking here, we see more conflict between some of these i would assume antifa protesters with police. i wanted to ask you about the way in which the city prepared for this. muriel bowser the mayor of the city was out of the country visiting a sister city of washington, d.c. she came back to oversee this. tell us how well that was planned out. the approval of the protest was authorized a couple of days ago. tell us what went through the security surrounding this today. sure. david, so it s the u.s. park service the national park service that approves the permit. it said there would be 100 and 400 people attending the rally.
they might be able to hold on for a short while, get a supreme court justice through but at the end of the day the entire soul of the republican party is lost. with that, we ll leave it there. thank you, kurt bar dell. jennifer and michael will be back with us. on the one year mark of the deadly clash between protesters and white nationalists, msnbc shares the story of a former white supremacist to who dedicated his life to reform each others. watch breaking hate on msnbc. up next, an exclusive interview with house democratic leader nancy pelosi. stay with us.
sufficient size or scope or focus or coherent message from that group, met with the pushback from the citizens of washington, d.c. and decent people who came out to make sure that every step of the way that that messages of hate and division and disunity simply would not be welcomed here in the district only columbia. the rain and the small size of that rally foreshortened what had been a rally that was planned to go on until at least 7:30 or so tonight. instead, with those folks leaving early we saw a bit of a clash between antifa and police. david, i think that s going to be a story that we ll have to continue watching at every one of the rallies, antifa presence is something that we have to pay very close attention to. i don t think we did as much of a few years ago covering this kind of thing. but again, in the overarching picture a small koda to the day
offof the victim experiences. take a look at a longer documentary version of katie s report, go to nbc left field, the youtube channel. tonight, also, on the one-year mark of the deadly clash between protesters, and white nationalists in charlottesville what you ve been watching, msnbc shares a story of a former white supremacist who dedicated his life to reforming others. watch breaking hate tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern on mns msnbms. be right back. by funding scientific breakthroughs, advancing public policy, and providing local support to those living with the disease and their caregivers. but we won t get there without you. join the fight with the alzheimer s association. ialing] no. no, no, no, no, no. cancel. cancel. please. aaagh! being in the know is a good thing.
there are countless voices off hate that permeate the digital world. it is diversity that has divided white people. nuke africa and cut off the aid there. gassing and lamp shading everyone on earth. liberating women is the worst disaster ever. it s a show about commonsense extremism. this is alt-right shock jock, one of the most effective propagandests working today. we used to think being called a racist meant we were doing something wrong but after you re fleer a little while you realize it s norm the only reason you avent been seeing it is because the jews have been censuring it. today we re on opposite sides of the war. he doesn t have anything to say. he tell people if you just stop hating then your life will improve. that s not what this is about.