i just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have. in a moment where to break down with ellison barber, and georgia political reporter greg bluestein as well. this hour follows later on international efforts to fight the baby formula shortage here at home, with the first flight from overseas arriving today and a week after the buffalo shooting, i m a talk to a pastor about how the community is in fact healing. how do they move forward. and then some perspective on how american teenager can get radicalized by hate, from someone who has seen the same kind of extremism up close, covering foreign wars, that s coming up as well. we begin though, with the critical race in georgia were less than 48 hours until voters head to the poll in the states critical primary election, so far there s already been a record turnout. more than 850,000 georgians have cast ballots, the majority in person, all of this happening after more restrictive voting laws, imposed by state lea
for our country mobilizing for that war was this conundrum of where all the workers would live, who worked in these newly built and newly retooled production plants? in an already crowded city like detroit, for example, the government of 1941, realized that they re gonna have to quickly add hundreds of thousands of units of housing in order to bring in hundreds and thousands of new workers to staff these defense production facilities that were being retooled from civilian detroit, or in fact newly opened to make more material in that city. and that math is easy to see, right? you need to build a whole bunch of new stuff. you need a whole bunch of new or retooled or expanded facilities to build that stuff. you need a lot of people to work in those facilities, so they need a place to live. the math is simple, right? on paper, that s all very rational. that all just follows. it s very logistical. it makes sense. in practice, though, it was its own kind of war. while detroit resi
when we underplay this, we re all at risk. i think that we as a nation need to treat our violence problem, and our white supremacy issue as a public health issue or else we re gonna continue to come up against these things again. what i like to see in this community, yasmin, what we know after a week of serious listening, in the interim we need grocery stores, there s no reason we should relegated just one grocery store in this community. we need on board mental health support, long after the story is no more leading headlines. and then in the long term, buffalo needs an economic plan, this problems would never be solved in a sustainable way as long as buffalo continues, buffalo seaside and particular, continues to live in the poverty that exists here. do you have confidence that these type of changes will calm, we ve seen historically in the city of buffalo for instance, the six most segregated city in this country.
he wanted to have black americans feel unsafe literally anywhere they might go. in 2003, the same year the tops market opened on buffalo seaside, that state got a new state assembly woman, her name is representative people stokes represents that district till this day, she is now the democratic leader of the new york assembly, she s the first african american to hold that post, she knows that house market on jefferson avenue very well, like just about everybody else in that neighborhood she does her shopping there too. joining us now from outside the tops market in her district, is u.s. state assembly leader crystal people stokes, madam leader thank you for joining us. i know this is an incredibly difficult time. this is a very difficult time, it s very difficult but these are we are resilient people, and we will come through this. without becoming the haters of