moment and, crucially, vladimir putin s arm eaves involvement in that war. because this was what they undertook there, a project, an intentional one, of force depopulate station depopulation, intentional civilian targeting. to star for surrender, to offer syrians that choice. it had enormous geopolitical ripple effects because it drives people out and they have nowhere to go. and then everyone else is brought into it. and it s happening again, right now. nbc news correspondent cal perry s and the western ukrainian city lviv where he joins me now. cal, it s always great to talk to you, i hope you re well. what s the latest today? well, i ll pick up where you ve left it off, the tactics that we are seeing in the city of mariupol is exactly what we saw in aleppo. as i look at this video from mariupol and places like kharkiv, the first thing they are doing is they are bombing the cities to rubble and then they are bombing the rubble. beyond that, you have now this
republic, from poland, making their way there all the more extraordinary because they announced it ahead of time. it was early this morning where we saw the wires cross and the public announcement that they would be making their way there. and they did not do so by air. we thought maybe they would go via holocaust years. they took the train, here, in lviv, all the way to kyiv early this morning. there is only a few people on the train, it s either people headed to the front to fight, people trying to rescue the family members, or people supporting the war. for them to get on that train makes an incredible statement of support, of solidarity for the ukrainian president. one quick thing also, we heard from the ukrainian poseidon and last two hours, and one of the things he s now talking about and alluding to is maybe the fact that ukraine does not need to join nato. that ukraine is strong on its own. and he s doing so while discussing the actual on the ground negotiations. it ll be inter
at harbor city in los angeles. cal perry s msnbc s senior editor for digital content. the teacher making the issue, the number of languages here. some schools send out an english alert to families and parents, and others in spanish who would need that. but just the nature of getting the information out to parents. 650,000 students. let s just say one guardian, one parent per child here. you are looking at quite an effort to disseminate the right information without alarming people. yeah. to over a million people as you are sort of saying. this second-largest school district in the country. almost 700,000 schools. sometimes social media can be very positive, very helpful in this type of situation. on twitter, the los angeles school district has some tips on