challenges. the war between israel and hamas with thousands of palestinian civilians caught in the middle of what could become a much bigger war. the ongoing russian invasion of ukraine, deepening fears of what the china might invade taiwan while america is indirectly supporting two major wars. extreme political polarization around the world and here in america, not to mention a climate crisis that they re in the habitability of our very planet. so much is going wrong. so much there around us, which one is the most serious threat to global stability? none of the ones that i mentioned. the greatest threat to the stability of the world right now remains a twice impeached, what the bull indicted former president of this nation, donald trump, is the greatest threat that the world faces. here is why. those global crisis i mentioned actually hang in extremely delicate balance with president biden steady and on the wheel. as chaotic as things may seem right now after some, how much
and run into malcolm kenyatta, who s a fellow pennsylvanian. and it was great to see him. and you know, the campaign has people like him talking about what people are actually feeling out there, i think that s going to be very, very helpful. you can give people statistics, you can give people all sorts of stuff, but we have to have real conversations about how are these things affecting you at home. so i thought, lot of surprises for me, lot of fun in one hallway running into two of my old friends. i m going to see you in not too many hours. we re going to do this all over again. get some sleep, my friend. a surprise from the supreme court today a ruling in favor of common sense. all the justices except thomas joined in favor in the case of preventing domestic abusers from having guns. chief justice roberts in the majority opinion wrote, quote, the laws confirm what common sense suggests, when an individual poses a clear threat of physical violence to another, the threa
two, calls are growing for vladimir putin to stand trial for war crimes. we ll talk with one of the security experts work to go build a case against russia which could lead right to the top. colonel eugene vindman joins us. back here at home, special counsel jack smith over at doj on both his january 6th and mar-a-lago documents cases. how his office is moving full speed ahead with new aggressiveness in both of those probes. and later in the show, to mark the one-year anniversary of the war s star, country music superstar brad paisley has written a new song in support of ukraine, and here s the plot twist, president zelenskyy is on that track. we ll play it for you and talk to brad about making a song with the wartime leader, and about why it s so important to continue to pay attention to the war in ukraine. all of those stories and more when deadline white house continues after a quick break. don t go anywhere. continues after a quick break. don t go anywhere.
that was our friend, a ceremony to honor the victim of the atrocities committed there. one of the many towns devastated by russian violence. more than 71,000 alleged war crimes have been reported in ukraine over the last year. ukrainian and western authorities say there is evidence of murders and of executions. shelling of civilian infrastructure, forced deportations. child abductions, torture, sexual violence, and illegal detention. one expert tells reuters that they are an intrinsic part of the invasion itself. quote, what is clear from the prosecution s investigations over the last year is that there is a criminal plan and the russian military operation is inherently criminal. in the sense that you can not seek to extinguish ukrainian identity without the massive commission of war crimes, and crimes against humanity and possibly genocide. let s bring in retired u.s. army colonel, eugene vindman, deputy