public auditions going on right now. so we ll pick that up where you left righ you killed it tonight and have a great show tomorrow. i m laura ingram . this is the ingram angle from washington tonight . we re going to get to the latest ng w desperate move from the january 6th committee in moments. but firstst, the great unravelie that s the focus of tonight s angle now reportedly very frustrated about a disastrous poll numbers, president biden not leaving europe today. there s an old expression little town delaware called klymenko. little steeltown say we re like poor is rich or poor invitedd. and we stay longer than we should. so be carefulay no. you may not go back. all right. well, i couldn t blame i m right out here . it would seem a lot more preferable to coming back home and facing the wrathca of america. now what you re witnessing is the great unraveling of the democrats 85% of americans now believe that the country is moving in the wrong direction, including a who
thank i prefer pab. they re more comfortable for me. thank you . i always get the one with t wings. ha joining me now is chris rufo, senior fellow at the manhattan institute and the one who first alerted us todi this disturbing series. chris ,cl that s a short clip. tellll us what was happening at the end of that clip. there was a little short well,e it s very subtle, b but what you see is that it s a trans mang wearing a shirt made out of the colors and design of the transgender flag and the subtle message that they re promoting is that men can geter periods. io this is a talking point among trans activists and what did they have done? and we know this because i ve obtained internal videos is that they want to promote trans ideology first through the background characters. they ve actually created a computer programer to tracknd these so-called gender nonconforming background and then slowly but surely start to reinjured orar reengineer the discourse around children and sexuality. an
a six month course that teaches prison technology and entrepreneurship. i see this program is giving me the skills, so when i get out, i have a marketable skill, where i can go out directly from prison into the work force. reporter: when you are behind bars for decades, are you not on the forefront of cutting edge technologies. i have been there 19 years, since 1995. reporter: have you touched a computer before this? never. reporter: here s another challenge, prisoners don t have internet access. reporter: as a codeer, that is critical. so we had to come up with a curriculum and a process that we could simulate the environment without actually having an online experience. reporter: it s a lot. they code four days a week, eight hours a day to build out tear future. my dream job is to be a computer programer. reporter: behind bars, they ll be able make a real salary. reporter: there is no reason why we can t teach someone at san quentin to be a very