it wasn t donald trump alone, there were a lot of other enablers and handlers who made it all possible. congressman, we appreciate your time, as always. maryland congressman, jamie raskin, member of the january six investigation. thanks for being with us, one quick programming note, tonight, after the show, you can catch msnbc s exclusive new documentary, loving the constitution. it is about congressman raskin s fight to hold on trump accountable, while grieving the loss of his son. it s a must watch documentary. we still have much more to get to, including a story of how conservative lobbying is trying to create their own government database, to track people who wish to exercise a certain constitutional right. stay with us. us those precious memories might make you think about your future: will my high cholesterol get in the way of moments like these? but appointments don t always fit your schedule.
comes from a debunked conspiracy theory involving a government database where anybody can report any adverse effect from any vaccine ever. and that database is sometimes misused and abused by conspiracy theorists who want to spread antivaccine disinformation. so that s what s happened in this case. marjorie taylor greene was using this database. she was misusing it in a way that claimed that lots and lots and lots of people have died from covid vaccines and that the media is suppressing the truth. come on, like, obviously that s not true because we would see it with our own eyes. but she has engaged in that kind of antivaccine propaganda many times. and according to twitter, this was her fifth strike. you cannot just have three strikes on twitter before you re out, you have five. and this was her fifth strike and that s why she was banned. yeah, i don t know a lot about sports, but i m pretty sure it s three strikes. but her congressional account is still online.
their family. that sends their deepest sympathy to theirfamily. what that sends their deepest sympathy to their family. what we are addressing is the behavior of owen pattison as an mp and how he broke the rules in the house of commons and of course it s going to go to the personal no change in the face with his family, of course but that is not track from the fact he is going to to do to make sure that standards and parliament are upheld and of course there have to be a coming together to make sure that we deal with the bitterness and the rancor that is in our public life and the way that a member of parliament and a be a coming together to make sure that we deal with the bitterness and the rancor that is in our public life and the way that a member of parliament and abc decent man has and there has to be a coming together and understanding that we are all in this together but they pay minister has got to take relief and the thought this was pushed till yesterday in an undignified way
the data does not address how many of those deaths were deemed to be justified. what does this data tell us? s reporter: this study highlights the need for more comprehensive and public data system on police violence because you can t make change without all the facts. particularly because this data shows again as you mentioned how much people of certain races and ethnicities are impacted disproportionately by that violence. my colleague broke down the study and found researchers looked at a 40-year period in the u.s. and determined more than half of all deaths found to be due to police violence are underreported or misclassified in a government database where they can be ak sessioned publicly. a closer look at those numbers show the mortality rate over the four decades was 3 1/2 times higher among the black population and 1.8% more for hispanics.
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