always faithful. harry smith, nbc news, florida. my dad who served in that called me this morning, and ask me to acknowledge this day, and i m grateful that we are. because we are grateful today, and every day for the service and sacrifice of our military and their families. on that note, i wish you all a very good night from washington d. c.. from all our colleagues across the networks of nbc, thank you for staying up, i will see you at the end of tomorrow. tomorrow tonight on all in. america in reverse on reproductive rights. the legislation would create a whole new crime called abortion trafficking. tonight, rebecca traister on the shock and awe of state by state legislation criminalizing reproductive rights. then, just when you thought it could not get worse for fox news. this has to stop now. the audience is furious, bad for business. devastating new filings in the dominion lawsuit against fox news and senator bernie sanders unloads on starbucks in the se
publicizing what the state deemedukraine. that the government decides, you know, if this journalistic account about russia s war in ukraine is false or not, and if they think it s false, they put you in jail. so it s a joke, frankly, jo journ journalistically, it s sad for russia and for russians what vladimir putin is doing here and how much he s discrediting russia. many journalists for major os have gone through training, what will you do if you re kidnapped. i went through it. very different situation than actually living it, which you did. what is evan facing right now? he it s a funny, you know, thing. he feels terrible for his family i know that might sound strange, but you know, he loves reporting. i was reporting afghanistan many years ago and the taliban held me for seven months, and you know, he s like telling the truth. he s actually trying to i think help the russian people by reporting on the ground there and taking a risk, but showing how much th
trip ahead for you just one lawmaker who joined protesters demanding meaningful gun legislation at the state capital kept her seat yesterday. representative gloria johnson, a white woman, slammed the expulsion of her colleagues justin jones and justin pearson, two of the state s youngest black lawmakers, saying she was the only one to be spared was quote, pretty clear. outrage over the pair s removal is being felt across the country, coupled with the concern of the dangerous precedent this is sending. and a short time ago, tennessee s black caucus whose chairman called the decision an assault on democracy that quote, smacks of overt racism spoke out. it looked like a jim crow era trial, where we saw two black men fighting for their careers, fighting for their reputations. the world is watching tennessee, and yet again, they re watching it for the wrong reasons. quite frankly, i m kpexhausted. what are we going to do now is it going to be business as usual, it happened t
high court speaks for now. the abortion drug mifepristone remains on the market after th supreme court blocked a ruling to toss aside its long-standin fda approval what now plus, trump back on trial. the civil rape case brought by journalists were e. jean carroll about to begin our legal experts will tal about what trump will say an if that matter, show up. also the right wing guns and radicalization, there is a intersection between them. is this a factor in the rash o shootings across the country from the board room to broadway, our conversation with the firs latina actress to front a play by the legend, andrew lloy weber. this is american voices. we begin this hour with th first major test for abortio rights in front of the supreme court since the conservative majority overturned roe last summer on friday, the court temporarily blocked a decision by u.s. district judge matthew kacsmaryk, which throughout th fda longtime approval of mifepristone the drug, which is also
ruled that former vice president mike pence must testify before a federal grand jury investigating january 6th. officials pinpoint the cause of a fire that killed more than three dozen men in a migrant detention center in mexico. a cbs news investigation, female athletes are more likely to suffer concussions, so why is there so little research? do you think enough is known about concussions in women s sports? absolutely not. norah: and during this final week women s history month, the inspiring life of a civil rights icon. i thought my life was at an end. but a new life was just beginning. norah: good evening to our viewers in the west and thank you for joining us on this tuesday night, nashville and the rest of the nation are heartbroken after that deadly mass shooting at an elementary school. tonight we are learning new details about the victims. one of those 9-year-olds evelyn dieckhaus, described by her family as a shining light. among the adults