china. i don t want another revolution happening in my new country. tucker: no, that is right. and you fled the chinese government, and now you see are leaders making excuses to the chinese government, praising the chinese government, does that make you uncomfortable? not just uncomfortable, i am terrified. i have seen that the government is almost like a tactic. and our country is so divided by the traditional tactics. and you separate people into oppressor versus oppressed. i am warning people, we don t want that. what is happening here to destroy this new country i love. tucker: are voters in new hampshire responding to that message? yes. we have lots of people here,
family. my mother, sister, grandparents still in ukraine. he is killing our people, she says of vladimir putin. how could anyone be so cruel? i am terrified. i m terrified that something like this can happen, that you can lead your everyday life. and all the sudden, because of decisions that you have no influence upon, there is a war and you have to flee. it s it s unbelievable. it s terrifying. reporter: the doctor is a psychiatrist in warsaw. the hospital focused on treating women has seen 80 ukrainian patients this month, delivered 11 babies, and treated cancer patients like 58-year-old tatiana. i ran with my granddaughter in my arms, she says. missiles had already blown out the windows in their building. as they fled, something exploded next to their car. her city is now occupied by russians. she is grateful for her doctors
in poland, baby adelina is already a survivor of the war in ukraine. is it is it hard to be happy? it is, she says. she is christina s first child. you feel guilty? why? because i left, she says, left her home in western ukraine. the war had begun. the bombing neared their city. she escaped by bus, then walked on foot across the border and paramedics rushed her to the hospital. she delivered a month early, separated from her family. my mother, sister, grandparents, still in ukraine. he is killing our people, she says of vladimir putin. how could anyone be so cruel? i am terrified.
hospital. she delivered adelina a month early, separated from her family. my mother, sister, grandparents still in ukraine. he is killing our people, she says of vladimir putin. how could anyone be so cruel? i am terrified. i m terrified that something like this can happen. that you can lead your everyday life, and all of sudden, because of decisions that you have no influence upon, there is a war and you have to flee. it s it s unbelievable. it s terrifying. reporter: this doctor is a psychiatrist at a hospital in warsaw. the hospital focused on treating women, has seen 80 ukrainian patients this month, delivered 11 babies, and treated cancer patients like 58-year-old tatiana. i ran with my granddaughter in my arm, she says. missiles had already blown out the windows in their building. as they fled, something exploded next to their car. her city is now occupied by
In his signature style, Lawrence O Donnell goes into depth on the latest news developments and offers his take on the political stories driving the national.