tucker: martin luther king s home. but at the same time, there are organizations that have worked against black people that are program and they are pro-gun control when it comes to black people, like the nra. tucker: i would say i m not here to speak for the nra, but as someone who believes in the second amendment, i believe it s a universal principle that applies it goes without saying, but i will say it exquisitely, it applies without regard to race of course. applies to all human beings. it said god given right, the right to self-defense and effect most people believe that. how much will you take for saying something so obvious on thel show? i take it every time i m on the show from one side of the other. so i i think i m prepared for i. tucker: you re prepared for it. thank you very much for coming on. i hope that people can rise above the partisanship just for a second and meditate on whate you said because i think it s absolutely true. great to see you.
details they ve been asked to provide or are they continuing to stonewall? they continue too stonewall, which is the opposite behavior what you expect to see from someone if they believe that they are innocent of any allegation. so the media here in minnesota continues to just have a blatant disregard for this and it s a struggle with the media. they ve known about it for three years. these agencies know about it. we are doing our best to make certain they are prepared and fully equipped to do their job. tucker: right. ultimately voters will have a say in this fairly soon and i hope that you can keep them as informed as possible so they can make their decision with all available knowledge. thank you very much for that update tonight. thank you. tucker: well, the koch brothers, the famous koch brothers have dominated the world of republican politics for years. the question is are they
harvard economist who also thought he was going to find aas disproportionate use of deadly force against black people. he found the opposite, that police were more hesitant,ou moe reluctant to pull the trigger against black people. what this lie does, it causes young black men to be confrontational with cops instead of cooperating and it causes the cops to pull back for fear that they be called racist and you are saying what s called the ferguson effect in places like chicago, baltimore and st. louis outside of ferguson where cops pull back in the very people that thes left claims thy care about, black people, with the oneso were most likely to become victimized. so it has a real-world consequence. it is a lie. tucker: yeah. and the usual people suffer. the people that no one actually cares about and i ve noticed. larry elder, great to see you tonight, thank you for that. you got it, thanks for having me. tucker: you are hearing demands all of a sudden mostly from democrats but a
president to also tone down the language, to try to tone down what has been i think incendiary name-calling towards immigrant communities. i think that has also played a contributory role. that is not a discount the problem with the left and the right it s all but what about- about-ism. there has been extremist reaction. tucker: i don t like the tweets. i have never liked thehe tweetsi get it. so i think the president his rhetoric has played a role in what has been a disastrous kind of civic situation that we have rightof now. that s not to say that the left doesn t overreact. this is part of the problem of a political world that s dominated by twitter and cable news. if the loudest and most extreme voices are always getting all the attention. tucker: this castro character as a presidential candidate. and his brother, who tweeted that out, is a member of congress. so these are not even cable news
it goes on for almost a minute. the gunfire leaving a 33-year-old man dead and eight people wounded. city wide, seven people were killed and 48 wounded over the weekend. many on the west side. tucker: those seven murders pushed to chicago to over 300 murders for the year. most of those have occurred in just a handful of neighborhoods. the black residents suffer the most by far. 80% of the victims. smaller cities, sailors, baltimore, detroit or even more dangerous. that s not what about it s totally real and it s ignored. larry elder as an attorney and a radio show host and joins us tonight. whyth is that by the way, you can deplore and be upset about mass shootings and i think all normal people are, and still ask the question why is the day-to-day carnage ignored resolutely? what s the-t answer? well, it s a good question. 17,000 homicides last year.