resources-intensive, human intelligence. you got to put people in those places to try to figure out what s going on. the fbi is really the only agency that can do that on scale and you saw director wray last week talk about basically 100 disruptions already i think within the last year and the fbi is moving on these things. they ve done a good jobover disrupting it. even in the case of this man today, in his manifesto, he talked about how he just planned this attack quite recently. he was probably further inspired by the attack in gilroy just a week ago. this tends to create a contagion that we ve talked about on msnbc where one inspired attack oftentimes leads to two or three
president donald trump, right? he s nowhere near racist. i saw something recently that said he is post-racial, and i think that is probably the most accurate depiction of him, he is post-racial. he knows this is all bunk, he laughs it off.te every congressional republican, every republican around the nation, should learn that lesson. don t take the dog whistle, they re going to call you i said that on the show before n every republican has been called a racist. why do you keep calling for it? tucker: i think for people who are in the public t eye, the is a real threat, one thing you lose your job over, people lose their jobs screaming lunatics show up at your house and scare your children. there are real costs, but maybe we de-escalate by laughing in the face of absurdity. definitely. that is what i do all the time, i laugh at people, especially when somebody tries to push on me i let them know that i don t feel 1 ounce of inferiority to anyone. ultimately, that is what they
think that is probably the most accurate depiction of him, he is post-racial. he knows it this is all bunk, he laughs it off. every congressional republican, every republican around the nation, should learn that lesson. don t take the dog whistle, they re going to call you i said that on the show before every republican has been called a racist. why do you keep calling for it? tucker: i think for people who are in the public eye, there is a real threat, one thing you lose your job over, people lose their jobs screaming lunatics show up at your house and scare your children. there are real costs, but maybe we de-escalate by laughing in the face of absurdity. definitely. that is what i do all the time, i laugh at people, especially when somebody tries to push on me i let them know that i don t feel 1 ounce of inferiority to anyone paired ultimately, that is what they are saying to people of color, black people, hispanics, they are saying that we see you as inferior, and so we
with the atlanta council s digital forensic research lab. gentlemen, welcome to you both. steve, tom price lost his job over, shall we call it, a transportation issue. are these people any different? you look at superficially this is pretty much the same thing. in both cases you look at that issue of perks of very expensive travel in the case of the veterans affairs secretary, bringing along his wife at taxpayer expense. if you believe there was a precedent set with tom price, and it took a while before the tom price thing came to a head, you have to wonder is there a similar example made of shulkin, made of pruitt? there s not an indication that s going to be the case but the thing with trump we ve learned he s with you until he s not with you. so that could change at any moment. it s interesting, too, you have a member of congress, a
what is the if there s a singular objective that you see here by these demonstrators, what would that be? i think we re really struggling to define who we are. this conversation started a very long time ago. i don t think i think for the most part for many white americans the idea of post-racialism was very attractive coming out of the obama presidency, the idea that we had sort of crossed a lot of these boundaries, that the days of water hostages and, you know, very, very overt racism were sort of over. then we started to talk about microaggressions and covert racism. here we are in 2017 confronting hate groups and at a level i don t think we ve seen in a very long time. there s this big conversation we re having about who are we as americans? what do we look like as americans? a lot of what we re seeing the undercurrents of this and these