that aside, it s as emphatic anm definitive as conservatives hoped and progressives feared. it s the way that the 14th amendment was color blind, jackson and others, nonsense., look at what the 14th amendment achieved. brown versust board of educati, likewise. nonsense says the dissent. it was race sensitive. the 14th amendment must be race sensitive. then there s this world s worl viewpoint, there they are like t ships passing in the night. one side says, look at the worlt today and whathe needs to be do. the conservatives, the law of the land, say ending discrimination means ending all discrimination, period, paragraph, end of story. yes, there will be a tiny little wormhole that people will push h on. the basic thrust of what the majority has done it s as emphatic as the dobbs opinion last year is to really have a revolution in the meaning of thl constitution and socially permissible ends as a result. laura, for a long time, quotas have been not permitted. sinc
live picture of new york city at 9:00 in the morning. happy friday morning to you. especially waking out on the west coast at 6:00 a.m. i m willie geist. any moment now we could see the affidavit, the fbi used to acquire the warrant to search former president trump s florida home. a judge ordered a redacted copy to be released. kristin welker has the latest. reporter: today americans will get their first glimpse of the affidavit used to justify the extraordinary search warrant executed by the fbi at mar-a-lago. former president trump s florida estate. a federal judge in florida has ordered a redacted copy of the affidavit including blacked out portions the justice department wants kept secret to be made public by noon today. the affidavit is believed to contain critical information about the government s investigation into the alleged mishandling of classified materials at mar-a-lago. media companies including nbc news asked the judge to make the affidavit public as mr. tru
narrow, what it means in terms of the specific universities and universe of people affected by this decision, the broader impact potentially of what the supreme court s decision on race metrics for increasing diversity would apply beyond s ñ■#. this is a person who considered african american support the backbone of his political support. there will be a lot of pressure on this admission administration to come out strongly in condemning this decision. it s worth noting kristin welker reporting that the president watched the news reports of this decision as it came in and then met with his senior staff, including those working on this issue. officials thought that in their participation in arguing against this decision they had made a strong case. it s worth noting the president of late has been praising of the
classified documents. trump described himself as innocent as a person could be and claimed without evidence that the investigation is politically motivated. president biden said this week he had no prior knowledge of the search. but he s publicly focused on mr. trump with a fiery speech to democrats last night. trump and the extreme maga republicans have made their chis. to go backwards, full of anger and violence and hate and division. reporter: the president starkly attacking what he called maga philosophy, saying off camera, quote, it s like semi fascism. kristin welker reporting for us there. and let s bring into our conversation correspondent ken dilanian and former acting solicitor general and now msnbc legal analyst neal katyal. mike barnical is still with us as well. we re officially within business hours in south florida. could be very soon that we get to see this affidavit.
screaming. reporter: as she marches 50 years later, says it is hard to imagine that little girl lives in a dramatically different world. here i am today, 61. look at selma. the world converged on selma. i get emotional talking about it. reporter: the emotions powerful for all those that came to remember a painful past and bridge to the future. that was nbc s kristin welker reporting. we are expecting a news conference later from police in madison, wisconsin and more rallies after a police officer fatally shot an unarmed african-american teen. the police chief says officers were responding to a call about someone jumping into traffic friday night. the chief says that let off matt kenny to an apartment he forced himself inside after hearing a dis. the chief says kenny fired his gun after being assaulted by 19-year-old tony robinson. robinson died. now his friends and family are demanding answers. joining me michael bell. his unarmed son was fatally shot