that s what we are doing in new york ste. dana: coming up tomorrow night on cross-country you went to the law enforcement museum. call for number two. let s play that for tomorrow night. across the street we have the national law enforcement officers memorial where we engrave names of officers who have fallen in the line of duty. as of last year, there were 22,611 names. we re about to add 600 more. the most we ve ever added in any one year. dana: tell us more what we can expect tomorrow night. i had the opportunity to go through a police simulation went i went through an aif shooter and driving drill but not gott to visit the memorial where they will add all the names of the cops that have died in the past year. it is very moving. there is an attack on law enforcement today. and the ceo reflects and says that when communities aren t safe, cops aren t safe, either. not like you can separate the
If ever there was a great example of why fewer and fewer Americans have much faith left in our governing institutions, it's this one. Readers may recall that amid the incessant violence and [.]
from law enforcement that we heard from one of those members of law enforcement today, capitol police officer harry dunn, and it stuck out to me that he was asked about what it feels like on this anniversary of the insurrection. he says, it doesn t feel like an anniversary because it s not over. it doesn t feel like it s over. from another perspective, the residue of that day, we heard from members, is still in the house chamber. it s still in the environment, still poisons the discourse. and in many ways, it s hard to imagine, but when it comes to the discourse, it s worse because of the fact that people who believe what they see with their own two eyes, people who accept the reality that this insurrection, this attack on the capitol, this attack on democracy itself happened, are sitting there looking at their colleagues who are denying what