for marshall avocation. on assignment: ukraine s secret resistance begins now. kraine s secre resistance begins now. hey there, i m stephanie ruhle, and no, your clock is not wrong, it is 10 pm, and one hour from now, we ve got an amazing live 11th hour coming your way. we are talking abortion rights, our toxic politics, and we are shaking things up with our friday night cap. you do not want to miss it at 11 pm, right here, on msnbc. before than, i want you to pay attention to this incredible reporting from my colleague, richard engel, where he is speaking to ordinary civilians who joined an underground resistance in ukraine. it is a must watch. [sirens] russian troops tried and failed to topple ukraine s capital, kyiv. they still launch attacks on the city, from a distance. kyiv remains free. it endorse, that isn t true everywhere. i m heading for hundred miles south from kyiv to the city of kherson. kherson was the first city russian troops captured and occupied w
failed to topple ukraine s capital, kyiv. they still launch attacks on the city, from a distance. kyiv remains free. it endorse, that isn t true everywhere. i m heading for hundred miles south from kyiv to the city of kherson. kherson was the first city russian troops captured and occupied when they invaded ukraine. the journey will take all night. i met a soldier named daniel on his way to kherson. he tells me the russians are finally starting to lose their grip on the city. they are getting their asses kick and don t know what they re doing. the russian military is a times the size of the ukrainian military. yeah, yeah, we have quality, and they are quantity. that is a big difference. it s about heart? it s about heart. it s about truth, it s about what is ours, and what is our, our land. soldiers aren t the only ones fighting to free kherson. i am going to meet a group of extraordinary ukrainian civilians. i will spend the next several weeks retracing their s
[speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] like vlad, nastya never left kherson. she needed money to live so she returned to work at her bar. it was now full of russian soldiers who got drunk and let their guard down.
the russian monster entering our city. they were in uniforms, driving slowly along the streets, covering them in darkness. [speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] kherson had its identity stripped. schools were forced to teach in the russian, symbols of the ukrainian state were erased. [crowd chanting] a hated occupation government ran in the city. anyone who dared to resist was