to 18 to 1, but they wouldn t let him make it retroactive. tonight the senate voted to make it retroactive, which means there are 3,000 people sitting in prison right now who will get to come home soon because they re serving outdated, unfair sentences. the new york times calls this the biggest breakthrough in criminal justice in a generation, and it was brought about by ordinary people who came together and fought. and i just want to say, formerly incarcerated people, directly impacted people like topeka sam, jessica jackson, louis reed, david safavian, and frankly jared kushner, whose father went to prison, refused to die on this, and we have a christmas miracle. let s talk about it, then. let s get into when you talked about powder cocaine and crack cocaine. yes, sir. for the longest time, folks of color have been saying, well, people weren t upset when, you know, people in the hood were dying and going to prison. but now there s a heroin epidemic and white people are
miracle. let s talk about it, then. let s get into when you talked about powder cocaine and crack cocaine. yes, sir. for the longest time, folks of color have been saying, well, people weren t upset when, you know, people in the hood were dying and going to prison. but now there s a heroin epidemic and white people are dying and being affected by it and having to serve time for it, and now all of a sudden, it s an issue. how does this work? look, i think that is a very fair point that when there was an addiction crisis in the black and brown communities, they said throw these people in prison. now there s an addiction crisis in poor, white, rural communities, they say give these people help. but the reality is now you ve got common pain in all these communities, and now we finally have some common purpose to begin to do a better job. listen, this is like the 1959 civil rights act. people think about, no, new york 64, 65. first you had 1954 which broke
there. the culture was that people would wear the manure inside. shannon: let s talk about it, ben shapiro. welcome inside. i know that you have raised some concerns or at least pointed out that this potential he does not line up with some of her political leanings. i m very sick of politicians just generally claiming that some kind of heritage allows them to get off the hook for their current political position. i ve never heard about her heritage before this. you ve seen politicians like hillary clinton and john kerry do the same thing. alexandria osasio-cortez is incredibly close to people and she is not shy about associating with folks who are fans of anti-semitic boycott. again, it is an easy way of avoiding the question but it has does no political weight. shannon: it is interesting,
forced to pay her roommates rent, a lofty $6,000 a month. i demand she says it is reasonable, quoting either i leave and incur moving expenses, or my roommates move and i incur their rent expenses. not only is this a blatant violation of my privacy, but also a violation of my rights. we should note, the reason she says she owns guns in the first place is because she had been in a physically abusive relationship, quoting again, i had a real and legitimate reason as to why i want to protect myself. for now, pirnie says she wants to focus on studying for her upcoming finals. channing. shannon: trace gallagher, thank you very much. as their legal case here for layla bernie? let s talk about it, it is time for night court. tonight s attorneys are at david bruno and bob bianchi. thank you both for being in today. if you got the gist of the story, she talks about being
respond. these court documents say that s false. in fact, michael cohen got a call from the president s office, from putin s office, his representatives saying sure, we would like to engage you on this trump tower moscow project. let s talk about it, and they had a conversation. when cohen was asked about this under oath before the senate he lied and said that never happened. the other thing he lied about was the timing, saying he ended all involvement in this project in january 2016. the court documents show that they were still working on it as of june 2016, chris. wow! that s a lot to take in. in terms of the overall picture, fair to say that what we are just learning here we certainly aren t learning everything that robert mueller knows by a far piece, but these are important developments. and they give us a good clue about where he is going with this. they are. now, they don t speak to anything to do with russian interference in the 2016 election, right? remember there s an