just to live. and yet, here we are. seeing the right of our community members diminish. their voices are silenced, they re very identities denied. our nation has made great strides with filling the fundamental promises of freedom and equality for lgbtq plus americans, but lately something has changed. the arc of progress is bending in ways we did not think possible just five years ago. unjust ways. so far this year, more than 520 anti lgbtq bills have been introduced in state legislatures. that is a record. more than 220 of those bills, specifically, targeted transgender and non-binary people. also a record. and an unprecedented 70 anti lgbtq laws have been enacted just this year. in the past, we have put together pride specials celebrating lgbtq+ individuals and their achievements, first in the white house and then on the stage and screen. achievements that deserve to be celebrated. but tonight, as that progress is threatened like never before, we are going to do something d
impact the jury pool. and the tragic and into the undersea titanic tour. all five members on board presumed to be dead after a wreckage was found, and then politicians waging a culture war and the classroom, but how do parents and teachers feel? an important discussion that you don t want to miss, as the 11th hour gets underway on this thursday night. good evening, once again, i am stephanie ruhle. special counsel jack smith shows his hand and the government s case against defendant donald trump today. smith s latest court filing reveals evidence that he has now shared with trump s legal team. it includes information collected through subpoenas, search warrants and grand jury testimony from witnesses, who will be testifying for the prosecution. also, interviews with trump himself by non government entities that were recorded with his consent. it includes the july 2021 recorded interview quoted in the indictment. that is the one or trump was at bedminster and reportedly admitt
couples to be recognized, that same season we saw that same court takeaway section five of the voting rights act. so what we know is that progress is not a straight line and if we do not fight and defended, our opponents oil constantly chip away at it. it also teaches us that they are coming for all of us in a deeply coordinated way, so we cannot go off and fight to our own individual battles, we cannot fight battles to protect holman s right to choose, fight battles for voting rights and affirmative action, fight battles over here for lgbt equality because their infrastructure is aligned and coordinated and they are going to come after each and every one of us. just when we thought that our rights were secured in the lgbtq space, they are following the same exact playbook that has taken on voting rights and so many other things. so this is why we have to be vigilant and not think that these victories are solid without the investment in
court takeaway section five of the voting rights act. so what we know is that progress is not a straight line and if we do not fight and defended, our opponents oil constantly chip away at it. it also teaches us that they are coming for all of us in a deeply coordinated way, so we cannot go off and fight to our own individual battles, we cannot fight battles to protect holman s right to choose, fight battles for voting rights and affirmative action, fight battles over here for lgbt equality because their infrastructure is aligned and coordinated and they are going to come after each and every one of us. just when we thought that our rights were secured in the lgbtq space, they are following
we are talking about it so much it feels like progress. but we are talking about it, and a culture war has ensued. and now our young adults are in political wars? back in times when i was in high school, it was terrifying. the idea that someone would call you gay. it was terrifying that you might be outed. so clearly, it clearly was so far in the other extreme. but no one, and, that i knew in the lgbtq space said you need to introduce subs jacks before there and people in the ban, no proposal existed. they had no data. it s just politics. so the fact is that we have come around one way, and i do believe as randy pointed out, that in most of the movements that we recognize as progress today. there was a time when, there was just so much anger and