With his eyes on the rest of europe, starting with poland. Why didnt you tell the 800,000 Polish Americans right here in pennsylvania how quickly you would give up for the sake of favor and what you think is a friendship with what is known to be a dictator who would you for lunch. Seeing it a second time. Thank you for being with us as we digest it was a very lopsided debate as it turns out. We all knew the Stakes Tonight were almost unimaginably high. We knew it would be a debate like No Other and a president ial race like No Other, but now, we know how it went and why the Harris Campaign is so pleased with how it went. I will tell you something. He will talk about immigration a lot even though its of the Subject Being raised. I will do something unusual and i will invite you to attend one of Donald Trumps rallies. Its a really interesting thing to watch. You will see during the course of his rallies he talks about fixed noble characters like hannibal lector. He will talk about windmi
that former ambassador to ukraine, bill taylor, said the same thing. he said ukraine winning is the way to stop the slaughter of innocents. i want to really drill down on something you said, because it seems that in russia, the genocide of what their propaganda describes as nazis is the military strategy. president zelenskyy describes what s happening in his country as a genocide. and it is only in the west that we re, i don t know if that s what it is. it s clearly what it is from both the russian side and the ukrainian side, right? why don t we call it a genocide? i think it s a high bar. it comes with, first of all, the term comes with a lot of baggage, and there s, just like we ve incrementally called putin a war criminal, and dealing with somebody that engages in genocide is not really something that s it s not a possibility for diplomacy. so, i think those are really loaded terms that have to be for the most weighty circumstances.
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it s, you know, imagine this vigilante enforcement, and as it wound its way through the courts, it didn t get normalized, but it almost has. it s being emulated, and it was this worst case scenario. companies left. what is happening? well, you re right, and it s incredible that at a time when particularly women in this country are working to get back on their feet, get back into the workforce, their kids back in school, that these attacks by the republican party have only intensified, and i think one of the things that s most disturbing, nicole, is when you look at the states where they are most rabidly focused on outlawing access to safe and legal abortion, they re also the states where women are struggling the most. you look at the state of texas the highest rate of pregnant women who don t get early
most hypotheticals, i don t answer, and i think that whole question puts the cart before the horse. respectfully, it s a big deal that you won t answer this question, because you know, in 2016, you made what you called a principled argument for not holding hearings on president obama s supreme court nominee, merrick garland. you said it was the most important thing you ever did in your career, most consequential. the argument you made was that it was an election year and we should give the voters an opportunity to weigh in and let the next president select it. are you suggesting that you are developing an argument for not holding hearings on a supreme court nominee if it s not an election year? i m suggesting that i m not going to answer your question. i mean, i think the audience it s an important question in the public interest. i think people, like, before don t you think the public, before the november elections, has a right to know how you