cities like charleston and pittsburgh and el paso and christchurch in new zealand that have been tragically been victimized by racist rampages and violent extremism fueled by racial hatred. the conversations across this country today do nothing for the families of the victims. they do not erase their pain or ease their horror of the loved ones violent deaths, but at least we have a quorum willing to acknowledge the problem. the ideology that fuels saturday s mass shooting no longer sits on the absolute fringes of our society. ten people were gunned down, three others injured at a supermarket by a shooter who traveled more than 200 miles to target a predominantly black neighborhood in buffalo, new york, a shooter who according to police this morning would have continued with his rampage if he had not been stopped and arrested by police. 11 of the 13 victims were black. the dead range in age from 32 years old to 86 years old. the shooter wrote a lengthy, in which he was inspir
no. at the end of the day this is about two things. it is about money and this is about power and there s one thing that i talk about when i when i talk particularly to young african-americans and as the country changes, don t get hooked in this idea that one day the people say it s the money hook and the power piece and that s the thing that they are scared to lose control of more than anything else, and we ve already seen it in our history, right? when there was black wall street. what did they do? burned it down. so that money piece and that power, that power piece, those two things are the last vestiges. you all can have the american dream as long as we have the money and the power. no one s going anywhere. when we come back we ll continue our conversation from the buffalo massacre with democrats