classified documents to people in private meetings? the short answer is yes. i watched him show documents to people at mar-a-lago on the dining room patio. he has no respect for classified information, never did. former staff like stephanie grisham say he did it. trump himself is heard on tape bragging about it. now the former cia director is speaking out about the danger trump posed to national security. also, we re learning more able rich billionaires that justice clarence thomas has been palling around with. what he received from them and what he reportedly gave in return. george santos is comparing himself to rosa parks. the republican in charge of oklahoma schools says the tulsa race massacre wasn t about race at all. i wish i were making that up. we begin with a twice indicted ex president who poses a national security risk unlike any this country has ever faced. don t just take it from me. here s a warning from michael hayden, the former director of the cia
i was telling my friend to not talk. [speaking spanish] she cried a lot. according to the cdc, guns are now the leading cause of death among children than adolescents in america. it jumps a 30% between 2019 and 2020. according to the washington post, more than 311,000 students have experienced gun violence at school since columbine, in 1999. of course, republicans are suggesting to keep the schools as virtual prisons to deal with this problem. we need serious funding to upgrade our schools. this is to install bulletproof doors and locking classroom doors ultimately. as we all know, what s stops, armed, that guys, is armed good guys. i hate to break it to cancun crews there but that the armed guys were not much help. the police admit to a stunning string of failures. 19 police officers waited in the hallway for nearly an hour as these children were trapped with a gunman, before even attempting to breach the classroom. why the hesitation? one lieutenant saying that they
does not give a person unlimited rights to seek compensation. joining us now is demario solomon-simmons, civil rights attorney and founder of justice for greenwood. demario, it is great to see you. i have to say, the argument that people have normally made against reparations is that the victims of enslavement, or some other wrong, are long dead. we can t compensate people because victims are dead. now you have a case where the victims are alive. three people that were alive, and they are still saying that we can t have reparations. make that make sense. it seems like a heads you lose, tales i win. it is always a movement of the goal post when it comes to black people, and when facing justice claims. and you re, right 109 years old, mother fletcher was seven years old at the time. mother randall, 100 and, eight she was six years old at the time. they saw, they felt, they heard, and they witnessed and experienced the race massacre. they are still here. that s the thing that this case
survivors went through that. the mental health of my survivors and my descendants. having a community of people around the nation standing with us, donating to our cause, and letting us continue to know that we love and support us, because you being a tall, so you know that the powers that be, and the city of tulsa and the chamber, they do not support. as they are fighting against. as they are trying to starve us of resources and keep us from justice. people are binding together with us. it is the best thing you can do. make a donation today. i m thinking of the survivors today. mother fletcher, mother randall, uncle fred, i want everyone to get a sense of the fighting spirit in uncle red. he did an interview with our colleagues at another network after the decision came down from the judge. take a listen and we will discuss this after. you feel a deep down to your core. yes. it has been a long time coming. a long time coming. it is going to come.
a change is coming. after decades and decades of trying, this is just for a chance. just for a chance. uncle brad said he will keep fighting if he is 130 years old. he will keep fighting. we are commemorating memorial day this weekend. you just think about all of the people who served this country who went back home to tulsa to have their homes destroyed after serving and fighting for democracy abroad, they could not get any such thing back home in tulsa. it is quite striking. we give our viewers an idea about uncle red, mother fletcher, and mother randall. that is amazing. you saw uncle read in that interview. he said he s going to live to 130. he is very serious. he told me in a text message before the hearing, he sent me a text, he can text at 101. he texted me and said that you let the lawyers know, they