and i had a march. 200,000 people in the pandemic. if you contrast that peaceful march, not one brick thrown, no violence, with january 6th, you d see the difference. if we had one incident of violence, we would have denounced it and said, these people are not with us. these people are trying to justify seditious acts. some of the people convicted here are convicted of seditious conspiracy. you re talking about pardoning them? to have them even entertain being in the white house is frightening to most americans that believe in the letter of the law. it is. boris, just to button this us, i m reminded of a recent trip to poland that i made to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the warsaw ghetto uprising. we were in the summer palace in
warsaw. a 97-year-old holocaust survivor named martin tursky talked about the rule of law and democracy to the assembled crowd of polish and american leaders. he said, you know, you american s, when you were watching january 6th, you thought it was all about you. you re wrong. we were watching, too. we were asking ourself, how would america respond? he said, i say this as a survivor of auschwitz. when you won on january 6th then he stopped and said, and you won, you won for people like me, who saw all too well the cost of not upholding the rule of law and the cost of letting violence invade democracy and freedom. an extraordinary, extraordinary
the more serious charge, which is first degree felony assault, could see him spend the rest of his life. in prison. the community here has been demanding justice. you showed those pictures of his classmates ralph girls classmates staging that peaceful march today outside of their classroom. they re describing this as a unity walk. he s been loved by fellow classmates and teachers. he played for instruments classmates, describing him as a kind, smart young man, a humble man who did not brag. the incident unfolded on the porch of this home behind me. the teen as you point out, made a mistake. he was supposed to be picking up his younger siblings at 100 and 15th terrorists. that home is actually a block away. the gray home past the yard behind me. this is 115th street. we know, according to court documents that ralph you are rang the doorbell. this is, according to lester, what he told the police on the evening of april, 14th. lester said that he had just laid down to go to
now, this is paris, where we re looking at a peaceful march here, almost 5:00 in the afternoon. throughout the entire country, however, they ve had protests throughout the streets. we re getting word from marseilles on the mediterranean coach, largely peaceful, same for bardot in the southwest, leon in the southeast. paris is where the heart of the action is taking place. there s video apparently of protesters going after the restaurant where macron eats. how dare they. they may have burned down the awning outside that restaurant to make a statement there. we re working on that. he wants to raise the retirement age two years, from 62 to 64. they don t like it. we ll see in the end. a lot of them are very young. is preposterous in a way. their benefits are g generous, people work long hours, pay into the system, and this would