that we can t pay for, that all americans may not be supportive of. it s interesting. elizabeth warren, who is surging in the polls, her policies are too left for me but i m a huge fan of the campaign she s running. she s talking about the big bold idea agenda, which is what bernie did. but we saw in the recent fox news poll back that over 70% of democrats are looking for steady moderate leadership. only 23% were looking for that big bold agenda. sam looking for a center lane candidate. honestly, i m just watching julian castro, he really should have more buzz around him having been a mayor of san antonio, hud hud secretary, you have mayor pete, a much smaller town. harris: he s having some challenges. jessica: he is. but julian castro hasn t been able to get the name i.d. i think he deserves based on his record. and he has a really amazing policy shop. he has thought about his ideas. so center lane and julian castro. dagen: these big, bold, communist policy ideas, they scare the
way that we interact with each other across racial lines? we re joined by demos president heather mcgee who advised starbucks on its anti-bias training. she s also an msnbc contributor. heather, you come from a policy shop where you think about concrete policy solutions to things. what is your thinking in that vein on this set of problems? so i think there are a lot of things we can do, and i think we have to have the message that we can do better, that it is possible to make progress. and one of the pieces is that this moment of popular education, the fact that the country is having this conversation is so essential because the fact is the idea of the hierarchy of the human value, the idea that some groups of people are simply worth more than others is a very well marketed idea in our media, in our politics. i think things will start to really change when we put more blame on those that are selling that idea for their own gain
woman this and i do feel like i have to internalize it. it s become even more frustrating and exhausting. wow. well from stories to solutions, what is the path forward and the way that we interaction with each other across racial lines. heather mcghee who advised starbucks on its training. still with us valerie jarrett and tim wise. you come from a policy shop where you guys think of concrete policy solutions to things. what is your thinking in that vein on this set of problems? so i think there are a lot of things we can do, and i think we have to have the message that we can dos possible to make progress. and one of the pieces is that this moment of popular education, the fact that the country is having this conversation is so essential because the fact is the idea of the hierarchy of the human value, the idea that some groups of people are simply worth more than others is a very well marketed idea in our media, in
then it becomes angry black woman this and i do feel like i have to internalize it. it s become even more frustrating and exhausting. wow. well from stories to solutions, what is the path forward and the way that we interaction with each other across racial lines? we re joined by demos president heather mcgee who advised starbucks on its anti-bias training. heather, you come from a policy shop where you think about concrete policy solutions to things. what is your thinking in that vein on this set of problems? i think there are a lot of things we can do. and i think we have to have the message that we can do better, that it is possible to make progress. and one of the pieces is that this moment of popular education, the fact that the country is having this conversation is so essential because the fact is the idea of the hierarchy of the human value, the idea that some groups of people are simply worth more than others is a very well marketed idea in our media, in our politics.
states as it interprets the first amendment to the constitution. so there s no legislation that could get around what the supreme court has articulated as what the libel standards are. i read the book. in the book it asserts that he doesn t read, doesn t read policy, doesn t read books, doesn t know history. he s kind of proving the book parts of the book true by saying, we re going to work on the liable laws, what have you. many people are smiling as you re not telling the truth and profiting off of it, they re going, are you talking about yourself ? yeah. in most white houses when presidents articulate policy agendas, it s because somebody there s been a policy shop within the white house that s looked, examined, explored proposals. there s nothing here to back up what he s saying when he says we re going to look at the libel laws in this country. david, why would he even go there? why would people in the white house especially considering the