official gabe sterling. it rang out across the country ahead of january 6th. of course it was i go author booed at this president and his backers. obviously, sterling s words were prescient. at least five people were killed on january 6th. but the incitement he warns about there did not end on january 6th. in many ways it was all just the beginning. we are back talking about their incredible investigative piece on january 6th. i want to read the sort of final line of what have the report lands on. short of bloodshed, i don t know of any way to fix what we currently have going on. that was wade damns, a 47-year-old from snowflake, arizona, who works in arizona. i would take part in it, he continued. i would just need someone else to be the leader. so willing to turn to bloodshed, phil rucker, to deal with what is b.s. krebs, life long republicans said there was no fraud. attorney general bill barr, who was right next to pence on the
i have ever seen in my lifetime. i just look at those words there are only three lines to that amendment. a well-regulated militia. if the militia, which was going to be the state earner, was going to be well regulated, why shouldn t 16 and 17 and 18 or any other age persons be regulated in the u.s. of arms? welcome back. that was former-chief justice warren berger to pbs news hour 30 years ago. but even given the events of this week, his perspective on the second amendment could not be been more prescient. joining me now is michael waldman, president of the brennen center for justice and author of several books, including the second amendment a biography. thank you for joining us this evening. let s start with the second amendment.
but because their neighbors were telling them how exhausted they were after 18 months of covid, how long their kids had been out of school. they felt that youngkin was addressing that, terry mcauliffe wasn t. and it was kind of prescient really when you look at the exit polls. a couple of them said they were worried about youngkin s economic message. a number of them said to me i can t afford to buy milk. youngkin said he s going to eliminate the tax on groceries and finally i would say in talking to democrats, they agree with kyle. they say in these suburban areas this wasn t just about in 2020. people being sick of donald trump. they also were looking at the democrats and joe biden who said we re going to make things better, we re going to get things done, and in fact, that hasn t happened the way they see it. so i think there were a lot of signs here. i certainly heard it from suburban women i spent time with.
wind to come online through various parts of the world. neil: baron s is talking about $5 a gallon gas. i am not because there is a big reaction from the consumer at $4 a gallon on the demand side. you are already seeing pressure on opec, with the pandemic. at a faster rate. neil: nice seeing you. the energy expert has been uncannily prescient. putting what the holiday season could be looking like in perspective. first we learn the likelihood that a lot of the gifts we wanted wouldn t be in time to put under the tree, then we heard there might be a devil of
it is from the historical archive. but it is also a moment that was contextualized by the filmmaker michael moore. in his documentary farenheit 911 after an industrial war complex. many blasted moore at the time as too liberal or too dovish or too critical or conspiratorial in the middle east. public it turned out had a pretty different view than those power brokers or narrators. that movie remains the highest grossing documentary of all time. and you could see the thrust was prescient, how they hijacked u.s. policy tieing to a costly ventu that continued on 20 years later. this is the first interview by