flags, the rise of isis. they re focused right now on turkey, these kurdish fighters are. could we because of this see a resurgence of isis? certainly could. there are two really big problems to worry about. your correspondent alluded to both of them. one is the possibility of prison breaks or just a loss of control over these thousands and thousands of former isis militants and family members. they re in about 20 different locations around northeastern syria. they re guarded not by americans but by these kurdish militants that are helping us. if they re off to the front line to fight the turks, all bets are off in terms of who s going to look after these prison camps and make sure there a nore no escapes. he called on his followers to do prison breaks specifically. he s looking to get his people out because there are a lot of
inappropriate. this bill, however, in moving from house to the senate changed and it changed to include retroactive sentencing changes where people would be let out automatically and it created a one dynamic of specifics about who would be blocked from that, but not included including people involved in domestic violence, strangling your spouse, assault with deadly weapons, prison breaks, drug trafficking, holding immigration papers to keep people in slavery so they can t escape so if we are going to be releasing those people are giving them an easier time to get out of prison, they are going to go right back to the community. [inaudible] i agree with you completely, i don t think any republican would want to support a bill that s going to let violent criminals back out on the street and there are 52 categories of violent crimes that would make you ineligible to get any benefit from the sentencing. but here s the fact.
inappropriate. this bill, however, in moving from house to the senate changed and it changed to include retroactive sentencing changes where people would be let out automatically and it created a one dynamic of specifics about who would be blocked from that, but not included including people involved in domestic violence, strangling your spouse, assault with deadly weapons, prison breaks, drug trafficking, holding immigration papers to keep people in slavery so they can t escape so if we are going to be releasing those people are giving them an easier time to get out of prison, they are going to go right back to the community. [inaudible] i agree with you completely, i don t think any republican would want to support a bill that s going to let violent criminals back out on the street and there are 52 categories of violent crimes that would make you ineligible to get any benefit from the sentencing. but here s the fact.
she will remember that as long as they serve. i can tell you that. thanks for joining us. brianna keilar starts right now. thanks, john. i m brianna keilar live from the washington headquarters and under way right now, homeland finale. why more administration members appear close to the exit. and the red flags raised for the right with new signs the president s mid-term night was worse than originally thought. a boeing jet falls from the sky and now a new report suggests boeing with held key information from pilots. and prison breaks. a golden ak-47 and one of the world s most notorious criminals. the epic trial of el chapo begins. we start with news that is just
supporting president trump in the streets. there have always been violent extremist groups on the ragged edge of american politics, right? anti-abortion extremists who turn to bombs and snipers to kill people to try to get their way, to kill doctors. left wing groups in the 70s who carried out bombings of their own, hijackings, even prison breaks. puerto rican groups shot up the u.s. capitol in the 1950s. more modern iterations of the klan persist to this day. and violent cults and sovereign citizens. violent extremism, people who celebrate violence for its political effect, they have always been with news this country. or they ve always been off to the side of us, right? they re here, but usually way off the number line in terms of what counts as american politics. right now, though, we are experiencing something a little bit different, which is that we are now seeing the formation of new groups, aggressive groups that recruit aggressively, and