classified information, we ve seen the reporting. and then the indictment came out and it was shockingly worse. it was so much worse! it was so much worse. nuclear secrets! nuclear secrets. 31 specific code clearances, et cetera. the legal process, we will see what happens in the georgia case and what jack smith has on january 6th, has been working as it should. meaning, yes, there is excellent reporting. but most of it is not leaking out of these prosecutors offices. so if they move forward, we learned a great deal more than we do before. i had interviewed jamie raskin last week and he said, i m interested in hearing what jack smith has about these high-level conversations because we didn t have time to get to that level of detail. and they did a lot of the january 6th committee.
happening. we ve listened through our outreach throughout the state we ve identified the need to get involved at many levels from early intervention including education, i think studies, cross cultural awareness which will help better inform and prepare when our community members to live peacefully in our diverse community. to realizing that many hate crimes actually majority of hate crimes in california were never identified or investigated as such. they were not worked up as hate crimes and hate crimes of course are hate crimes, they are comes against an individual but they are also crimes against the community. it is very painful when a hate crime the community knows is a hate crime is not investigated as a hate crime and not identified as a hate crime. we work with district attorneys offices, prosecutors offices across the state to be better prepared pant performed about how to prepare those hate
our community members to live peacefully in our diverse community. to realizing that many hate crimes actually majority of hate crimes in california were never identified or investigated as such. they were not worked up as hate crimes and hate crimes of course are hate crimes, they are comes against an individual but they are also crimes against the community. it is very painful when a hate crime the community knows is a hate crime is not investigated as a hate crime and not identified as a hate crime. we work with district attorneys offices, prosecutors offices across the state to be better prepared pant performed about how to prepare those hate crimes cases. and then victims services are
bringing charges. again, i just think this smacks of the kind of criminalization of politics that the american people have had enough of. we sense in this country today under the biden administration and radical democrats around the country, one set of standards for conservatives and republicans, one set of standards for democrats. as i said, i think it all is setting in to motion forces that will bring about tremendous change come 2024 all across this country. because the american people believe in fairness, they believe in equal treatment before the law. i think they re going to be electing people from local prosecutors offices to the highest office in the land that will stand on that principal of the rule of law. neil: so i guess what confuses some people when you talk about fairness, this idea when many in your party rightly so at the time targeted bill
something that you get acquitted, saw them keep committing more try, and then we get to my shots for the price of one. our system of government can handle, it our system of government can, demonstrably and absolutely and the prosecution of alleged, crimes committed by public officials, and foreign public officials, it happens all the time, it will not, because it does not break us, unless the political right, and support of donald trump, decides that the prosecution that particular public official is reason enough to pick our system of government to break the legal system but not to tense violence in intimidation but by seizing partisan and political control, prosecutors offices there s no inherent crisis for