prosecutors are warning that if jack teixeira is set free he could keep spilling national secrets all over the internet. now it s up to a judge to decide whether to keep the 21-year-old behind bars. but we begin here in new york city where earlier today a funeral was held for jordan neely who died after a fellow new yorker placed him in a chokehold on a local subway. neely s death fueling familiar, albeit passionate debates, over several of the country s intractable channels, mental illness, homelessness, and vigilante justice. and today even as family and friends grieved a devastating personal loss, those loved ones were also mourning a young man just 30 years old who had looked for help but never got exactly what he needed. reverend al sharpton delivering the eulogy today said that has to change. we keep criminalizing people with mental illness. people keep criminalizing people that need help. they don t need abuse. they need help. jordan i didn t know your jordan. i
states we are going to show you them shaded in purple on a map that the pro-choice gutmacher institute says are certain or likely to ban abortion based on currently in books or transient states but that is just the effect today of the supreme court s 5-4 decision. what happens tomorrow and months and years from this moment? that, we don t know. in fact, many democrats tonight are expressing concern that the decision could provide legal justification to overturn other rights, secured by supreme court precedent. including those covering contraception and same-sex marriage. and they have reason to be concerned after justice clarence thomas suggesting doing just that today as well. this is what justice thomas wrote in a concurring opinion, quote, for that reason? future case, we should reconsider all of this court s substantive due process precedence, including griswold lawrence, and obergefell. he continues because any due process decision is demonstrably erroneous. we have a
but full families and societies and communities as well. let s talk specifically about mental health, symone because it s come up a lot lately. you and i have talked about it on this program, particularly in the debate surrounding gun violence. and i can go back literally decades having covered mass shootings where i heard republicans in particular saying the problem isn t guns. the problem is mental health. is this a chance for them to put their money where their mouths are? i think so, chris. look, it s not complicated, right? i used to be a juvenile justice advocate in another life working on reform issues, and when i first got into the work, there was something that was called jdai. it was a pilot program. jdai was the acronym for juvenile detention alternative initiatives, alternatives to detention, to jail, to incarcerating young people when what they really need is support or what they really need is therapy or what they really need
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have you seen in this time you said there have been some people there who were in support of the decision. have they been making speeches with microphones, like we are hearing people now making speeches against the decision? they haven t been. once this opinion came out, the the group here who was elated by this decision, who was in support of the opinion, didn t stay out much longer after that, anderson. there were people here who were hugging. they were jumping fofor joy. but mostly, they they left after about an hour and a half or two hours or so. so, once that group cleared out, there were a lot more people here who are out here protesting this opinion. and and the speeches have touched on a range of issues. people are really taking this opportunity to to highlight the what they believe is the possible slippery slope here to talk about other civil rights issues, and and again, take this opportunity to apply what they have seen out of the supreme court to other con