that is very clearly about racial justice, in the sense that he is about dealing with drivers licenses being suspended where essentially poverty prevents people from driving and having a livelihood and that disproportionately impacts people of color. he wants to reform sentencing laws. he realizes that voter i.d. laws have been a way of disenfranchised voters of color in particular, black voters. he s got that record. what he doesn t have, and this is what i was talking about earlier, he did a half. st step. he said the right things about taking responsibility and recognizing his harm. what else. what s the climate change? what is he doing differently? how can he convince us. what s the evolution. thank you both for your analysis. i appreciate it. maya wylie and micha wylie an l sure to aim it. i m aiming it. ohhhhhhh! i ordered it for everyone.
justice in the sense that he is about, you know, dealing with driver s license being suspended where essentially poverty prevents people from driving and have a livelihood, and that disproportionately impacts people of color. he wants to reform sentencing laws. he recognizes that voter id laws have really been a way of disenfranchising voters of color in particular, black voters. so he s got that record. what i doesn t have and this is what i was talking about earlier he did a half step in this, in exactly what you are saying, ali. he said the right things about taki taking responsibility and recognizing his harm. what else? what has he learned? what is he doing differently? how can he convince us? what is the evolution? thanks very much. maya wiley and mark thompson. michael moore is here in the studio. he will be my next guest. my net and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they re always going to take
the party shift to the left. joe biden is the late toast join the apology tour. now saying he regrets that the 1994 crime bill led to an era of mass incarceration through vastly tougher sentencing laws for those selling crack cocaine. it was a big mistake when it was made and it s trapped an entire generation. biden was right here in the rose garden when the new law was signed and he has taken ownership. i wrote the crime bill, the thing that put 100,000 kops in the street. meanwhile, kirsten gillibrand has been trying to explain her shift to a liberal senator. she once described herself as a firm opponent for giving amnesty to illegal aliens. she also said english should be the official language of the united states. they certainly weren t empathetic and kind andy not think about suffering and other people s lives. while cleanups are common in
sentencing laws, you stated in response to the crack epidemic that community leaders back when you were attorney general previously asked for these types of sentencing laws. now my understanding is that many of these community leaders at that time and i was a young prosecutor during those days, knew and said even then, that the crack epidemic was a public health crisis and that that was really the chorus coming from community leaders not that they wanted drug addicted people to be locked up and similarly now, we can find that in most of the communities aapplicanted by the opioid crisis, they are similarly these community leaders asking that it be addressed for the public health crisis that it is. so my question is, if and when you are confirmed in this position, would you agree that when we talk about the opioid crisis, the crisis in terms of methamphetamine addiction or any
between nonpublic information and confidential information? no. okay. in response to a question from senator durbin about harsh sentencing laws, you stated in response to the crack epidemic that community leaders back when you were attorney general previously asked for these types of sentencing laws. my understanding is that many of these community leaders at that time and i was a young prosecutor during those days, knew and said even then that the crack epidemic was a public health crisis and that that was really the chorus coming from community leaders, no that they wanted drug addicted people to be locked up and similarly now we can find that in most of the communities afflicted by the opioid crisis, it s the community leaders asking that it be addressed for the public health crisis that it is. so my question is, if and when you re confirmed in this