it looked like she was going to get face those charges, maximum 15 years in jail. when she came out of the court, and i think this perhaps surprised a lot of people. she was able to speak to the cameras there. she said, and i think this is something that the that will be what the kremlin wanted to hear, which is that she acted alone. this was her decision, that she wasn t sort of part of a conspiracy at this major sort of organ institution of state propaganda channel, channel 1 there. but she also said that while she was being questioned, she was questioned for 14 hours, that she wasn t allowed to contact any legal representation, that she wasn t allowed to contact any family members, which goes a long way to explain why, for so long, her lawyers didn t even know where she was. but it is very interesting that the government hasn t thrown the biggest laws at her, if you will, and it gives the impression that they re charging her for a social media post and
electoral pressure on the left and called the career that was moderate, moderate democratic, maybe a little bit to the left to center. he was not a leading edge progressive on any issues when he was in the senate. sometimes people around him will say he was. it wasn t until he started positioning himself to run as president as vice president you saw him take charge on the leading edge, particularly on gay rights. we remember him coming out before president obama on gay marriage. and certainly he pushed things to the left in the senate. but he wasn t sort of a ted kennedy liberal lion at the senate in any sense, if you look at the other senators around him. i want to ask you about we talk about the demographics here. why isn t that message getting through? why is there so much talk about the phantom working class white voter who will be the future of the democratic party when so much data doesn t vet it out? one, because society has been wrapped around that person and
total myth is the indictment of rick gates. paul manafort left the campaign under dubious circumstances when his connections to extremely powerful and sketchy russians surfaced. but rick gates, who was his deputy, stayed on and as we reported made multiple visits to the white house. he wasn t just a campaign guy. he wasn t sort of a fringer hanger-on, he was somebody who had white house access, who was bringing people in, who knew how to influence trump as president and not just as a candidate. sop this idea that these people had nothing to do with him is literally the opposite of the truth. what do you think when you hear that from him? it s not true. . just simply not true. this is your beat as well. we will let you jump in here. this new, new, new spin on mueller, i don t know anybody in trouble yet. other than the russians, which has president he should actually be very well versed, he should be very well briefed on the people who attacked america s democracy. we ve been talk
and u.s.a. today and huff po. something called toxic masculinity. it s not in the dsm new made up term everywhere all of a sudden. desire to murder others, the theory goes, stems from the masculine desire to control women that for some can only be expressed through violence. a psychotherapist and hosts unscripted. nell, thanks for coming on. thank you, tucker for having me. tucker: maybe it s not surprising but i m drawing the opposite conclusion here. this kid, the murderer seems like he suffered from a lack of wholesome masculinity. he didn t have a male role model. he wasn t self-sufficient. he wasn t sort of living up to the classical masculine ideal of providing for others, of being a man. he seems quite the opposite of that how is this the result of masculinity. let s go back to the idea of what toxic masculinity is. as i dug through this story to do this segment tonight, i m still struggling to get my head around the concept
more effective. others role will be as outsiders. john mccain has been pretty much an outsider. most of his time in the senate he wasn t sort of thought of internally as part of the team, so much as someone out there who was willing to take positions, sometimes, i agreed with him, sometimes, i didn t but i don t think we should northbound a position as a party where what we re seeking is unity only unity, all the time. especially when we re at a noint history where we ve got major challenges. the basic fundamental values and beliefs we care about. my daughter is running in wyoming because she believes strongly in fundamental values and barack obama is taking away from them and we need to get back to the corner stone of success for america you look and you start without new york, pennsylvania, california,