the left wing militia group dressed in black masks. you remember them from the summer of 2020. they burned our cities. churches and police stations and courthouses. the killings they committed was to defeat donald trump. and make the country so chaotic that voters would want to change. they were so effective that kamala harris herself raised money to bail them out of jail. in the end antifa played a pivotal role in our presidential election. then the moment joe biden was inaugurated, antifa seemed to disappear. nobody asked yeses about where they went or who was paying them. they served their purpose and then they left. so it s very clear who antifa was and is. antifa is the armed instrument of the democratic establishment in washington. their job is to mobilize when politically necessary. this is a new things in the united states. but political militia are a common feature in third world politics. in our country only one party has them. the democratic party. with that in
people that i saw were police tackling protestors. tucker: why does every neo-liberal talk like a socialology professor at a college? that was david explaining it s not violence because it s against property. when they burn your house down, it s not violence. it s always the same script. remember the burning police station in minneapolis. cnn said the riots in kenosha were fiery but mostly peaceful. that freelance reporter david is not actually a reporter. he is a professional antifa apologsit. we are not just guessing on
a lot of things heating up in south carolina. and that s not just the fish at the all important fish fry. where all but two of the candidates are at the same time on the same night. this event is a moment for everyone from biden to booker. to make their pitch to voters in a critical early primary state. it can be seen as a micro cosm for support among black voters across the country. a familiar face on the ground. and georgetown socialology professor. good to have you both. how s the food? you know what, cuomo, i haven t had any yet. thank you for holding the appetite to talk to me. absolutely. only for you, chris cuomo. this is a big deal.
the broader public for good reason. it s also a lack. it s always what s missing. he came in above this other guy but we re searching for somebody else. we still haven t found what we re looking for. it would be remiss of me not to ask you about a controversy involving a student sandra fluke and rush limbaugh. rush today apologized for calling her a slut and a prostitute. it s what some described as a vacuous apology. yourself as a socialology professor, you re part of that community, what s your reaction to this kind of controversy and the attack on a student of your community? it s ridiculous. i m proud of her. i m glad she spoke up and spoke out. it s courageous in the catholic circles that she spoke from. her love from the catholic faith
it goes forward and if it succeeds at the many steps yet to come, yes, it could be a big step in changing that. the case itself will proceed somewhat statistically with statistics because they ll have to show that women are being treated badly and it s not just that they weren t as good employees. right. professor, i m sorry to interrupt you, but you brought up the issue of statistics. will cases then going forward be affected by statistics more than before, based on this case as it really looking at statisticians results? well, what this case could determine is that the role of statistics and socialology. there s a socialology professor that wants to testify, too. the claimants have to show it s a policy emanating from the central walmart that caused the discrimination everywhere, and so there s a sociologist about