helping? because we spoke to many people in the black and brown communities who were still reeling from their policies of stop-and-frisk. with the over populations of rikers island. so i think it is really a perception. who you ask really depends on what view of rudy giuliani will get. i am glad you said who you ask. because you mentioned julia reed. you also spoke to bill de blasio. and jamie. raskin what was a calculus that went into the thought process of deciding who you thought would be accurate, historians and people that could talk about this evolution of rudy giuliani? i think it is important in a story like this, when you think you know the story, to really get people that are deeply inside. and that means on all of the different sides. we did have his, son andrew giuliani, willie talk through the human aspect of which i think is important. but as you mentioned, we also have these great political
Evidence shows that many Black Americans experience police killings of unarmed Black people – even those they do not know – as traumatic events, causing acute physical and emotional distress.
let s just say that this is the neighborhood where they perfected stop-and-frisk. anthony: right. did you you remember your first time? desus: i remember my first time. anthony: how did you feel, first first time stop-and-frisk? desus: i cried. in that summer, 15 times stopped and frisked. just thrown up against the gate, fingers through our genitals, just cops looking for guns. but you remember that, you remember your first time. when you lose your stop-and-frisk virginity. you know, you remember it. anthony: i ve never been stopped and frisked. desus: you ve never i wonder why! what is it is it because you have a cnn show? or is it just anthony: i ve been arrested, but desus: if you hang around here long enough i can get you stopped and frisked. anthony: they talk about diy culture, about do-it-yourself, and you better be able to do it your damn self in the bronx, because often nobody else is gonna do it for you. desus: when you go in the bronx, you re
the issue. innocent people are no longer watching other people being victims of crime. innocent people are being victims of crime. what the democrats are doing, they re talking about policy. nobody wants to hear about poim. policy. and i can go to times square and not get shot. what they want to see are more police officers on the street and aggressive policing. zeldin mentioned the sound bite, zero tolerance, that was com-stat, stop and frisk, that s going to turn this around. what they re saying now, the guns, 350 million guns in this country. that s not going to stop crime. neil: i m glad you mentioned that, howard. i know their push and typical response you hear and even the president alluded to in chicago last night watch those assault weapons, i get that, but as you pointed out, in a lot of these crimes they have no weapons at all. people pushed onto subway tracks or a knife or someone
all about. neil: another thing governor hochul mentioned as you know, howard, this idea that lee zeldin has one plan, talks time on crime but won t do anything about the guns. she says she s nod doing anything about bail reform either. where do you think this goes? well, i think if lee zeldin gets elected, the nypd is going to become much more assertive. they re going to go back to doing stop and frisk. they re going to do the things that made the city the safest in my tenure. if hochul gets elected, you ll see more pandering to criminals. as i said before, the only people that should be afraid of police are criminals. right now they re not. if they do something now, they get right back out on the street. we have to stop the madness and