hear this case and they were afraid and wanted to get it out of the court. and those arguments were so wrong, so misguided, and they stand as a really powerful lesson that if you carefully study and take seriously the united states supreme court decisions, litigants can win cases that stand up for our democracy, even in this court. so this court is the thing that i do want to sort of talk about. it was chief justice john roberts, it was sotomayor, kagan, kavanaugh, coney barrett, and ketanji brown jackson. dissents were clarence thomas, gorsuch, and alito. two of those don t surprise me at all, but the other thing that strikes me is it feels like the year 2000 election and bush v. gore are like a monster that you can t kill in one of these horror movies. it keeps coming back. john eastman arguing that 20 years apart that this insane theory is what should rule our
things. and it may have been held up or may not, but that was not a document. i didn t have a document per se. oh, gosh. an audio recording undercuts trump s pathetic defense in the classified documents case as the doj reportedly barrels forward on its investigation of his attempt to overturn the 2020 election. also tonight, a supreme court victory for voters and democracy. in a defeat for republicans who wanted to strip state courts of any role in running federal elections and give politicians the final say. plus, ron desantis admits he wants to rewrite the constitution so that right-wing politicians can decide whether people born in this country can legally be considered u.s. citizens. we begin tonight with a frequent and losing strategy by the twice impeached, twice indicted former president. whenever he finds himself stuck in a perilous legal mess of his own making, he goes full orwell and just tells the world don t
believe your lying eyes. stick with us, don t believe the crap you see from these people, the fake news. just remember what you re seeing and what you re reading is not what s happening. it was the same during his first impeachment over his call with the ukrainian president, pressuring him to dig up dirt on joe biden ahead of the 2020 election. trump kept saying, read the transcript, as if by doing so, it would magically present a different conversation. he even mentioned it again this afternoon. they ended up impeaching me over a perfect phone call. congratulations on winning. that was a call to ukraine. it was the same during his second impeachment over his role in the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol. regarding his call to georgia s secretary of state pressuring him to find the votes to overturn the election, trump told everyone to just listen to his perfect call, where nothing
really is a fascinating study, one that goes on for so long. we heard of some of the detail there in that report but give us a sense of what you really hope to achieve from this study. you really hope to achieve from this stud . ., , , , study. so, ultimately, this is the world s largest study. so, ultimately, this is the world s largest and study. so, ultimately, this is the world s largest and most - study. so, ultimately, this is the world s largest and most unique | world s largest and most unique study looking at changes in our internal organs over time and what we hope to get out of it, it will enable unique research to be done by researchers around the world to try to identify what are the potential causes of diseases in middle and older age, to understand why people develop some diseases and others don t. , don t. am i right in saying the reason you don t. am i right in saying the reason you then don t. am i right in saying the reason you then do don t. am i right i
he s not capable of empathy. those words that he apologized, he felt bad, those don t last very long. in fact, by the time of the transition in late 2016 and early 2017, he actually told him, and this was in the new york times, he told the united states senator that he said he thought the access hollywood tape was made up in fabricated. that is the depth of his remorse for his egregious sexual misconduct. do you think that this verdict plays a role in how he does in the campaign for the nomination? do you think that it affects that? i think that like everything else involving donald trump, it cuts both ways. i think that to the people that support him, they will simply dismiss it as a conspiracy led by the litigation, whether it be me, you cnn, jean carroll,