essence fast. i wish i was there, but i just would be there in spirit, all in with chris hayes starts right now. , al tonight on all in. come on. the hypocrisy is stunning. new supreme court rulings that make millions of people poorer, and open the door for discrimination. there are some people in this country now who believe that it was open season again on lgbtq people. tonight, two stunning two examples of the supreme court imperial overreach, and what happens next. today s decision has closed one path, now we re going to pursue another. then, an important new figure in the case against donald trump. starting with our campaign chairman susie wildes, who is really the best. really the best in the business. what we know about trump ain t susie wildes, and wide to big deal that you talking to jacques mid. it seems that susie wildes has spoken with investigators several times, it is earth shattering news. when all in starts now. good evening from new york
ironic it is that your the justice says when they re nominate and they re going through the confirmation process, they say we don t like to comment on hypothetical cases. and it was watching the opening segment and it was like no one is aggrieved, there actually is no case here, but they have no problem making decisions about hypothetical cases if, that, say someone one day was aggrieved. that s a great point. they re-found their ability to weigh in on high post. exactly. great show as always, my friend. great to see, you enjoy the rest of your evening off. and thanks to at-home for joining us tonight. alex has the night off. i m filling in for her this evening. but we begin tonight with the supreme court. and his name was jerome rebels he was born in 1827 he was a minister in the amy church. he served as a chaplain for the army for the american civil war. and in 1870, he was elected by the mississippi legislator to the united states senate believe it or not. the firs
in our country s history was him. and it s sort of hard to imagine that today mississippi was the first state to send a black man to the u.s. congress. but they did, and they did it all the way back in 1870. they did i and then believe it or not, an 1875, they did it again. the mississippi legislator said blanche k bruise to the united states senate. that s the second time ever a black man was elected to that chamber. and you re probably wondering why or how that happened. the reason mississippi was actually able to make history like that all the way back in the 1870s was because of reconstruction. after the civil war, mississippi was forced to adopt a bunch of new laws and franchising the states newly-freed black citizens. and those laws allowed the states black man to vote in free and fair elections for the first time in history. and that s what they produced. it was real historic progress
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and then sort of went down rabbit hole where he ll just post off that he finds online. so he will surge around everything that he can find about this. and then there s something that he he found something about tunnels being around. he thought that the protesters lived around there and that there were underground tunnels. so you know, he s his video has been replaced where he s just going around the fires about the above home and he finds a backpack, the backpack had been abandoned a while. back he s searches through it, and then he started saying, they re coming at one point and the livestream sort of cuts out. so this is someone who just really a troubled individual i think that clearly he has some deeper issues going on here. ryan riley, as always, thank you for your reporting. that is all in for this week. alex wagner tonight starts right now with a man what mohyeldin, in for alex. good night,. amen goodnight, chris. i was watching your opening segment i was thinking how