editor at the washington times . he will soon t be t taking the e with the rest of r us .ch we re happyar to have him join us . charlie, thanks for coming on . goodll show in all. but let them eat cake responses and we hear them all the time. y take the bus has got to be pretty close top. the top spoken by somebody who has never been to a bus stop in a very long time obviously. but you know, us the most important question, you know, what are their priorities? what are they trying to doriryin about us ? and a simple answer is this just this week our our great leaders in washington agreed to send another billion dollars to ukraine and rightit there that alone right there tells you what their priorities are in termsy who they care about and who they don t care about. they don t you know, we hadadsi a joint session of congress to talk about ukraine. when was the last time we had a joint session of congress to talk about the middle class being crushed by inflation? it hasn t happened. i ass
0 by istanbouli ticket to seattle . netwenty seven presenting partnr usa. good evening and welcome to tucker carlson tonight areld a lot of things going on around the world at the moment but we thought we would begin tonight with a report from oour own country just to give you something a little differentnt fromat what you ve been watching every moment of every day for the past three weeksksas on your screen are pictures fromyn brooklyn, new york . these are people waitingth in line at a food bank. the queue stretches for blocks. it s what we used to call a bread line. otst of these people are not homeless or not addicted tohe drugs. some of them have jobs they just can t afford enough food. very few living americans have ever seen anything like this . it s been nearly 100 yearses since the united states experienced widespread food shortages. that s long enough that most of us have forgotten what it means . and here s what it means. if you want to make a society volatile, not just an