weight, my weight, my phone rang during the show. that is 70 me. but it won t happen tonight. you know, lawrence, it has been a long week. it has, and that neil is going to join us tonight to talk about the supreme court decisions, and i need this. because i like neil gorsuch s. i don t know the difference between nitrous oxide and whatever the other thing is. which chris hayes and you both explain beautifully and i have already forgotten. but ■çhe is going to take me through it again. he is the guy to have. it is a big day at the high court, i will be watching. thanks, alex. have a great show. thank you. okay, 24 hours later, if you re ready for some calm analysis about what we all saw last night this is the place to be for the next hour. the very first thing you need to know about what we all saw last night is that most voters didn t see it. it was the lowest rated presidential debate in a very long time. it had the smallest audience of any first presid
uncertainty. we can fix that. and that s what i m going to do today. fix it. biden s historic announcement about legal protection for the undocumented spouses of american citizens, to keep hundreds of thousands of american families together. plus, white boy summer. the new symbol of white nationalists and the latest recruitment tool for the far right. but we begin tonight with the lucrative politics of climate collapse and the greed that is literally letting our country burn. today, millions of americans from iowa to maine are suffering through heat warnings, watches, or advisories. cities across half of the country like chicago, st. louis, indianapolis, detroit, philly, and now new york are hitting temperatures exceeding 90 degrees fahrenheit. though it feels closer to 100. many of these cities could experience heat indexes hitting 105 degrees by sunday. these increasingly oppressive hot days aren t a coincidence. they are the predictable impact of a climate crisis. and