Watch Chris Hayes call out Fox personalities for objecting to Roger Stone being treated like the “less wealthy and less white and less well connected”

From the January 31 edition of MSNBC's All In with Chris Hayes:

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CHRIS HAYES (HOST): Irving Kristol famously quipped, “A neo-conservative is a liberal who has been mugged by reality.” But for Roger Stone and Trump TV, it seems that a liberal is a conservative who just got raided by the FBI.

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It is pretty wild that FBI agents in body armor wielding large weapons conducted a pre-dawn raid at the home of a 66-year-old nonviolent offender. But also, welcome to America, Sean Hannity! First of all the FBI was trying to keep Stone from destroying evidence, they say, and as Senator Richard Blumenthal wrote, “Under those circumstances, a pre-dawn raid is entirely in keeping with standard protocol.” But also as Radley Balko, who's a phenomenal journalist, has documented in his essential book about the militarization of America's police forces, Rise of the Warrior Cop, SWAT raids in this country are an epidemic. They're used for minor alleged crimes like selling marijuana. SWAT teams have been known to invade the wrong house, to kill pets, even to throw a flash bang grenade into a two-year-old's crib and leave a hole in his chest.

The central question of this era in Trump's America, it seems to me, is who does the law protect and who does it hold to account? What Roger Stone's defenders are objecting to is that he got a small taste of the treatment for people who are less wealthy and less white and less well-connected.

Previously:

Here's how Fox is downplaying Roger Stone's indictments

Roger Stone repeatedly bragged about talking with Trump and senior campaign staffers during presidential campaign

Roger Stone tries to explain his witness tampering charge: I advised Randy Credico to plead the Fifth so his liberal friends wouldn’t get mad at him for helping Trump