Many will gather on Boylston Street, as they do every third Monday in April, to cheer on runners as they come across the finish line of the Boston Marathon. This time, though, it’ll also be a celebration of the three lives and hundreds injured when two bombs exploded there during last year’s Marathon.
In the wake of tragedies like 9/11 and the Boston Marathon bombings, fear can be a unifying factor. But fear can also cloud our vision when it comes to how we perceive threats to our security and who we perceive to be a threat. On Saturday’s Melissa Harris-Perry, we will discuss the complicated implications of fear when it comes to national security and government policy.
The conflict in Ukraine has continued to escalate. Pro-Russian separatists have moved further east into the country while Russian troops remain on the border. Secretary of State John Kerry and other diplomatic representatives met in Geneva on Thursday to discuss ways to curb the ongoing violence. After hours of discussion, the parties involved agreed that all groups would cease provocative activity and that all illegal groups would be disarmed. Despite the agreement, pro-Russian separatists in Mariupol have refused to surrender an occupied administration building while in Donetsk, separatist leader Denis Pushilin has called on supporters to ignore the agreement. On Saturday, we will bring you the latest on the crisis in Ukraine.









