Aisha I'm Aisha Rascoe, and this is a Sunday STORY from Up first.
Every Sunday, we do something special going beyond the news of the day to bring you one big story.
Tomorrow marks four years since the attack on the US Capitol as Congress attempted to certify President Joe Biden's win in the 2020 election.
On January 6, 2021, then President Donald Trump, now President elect, once again held a rally to dispute the election results.
And then thousands of people charged into the Capitol.
Many were chanting stop to steal.
Some broke windows and damaged property.
Others called for the hanging of public officials like then Vice President Mike Pence and then speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.
When all was said and done for, four people died, 140 law enforcement officers were wounded, and there was nearly $3 million worth of damage.
And the FBI soon opened what would become its biggest criminal investigation in history.
And as the arrest began, something became clear.
There were a lot of people with military ties in the Capitol that day.
It's a fact that continues to have a ripple effect for the Pentagon, especially now on the eve of another transfer of presidential power and as Trump continues to set up the Cabinet for his second administration.
Trump recently said that he might pardon some people who were convicted for crimes on January 6th on his first day in office.
Today on the show, we want to dig into the continued legacy of January 6, 2021.
Does the military have a problem with political extremism in the ranks?
And what does that mean with Trump returning as Commander in chief?
NPR's Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman and producer Lauren Hodges have been asking themselves those questions.
Late last year, they released a new investigation with NPR's embedded podcast called A Good Guy about an active duty Marine who participated in the Capitol riot.
My conversation about extremism in the military with Tom and Lauren after the break.