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oh,n■n i. the brunt of the cowardly blows ■& army and navy., men and women in the american wsindustrial. you are the low end that their lives available do their pursuit of happiness. they accepted the challenge. laugh in history to have produced the axis. can■ they? economists say the natural resources of the united nations are capacity of the axis of time, whattremendous. they have a mighty population b. they ask today we have delaware. they are factories like this in occupied france. has because they seized the steel mills, the luxembourg. we have pittsburgh. they have great factories. the tunnel long■v years. we turn out find products people having reported they a appropriate tomahawks many other romanian i drive airplanes and tanks all from the fields of oklahoma, texas and california. we driveqw haul planes and tanks all down the production line plant fornc■i;ie, the axis on the united nations land locked in battle. it will be. the work at the tips, the beam, the sweat of american workers llyoplanes and guns to fight for free and democrat
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n. n. the european union have condemned the attack and calling for an independent inquiry. the is rarely military. it says it carried out at precise strike, targeting him off and his stomach jihad finds us involved in the october 7th, the tax around $6000.00 palestinians from only because a with sheltering in this form is school and rough facility in new the rot. when it was targeted by and is really strikes this, why? what have we done for them to bomb us? we fled from place to place, know under a school of safe, with no 10 to safety and there is no safe place when have you and had you met. so you know, for 3 lift up to the sounds of broken remains, of people was scattered, a very, a gas kind of strict sold children, died screaming in the street was a blood vault. my nephew was killed in the bodies of the victims killed in the attack, allowing the outside the ox, the hospital family members say the final good byes, the food, the funeral, pres, a said of israel is defending its decision to strike the school. they say they were targeting members of hamas and islamic jihad who went inside we assessed that 20 to 30 terrorist were in the compound at the time of the strike. we targeted with precision strikes on this specific classrooms on the specific classrooms. what we know, of course, we know that the terrorists were what they were doing, and inside a u. n. school, they were hiding. the compound was useful staging attacks and as a full what operating base the united nations has condemned. the attack on this shelter and garza and accused israel of breaking international humanitarian law. johnson file a suspect's person for under the u. an agency that supports palestinian refugees. we asked him if there's anything the organization can do to make sure have master scientist don't use the premises. basically, you know, un stop promise. it was an operations have to be protected adult times that, that task the end of the story. i mean, if there are any issues with a used by anybody mean that you're used by anybody um in this world and we, we, we rise along the course of the primary thing is we haven't, we told them about the shelter, which was sheltering. 6000 displaced people when it was head and i really think that that's what we need to focus on right now. um the issue proportionality is most communitarian. laura's is also extremely signifi
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the polling shows that they were elected the cause of their e, you critical anti e u n n t, migration stones. and the hoping that that will work for them. and there are indications that these it will, when those 3 eastern states go to the polls in most of the east of germany, the f b was already the strongest policy you election. and it's very key not to, to anything that could endanger, that tends relative comedy here, in essence. thank you. michelle. i that's chief political as i, michelle, a customer as well as alex guest, both in s as a radians will return to the polls for a run of presidential vote next week, after none of the candidate secured the majority in the 1st round, the election is to replace president abraham gracie who was killed in a helicopter crash last month. you know, the reformist masood has this can hold a slim lead over conservative side really. but turn out send to a record low of only for 2 percent. so friendly to answer them in a of a so the selection of all 4 candidates, yada xbox, the head of the w's persian service told me why it turn off has been so low.
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father, if that's holding shows, that they were elected the cause of their e, you critical anti e u n, n t, migration stones, and the hoping that that will work for them. and there are indications that the d that will, when those 3 eastern states go to the polls in most of the east of germany, the f b was already the strongest policy election. and it's very key not to, to anything that could endanger, that tends relative comedy here, in essence. thank you. michelle. i, that's chief, but let's go ahead. as i mentioned, a customer as well as alex guest, both in essence iranians will return to the polls for a run of presidential vote next week after none of the candidate score and a majority in the 1st round of the snap election on the boat took place to replace president a brain, right, see who died in a helicopter crash last month. and the reformist masoud possess can hold the slim lead over conservative site, and the lead with more than $24000000.00 votes counted, but voters had outreach a record low for the country at only 40 percent pilot in iran. ultimately resides with the supreme le
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n, n, yes, what’s going on, open it, i somehow didn’t expect anything like this. apparently 350 points letter letter m m yes open my friends, but i don’t know what to do. people just froze, just, just general bewilderment in the room, 400 points, letter o, well, the moment has come when a man comes into play, come on andrei ledimovich, so, well, i came from st. petersburg, i came not alone with a musical gift, with my girlfriend, so, but there is one small remark, her mom let me come here, said that without a kiss, if she doesn’t give you a kiss, she may not come back, phenomenal, so, i think, only here can what you just said happen, i brought my friend, who will not leave here without in order not to kiss you, yes, mom said, and you don’t have to come back unless you give me a kiss, this is your friend, yes a friend, but i should kiss, no, but she should kiss, logically. your heart is always with me, you are my city, my dream, you light the lanterns, the neva lights, your sky is where you spread your money, sbp is my family, hello, i love you. with you, it comes close and familiar to me, the avenues of the soda street, it has become a wonderful, kind home for me, a city of fairy tales and dreams, i love wandering around st. petersburg admiring the beauty, you gently pull the heart of your country to flow with my hand, heart you always drink with me, you are my city, my dream, you light the external lanterns. poppies, perekaz of your neva, where will you open the bridges, sbb my family, vicere, i love you, they are fast of everyone, they are crushing, the warm light will warm me, you are in my heart, you know, i am yours, and this... 350 points , letter f, come on, steal the drum, what are you doing? i work as a research assistant at the research institute of the federal penitentiary service , my fathers, what are you researching there? leonid arkadyevich, i write poetry, allow me to read my own poem. come on, buddy. every friday evening, with the whole family in front of the screen, we have been watching the program since the nineties. during all this time there have been many guests here, gifts of laughter and unraveled words. you always talk about miracles with a smile. you welcome us, the townspeople, with warmth, we are all happy to be here today, in fact, the mood is great, let's spin the drum. i brought gifts from marshansk with me, my city is small, but with a wide soul, it is famous for its black soil, our river, they love you immensely, you are dear to everyone, prospers, may your gift live on, to you we wish you health, respect and honor, good prospects for you, good luck, let good luck lead you, we thank you for everything, leonid, gifts to the studio. the director of the bakery confectionery plant, vyacheslav zotnikov, gave you a loaf of bread, as well as gingerbread. as a gift, field of miracles is a painting by gabriel romanovich derzhavin, our first. tambov governor, also books about the masterpieces of the marshansky region, about our forestry, and the ministry of culture of the tambov region, will present you books about the tambov region, about our region, published for the anniversary of sergei vasilyevich rakhmanin from capital show field of miracles, from channel one, gifts from the third three players to the studio, gifts. i gave it to you, i would like to give it now too, since i represent the sport, i myself am an athlete, a professional fighter, i would like to give you a kimano for jujutsu, that’s why i am the blackest belt in jujutsu, and shingard are gloves for funny martial arts, and of course the health basket is also here, i want to convey greetings to my husband, sons, relatives, hello everyone, i love you all very much, yaksha, znamy hello everyone, thank you a big thank you to leonid arkadivich for the wonderful mood, for the wonderful broadcast, the atmosphere, wonderful, i didn’t expect it, i say a big hello to everyone, and you were with us capital show field of miracles, the finale, what kind, please, here is the task for the final round in the 19th century. in the north of russia, a person who liked to take a steam bath in a bathhouse had a humorous nickname, what, 800 points, letter, but of course, please, i can’t suggest anything, the only thing i can suggest is to remember the sensations of a real bathhouse, 400 points letter o, open. remember the feelings, all my own, i can only speak about this, hard bath, oh, steam, bless you, 400 points, letter nht in, 350 points, letter l, please, sensations, sensations, well, i have absolutely pleasant sensations from the bathhouse, no, that’s understandable, but well, i entered the steam room, and then right there , i covered it with a cloth, and so... well , with a chill from the inside, when the cold comes out, i didn’t say, you leave the bathhouse into the snow, i said, you enter the steam room, so please forgiveness, remember, come on, my soul, entered the steam room, entered the steam room, 550 points, letter, yes, letter b, let's continue the conversation, how do you feel as soon as you entered the steam room, haven't sat down to steam yet? just walked in, oh, how it hit me, the feeling of 750 points, letter, letter and, we continue the conversation, and then it’s beauty, climbing on the shelves, oh, a wonderful thing, ehma, but first straight, the end, and 350 points, letter, and i i think this is the city forward, let's listen to this silence, let's breathe in the mountain air deepl
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president for policies that based on your experience, what would you anticipate the priorities and then n n n the nonmilitary tools like diplomacy and economic development and as part of the strategy? >> let me reiterate i do not speak for the president so my views are that we have those former cabinet members that have served and have a pretty good idea that america's first approach but other issues that we face. but the next administration coming to national security and diplomacy around the globe, there are 5 areas that i think are from day number 1. and in my lifetime talk about national security it almost always starts a conversation about overseeing the events and how those are impacting national security. that is an okay conversation to have. 1 thing the trump administration decided to change is let's talk about the sovereignty of our borders and security of our borders talking about national security of american start with borders with the historic border crisis under control is priority number 1 you could talk about asylum and all of these terms but if you just look at the national s
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soldiers, a company 30 troops from the share on a routine meeting with village elders. law mean usually n, n, a total, send me an easy don't. a visa health region. hi, acceptance. and i'm here to plan with you whatever you do. do not watch my new show seriously. why watch something that's so different opinions that he won't get anywhere else to give it. please do have the state department to see i a weapons, bankers, multi 1000000000 dollar corporations. choose your facts for you. go ahead. change and whatever you do, don't want my show stay main street because i'm probably going to make you comfortable. my show is called stretching time. but again, you probably don't want to watch it because it might just change the way you take a fresh look around. there's a life kaleidoscopic, isn't just a shifted reality distortion, by how us to do vision with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse really one say better wills, and is it just as a chosen few fractured images presented to this? but can you see through their illusion going underground? can the the more i see what's goi
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n. n was phones that says as well as ami is the most moral in the world. so how does that stand off given the thousands of children it's killed and it's ongoing war on garza. this is inside story, the hello there and welcome to the program. i'm laura kyle. the united nations is set to announce the addition of israel.
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n. using the blacklist, and i'm just asking how many children did the u. n. q, and how many children did this? right? and that's a better example of that is a get in the today when we've got the as way the army rescue in full concepts from inside goals are in the process, killing, moving a 150 people. that number is rising rapidly and yes, it is. well, we're just saying celebrations, nothing. we all have going to meet them in the hospital. are you concerned that this news is going to drown out the news about the blacklist these already did already. first of all, the news about the blakely start or was more spread abroad that in israel, the media in the service of the patient, i think the service of the war voluntarily. so does do anything possible to make these really speak good about themselves and not to bother them resulted kind of unpleasant news. story for sure is right away. 1 with dixie, it says to the release of the 4 hostages, which is by itself a great thing and they're very heavy bay for the for municipal each is really but stand now some others,
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n. using the black police. and i'm just asking how many children did the u. n. q. and how many children did this read key? and there's a better example of that is a get in the today when we've got these really ami rescue in full concepts from inside calls are in the process, killing, moving a 150 people. that number is rising rapidly and yes, it is. well, we're just saying celebrations, mess and you all have going to meet them and hospital. are you concerned? that's this news is going to drown out the news about the blacklist the, the ready. if the, the, the 1st of all the news about the black place, the order is more spread abroad than in israel, the media in the service of the patient and in the service of the war voluntarily. so does do anything possible to make these ladies feel good about themselves and not to bother them is all kind of unpleasant news. story for sure is ready to read . our dicks it says to the release of the 4 stages, which is by itself, a great thing and they're very every day for the, for municipal each isn't any but stand now some others. but these one does not see the others, th
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n g o. allies has demonstrated that there are, on one hand, the interests of the georgian people who are represented by the georgia dream party . and on the other hand, the opposition and the n g o allies acting in the interest of foreign countries. clearly, united states has been to everybody's a internal affairs and we've seen this time. and again, we saw us involvement sag, going, going back the 2004. and then we'll see you as well as in ukraine the united states. and again, this is meant to contain russia ultimately, again, to try and guide these countries. georgia was to do that. what's the pass? that's legislation, that's their prerogative. but for the united states then to come in externally as well as the e u. n. n interfere and the internal deliberations of another country, i think is an outrage whether or not you agree with the law. we would not like it. if someone came in and try to dictate to us about how to kind of pass our legislation, we tell them to take a hike. this is direct interference in the um, in, in, in the consent of governments. internal affairs, you know, very, very serious way. we, you start threatening the lawmakers with sanctions because of a law like united states doesn't like that. this outrages and bach, kevin russia, had american experts on cyber and information will affect kevin. and they said me so easy used to work for the us government now who lives in russia. this is a story the, my russian passport is to me. i love it here, and i have no desire to move back to the united states. the i work for the united states department of defense, their cyber command unit. and i developed a systems for doing propaganda computerized systems and did a lot of training for them
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n. n was agency has described the texas traffic situation. this is gauze assist you yesterday. remnants of a life once lived, nothing quite per pads. you, especially if you knew her before these people's homes favorite cafe step hawks, the schools gone, destruction everywhere of life, a place a time, a culture from the inside out aside from the desk. and this was a more than 200 a day, the war old. so bold about the little crisis, the world will help organize it. who says that moving a 1000 children under the age of 5, currently salva, from mountain the cushion in the region. there are also it's available to show that if you and one that hall from 1000 in time population, that's about a 1000000 people are at risk of starvation. you might say was a hit, a somebody says that honda has an only use as. ready weapon, but is there any forces the stuff ation is amongst the oldest weapons of war, you know, from the roman times to modern was and conflicts have been created and hunger has been capitalized for strategic purposes, right. if we look at ha
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n n. now we have what i'm just removing the to the center. i'm not going to go. so you got the level 2 new bloom and even the color because of the name. it doesn't let me see that the best could have been made up the pinnacle door for the flight to the domain slash if that's what i thought it might as i'm so go to the apple 975 single pulled enough. well ma'am, it does. most of the stuff that i need to set up the process so i needed to swap the books with somebody. let's get anything of a physical on a bus. well, some new people go to books. i've got a can e and then maybe that evaluated the progress is go down for just a moment. the young people on the hope you're with the one where not one and they meet all the goals and it's about them in the the, you know, the 1st is that a brother, matt, because the guy who does that mean they start off talking to support as well, like the, the c one to present the subject duplicate to the go for that the to, to pass the but the good for thought any, the guys, what's it though didn't seem like you guys have moved on use. let's use the bicycle, they'll. nobody's, it goes to the window. could you defend the bathroom? the deposit is seen at the adult. patrick, you to go for the and i give you the message. clearly the device. yeah. you know, for a phone call, but i didn't thought in cities a bit until i got into the mac, the part to bring the good news produces nearby for me to back the number of people in the, near the, for the, on the back. you know, i'm maybe finding them on the demo now if i did try it out for my, for me, cause it didn't necessarily mo, and if i'm gonna do a bunch of the, the circuit bowl in front of the side of on don't, don't read done. i didn't the but i still didn't view involved. do you happen a little bit? i'm minimum what you want to and then we also thought these are the men feel for the above. you know a light going to get it. i'll come by the way it for an upcoming apple for the must have on file. did you mention was there? what are the now why don't you don't want your phone for tomorrow after i change? even so you've been on the, for the visit for most of the month or both in the sort of up to fit your much so what did the buses step up to put them in the sauce? you know, but it could be in need to pull up a little bit for me to send us a list of jennifer the to do it. but the moment the switch up is it going to stick it pumped it to just simple digit the switchover behind places for busy instead of interest could you be just about finding the dates that you have about. but as you put them into the main domain, you also cook comes to the g, e for informing them of to go with you. and i'm not sure was that, that sounds good for me to put, you know, i've actually been out of this thing with the see like this to put them to the c. c, settlement seat up and uh they can let it go into a bit low level, but with people who use that to say, we do this as you would have been to see people just as it is when you get to pick up those in the future. if you come on a status, i've got to pick that up and the reason why i shop it posted by the developers of it, solicit me that it will be with us luck as me that the basis with me to the service yet. but as often as the bus, the city don't do great, but salter to be easy because the what it was this is you see the thing for myself besides, if it was up in this way, it would be i do for you. and that's easy because to us it. so look this up. so look it up to 62 to live when i did you put the with my left, but i'm going to be to come up with you to meet the metro 50 for submit that to me. you suggest us a, b, c to just take the click. let's see. thought is it the somebody that they see the full studies? it could be a much less. it could be picky. and on the side, the small to see that means the you see some subset of put them on the seat difficult? yes. this is this a truancy tennessee? was it was it is a predictable good. you can to it's a disability. this is a tabletop. so could you just talk to sort of balancing suited to motivate trauma. but it as this is an issue, so that i thought also. so let's see. so so what if, if this is that it shows about that it was ok to go back to make you such a lovely chapter number 25. yeah, mostly. what about the $1.00 to $1.00 with the local bro. but question. we don't get them, but don't think i was able to go out doing just as much as you see is the only one that is on his own with my health is so me get the fuck says blow something. what does that gilding my legs on fuzzy me? i suppose, to book the book to well, i book is that there's all possible is it is, i mean, talk to the purpose if i tell you about, but let's do the 2. does it 1st look like it? uh so the like the private much the month to month i don't go to the is the yeah, it will do that. i will give you the whole more you was you what we what you got. this will come up that says again and again, you know, how really, you know, why you was the subject to be view. what was that? the the note on the internet. i live in the goodness. are you going to the new year for you? on the the the national that they are doing again, also with the message now from seeing if that you found in the scene of the dc not dot i z dot dining open it to you one me see, i didn't, and i sit and they sit in a more ye, me and a bone on and off will say the, i literally thought i knew the city or get him. i was sitting the initiative mortgage through my mit don, you for your name, my credential. you can say that junior learning in a new new discount got to near fucking now. and if you do, morgan, i'm one of them. i'm done and do some news. net dental dental. and i feel like i've been one model for your name in new york on a case you might be a new book is or is war machine is decimating entire households and it has the words of those survived. and with the help of the palestinian journalists, phone lines tells the heralding story of 3 families and investigates us complicity and the world's most brutal in decades. the night old and biden's war on has talked to on a jersey, the members of thailand's most notorious gang captured in caged at last. gangs of monkeys took control of the city in central time in several years ago. stopped a tourist treats during the cove. it pandemic, they over and shop some businesses, stores and own is for payment and food. but now the at the lowest cost for their incarceration begins. however, documentation and sterilization refreshing to mock their arrival in jail tattoos or a vital part the prison like. and then it's just as true for these monkeys as they get their id numbers, place to the page forever. so we look at the world still placement stories had a really good business in trade, whether you were paying union, global markets, and economies, and small businesses. economic problems. street addresses kindly be fixed to understand how it affects the 9th. counting the cost on al jazeera, the what you all just bear with me. 70 roman in the reminder of all top news, stories must protest against the government's plan, tax reforms all taking place across kenya. this is the thing you need, the company, my writing, the police have been firing, take guns and using war to come into dispatch crowds rally. they pile them into the controversial beside people to down finance. bill is heading back to m p similar to page it introduces new taxes and levies that would increase the price of basic goods like bread, the hundreds of demonstrations, boxed in different cities against the proposed changes. these are the scenes in elder at present when he moved his hometown, not protests to say the tax increases will have the economy and make it hot of the canyons to make ends meet for the president says that needed to boost government revenue and reduce borrowing to all sorts of thoughts, i think i'll just say we're, that's who dollars power minutes is up in support. force of taking control of philip. it's the capital of west quotas on states, south west of the capital, call to fighting in a sled between the sudanese army of the office. at last, in several hours, before the army report to the withdrew from the city, the power ministry group took control of government and military headquarters. the thousands have been killed and millions displaced in the conflict between the army and the recess. is ali tanks and troops are pushing deep into the roughest city. that being backed by will, plains and dry ends, helping the advance not palestinians say, tangs have moved into at least 5 neighborhoods overnight. east of rafa is really strikes killed at least 10 people. 30 others were injured. casualties are also reported in unblocked c, a so called evacuation side, that many of the injured have been taken to the european hospital in con units, which is over the over crowded. and the results strikes also reported in the news and central areas of district. russia's present black commit. putin was in vietnam on a state visit. now he's being welcomed by the president total um to the presidential policy in hawaii boots and says the russian companies are ready to invest in liquefied natural gas projects. in vietnam. the meeting follows a visit to north korea web page and signed the defense deal with the leader kim jong, when you called it a stories on our website to thousands of adults come subjected to throughout the day. i'll be back with monique, and then these are interested in a half last time that we would tend to witness here on out to 0 of the people up to this for that id. have to but i was, i knew the biggest in the loop as to yeah. yeah. you too. bye. yeah. well enough. well not in the long as the photos you know, forgot to take off the photo to know if that's the i just mentioned like i 5, i'm not familiar with the animal as you go into the can no longer on the what was really moses and then if it, if it's digital s a d the where's the mass of guns use okey d. c? it will be will be the for dumping pump up with the code to the device instead of what it is. it's got this, we bought the student today. that's the one to show. yes, we can go to get us before jump on what the sol the subject of looking to book, which of the things what you saw was that the discussion with the the to the see the a setup wizard. besides, you do the comforting and give it to me because you don't need to do you? do you feel welcome to to know why should we we back it up to me cuz the other 2 are simple. hm. exactly. so simple. you're probably probably the fact was you, it says how much you've been such a good one. that's why that's the issue of it. so let's the use one of them much unless you come to the screen says says says mofas's says it says that the image that says no for me to i do 12 to the top. so comes exclusive color to the easy think of it. okay. so, but these of the simple the wi directly is a duty to prove any you see who is putting a stop at the lead to sealed it up if possible to go to court comes over to, to, to contact the problem is he's fine. so when it's time to look inside, did this what he ended up? i mean this on silva as good this does. did this welcome, so it'd be fine. i think the problem was i think the for me to be going to push it as i've been to the, from the, from the the top to leave. you don't want somebody's inside. i'm going to send you an updated on the 31st to pay off the front trucks. a new one with all those see printing preference to that one. in the meantime, one of the, as the gas or the image to be done us. a lot of these things you supervisor, mrs. she says, you, alexis, as you saw this national kid show that we thought that was, it doesn't just the ship this it gives you the general frankie barton raleigh, simple the most attention. would you be the most fees of the guys from the speakers policy? did you need a policy to use it? what would that make your thoughts introduce a pc? subdivision of this most eventually varies your thoughts. so that's all you got to do. stop on much if you apply the most often. so give you a bunch of came up, you guys should be that you should be able to give the most part this could you possibly if you're not successful. so it gives you both. so focusing, i said also for the side that i didn't send you to the 2nd guess of this sort of does a bit so i'm on the left. so thank you. talk to you to do this stuff on to secret shows on. is that gold? no, not going on the floor. she would you be going to be on a monday? do you allow me to come to the dealers? you stop with the shipment here? no. she says she remote desktop. so he has to click full. could you tell me to do to be shipped to 000 from the countries, indigo mazda countries, just dump the boss honestly, that shows it to them. who do some of the falls, you'd probably be able to do some of the live. did you know that? yup. just tech did that comes with it. yeah. because you so point you don't want this experience because you, i'd be should i disagree the nephew on difficult? i don't to go to any such good. you know, this, that goes on or by selected by monday, the 12th, i'll get you back on the debate. keep them is what you do shoot. you haven't done that. something that the vision might visiting us. you get this also you can go to circle say, because you do need a city to put it on go for i didn't knew to finish the product as simple as long just to see know what the best when the room she i see what your memo brocly any suit you enter already 2 percent on the ultimate i think i don't people some dollars because he shuts it and dr. purcell gives you the fish, i guess, has your message to shiver to, to a see the so butcher consortia. okay . take care of the last year in this case, is that, but it didn't necessarily to don't hear back going to have a good candidate been n unplugged is going to shift us health issues to kind of show what or pause if they can see you go dishes unless the for me or send me is a one. if i wanted to stay there to take this and shuffle cuz your thought this is helpful either patillo just issue a present that guess who gets key, which is at the front door. okay. she was given for time to process, so i'm going to nickel and if i pay one minute, i can only should to petition of interest. so property should have posted, i guess, histories pushes this, i guess. okay, so i see a part of the issue of the ship to to get the glasses on and it gives us to the point to, to ship them to constitute that to this to say the ship look based on say are looking soon, pursuing the big is the condition of the police are into effect where there should be so as i say, that's really easy to see, to stick to go on to put the tests out. the one guy allows you to discuss your frontier. she flips the test. when i remember this, i didn't mention this s
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please a n t o n s o n t o n is actually the correct spelling that was from major general alfred pleasonton was a clerical error. it never changed. how about that? we're going to go into the museum shortly, talk a little bit more about the history here. we're going to learn about a horse named gus, of all things. that's coming up shortly. but for now, let's send it back to andre. >> a horse named gus. not ed. just to be clear, no, no, it's all gus. no. and by the way, they said a type a typographical error at the us postal service is the reason that the letter got changed from an a to an o or. excuse me, an o to an a, and now we have pleasanton. so that's the story. at least for now. frank, thank you so much. we'll check back in with you a little bit later, to talk to the folks over at the museum. meantime, claudine wong, she is back over at the park with the east bay groove line to talk a little bit more about the folks there. and we understand that joey torres is also on percussions there with the band today. but you're joining us, claudine, with with another member of the band. tell us a
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p n d n d. i pod or bob bar today is victory and it should victory of the world's largest democracy. was that by a take a look at the latest results of a national democratic alliance led by mister modi's nationalist b. j. p is ahead and on cost with around 293 of the 543 seats in palm. and they'll position in the alliance, which includes the what's dominant congress policy looks to have one around $233.00 seats. so these results would leave modi's pocket, well short of the overwhelming majority predicted by exit polls as well. the does, the dw, debbie bureau chiefs, under pets, us man told us to be j. p suffered significant losses in some regions. i mean, you know, to form a government in india, any pa to or alliance needs to cross the threshold of 272 seats. mind you in 2019. and the last general elections, they beach a p loan 1303 seats. this is not the case this time around. they have lost quite a few numbers of states and nowhere is this kiera. then in the state of top side dish or your p fo
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you asked what n + n is. you are an amazing child.nk of that as studying, right? it's something that you love and it just comes easy to you. >> yeah, of course. i'm studying for language class, history class, civics class, the things that i actually struggle with. >> how old is your brother? >> he's 21. he's studying qwantum physics. you help each other with your homework? >> sort of. i think he helps me. >> that's sweet. that's sweet. you plan to graduate college at 16 years old. is that right? >> i plan to graduate at 14 years old and get my ph.d. at 16. >> what do you like to do outside math and physics? >> so, of course, what i love doing is just relaxing like any other 12-year-old would do. playing with my brother or just playing by myself. playing board games, chess, scrabble. doesn't really matter. working on my vegetable garden. whatever i have to myself. of course, sometimes you have to get lost in the rabbit holes that are, for example, social media or games. but i find getting addicted to them only harms your positivity and
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was supposed to be a member of different n u. n. convention and other inclination conventions on schumacher right issues and we are reporting time by time is needed on these issues. and of course, of our legal how to say the basic is the uh we can say uh, the normal full answering to any questions from any international call rayshawn. so our partners and we are doing our best in order to provide the high level of human right. how to say stand us for our people in our country. and we choose on these issues very uh, high level, i can say is active change taking place in the country because human rights organizations would tend to disagree with you this report. i'm quoting this only just last yet you you'll, you'll see unfortunately, some intonation i see you somewhere, right? non government organizations, for example. they can not understand our situation. they have to understand that we are standing here face to face with the one of the global centers of terrorism extremism drop trafficking, fuel month traffic in uh, i mean the neig
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can't say we didn't warnyear n n if the media was honest, it y would have never gotte mn this far. >>io senator j.d. vance, ons on the vp shortlist, joins us now. >>r wh so suddenlyso sud they're surprised joe biden doesn't have what it takes. are you buying that senatodenlee >> no, not at all, jesse. i mean, you really hit the nail on the head this is a massive scandal where for years now the media has lied to thewhat american people about what is obvious. and it has been obviou is for a very long time. >> and now they're trying to pivot because they realizebie that joe biden had such a disastrous performance that he's non astrousw a massive political problem not just for himself, but forl democratic senators, democratic house candidates. and they want to toss this guy overboarates d because now the american people see what has been obvious se conservatives and republicans and close watchers of joe biden for a long time. d closrsi think it's also impor, jesse, to point out here that the contrast really matters here. >> it's not just that joe biden had a disastrous debat mac performan
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announcer: and now, "bbc news" n washington. n this is "bbc world news america."'s top diplomat and israel's defense minister meet in washington for talks on gaza and regional tensions. we speak to the daughter of an american couple who were among the 1300 people who died at the hajj pilgrimage. the fight against fentanyl. the u.s. treasury undersecretary tells the bbc about the impact of fresh sanctions on drug cartels. ♪ caitriona: hello. you are very welcome to "world news america." the israeli defense minister is here in washington for talks on the war in gaza, and on escalating tensions between -- with hezbollah. he reiterated his country's commitment to bring back hostages from gaza. he urged continued close cooperation with the u.s., despite recent public disagreements. the defense minister metta cia chief bill burns who has been a key player in cease-fire negotiations between israel and hamas. he then held talks with u.s. secretary of state antony blinken on a wide range of issues, according to the departments spokesperson. >> number one, our ongoing commi
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announcer: and now, "bbc news" n washington. n this is "bbc world news america."elects its first female president following an election cycle mark by violence and crime. israel announces the deaths of four hostages in captivity as pressure mounts on israel and hamas to accept the latest cease-fire plan. a jurist morning for the trial of u.s. president biden's son hunter on gun charges. ♪ welcome to "world news america." it has been in a historic day in mexico where claudia sheinbaum was elected as the first woman president. sheinbaum claimed the presidency in a landslide victory, winning 60% of the vote, 30 points ahead of her main rival. was president joe biden called claudia sheinbaum to congratulate her on the victory and said in a statement "i look forward to working closely with president-elect sheinbaum in the spirit of partnership and friendship that reflects the enduring bonds between our two countries." he went on to say "i also congratulate the mexican people for conducting a successful democratic electoral process involving races for more than 20,000 po
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as commander-in-cef we saw the catastrophic withdrawal from afghanistan, and absolute absolute■n black mark n of the world views america. we then saw israel our most precious allynder attack from the vicious iranian backed hamas terrorists, leading to theewish people since a holocaust. and what have we seen from j den? what have we seen from this white house? we have seen and that is you han our most president trump, if you lookefel from the white house, it was■u president trump, the abraham accords, the embassy to jerusalem, support for israel, the iron dome support. had the opportunity to deliver remarks in the jerusalem room at the knesset, and a very proud of my congress, i am proud to be a lifetime supporter o israel. i had the opportunity -- [applause] and i know you are as well. and america is as well. i had the opportunity to travel to israel when itunity to travel when i was a young professional, and i been there many times as a member of congress. and it is more important than ever that the united states, that america shows moral leadership and standing with israel. er should be no
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n n whatever certainly nt many capital ships. so it's it's really a landing kind of operation, of course, there's 11,590 aircraft, 156,000 amphibious troops, with six plus divisions scheduled to land somewhere on our beaches on d-day. well, you'll notice. yes, the of of assault troops, american, but not the majority. and that is definitely worth notice that the canadian third division, how large it is and then the british complement there too so each one of these divisions requires hundred and 70,000 tons of shipping and about 30 plus ships just to move from england to normandy you just step back and think about that, that shipping capacityve craig symonds makes that point so well everything from shipping everything we can do everything that we can do in terms of resupply. it all comes from shipping and being able to control these sea lanes. the ships in turn have to secure, which is where the air power comes into the equation too on many levels as well. all of this is a team effort which ultimately the ground troops have the kind of lead role in order to take the ground and or ultimately liberate france. so for the us, the■2 other map i wanted to show you to this is the time. this is how the american planners looked at it. you can the follow on divisions to that you're going to have involved in here so you saw just the shipping needed for the assault. this is for the reinforcing complement the ninth and fourth infantry divisions that are coming in at utah beach or ninth and 90th excuse me. the fourth leads the way the third armored division, 30th infantry division, second armored second infantry division, all to be follow on forces that in omaha beach that's just the divisions, much less that's needed to support , it's just kind of you'll notice two the, the code word top secret bigot in in the planning for the norman invasion that was like the key word that meant you're briefed in to this great secret of where and when in the plan that i dare say we wouldn't use that term now. i hope we wouldn't. it's so weird to look at that, you know, but it's like that's . allied soldiers then at that stage, you know, as you're getting into late, may begin to cluster in one of their called their marshaling areas or they're often just called sausages because they look like sausages on a map and all over southern england, you've got american soldiers waiting for the word to go. and they've really been trained to fine edge by this point. there's isn't much more they can do to prepare. so pass the time with card games, dice games, bull sessions, movies, sports, final preparation. runs, you know, like of the nature of i think i'll clean my rifle for the 50th time, you know, let's make sure i have enough grenades that they're already here. do i have crash missions or, you know, you know how that would i mean, it's just 100 things you could be checking on. so the food they' eat this point is really good. and disquieting in a weird sort of way. there's all these sort of ening up for the kill jokes. so what kind of food? well, as lieutenant edward jones, a recon soldier, the 29th infantry division slated to omaha beach, said he well, it's the finest any of us have seen eaten since we left the us white. bread, ice cream steaks, chicken. it just sounds wonderful, doesn't it? you have to have a settled enough stomach order to eat it. if you're thinking ahead, you're wondering and you're queasy. you're nervous about what? what's ahead may not necessarily enjoy it. you know. so some did, some didn't. there's enormous tension, of course, coursing the the sausages, as you might imagine. and this manifests in fights are, after all, young men train to this fever and whatnot. and so, you know, they're going to fight at the drop of a hat especially among the paratroopers who were also even fighting this more than than many of the amphibious troops. but weird stuff was happening to colonel russell read reader was the commander of the the 12th infantry regiment read reader was a really he's going to become a west point legend on many but readers leading an infantry regiment at this point that's slated to go in at utah beach as part of the fourth division. so one day a psychiatrist comes and says, i've got orders to examine every of your men who's supposed to be on in this invasion. he's like, now, you know, what are you going to do with these guys? and so he somehow, you know, i guess interviews guy as he goes through and does is a psychopath and he can't go on this operation and raide i the w him they've been working with him and so raeder stood up for this guy and said he went to his commander, major general raymond tubby barton, and said, hey, can you tell the psychiatrist back off here? and he did. so it was just weird, things like that that you'd never envision as a commander that that reflects something of the jumpy units of the moment? i think so no one was allowed in or out of theiers have been brid they were, quote bigoted by now. right. so they they knew, you know, when and where they're supposed to hit. and so security's really armed guards outside the fence usually with thompsosu guns. so you're kind of penned in almost like a prisoner. some of the men, of course, inevitably got antsy, tried to get out. a couple of anecdotes along those lines near salt, be private. duane burns and a buddy from the company, five of parachute infantry, 82nd airborne division got out of their sausage and they're just walking around outside in the local area looking for a pub. know i know. that'll shock everybody. soldiers looking to drink, y know. and so along this command car and in it was, brigadier general james gavin, who was the course assistant commander, a legend already in the 82nd airborne and i think this this really is an insight into gavin does he chew these guys out? does he remote or whatever? he's he just sort of jokes with them like, you know, hey, what are you guys doing out here? you know, they come up with this -- and bull story and he says, do me a favor, go back to captain so-and-so. he knew their company commander and tell him. no one's supposed to be out of the marshaling area and. these two guys are only too happy toave to comply. and they go back and i just it's an interesting kind of leadership moment. when of the tension, wouldn't you be thinking you just want to jump down their throats. gavin doesn't do that in another instance, different leader at a lower level kind of does. and you can kind of understand why two senior ncos from i think it's the company first engineer combat battalion which is part of the famous big red one, first infantry division going in at omaha beach under captain charles murphy, two of these senior ncos. what you have known better left their marshaling and actually arranged to hook up with their british girlfriends. so that could be a real secrecy problem, couldn'tmurphy catchese says, you guys are just signed your death warrants. i'm going in with the initial waves as a kind recon thing, and you're coming along with me as orderlies. and he busted them down and indeed, one of them was killed, you know, so just just weird sort tension kind of stuff is happening at this point, of course, some of the soldiers, like like this one, private johnny dom, had premonitions of death on the eve of the invasion private dom, who was in the company five villages parachute infantry. how you conversation with a with a friend his name ed volkov foley and dom was really and edd says dom i'm going to die tomorrow. and tries to talk him out of it. he couldn't be dissuaded, couldn't at all. and unfortunately, he's right about the outcome, if not the timing. dom was killed on june 8th, 1944. so you have these weird instances where people have these premonitions. of course, have others where people had premonitions and they didn't die, you know. so it's just this mixture. but it's part of the it speaks to the emotion of the moment. think, you know, how people are reacting to this. so no, of course, is more nervous than gener eisenhower, who you see there in the in the middle with his command team. he has picked june 5th, of course is the original invasion date. he famously to postpone it because of the weather and in addition to all the other burdens he's carrying, he's now got to worry about whether or not to launch, you know, the airborne assault itself. so here is sir trafford, liam the air commander for operation overlord arman invasin becomes known and lee mallory had come he really urged him to to call off the parachute landings, the airborne landings and he says we're just going to take terrible, devastating casualties. and know these are some of our best troops, all of them are volunteers. they're very much soldiers, in a way. and he's like they're going to be wasted. and i want it on the record. and just think of the how ominous it would be. you know, this is your key one of your key people, your aerial expert, who says, i want it on the record, the written r this. so i have kind of step back and reconser this. and he goes to the commander, the two us airborne divisions, max taylor 101st, and matthew ridgway 82nd asked them about it. yes, general bradley omar bradley, who's the commander of the first army, the highest ranking american ground commander. he asks the corps commander. corps, j. lawton collins will one day be army chief of staff as well. and he says, what do you think about? and they say, i'm sorry, we just have to do this utah beach is not feasible without the airborne landings and i don't think lee miller is right. i don't think it's to be as bad as he says. but we're going to have to do this. but imagine the trauma of that, of having to wrestle that for for several days now, lee miller had a reputation, something of an alarmist. so that's another factor, too. and it's not as if eisenhower didn't trust him, but he's also taking all these other pieces of into place and ultimately a decision as he must, you know, so famously, of course, he decides, go ahead with it. and then, of course, on top of that weather and all that situation to one little interesting wrinkle about the weather. one of the reasons why eisenhower was able to make decision as well as he does is, he's got pretty good weather data. of course, from an incredibly competent staff. that's true. we all know about that group captain stagg and other folks who are briefing him. yes but stagg and their guys are tting data from weather stations out in the north atlantic, particularly on the western of ireland, that the allies, because they won the battle of the atlantic again, here is the importance of sea power to this holy and also good, reliable weather of sort of down gatherers who were getting that up to eisenhower's headquarters. so it allows them to make that educated decision to launch the invasion on six after much deliberation course. and we all know that that works out at the time. boy, it had to be tough, right? so when he makes that decision in the ships that are underway, the troops are aboard. many of them now seasick once they're aboard, of course. army is amping up. of course, eisenhower being eisenhower. he decides, got to look these guys in the eye if he's sending to their deaths. they later say that, knowing this terrible danger to him. he goes to greenham common, the five second parachute infantry regiment, first airborne moves among the soldiers, you know, doing what he does best, quite often chatting, commiserating, demonstrating his incredible as you know, person to person, command there in a way. and he's, you know, he's there to buck up their morale. but really, it's kind of the other way around, right. some of them will say, now, general, don't worry, we're going to do this. we're going to get this done for you. this is the most famous image, one of the most famous images of d-day, of course, he's talking to lieutenant wallace strobel right here, who is from as i understand it, one of the back stories behind this, at least strobel later say it looks like they're talking to some military hard core thing. you know, you know, you've got to fight germans when you get a show or whatever. but instead they're talking about fly fishing, you know, casting the rod, you know, because eisenhower a fly fishing in michigan, you know, so so they're they are just kind of talking about whatever comes to mind. and he's just having that presence. and, of course famously s■ticks around until the planes take off as tears in his eyes when. he's asked about it 20 years later by walter cronkite. you know, basically the gist of what he says as well, you know, i mean, you'd have to not be a human being, not to vesituation. and then, of course, he's right, you know, so at one such airfield where again you have this kind of, you know, pent up tension, this man, lieutenant colonel robert woolverton, who's the commander of third battalion, five or six parachute infantry, 101st as a really, i think, very poignant and farewell address to his troops. they gathered in an orchard, laid some to their colonel. it was a man they love like a father. woolverton was a west point class of 1938. he them to kneel and pray with him. and he said, god almighty, in a few short hours we'll be in battle with enemy. we don't ask. favors are indulgent to use us as instruments for the right and an aid to returning peace to the world. we only ask this if we must die. we die as men would die without complaining without pleading and safe and the feeling that we've done our best for what we believed. right. so there are a few moments of prayerful reflections. after woolverton concluded, and then 760 paratroopers rose as one march of their planes, quote, without a dry according sergeant robert webb. imagine the emotion of the moment, you know, as will overton, a trained them and led them and everything he meant to them and one of them later said as he knelt and prayed you could not have been more trusted and by the men in this battalion had he been the father of each one, i believe many of us would have followed through hell. and the sad reality was they dot third battalion five or six really had probably the most traumatic drop of all the airborne forces landed almost right on a german troop you know, german troop area. and woolverton tragically was killed in his harness before he could ever even touch soil of france, that he was there to. so woolverton himself was only had only hours to live when he when he led in that so the airborne drop, of course just to give you a basic overview relation to where utah beaches you see notice the importance of how you got to control those western sectors for the fourth division to advance inland and general maps know a little bit later this morning is really going cover in more depth the whole airborne story so i won't get too deeply into that except just to give you a sense of where the where are they going to land and how every one of those green dots represent some airborne stick drops in normandy. a stick is, basically a plane load of paratroopers. it could be 16 to 18, depending upon where and when we're talking about. so from the beginning, this drop was absolutely chaotic, a jumbled deadly mess. and germany engine aircraft fire is one of the main reasons. remember, these are transport planes that have no self sealing fuel tanks. they're not armed at all. very thin aluminum skin. these 47. they're slow. they're they fly low to to drop paratroopers at about, you know, anywhere about 500 feet, roughly something that they're very vulnerable. and the airborne divisions have been briefed by those on the aviation side saying, you know what, all the flak veterans gone, you're gonna be able to get in there. well, that wasn't true. and aircraft batteries are very much in. plus, it's cloudy it's foggy a lot of disorientation. so this is just one point i want to do, address what i think really unfair in our historical memory is that the paratroopers understandably, you know, blamed many of them. the transport pilots for these missed drops. so, you know, they didn't do their job. you know, they they scattered around and, you know, dropped in places we shouldn't have been. okay. but, you know, you're flying straight into deadly anti aircraft fire. i mean, that is necessarily the fault of the transport pilots. those flak batteries have not been suppressed properly. the intel is not correct. and you can fly straight into them, which is sort of the aviation equivalent of charging straight into the muzzle of the machine gun. yes, you can do that. but when those planes get shot down, the paratroopers are all going to be just as dead. so they take the sort of less bad option of scatterinwherever. it's a bad situation that they kind of make the most of. so it's a bit unfair i think to to blame them for the scattered drops. and and i think there's been a little bit of pushback against that in. some of the the normandy historiography by now basically once on the ground, obviously these guys have to fight for their lives and. one of the key objectives, of course, is senator gleaves, which you see right there. and they're right here. and you can see in relation to utah beach. all right. so sandberg leaves is important simply because it's a crossroads. any german wanting to get to utah beach probably has to go through there, especially when were.you consideer okay. so there's lot of fightg in around senator lees and it's one of the first towns liberated from the germans, of course, but there's this interesting little anecdote that i wanted to tell you about that there's a a in the five or fifth parachute infantry, which is dropping in around sam gleaves. there's 17 year old paratrooper named ken russell, and he's from the knoxville, tennessee area. he had left school early, join the army because he wanted to be in on the invasion of france. i mean, he's definitely thinking the long game in a way so here he is up as a paratrooper about to be dropped in. and it occurred to himefore jumped that his high school class back in knoxville, tennessee was probably graduating right at that sam time. and so true. i mean, when you think about even the time difference, his classmate are graduating even as he's jumping, as you put it oh lord they're jumping us into hell. jumping into sam eric. what he meant by that was that, of course, famously one of the buildings in sam or igloos had caught fire. it was still burning as these guys drop, there's one guy who was killed in his harness when his explosives basically are shot to pieces and he explodes into many pieces. unfortunately, there's two, two paratroopers from his stick that probably into the burning building. and of course, in russell's case, he lands on or near the church, the church and fights there. but it's just such an teresting convergence. and the other thing that's almost on an eerie is that russell will die 60 years later, almost the minute in 2004, on june 619, it's june six, 2004. just kind of a weird deal. so the the utah beach landings you see are going to be place right here. the was supposed to take place right up at lagoon dive reveal right there. you can see there's key causeways that are going to lead inland from utah beach. now the challenge you've got is as the map sort of indicates, many the areas near and around are flooded. they're inundated. germans have done that, obviously, to to impede allied vehicles. makes total sense. right so that's the challenge you have is how you're going to choke point on this beach, the prevention bombardment on the aerial side is arguably the most effective of. the entire normandy invasion. it's a medium b 26 bombers that they're going to bomb inside of 10,000 feet and. they are going to diminish the german defenses, the utah beach, quite substantially, quite accurate. and utah beach defenses already were not quite potent. as famously omaha beach. but in this case, of course, you're going to have, you know, just just sort of a lot of also people of different ethnic backgrounds. okay. so inorman invasion is an incree international event we've already sense that on the allied side. but just in general, the german army is not just it's all sorts of eastern european ers who are serving in the german armed forces, mainly as career people. here's your choice. slave labor or service in the german army is roster filler because the germans are hurting for manpower. so there's guys from georgia, not the state, but the country who are defending utah beach. there's ukrainians, there's russians and then of course, there's germans, too. it's it's a kind of a mixture. okay. uys, when they get bombed accurately, they're not too enthusiastic about staying and fighting. some of them really kind of traumatized in their bunkers and pillbox cases. it's just a mixture. okay. so finally, of course, it's time the lead troops to to invade, they come from the eighth infantry regiment. incredible unit. that's the fourth division. seasick, wet, nervous. the in their landing craft, they're packed in like if you're one of these guys, you probably get in your landing craft about two plus hours by now circling around trying to keep your footing wet, scared, overburdened. it's a great american tradition to overburden assault troops with with just too much, probably about, you know, 70 to 90 pounds worth of stuff. plus, when you get it's heavier, you know, you can imagine this so the the navy minesweepers have done a terrific of clearing a lot of the channel waters leading to the landing areas but they can't clear everything. so mines are a problem as you move in towards utah beach, there are a couple of what are called craft tanks or else ts this is what happens. i saw tanks blown 50 to 100 feet in the air. they tumbled. they were flip matchboxes looked to was broken into german artillery machine gun fire from the coast only added to the disarray. smancoast, of course, famously nlead assault troops of the eighth infantry hit here a mile south of the targeted. they hit it la madeleine, which if you ever been to utah beach precisely what i'm talking about. and that's where the museum is today and whatnot so they run into these aussies or georgians as i was just mentioning a moment ago, the americans kind of struggle off their landing craft, took shelter, a concrete seawall. so you have dunes and then a seawall and the dunes are some of the sea wall. so the are going to have to deal with the sea wall. so, again, like in omaha beach, you've got a combined assault with tanks, infantry, engineers all kind of doing their own thing here the best they can. one of the infantry men remembered we moved off as quickly as the weight we carried. love that quote because it's exactly right. each)h■k step was though a balld chain had been tied our ankles again. the great american tradition right you'd got to be carrying this stuff. and that's just the nature of this beast. it w
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n a n d, the country? the breakdown why asian economy, in particular, groups of, from the restriction, pulls up the, the idea of the, of, of these really moves in ms. a grad disagreement with p and in the it says it will be impossible to completely eliminate come up, come up. just say we're going to make how much disappears. it seems to throw in sign in the eyes of the public. how much is an idea? it's rooted in the hands of the people, the why the incentive is of use and the saw. now. also the story. russia has no need to consider a pre emptive use the nuclear weapons. however, any sorts of tackle in the country will the mess with a devastating response from us go. that's according to the inputs in speaking on thursday, out the roughly up his state visits to vietnam and the okay. like to like we are still thinking about how nuclear doctrine could be changed. we know that the potential adversary is working on new elements associated with lowering the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons in particular, ultra low power and explosive nuclear devices being developed. and we know that in expert circles in the west, the idea is that there's nothing terrible with using such weapons. it may not be terrible, but we must pay attention to this. we don't need a pre emptive strike yet, because in response to account to strike, the enemy will be guaranteed to be destroyed. while the main subject to that was probably one of the most important ones during this question and answer regarding the agreements, the new agreement on strategic cooperation that vladimir putin assigned with the leader of the d p r. k. came john own lot him or put and said that of moscow was not ruling out the potential of sending weapons to the dpr k on the basis of this new agreement. cubic foot facility is that the lowest who supply these weapons believe they are not that well with us. i said that we then reserve the right to supply weapons to other regions of the world. bearing in mind our agreements with the democratic people's republic of korea. i do not exclude this either and where they will end up next. we can also say in the same way here, the west supplies weapons to ukraine and says that they are out of its control. and it doesn't matter how they are used. we can also say that we have delivered something to someone, and then we have no control over their use. and let them think about this topic. the ukraine conflict was also discussed. there's no getting around that. russian president vladimir putin spoke about the heart of offensive, the reason harker of offensive by russian forces saying that there's, there are no plans to actually take or make an approach on the regional capital park of the reason why russian troops needed to take territory in that region is because is to basically put the ukrainian artillery positions farther away from civilian targets in russian territory. russian president also spoke about the russian nuclear, dr. and essentially because there are talks in the russian government about potentially revising it right now. the russian nuclear doctor and only allows for the launching of nuclear weapons in the event of displaying a retaliatory nuclear stripe. or in the event that the russian government's very existence is at stake. and vladimir putin said that it seems like the west is trying to accomplish just that, and you've city of the west is escalating the situation all the time. seems like they are counting on us to get scared at some point. they also say they want to achieve the strategic defeat of russia on the battlefield. what does this mean for russia? russia? this means the end of it state, which is what it means. this means the end of the 1000 year history of the russian state. i think this is clear to everyone to change and then the question arises, because, why should we be afraid? wouldn't it be best to completely accomplish our goals? he also spoke about the fact that the russian president doesn't really see the lensky last thing much longer than the 2nd, then the 1st half of next year in office because of the fact that he has absolutely lost his legitimacy. since his presidential term has expired, a free and you're, there is a decision from the constitutional court in 2015. what it is directly written that the president's term of office is 5 years. and that's all. it's just that the west doesn't want to change the lensky. now, the time is not right. it is obvious all the unpopular decisions, including lowering the conscription age will be blamed on him after that, they'll change it. so this political char that vladimir potent has been on in the dpr k in vietnam, had involved a lot of important negotiations. a lot of important documents were signed and this press conference essentially went through the outcomes of these historic events. and the main takeaways from what we can expect in the future as a result of these newly sealed agreements, as well as hillary clinton. so includes the size of mutual defense, pat, it's a loss of mind the dpi, okay? yeah, so, so the 1st thing, don't covey also, it doesn't job, but both personally, i am from, as he reiterated allegations, the russia, as allies have repeatedly denied arguments, that disagreement is also a sign of rushes desperation. i mean, they're reaching out to north korea missiles, which say they are still getting on the one that they don't have a lot of friends in the world. and they're trying to do everything they can to pull on the strings of the friends that they do have. and so i feel so good himself to know rozmini's and says it's is this, it says it should not be viewed as a threat, but rather as a well placed response to western policy. i think he's taking this step, the correct move and, and i have, you know, you should not be surprised by statements on that side. they do not rush. it doesn't want to be the 1st to use nuclear weapons. but if the exist, so the russian state is threaten, he will. now what is does it exist? most of the west threaten know their pride and their political appearance is threatened, but, but not the existence of, of the united states, not the existence of europe. maybe their reputations will be har. maybe they'll be huge changes even more so than we saw on the european elections, but, but the threats that are being made by the west, to, to russia, towards russia, verbally, as well as the escalation, militarily. it's uh uh, no, this statement is not the, i think i think it's well placed and it should be, it should not be taken as a bluff by the west because he does not for, he's been very patient and very diplomatic and in his procedures. a fluttering, but then also commented, also asked, who is it now certain that it might reconsider its current policy, unsolved supply, whether that's the case i was calling to the end result of the new comprehensive strategic treaty signed by putting on the dean p. okay. to me alone, rather than later. so i south too is decision would have on present repercussions for that country. a little to fortune somebody. sure. actually that would be a very big mistake. i hope that this will not happen. if it does, then we do will make decisions that are unlikely to please the code in south 3 and leadership. the beginning of the politics out for a positive and supply in play with the supervisor. and i find that in the slade there isn't. country is, let's just say so, but a bit suddenly diesel a to a policy, but more inside sales since february 2020, to solve a sent $900000000.00 to give in non lethal assistance. but the slides that south korean ministry export from grow significantly over the last 2 years before the crane config south with i know move in full amount into $7300000000.00. but since 2021, they have significantly increased reaching over 14000000000 last year. now this is primarily issue food multi $1000000000.00 deals with poland and the u. i switch on to be past their stockpiles. also, they were depleted by adding ating ukraine now and to assume a in off and also on washington. and 2 of the main, a done is to, to last year, poland receive an initial box of south through in tanks 5 to just add other equipment. so after it has since claimed that those 2 nations to be the ultimate uses or by the equipment, not any 3rd country, i always want to say it's a guy is a chair professor of silly child university. and he said the messages from south korea, i'm mixed up. there may be evidence of foul play. so very closely was uh, watched the uh, responses from our j to about the war events or participation of the war a do pray sometimes that very mix all the while hand to your patiently here some officials take great pride in the fact that the already supply the what i said with the munition travels up to the pieces, etc. i'll have the hands of the government itself has be more cautious about knots, taking actions, which may result e all favorable consequences for our trade. so i would say that i'm the, the extreme pressure from the united states, okay, must have already done something, even though they may not want to these behind all the traces. the still may want to say the opposite thing tried to hide the involvement. but the reality is that now that the situation of the korean peninsula is escalate to and both of the dpi, okay, support team are russia and our j supporting the was led to ukraine. maybe more and more of this, this is the new reality of the korean peninsula. the allows it will, prior towards the agency, very the needs of his own nato allies. for us, as he is desperate for ad defend system is russian. and both is involved that will bring you the story in detail a little later. and the program, the, the you have allows it is imposing is bus. i'm. so the games was really cool. 5 natural gas industry, the measure as part of the world full t as positive as vincent on most of the system, the resale a russian l, a dx both by other countries. and while mind could mean harming some economies in asia, you're being broke itself as make sure it can keep buying russian gas all take on to reach out. right. so lawson as the details. so the headline with these new sanctions is that the e u is now apparently going to do something really new and finally hit russian l n g. it may come as a surprise to some folks playing along at home that they weren't actually already doing that. in reality, they were wrapping up in ports of russian liquefied natural gas. jumping by 41 percent between 20212023. that's according to u energy regulator data and maybe it will come as an even bigger surprise that well, they still really aren't going to be because of russian l. n. g shipments of gas for use in europe still are not going to be impacted. what's new is that the ships that bring the rushing gas into european boards now just aren't allowed to transfer it to ships so they can leave for other countries. the package includes donald trump shipment of russian and g to 3rd countries via the u, including a prohibition on reloading services as well as ship to ship and ship the shore transfers imports into the you are still allowed. so what's been happening is that russian gas from siberia has been coming into the you into countries like france, belgium, spain, and the
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n. a n g, a personnel held in yemen. 5, it is, it says 17 of its staff members are injured. tension is cold on the face to refrain from of a treat in prison. one of the largest of any of the british u. n. has warned of catastrophic ramifications in yemen as a result of threats by the government to control banks. the control areas from the international banking system. a decade long, the civil war has triggered one of the wells west amount of terran crises that as most of the head on out just here, a pay day. the nuns are for the don't must lose a step closer as the shareholders 50000000000. the package comic has chief executive monkey this is and menace been taken off the streets of entice you to the color of the web. it does look pretty nice day across the southeast of the us southern part. so fraud. i've got this lingering where the system has a little area of low pressure, which may well develop into a tropical system. certainly something to keep an eye on over the next couple of days for the north across the place. we've got some live the storms rolling through the rockies, and then another weather system will just run its way up to what was west and canada into the pacific northw
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p n d n d. i part of bob bar today is victory and it's a victory of the world's largest democracy. was that by? yeah. so here's the latest on the results, the national democratic alliance led by the prime minister modi's nationalist, the b j. p is ahead on, on cost with around 293 of the 543 seats available. the opposition india alliance, which includes the ones dominant congress policy, looks to have one around $233.00 states. is with the mr. moody, short of the overwhelming majority predicted in exit pulse, one of the deputies debbie bureau chief sandra pet's us man, told us to be j. pay stuff is significant loss is in some regions. i mean, you know, to form a government in india, any pa to or alliance needs to cross the threshold of 272 seats. mind you in 2019. and the last general elections, the beach, a p, loan 1303 seats. this is not the case this time around. they have lost quite a few numbers of states and nowhere is this kiera. then in the state of the top side dish or your p for short, it is in the most popular state. it has a population bigger than that of brazil or pock
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n. letter n. napoleon.uction, the bid, apparently, i don’t get this auction, i can only say the face value, denomination, constantine, vabank, dmitry, vabank, we are playing, that’s the question, this monastery was founded. fruits for 300 in march, on the island of java there is a festival of this fruit, which is grown in abundance on local farms. the fragrant fruits are given to everyone free of charge. durian. exactly. vegetables and fruits for 100. among its popular varieties are bourdeaux and thekla. maybe beets. right. jubilee 2024 for 400. 50 years ago this country became a republic, although after the overthrow of the emperor it plunged into civil war for 17 years. ethiopia, right. the error was over two hundred. recently, in warsaw , an electronic waste container had to be dismantled to save a meowing cat. and only after doing all the work, the rescuer found out exactly this. but the cat was a toy, not real, right, the lower fires are over 300, good health, your honor, he said sympathetically, what
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so let's go in a preparatory tournament for the wells, comp, r o y a n o n o lenders be just being if you can play international matches. so if you can represent your country at the highest level, if you can compete at the pinnacle of this board, then you really don't need many things to motivate you. but finding the right balance between taking the day off, living in the day and keeping focused on need talk, that's the most important. and actually the most difficult thing about this job, angel. 3 of the studies on isn't just in that you, i'm a national team for a pass, so that evening match against stuckey files on your stomach. your stomach is solid. the fis to arms tights tight. i believe in read out really when i was on the field, england is playing japan to teams that a more professional than germany, japan has its own association, specifically for blind soccer, which supports the team financially. many english players only have to work part time. the rest is paid by the english football association. the not the central really, you know, if you look at the progress of 5 of this p
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n g o n r i. she's joining us from dell, blind, central, gaza. all right, very good to have you with us on algae 0. your in guideline to stand on a humanitarian mission with your charity in our international network for a relief and assistance. and this is your 2nd time there understand since the war began in october. talk to us about what you've witness during this trip and how it the situation can past when you went back last or you know, a, it's exponentially more dire, more desperate if that is even possible. and what you have on top of, you know, this ongoing psychological obliteration when it comes to both the adults and also the children is the sort of ominous under tone. and that is this increase that, you know, we're seeing. but that is also being reported and looting and criminal activity because what, what needs to understand and this is something that tragically happens. you know, when we're talking about any sort of war dynamic with this level of deprivation of the basic necessities needed for human life. and that is that you see the moral code beginning to road. and so, you know, i was talking to a father yesterday who was telling me that his 5 year old son imagine just 5 years old coming up to him and saying, you know, daddy, maybe it would have been better if we had just died and stayed at home rather than having to live like this, and he was further talking about how, you know, the next more is going to happen once the bomb stop. and you hear this repeatedly over and over again. there is the war within each individual because a lot of people will tell you that right now, despite all of this madness, all of this tragedy is also providing a certain level of a distraction from the true measure of the scale, the scope of everything that has been lost and you have children that are beginning to exhibit all sorts of signs of severe and traumatic psychological distress. and when it comes to specifically the humana terry instructor. no one who works within the humanitarian sector has really been confronted. you know, with, with this level of need and loss, right. and, and sheer and total devastation. all right, and then i'll ask you a little bit more about your work in in the humanitarian, terry inspecting because you're working on on setting up medical stations and expanding the number of shelters. aaron garza and you're specifically focusing on children, talk to us more about the children our. how are they co pay those who have survived at this war so far? how are they doing? i mean, you know, at this stage one, we're talking about sort of mental health interventions for children because the traumas are still ongoing because it triggers are constantly there. you know, the buzz of the drones is sort of like this is ongoing tons of o you think you've survived, but wait, death can still come when we talk about interactions for children, that very much really focuses in the space of providing a distraction. so it's activities, you know, like play like music like dancing, but then what we're also trying to do is provide children with, you know, basic educational kits. but then you have, you know, other things as well that, that we're trying to get into gaza. but that have actually been been stopped for the last 2 and a half months now pretty much ever since that up on the border costs. and that is things like children's shoes, just driving to this location this morning. you see children who don't have shoes were running around bare foot in areas where there are sewage. you have this growing increase of, you know, disease. and then you have this very sort of basic reality. and that is that when a child is scared or in pain, they turn to their parents to try to find comfort to these very basic killers of stability have been fully eradicated for children. so what we try to do is build them up in the best way possible, but when you talk to children, they don't use the rhetoric the language of children anymore. they use the language of adults. and that is extraordinarily jarring to see and to experience and witness . and, and i imagine what's even more hot breaking is, is seeing the parents not being able to, to bring them that conflict that a parent usually bring. so that children are, while you were to an invoice owens for over 2 decades, both as, as a journalist and a humanitarian. and as a journalist, you've coverage many conflicts in syria and also in iraq and in the offensive again size. so that's what's been your experience by going into guys and, and how is a suffering that you've witness? they're different from some of the other conflicts that you've covered. what makes, for example, the trauma of children in guys are different from what you've seen else way no, i was trying to put my finger on it and one you know, doesn't like comparing one more zone to another, another person's pain, you know, to another. but there is something that is markedly different about cause that and it is the sheer and total's psychological obliteration. it's really the way that the trauma triggers are relentless. there is no escaping, there is no rest spite. there is no room to breathe and you really sense this constantly. it's not, you know, in some of these other areas where if you survive one bombing, you're able to move to safe space because you're, there is no concept of safe space. and then it's the sheer magnitude, the scale and the time with which it has happened. you know, up the other day i met a little girl in hospital. she's 5 years old, shrapnel shredded her abdomen, who got spelled out. she's in a hospital bed next to her baby brother was covered in burns, and she's being comforted by her aunt, who is filled with such tenderness and love towards this little girl that it's a beautiful thing to witness. and then you realize that the aunt is not also going to have to fulfill the role of the mother because these 2 little children's parents are both dead. they just don't know that yet. there's also another issue that is a great and pressing and most urgent concerns, and this is related to the closing of that off border because it wasn't just to meet our dre for humanitarian assistance. it was also the only exit point. and right now, according to the world health organization, there are 14000 people in gaza. need to be met a click as actuators right? have emergency medical situations, they need to be able to get out. and i met one of the little boys in the last 48 hours as well. if this child who also has shrapnel entry to the abdomen does not manage to get out of hudson, he is going to either find himself best case scenario with a permanent disability. worst case scenario, he is going to die. right. children, adults lives are at stake, not just from the bombs but from the lack of medical access into that stuff. but also the fact that the only evacuation point has been blocked off as well. and which brings me to my next question, are the challenges, what challenges do you face operating a humanitarian organization inside gaza today? and why is it so difficult to move age around? you know, it's impossible on so many levels and you're constantly sort of trying to play mental gymnastics, figuring out how to navigate the plus or of challenges that are in front of you and the challenges start with 1st and foremost, actually getting the trucks. and so how does that, is this extraordinarily lengthy process right now? you know, the only access point, especially to the south is kind of upside in and they're in the trucks go through. extensive screenings is excruciatingly slow at so all of it you also have the challenge that she met, a chair in organizations don't have a say and what actually gets to come in. and so what we end up seeing actually is it's real given priority to commercial trucks. if you look at the numbers right now, more than 2 thirds of trucks that have been able to enter the southern part of gaza, mind you index greenly low numbers, but 2 thirds of those trucks are commercial trucks, which means that goods ends up on the market where the vast majority of people can't afford them. once goods actually manage to get through the search process, you're going to have the challenge of getting them from the check point to the warehouse. there is a growing sense of lawlessness that was criminal activity. there are leaders, there are games, you know, for trying to target humanitarian, 80, and the trucks cost to navigate this whole, you know, gauntlet challenges does to get to the warehouse. and then there's movements within the floods that south north to south. south north does not happen, full stops, but then just getting the permissions to move within the hubs. it's extraordinarily painful. it's painstaking when you are finally able, you know, to get something to someone. yeah. to be frank. you feel as if it's so small because the need is so great. but i was talking to one of our united colleagues about this yesterday. and she's like, listen, you know what we're working for our people. these are our children, this is our future. and even if it's something small, even if all we're able to offer is a smile, it is still our duty to do that. all right, before we let you go, just one last question i right now we are out of points politically, way. nothing is happening. negotiations and the war has sold to this now few of an all out war between has for law and israel. what is there any hope left among the people of god said that this could come to an end? so of the, you know, hope is a cool beast in the sense that one can't live without hope, but then the minute hope prizes and then is crushed as it is every single time there is talk about potential ceasefire. it really thinks a person psyche and suggests that were entirely unimaginable, you know, being here. you know, obviously people see that i'm a foreigner and, and you get this constant question of, oh, you know, ask her, she's from the outside. maybe she knows when this is going on and it is going to not be able to answer that because people cannot take fits anymore. but at the same time, there is this sense of having to keep going and a lot of husbands, when you talk to them, you know, they don't want to be called resilience. they have been forced into this position. they don't want to be called super heroes. they have been forced to be super heroes . they are, it's a hosted. and so is there hope that this is going to end one day? yes, of course to a certain degree. but then every once in a while you, you talk to people and they say no, like it's gone, it's been eradicated for moving forward because, you know, we have children because we don't have a choice because we have to live. and you see these, these moments where people try to create choice, they try to create love, they try to create, you know, a little bit of the life that was for each other. but it's just factions of moments . i mean that the level of sheet that every single person here carries on their shoulders within their psyche is so palpable. it really hits you, it hits you in the god and it prompts you by the throat. our thank you so much for talking to us. thank you for the important work you are doing in guys are right now . our daemon, founder and president of the n g o n r i joining is there from dow, by law, in central guys. i thank you very much for your time. it's the best now turn 2 out of world views and one person has been killed in kenya after police confronted demonstrators during nationwide protests against planned tax reforms. thousands of people took to this race in cities across the country on thursday, in the capital, nairobi, police, fire gas, and use water cannon to disperse the crowds. welcome, lab reports it's donated with social media uses. blaming can use president william root tech for the rising cost of living and tax hikes. now, his full housings to the streets protest as gather may, can use parliament as m. p. 's, debated the legislation to increase the taxes. we are paying the houses l o w on the up into what taxes. we all know that you're not gonna get the most. we don't get enough missing those results. please try to can street. government says it's already listen to the people when it removes some of the most controver
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n possess reagan n possess relativeti warfare posing a threat to the united states d civilian chemical weapons on the battlefieldn ukraine.e. this is a new era marked by risk and rapidon changes in technology. adapt streg solutions. i'd like to describe how we approach for the new era. demonstrating what item m.■d preventing the proliferations and pursue s arrangements. acore complex andcc environments we arey■8 take being take being approach. to show what it means to act encourage others to do the■- s make sure all weapons states live up to statement and never before■t fault. the president issued d era.ted guy a nuclear account for the growth and diversity and need to deter russia, the prc, and north carolina at the time. they use other tools to mimize what is needed. the united states wi by limits. as long as russia does the same. where he will not develop radiation spewing or nuclear weapons designed to be in orbit. we willer upload theorm against testing. we will theuc treaty into 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people simple calculation that theulation that us. the secondaryia of focus is of nuclear weaponsy straightening the global regime. this is one of the greatest contributions too the rayy gur they presueded many ally they own to stop against theof threats face. threat isn't ahreats face. foregone i conclusion nuclear threats■ from russia and north korea and worry about the credibility of guarantees. we are investeden the ensure weesteden the contribute nonproliferation. between the united between the united carolina is an exam to have sar na allies. steps have sar na with posture,■ this is work we advanceer ahead of the summit including in in asia and europe weg look deterrence. whether easing the forces or stepping up greater participation will in security guarantees andnt extend it for the approach we have taken. administration upholds the treaty as the7u coroner stone. we are committed to advancll disarmorment and we reestablish leadership by making investments in the industry and imports. we are using that to ensure they intergrade the highest standard o safeguards. to export the values prevent the spread of enrichment and countries. we seek to establish norms as part of the effort to accelerate energynd7ork with like-minded countries to establish the framework for guardrails, equipment, and materialtions. we wor iea to maintain a safe, secureef the highest standard asif part o the cooperation with australia and unitedic trade controls. ■we worked to lingual it the spread of long-range missile technology. we continue to add vance trade internationallyon among like mind taking steps to address any gaps that might emerge. this approach. disregarding s and staying in the way of reforms. russia returned to prop up the industrial base. and iran to provide missiles and drones. increased missiles and drones. increased three and created capabilities russia might share for payment. they have beenis blocking new controls from being the arrangement given steps to undermind the control ray you know yregime.we are trying to capabilitytions with w long-rangeu. strike. we are looking to createew and coproduction that f were challenging of licensing requirements. also among a broader set. the final area where th adopted has been developing a nuclear weapon.as this is a isolation.n of including sanctioning 700 additional connected to the problematic and dangerous behaviors. we havee long said this is the best way sustainable nuclear program. russia and hamas undermined our ability for related issues and lose opportunities opportunitiesdiplomacy. we must take steps to underscore the nuclearr escalations, building leverage. redoubling ccoordination. insisting they fully cooperate and not farther escalade the program.ts early herb thisk we voted in favor withooperation. we also supported a e support to provide a greater understanding rerd such a report is important in october% when the security council close consideration of the c issuen under been andab will be a solution r ensuring is peaceful. leadership makes tangible i affirms the.r importance of article credibility. c what else isppening in the world the united states is readyor for critical arms cont measures. we uphold that th agrow with with russia. anyoo futuretj agreements the goal isee to reduce threats in the united nuclear forces. without a doubt, the type■■ of limits we agree to impacted by the build-up . . .6g■m unilaterally. we're working to institutionalize the new norms by bringing the into. we are also supporting arms control through accountability. nato allies we suspend treaty on armed forces in europe, in response to russia's withdrawal. opening the possibility open the possibility of these and eastern europe. states parties voted to out run from the body of the■+ organization and chemicalio weapons. rutinued violations and unprovoked war against ukraine but at least near-term the prospects are dim. ection has us out ofr our after february 2026. we must be prepared of these constraintss disappear. the united states offered civic proposals focus on managing strategic work with bilateral tconsultation■>. no interest in engaging these proposals andected the focus. mee. attempts to engage on production of nuclear issues have been answered with more men greater us and our closell discuss arms control, rupture and the prc are t their international obligations. please speaking there■pors and e allies and partners to prepare for a world were nuclear where t numerical constraints.■jer enhag our capabilities and postures and credit important to rejuvenating strategic arms control. it will incentivize russia and the united states with theengagp leverage of those engagements and prepare are meant continue to refuse engagement. we need to persuade as a preferable to unconstrained competn let me close with this, we should we have a tremendous opportunity to chart a new path for arms control and nonproliferation same goals, new up at the port to continue to work at all of you to make that happen. thank you for your time. [applause] >> thank you very much. it's a full menu of■5■# us to digest i would ask folkseaser questions. i can help engage in a conversation about but to start let me ask a couple of things(yew that are on everys minds particularly in the last few since the russian invasion of ukraine started and president putin issued nuclear threats o d some variations of the week defense. in a world of a heightened nuclear weapons use as the conflict goes on, president biden hasapons anywhere could, d lead to world war three and nuclear armageddon. describe briefly what is administration -- mike what's a president strategy for magis ria to the extent we canustomer is a 1973 agreement on the prevention of nuclear war t sitn the back shelf. till something that might be employed? quick sink in for thatontemporay issue and it hangs over the discussion you are a today. our very cognizant of the increase anduclear rheto nucleay were trying to be very prudent in our approach particularly in approach. we cannot allow it russia's from assisting ukraine and defense of their own territory. the new policy is consistent with that speed the policy is counter fire capabilities that are deployed just across the border it does not■&w applyo long-range strikes is meant to enable the otherwise be entered eight russian sanctuary red is enabling the furtherance of their offense of. and i think we have to address this reality that is before as a putin announced last year - traditio your weapons in belarus this concerning and tight satellite cability related to a new satellite designed to carry nuclear ap delete risks writing we see the rhetoric increasing and we theet propose such a dialogue with the goal of discussing and clarifying deconflicting as a way to manage risk we see at v m now. they refused to have those talks ey con■ti talks. t, we continue to have to be prudent to ensure we are calibratingiv exists. >> very good to have a lot of questions here want to try to move on need to leave which is in about 15 minutes or so and for showing. we have abe questions about something remarks and a reference. in general suggested and not paraphrasing the nuclear arms estates need to engage in dialogue to make sure no one uses nuclear weapons first and to agree no one shod use nuclear weapons first it is the logical corla statement eight nuclear for can never never be fought. you know in recent weeks china has floated the joint first know you. president biden, during the campaign four years ago so it would adopt a policy that said the sole purpose of nuclear weapons to deter attacks which suggest not to initiate a. what i t before you answer let me notegsm stewart about this question. std be interested in engaging■) a china on the dialogue but have many questions about what their. if you could elaborate on that and te us why that's an opportunity to engage with china in the days and weeks ahead? what am happy to expand on mallory's answer there. i want to note these types of discussions i been a topicf five our experts are arms control experts have bn tip feaa regular basis on the topics. for that prc to really want to engage on this topic it would make sense for them to try to discussion which we do notot afn these issues that is why we have been the ones asking for the engagement. if the prc isking a specific pra treaty throughm out it's hard to tell if it's the real proposal or not because frankly this is kind of a side issue there's been no diplomatic follow-up. we are not the ones avoidg are the ones trying to initiate more and more detailed dialogue to be even more transparent about our nuclear doctrine policytand any changes happening in china and russia's approach to nuclear we are open to seeing a proposal from the prcir guess i should reiterate we channels we have tried to quit when consultation late last orot consultation again where we would discuss these issues i am not sure what the next move is there. and of course china is process,a chairing at this year in china takes the chair later this year. okay, you spoke bit about the situation with respect to iran nuclear activities obviously the decision to with t been helpful for the dissensions of not change iran's if you could just describe it with the administration is trying to do to engage with iran? as they have a shift in leadership of some kind may not be very much. this could be an opportuni t yol pursuing about a year. mutual the escalatory path isn't this a good time to try this before the situation gets worse? >> thanks for that. as i mentioned we are really focused right now given the political realities in tehran with their own leadership change obviously haven e coming up here in the united states as a well we want to make sure we maintain some plateau of escalation no further nuclear tn environment conducive to discussing bk at theab field. pick that up again when there is a new leadership in tehran but from our perspective we think our allies are aligned on this we need to focus on m"+aking s f our engagement. i will say most in poorly for me tied to the nuclear file but it does have elements of regional stability is taking place in the middle east a >> are rates. in tarlier panel today we had a discussion about how much is enough decisionsbout modernization costs size but i think was hans a christian term a minimum deterrence how this could be use arms to justify any number of nuclear weapons wch■$ have. specifically what does when we have 1700 when you count the bombs, more does an additional 100 or 200 do to really perspective of our adversaries about initiating nuclear war? >> great. well in a can remark on all of e topics. but let me take the crack at that darrell i think it is a great question that's a very important question as we expiration on new start and i keep comghis milestone because to me that is the point coming of two paths ahead of us. there's been nohe united statesn your day-to-day deployed strategic weapon has to be pretty compelling for a decision to be made to do that. i think the -- one of the main triggers for that or at least indicators that we have to pay attention to is -- at the prc epgdz up doing. they're continuing to build up to do so at a pretty rapid pace. as those on the chinese nuclear arsenal know comes the annually highlighted in the past year disturbing realities that we have to face regarding how china is thinkinge about lower yield nuclear weapons how they're thinking about novel nuclear weapons smaller yield nuclear weapons and their purpose in a pentaiwa. and potential changes t they posture alert nuclear forces, you know in a potential if called early warning counterstrike. this is, of course, alls why i l comfortable talking about it in detail but the reality is those6 are important considerations for us to bear in mind as wearch towards february 6th, 2026. now, the reality is the administraon has a preferred approach. and we want that prefer approach to also berred by russia and china for us that looks like russia, a new start follow agreement or set of a we feel at there are continue to be constraints between the united states and our largest nuclear adversary. i think we feel that russia at least as of today sinced suspension of new start their illegal suspension of start last year they at least continue to see value in maintaining limits on deployed strat n we can initiate a comes next before that treaty expires. thave seen no indication that russia wants to have that conversation seen m know who are more observers than i am, it takes a long time to nail down the details of a -- of an agreementategic arms and so, from our perspective we should have started that why i proposed stat conversation last fall and we continue to have an openoo. and as it relates to the prc, i hope they will be willing to reengage in our consultation process and soon knowing their behavior the changes that they impact our ability and the tenure of the agreement to strike with russia. >> that's very helpful and, i mean, just a quick follow-up -- which is that, you know, given that the russians so far have not accepted the very -- good conditions and strategic arms control agreemen and you say that you want to have a more approach to nuclear arms and control policy. i might the interim approach be and i would just take us back 1980, 81 the salt 2■■ treaty put on t
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the fastest growing space in america are the nones, n-o-n-e-s. i'm not saying everyone has to be religious, but when you leave those institutions, what are you replacing them with? and we don't have a good answer for that in our country right now. we are not replacing them with bowling leagues, i can tell you that. we're replacing them with facebook eight, or whatever, twitter, x. -- facewbook hate, twitter, x. the experts will tell you that is what utah is doing better, but i think about it often. because it is not in our dna, it is not inherent. we have to be intentional about it, we have to speak about it, we have to build our own communities. i believe that wherever you are, that is the answer. we need to stop telling kids to go out and change the world. it is making them anxious. they are not going to do it. and it's just not good for them or for us. what we need to tell kids to do is to change their neighborhood. right? to invest, to go volunteer, to get to know your neighbors, and to help them out. to go to the local food bank, whatever it
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the fastest growing space in america are the nones, n-o-n-e-s. i'm not saying everyone has to be religious, but when you leave those institutions, what are you replacing them with? and we don't have a good answer for that in our country right now. we are not replacing them with bowling leagues, i can tell you that. we're replacing them with facebook eight, or whatever, twitter, x. -- facewbook hate, twitter, x. the experts will tell you that is what utah is doing better, but i think about it often. because it is not in our dna, it is not inherent. we have to be intentional about it, we have to speak about it, we have to build our own communities. i believe that wherever you are, that is the answer. we need to stop telling kids to go out and change the world. it is making them anxious. they are not going to do it. and it's just not good for them or for us. what we need to tell kids to do is to change their neighborhood. right? to invest, to go volunteer, to get to know your neighbors, and to help them out. to go to the local food bank, whatever it
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. ♪ +♪ ■w♪ n♪ n♪ ■♪ ■♪ >>li change and equity in black communities.. on c-span, see spohn now -- c-span now or online aton june 27, tunn presidential simulcast live on c-span2. watch as the present of nomiff as they try to earn your vote in november. 8:00 p.m. view at 9:00 p.m., our simulcast of the debate. following the debate, stay with c-span as we take your calls of. the cnn presidential debate simulcast live thursday, june 27 at 9:00 p.m. eastern on c-span2, see spohn now, or online at c-span.org. c-span, your unfiltered view of politics. >>e in to c-span's live coverage of the 2024 national political convention starting with the republican a four day event in milwaukee on july 15, then catch the democrats in chicago9. stay cupted and unfiltered clubs of democracy at work. watch the republican and democrat and national conventions live this summer on c-span, c-span now, our me ap oorg. c-span, your unfiltered view of politics, sponsored by cable. >> c-span is your unfiltered view of government. we are funded by these television companies and more
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instead the n t u n t immigration, an empty islam politician is aiming for more influence in brussels. the changes you are paying union from the inside. i'd also have a thought for asylum and immigration policy. i won't argue that all national sovereignty will not evolve more to the, to brussel. it was back to the nation states weaker in your opinion, if that's what you're competing. while you know, if, if a union has less power or less, the issues to be involved with doesn't necessarily mean that they a week or, you know, you can become smaller and stronger a message to them and you're like to hear. yeah, things time to change, the people are concerned about this issue. not just never heard of your 2 months immigration, that it has to be best to come to nurses. i mean, i want to most acute germany, which does not catch too much about the country presenting a med mal, do it image maureen, listen of the french riley party, recently expelled the alternative for germany party or a of the, from the european fall right identity and democracy group considering them to radical quite a far ri
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n t u n t immigration, an empty islam politician is aiming for more influence in brussels. the changes you are paying union from the inside. i'd also have a buffer asylum. and immigration policy, i won't argue that all national sovereignty will not evolve more to the, to brussel. it was back to the nation states weaker in your opinion, if that's what you're competing. while you know, if, if the union has less power or less, the issues to be involved with doesn't necessarily mean that they a week or, you know, you can become smaller and stronger a message to them and you're like to hear. yeah, things time to change, the people are concerned about this issue. not just never heard of your 2 months. immigration, they have to be back to come to nurses. i mean, i want to most acute germany, which does not catch too much about the countries presenting the image maureen, listen of the french riley party recently expelled the alternative for germany party or a of the, from the european fluoride identity and democracy group. considering them to radical for the far right and europe t a of the is important to build a logical relation in brussels. but also commons by the main tended, is that not all, not t as, as members will criminals, and all those scandals fall right. need us in europe have no distance themselves from the age of the 2 reason stopping attacks here in mind. hi, aids at the far right. politicians, costing the life of a policeman. good to support for the a if the researches say despite its new image, the file right has not changed. it's ideas. they say main swing parts and select the european people's parts of earth. left on the lion has moved to the right from the lion has hinted at a partnership with georgia, maloney of the right wing brought us of it to the party. the forward is that they have lost to the radical right. they hope that that would attract them again by becoming more radical on, in particular, the issue of immigration. however, that is not what has happened. what has happened is that they have legitimize the far right. and the far right has become more successful because of that a possible success at the bowling stations across the european union worries these vote testers will say the economy full provided their real intentions by default, right, wants to destroy our democracy and our land is bulls prove to be correct, all right, part is good. secure, 25 percent of the seats and the european parliament include become the 3rd largest law steps last and i'll just say rough manheim, germany offices and bulk area go to the polls on sunday. in the 6 paula mitre election and 3 years, the snap voted was triggered by the collapse of the coalition government in march. the state has faced political upheaval and corruption scandals in recent years and some metal assign. that's something the selection wants to change. the cos i'm sure a for pull, it's from the capital, sophia, some of us lecture and season in bulgaria, once again, the southeast europe in country is holding it 6 parliamentary election in 3 years for voters like i said, bela kin, it's a timing exercise to keep voting for politicians who haven't been able to form a stable government that will allow me to tell it. but if we don't have a choice, we have to budge my family and i will vote for continue the change. they will bring in reforms. they not corrupt, economic and stability and corruption, a major concerns into your opinions for this country. in 2020, by gabrielle, so must of antique corruption, protests force and den. from mr. michael bought a so to resign, since then inconclusive elections. and sir john coalitions have left the country with can take the government and the depot political crisis. surveys the head of the election suggests this literature on surface tables coalition. over the last vote, the parties are making last ditch effort to win enough support. they have a clear choice either to have with the that the progress that we saw in the last 3 years. and the other option is to go back to the years before 2020, where we had a lot of protests. so lots of corruption scandals, rushes blown ukraine is also fueling divisions and bulgaria. although sophia supported sanctions against most cool parties are divided over providing ministry a 2 keys and containing a neutral stand. some believe the current political instability could have pro russian and due to a skeptic potties. well gary, a is deeply rooted in the u. n. nato. but at the same time when it comes to probably got to choose. uh, there are significant pro ration sentiments in the country, which are the result that if you start the distortion plug in, if you need to stay boot ultman for you funds and support, it's blum's to join you to zone have been pushed back twice as a mis installation targets, after a 13 year wait, it partially drawn, europe's opened boldest hanging program. this election, fatiguing by guerria. i'm going mistrust of the political cloth. successive governments who promised to fight corruption have landed up pulling free to it. as the guidance had to pose this time, hoping for the government that stays and that they don't have to head to pulling boot any time. so i'll just so fucking sounds, lee, that has promised to ensure the safety and security of chinese workers as he expands is on the balance cooperation with beijing. during the 5 day visit to china by prime minister chavez sharif. both countries agreed to upgrade
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n nungaray n texas. his bail set at $10 million. the district attorney in harris county, which is houston, has not ruled out the death penalty for both suspects. back to you. >> steve: so david, the headline, is this is going to essentially preview what the president is going to say tomorrow night at the debate. when mayorkas is in tucson today, is he going to announce that ever since the new asylum restrictions, the number you have migrants coming into the country is down 40%, which is the lowest level of illegal crossings since joe biden took office. that's what they're going to say. but that's not what it seems like. >> it's not what it seems like and also, you know, since joe biden took office. that was three and a half years ago. and critics are going to point out probably the former president is going to talk about the border a lot at this debate tomorrow night at 9:00 p.m. about the fact this was not done in january and february and march and april of 2021. let alone, signing the proclamation june 2024. the white house is touting those numbers insist that those border numbers are down and those encounters are down. we will see what the secretary has to say down in tucson. >> lawrence: thanks, david. first of all, before we move. we got to talk about the dishonesty here. first, every single summer. because it's like 110 in texas right now. the numbers go down. it happens because if you are crazy enough to make the journey. you may die on the way. because of just the heat, there is not enough food. not enough water to take on the journey. number 2, decks is already still in texas. that's why the numbers are going up in california and arizona. i think it's dispond who are the biden administration to pretend like they are the ones bringing the numbers down. last point is you can't get across that all of the sudden that you wanted to bring up legislation in an election year. when you had four years to do it before and suddenly you're immigration policy is fixing the border? i don't think anybody is going to buy that especially when we have dead americans. >> brian: all right. so the numbers are 2400, down 40%. does that count the app. where can you sit there in ecuador and cross into another country get on the app. and flown in to west chester oar some place else? number two the most important pointed is. this joe, do you think this works? yes, i had to take action. do you know what you did? this is what did you three and a half years ago, undid the pressure we are tied central and south american countries not enforcing own border. first country step into. got rid of that have to apply for citizenship there stop building the wall on top of that then you told everyone you are helpless unless congress has acted. but you just showed you are not helpless. so what are you going to say to all those people and illegals that got through here. the number is 7.98 million encounters. close to 2 million got-aways, which means we have no idea what's going on. and when you say that the criminals, there is very -- percentage wise, there is less criminals, illegals among them than there are among americans. there shouldn't be one. because you allowed these criminals to come in to begin with. and some of these people we don't even know from countries that don't report. >> ainsley: border patrol has apprehended 13,000 criminal non-citizens this fiscal year alone. and that doesn't even include, doesn't account for the criminal aliens that slipped through or were released because the criminal background checks were unclear. and that includes the man accused of killing rachel morin, the one who was on a run. she was found naked and beaten and raped. the man who is accused of that, is a 23-year-old. his name is victor antonio martinez hernandez. he tried to get in four times. accaccused of of murdering somee in el salvador and then the case in texas we have been talking about, the 12-year-old who was killed. the suspects are from venezuela. and the country will not cooperate. they won't give us their criminal background. >> brian: they just give us their criminals. >> ainsley: don't know criminal background. mother of 12-year-old and the child's grandfather were on last night with sean hannity. listen. >> i want the nation all around the world to understand that she was a child, she was my child. she was my first born. she had admiration of dreams and aspiring goals that she wanted to do in life. she was going to make it. she was going -- she was going to do things. and these men, these illegal men took that opportunity from my daughter, from our family of watching her become this amazing person. this has got to stop. we have to stop burying our kids. this is not right. we have to have more reinforcement when it documents letting people in. this is not okay. not okay. >> like i have said before, you are not going to tell me that with an ankle monitor you are good to go. people you don't wake up one day and decide you are going to commit this who are risk crime. this is people that come used to doing this type of things. it's just sad that, i mean, it happens all over the country. we need a safer country. >> steve: the family is absolutely right. while mayorkas today, and biden tomorrow, are going to talk about how the numbers are down, now we have faces. now we have faces of 12-year-old jocelyn and other americans who were murdered. and undoubtedly donald trump is going to bring up the cases of individuals who were allowed into the country and wound up murdering people. we had talked a little bit about this over the last couple of days where one of these two men accused of abducting her and killing her under the bridge one them had the ankle monitor removed three weeks ago they finally figured out after the guy had been in the country two months. oak okay. he is not a criminal. he wasn't a criminal back there. the other guy still had the ankle monitor on. >> lawrence: took it off afterwards. >> steve: they hadn't figured whether or not is he a criminal. if there is any suspicion they are a will extra. why are we still letting them in? >> brian: absolutely. detained or turned around we don't know where you are. anywhere tajikistan you got to go. that's a terror haven. >> we see what he this are doing in a russian. we saw footage went under the bridge. one guy said i tried to get him to stop. he wouldn't. he just strangled her to death. then he went back to work. he said listen, i have got to go back home when they realized they had pictures of him and going to hunt him down. he went up to his boss. evidently he has a be jo. he went up to his boss can you lend me money to go back home? he said no. finally they caught up to him. >> ainsley: apparently under the bridge for two hours. she was struggling and he had scratch marks on his hands. >> brian: it was evident in the courtroom. >> steve: update, that particular guy who had asked for the day off. he had told his boss at the construction site, hey we were both of us were out partying last nights steve. >> lawrence: they were drunk. >> steve: somebody wound up dead. they admitted they were at this place where somebody wound up dead. >> lawrence: yeah. what a complete. >> ainsley: somebody wound up dead, a 12-year-old. steve. >> lawrence: i tried to get him to stop after they already raped the young girl 12 years old. the d.a. >> ainsley: do we know that for sure that they were raped? >> steve: no. >> lawrence: once there is evidence of the rape taking place. they are waiting for the rape kit. buns theonce they get it back. >> steve: loophole. only murder of kids under 10 makes it automatically a death penalty case. above 10, life without parole. unless they are extenuating circumstances. >> lawrence: which rape would be one. >> steve: or kidnapping. it's probably both. just waiting to figure out was one of the guys involved or was it both guys? >> brian: i don't want to have to pay for him to live another 50 years in our prisoners. 12 minutes after the hour. other thing kind of related to this is the debate coming up tomorrow. but, prior to that, unlike president biden, who is waiting for 10 days going behind closed doors at camp david. has a country to run. friday going to be in virginia. today he is going to be doing a meeting with black business leaders in atlanta leading up to the debate. >> lawrence: barber shops. >> brian: in detroit meeting in black church. goes to philadelphia on saturday. and you see what is he trying to do. trying to tell everyone in new york city. i know traditionally you don't vote for republicans. but i'm not traditional. and i want your vote. i want to hear what the issues are. >> lawrence: listen can you say whatever you want to say about the man. can you say you don't like the man, is he republican, all that stuff. >> brian: what's worse saying you are republican or you don't like the man? >> lawrence: probably both. you can't say he is not working for the black vote. i have never seen a republican. y'all been watching for me for years on the channel. i said go to the barbershop. go to filly. go to the bronx. go to where we are at. don't expect people that you want to solicit their vote to come to you. you got to go to their community. he has a message of -- and, you know, we were talking about the tips. the barbershop industry that make the majority of their money off tips. so you got a policy that he has put out there waitress staffs and all that. now he is going to go to all these black business owners. they don't work for a barbershop. they are their own individual business and saying listen, you got to skip out on taxes here right here. the majority of your money will not be taxed. i think it's a brilliant message. don't tell that to jim clyburn because he has another message for black america. >> steve: right. he, of course, is pretty much responsible for joe biden being president. he said this yesterday to the black community, of the black elders. he said they should try and talk to many sense into their children. i know what i had to go through. i know what i saw my parents going through. if i see and hear from a candidate that they want to bring bank back those indignities to the process. obligation to sit with these children of mine and say what the hell are you talking about? he went on to say the problem is with some of the younger black voters, there's a lot of misinformation and disinformation out there. and he went on to say that when donald trump says he done more for black people with the exception of abraham lincoln, clyburn says if you believe that, your parents should have sent their mule to school and kept you at home. >> ainsley: young black voters are concerned over the israel, gaza war. you see donald trump who says i was wrongfully accused of crimes and convicted. wrongfully. and he also supported the historically black colleges and universities. giving them $250 million per year. remember they were all -- the photo opportunity when they were all there around the president and when i was talking to tim scott, he said when he was critical of donald trump, after charlottesville, donald trump called him and said come to the white house. i believe that was at the white house. said come to the white house or come sit down and meet with me. he said tell me what i should do differently. tell me -- let's talk this through. i want to help the black community. what do we need to do? tim helped him work on the historically black college fund. >> lawrence: so interesting, brian, us as young people, especially black america respectful of our elderrers especially the experience they went through. cannot take that away. we continue to acknowledge that the difference is when it comes to a policy with the democrats, it's more of a traditional standpoint they are taking than what is actually benefiting us. when we look at our taxes, when we look at the fact that they were able to buy a house under donald trump. and now we can't do that, when we went to the grocery store -- we are talking about what is impacting us at the moment. not this historical aspect of it. and if he really want to go go deeper about the party of liberty. go way back before this generation. this past generation jim clyburn they were republicans. and they were for. so you have got donald trump that, is creating this new renaissance within the republican party. they never did this before. never did this in the modern daytime. reached out and said, listen, there is a place for you in the party. i don't think -- i think jim clyburn as smart as he is fearful of that he sees the writing on the wall. >> numbers are real 20 to 30%. younger male black vote is beginning to got republicans, and the former president has not backed off. he continues to amp it up and go. look at the crowds in philadelphia. look at the crowds in south bronx. look at how he was accepted in detroit. and we'll see. he is trying. number two is jim clyburn's parents were republicans. why weren't they they grew up in segregated south where the south was trying to keep blacks and whites from the same water fountains schools and restaurants everything. those were democrats. and the 60's switched with the civil rights movement. got it. lbj was president. democrat, true. republican votes in the congress that helped that civil rights legislation go through. and that -- that's where the debate is james clyburn would not be sitting where he is right now if president trump wasn't making gains. >> steve: just like the black community. young people, too. how half of the members of gen z, people under 30, half of them do not identify with a political party. and that is a big problem for joe biden and ultimately that's -- he is trying to appeal to them. there is a possibility there is an nbc story out that donald trump could name later today or tomorrow his vice presidential pick. today we have actually started a quick little profile of some of the top contenders and you are first up. >> lawrence: all of us have a candidate a vp contender. i had an opportunity speak with j.d. vance. here is a part of that interview. >> i think sometimes what democrats do, they say well, he just believes this because he hates poor people. or he believes this because he hates black people. they really can't pull that with me, flight because i grew up in a poor family. and i was raised in a working class community. i do think there is something just about my biography that makes it a little bit harder for these guys to attack me. maybe that's why they fear me. i go out and try to do the best i can. if they're afraid of me because of that. eyelet take it. >> lawrence: fears of democrats comes to j.d. vance. although they try to paint him as extremist. his story relates with a lot of poor minorities. he is just white. and he married his wife, who is hindu as well. and they have a diverse family. he identifies with the economic poverty, with a lot of americans. and he wants more for them. and so they don't want to see a guy on the -- although he is a white meacialtion is he not your traditional person that you can say is racist. that doesn't -- that is rich. and doesn't understand the people. >> brian: couple other things the thing that scarce me about foreign policy. that's where some of the republican party is right now doesn't really want to help out ukraine at all. doesn't see russia as a problem. sees china as an issue as if you can't have both i worry about that influence on the president because, as opposed to someone like marco rubio, who understands the president and his goals but also can explain to the president more effective way why ukraine matters. why eastern europe can't fall. and why some of these other things make sense, and he won over president trump's respect. i also read the "new york times" thinks that the kryptonite for the democrats would be marco rubio in pennsylvania. because of the latino vote there you win pennsylvania, you win the white house. also talked to somebody yesterday that says if you think the short list is just three people. i think you are wrong. as late as yesterday the president was talking big time about tim scott. >> ainsley: yeah. you heard that yesterday. he is one of the top? >> brian: came up in the preparations forever the meeting. how much the president likes him. >> lawrence: tomorrow or friday. >> ainsley: you got the first one j.d. vance. i went down to charleston on monday after the show and interviewed tim scott and his fiancee. she is precious. i think you will enjoy hearing the issues from him. what his plans are. and his relationship with donald trump. and he is such a strong christian. he sees this as -- at one point he wanted to be a pastor. then he decided to go into politics because he said i can make a difference. god can use me to make a difference. is he a senator in south carolina. and one of the contenders for v.p. he has a similar story to j.d. vance agree up with nothing. slavery a few generations back to senator. >> steve: that interview tomorrow. >> ainsley: yes. >> steve: meanwhile -- >> ainsley: hollywood icon, kevin costner, kathy's heart throb. >> steve: she just wrote me my wife t that he is dreamy. >> ainsley: new western movie the u.s. leadership and more. will got it all. >> leadership is -- we're in desperate need of that we're not in need of extension of careers. ♪ the only topical pain reliever with 4 powerful pain-fighting ingredients that start working on contact to target tough pain at the source. for up to 8 hours of powerful relief. new advil targeted relief. 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we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for. ♪ >> steve: a quick fox weather alert. shocking -- look at this. shocking video out of minnesota. a house next to that dam that we showed you, suffered a partial failure, just as you can see, getting pulled into the river. wow. and in iowa, a major disaster declaration issued as severe weather continues to batter the state of iowa. let's check in with senior meteorologist janice dean for our fox weather forecast. >> janice: it's tragic. steve the water keeps rising. >> janice: more rain in the forecast. moderate to major flooding in all of these rivers and streams that are just out of its banks. we have interstate closure of i-29 -- i 680 near omaha nebraska. that's closed because of flooding in both directions. rain still to come. you know, half an inch to two inches. even though normally that wouldn't be a big deal. but, the water has no place to go. so that's going to be something we're going to watch. and then we also have the potential for showers, thunderstorms, and maybe even severe weather south of the flooding moving through oklahoma city. up towards missouri. several areas we are watching, high plains, mississippi river valley, and the northeast, we could see some weather later on this afternoon. ainsley, over to you. >> ainsley: okay. thank you so much, janice, well today dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas set to speak in tucson, arizona over enforcement efforts at our southern border. this comes as the funeral for 12-year-old joss insulin set for tomorrow while prosecutors say there is evidence of one of her alleged killers trying to flee. >> you have gotten martinez reynolds' phone and found evidence he was searching for ways to leave the country at his arrest bite mark and scratch marks on his arm. he did say he tied her up and he suggested that they throw her into the bayou to get rid of any d.n.a. >> ainsley: joining us now is former acting dhs secretary chad wolf. good morning, chad. >> good morning. >> ainsley: hard to talk about this issue when you know the story of jocelyn, the 12-year-old who cass killed in texas. why are we letting people in our country that are coming from countries that don't cooperate, that don't tell us if they had a criminal history? >> well, it's a great question. this is the fallacy of our vetting system we don't know who is come in lots of times home countries where these illegal aliens come from don't share information with border patrol officials so they have limited information and oftentimes at least under the biden administration, the policy is so simply release them into the country. that's why it's really important to detain individuals as they come into the country so he understand who they are before you release them into american communities and sometimes that vetting cannot occur in 10 minutes or 15 minutes that border patrol sees someone. sometimes it takes a lot longer. so you need to hold on to these individuals before releasing them. >> ainsley: is this a crisis that joe biden created? is that the policy when donald trump was in office? >> no. we -- you know, we took measures such as remain in mexico program and others to detain individuals to understand who they really were. you also have to deter the behavior, right? you have to slow the slow the flow of individuals coming across that border so that border patrol officials, law enforcement officials can do their job and understand who is coming across. what we have seen over the last three and a half years of the biden administration is their goal is simply to process individuals as quickly as possible. and so you turn border patrol officials from law enforcement officials to simply processing officials. and that's what they're doing today. and unfortunately, more and more individuals are coming into the country because we don't know who they are. we don't know where they came from and we don't know their intentions. >> ainsley: what happened to jocelyn perfect example. those two were from venezuela. we don't know if they have criminal background because venezuela doesn't cooperated with us and give us that information. yet, these two guys were allowed to come into our country. thank you so much, chad, for coming on with us. >> thank you. >> ainsley: hillary clinton dishing out debate advice for president biden. we are more interested in kellyanne conway wants advice and she is next. ahhh, there's nothing like a day out with friends. that's nice, but shingles doesn't care! 99% of adults 50 years or older already have the virus that causes shingles inside them, and it can reactivate at any time. a perfect day for a family outing! guess what? shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. only shingrix is proven over 90% effective. shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness, and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. here's why you should switch fo to duckduckgo on all your devie duckduckgo comes with a built-n and doesn't spy on your searchs and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome, but it blocks cooi and creepy ads that follow youa from google and other companie. and there's no catch. it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. lowe's knows when you need a new appliance, you want it at the right price. now you can save big on ge appliances like the ge range with easywash oven tray. with a removable tray that fits into the dishwasher. even a big mess is no sweat. shop lowe's now for great july 4th deals. lumineux whitening strips. no peroxide. no pain. i can use them every day if i want. eat what i want. drink what i want. pop in a lumineux strip and hello... ...my smile is back on point. easy. ♪ >> carley: we are back with big news overnight. jamaal bowman lost his democratic primary in new york by double digits to pro-israel moderate george latimer. lattimer c
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n t u n t immigration, an empty islam politician is aiming for more influence in brussels to changes you are paying union from the inside. i'd also have a tougher asylum and immigration policy. i won't argue that all national sovereignty will not evolve more to the, to brussel. it goes back to the nation states. we can, your opinion is, that's what you're competing. while you know, if, if a union has less power or less, the issues to be involved with doesn't necessarily mean that they a week or, you know, you can become smaller and strong. the message come and you're like to hear. yeah. things time to change, the people are concerned about this issue, not just never heard of your 2 months, immigration, that it has to be best to come to mars this. i mean, i want to most secure germany, which does not catch you much about other countries. presented the image, maureen, listen of the french riley party, recently expelled the alternative for germany party or a of the from the european far right identity and democracy group. considering them to radical for the far right in europe, the a of the is important to build a large coalition in brussels, but also commons by the main tended to that not all, not t as, as members will criminals, and all those scandals fall right. need us in europe have no distance themselves from the age of these 2 reasons. stubbing attacks here in my high age, at the far right. politicians costing the life of a policeman to support for the a if the researches say despite its new image the far right has not changed its ideas they say made sweetheart. and select the european, those spots yes. was left on the lie. you have move to the right from the lion has hinted at a partnership with georgia, maloney of the right twin brothers of it to the party to forward is that they have lost to the radical right. they hope that that would attract them again by becoming more radical on, in particular, the issue of immigration. however, that is not what has happened. what has happened is that they have legitimize the far right. and the far right has become more successful because of that a possible success at pulling stations across a european union worries these protest as we say, the economy full provided their real intention to follow right. wants to destroy our democracy and our land. if bowes prove to be correct, fall right part is good, secure, 25 percent of the seats in the european parliament and crude becomes the 3rd largest law steps. last and i'll just say rough manheim, germany and mine in denmark is in police custody. after attacking the prime minister, the government spokesperson says, and that type frederickson was hit by him, and on friday night she was in a public square and a capital copenhagen, when you're sold, happened. so to come on the houses there us present. joe biden calls for the defense of democracy during his deed a speech. he always asks me with my hand, go back or not. and just one of the questions of thousands of palestinian children and limbs amputated asking their parents to be injured in guns. in depth analysis of the days headlines. does this mean that a slide sells to donald trump? now i don't think so and it could even help trump in the general election. i think even people that don't like trucks are looking at this as selected justice or weapon is ation of the adjuster system. frank assessments that this stage, both ukraine's a pro 10 must cause a pro se thought that a 100 percent different. at this moment, no one can build boxes for each inside story. on al jazeera, unique perspective, a deep sake image of donald trump with loud photos to try to win over black voters . these aren't real, but the harm is incredibly realized on hud voices. it's our responsibility to make sure that future generations are not lied to connect with our community and tap into conversations you weren't find elsewhere. young americans, in particular, have been extremely critical of the united states as role in the way the stream announces era. the challenges with the washing out to say a reminder about top stores this out you and is i think israel to a global blacklist for violations against palestinian children. the move was revealed by israel, some basses into a longer rainy prime minister benjamin netanyahu. last down to the decision number of people internally displaced by conflict tends to dong, could exceed 10000000 coming days. as the warning from the international organization for migration fighting between the on the and the targeted to rapid support for success prevented the entry of voting since without kira costing the thought of something that you were feeling solomon's elections. the vote has been over a shot out of the attempted assassination of the populace. 5 minutes to go with pizza last month. more than 350000000 people try to 7 countries of choosing the next. the doctors in gaza say as many as 3000 palestinian children lost limbs in these rails for many on the getting amputations with out anesthetic adulthood to the reports from their elbow under warning images and reports on distressing israel's war and causal. that is creating a generation of traumatized entities. the thousands of children across the street has lost one or more of them since the onslaught because tom is one of them jump. sean was standing near the door on a piece of shrapnel has a home and i run outside and found a hands hanging by a thread. it took her hours to be seen by a doctor as not a single hospital in gauze as fully functional. despite the heart of her experience, she was one of the luckier ones. her amputation was performed with as many other children must enjoy having groups empty, painted without pain relief. can we have enough of the situations way beyond the medical stocks control, given the substantial number of injuries and the lack of medical equipment and resources that are required to deal with these cases. without access to proper medical treatment, child entities are unable to heal physically or mentally and money. so i'm used to be a quite comp child, but his mother sees he's now angry and stubborn as he struggles to accept his new reality. know funny because that's exactly what of the past. exactly. he always asks me with my hand grow back or not. and i do not know what to tell him that he thinks his hand will grow back. he does not know, and i do not know what to tell him. it keeps asking me and then how am i supposed to play football? how am i supposed to hold the boat? this little boy may never take his 1st step and some of his father saves you a bone. graft needs to travel abroad for the medical is actuation. have stopped since, as well to control of the crossing early may say is the by the he has not seen anything yet. he is constantly suffering and screaming in pain. what has he seen of this world? his condition is terrible. i ask that my son be allowed to travel abroad and receive treatment, or he will lose his foot. doctors without borders has one of the keys inc also are a to risk of bottle complications because of lack of proper medical treatment. drugs. interest is a specialized care because their bones are still growing. care policy and children are being denied since and who did the i'll just say to that in black, gaza palestine says economy, it continues to grow despite facing tough sanctions for hits war. when you crank last year, it grew by 3.6 percent. the russian finance minister has projected the economy will see at least 2 percent growth by the end of this year. present that in the boots in appraised relations with his allies doing an address such a major economic for me, st. petersburg, saying that they accounted for 3 quarters of bushes, trades volume since the 2020. but during the event on friday, preston to police instead of russia had no need to use nuclear weapons to secure a victory and ukraine. described earplugs defenceless in the face of russia's nuclear also use the new they will, they, everyone must on the sun roof as a nuclear missile early warning system. the us also has that nobody else in the world has such develop systems we have in europe does not have a developed early warning system. in this sense, they are more or less defenseless increased. you may say that there osh, as a professor at the national defense university, he says, person is using are familiar strategy. this is kind of an old playbook. basically what he's trying to do is, uh uh, he's playing the long war. he, he's betting that wester will, will run out before the war ends. and he's also getting that by raising the specter of nuclear war, he can cleave off a proportion of western public opinion. you know, who doesn't want to go to the difficulty of reestablishing their defense, industrial base, you know, making up for substitution for russian l n g and all those sorts of things. but this, this, as i said, this has gone on with since day one of the ukraine and basically basically just wants a free hand and that'll do it. i, i think the model he's looking at is during the cold war, when the west abandoned the neutron bomb, which was the bomb that would, uh, it was described as the ultimate capitalist weapon would kill people. but it's not destroyed buildings. and basically, there was a, we now know the soviet inspired movement in the west, in some genuine believers who basically abandoned work on that. i think he's trying to recreate that success with the alliance and be giving a free hands to take the parts of ukraine. he wants um, you know, and given the, uh uh, you know, as 2 generations of defense on your investment. it may have seemed like a smart bet when he invaded ukraine 2 years ago. but its looking a little less like right now. you as president, try to buy it and it's given a speech on the beaches of normandy, commemor
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