rebels and government. and assad will control the four major cities. alep aleppo and others. but he doesn t control the whole country. he says he wants it back. certainly in the days ahead, we can expect many more. hours of fighting. and an increasing death toll, sadly. i m joined now by bob corker of tennessee. senator corker, if you had to give advice on an intimate basis with the colonel president, or the incoming president, what would you tell him to do to try to stop this horror? well, look. we ve been giving advice for four or five years, chris. this was said to be on the front end of the conflict. it is a blight on human kind.
at this point, the story as it relates to western syria is mostly written. and what will happen will be determined by russia who stepped in, and iran. and certainly assad. so this is a disaster we ve known he is torturing his own people. you ve seen the holocaust museum of caesar who was documenting this. cutting people s genitals off. it has been g
he hasn t been charged with anything yet. but it would be standard procedure, and a special counsel investigation, to look into any financial here s what jared kushner s lawyer is saying in a statement tonight. we do not know what this report refers to. it could be standard practice for the special counsel to examine financial records to look for anything related to russia. mr. kushner previously volunteered to share with congress what he knows about russia related matters. he will do the same if he is contacted in connection with any other inquiry. what s your reaction to that? it may turn up nothing. but this is part and parcel of this long drawn-out investigation that we re in for. the idea that any one of these little new additions of information is going to be the body blow that, you know, unravels this whole mystery or takes down the administration, that s not going to happen. on the other hand, the idea that any one of these stories on its own is going to vindicate kushn
question of the legal team and the defense side hoping this would be gone long ago. and it isn t. and the office of special counsel expected monday or tuesday with their latest request or conditions that they d like to see for a potential interview with the president. one of the things they re saying is he could be asked about matters that happened prior to taking office that would kind of cover the area of collusion, alleged collusion. was there any interference from russian operatives with actual individuals in the trump orbit? we ve seen some of that playing out in recent months. but not things that took place while the president was in office, which would cover all of the things that relate to the comey firing or alleged obstruction of justice. that s where they stand at the moment. will any of this amount to an interview with the president. many legal experts say that would be perilous for the president to voluntarily do it. at the same time, we don t know if the special counsel
successful so far. those animals look good. thanks for inviting us into your home tonight, that s it for this to be 27. fair, balanced and unafraid. a lot of breaking news tonight, you can continue to see it right here with the story from martha. martha: busy day and busy night, thank you, bret, good to see you. so tonight, welcome everybody, expect president trump to come out swinging against the values and the policies of women known as the squad. he has doubled down on his criticism of them and in front of this crowd tonight and just a short moment we expect in north carolina that he will likely trickle down this evening saying the democrats have no policy agenda that they are getting nothing done. his bowls have been on the rise lately, for which today he thanked the vicious young socialist congresswoman. this battle are revving up his base and database as well as they get information on facebook going all these events. it comes at a time when
democrats are struggling to
says oil prices could spike to unimaginably high levels if the world doesn t come together to deter iran they ve been attacks on the saudi oil sector the world s largest crude exporter sharply reducing production still haven t been so and says he prefers a political solution to a military one that s helping ease oil prices today but not the saudis worries fitch has downgraded their credit rating citing the rising tensions. saudi arabia s message is clear an armed conflict with iran would have catastrophic implications for the global economy and send markets reeling it s a stark warning and one riyadh hopes will prevent military action by its long time rival a spate of attacks on saudi oil facilities allegedly orchestrated by iran earlier this month led to a huge spike in crude oil prices as saudi output sputtered in a rare interview with u.s. broadcaster c.b.s. the saudi crown prince issued a stern call to action. and that if the world does not take a strong and firm action to deter
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Freedom of the press in Native tribes was the focus of this year’s Oppenheimer Symposium featuring a panel of Native American journalists and a showing of “Bad Press” which made its premiere on Tuesday, April 9. As part of the Renfrew Interdisciplinary Colloquium, the panel was deemed Freedom of the…
Bad Press: Freedom of the Press in Indian Country According to an article by Indian Country Today, only five tribes (out of 574 federally recognized tribes) in the U.S. have passed laws protecting freedom of the press. One of those tribes, the Muscogee (Creek) Nation repealed its Free Press Act in 2018. Documentary filmmakers Rebecca Landsberry-Baker and Joe Peeler document the fight to restore the freedom of the press in their documentary Bad Press by following tribal journalist Angel Ellis, among others. The film, which premiered at Sundance Film Festival in 2023, explores the importance of an independent press as well as the danger of government corruption. The University of Idaho is hosting Landsberry-Baker and Peeler as keynote speakers for its annual Oppenheimer Ethics Symposium, along with a film screening and Q&A with the directors and Ellis.
The 14th annual Human Rights Watch Film Festival will have in-person and virtual film screenings that explore various social issues, from the rights of LGBTQ+ youth to press freedom.