image, according to a french government report. coming up on the film review: the dinosaurs are back. find out what mark kermode thinks of drastic world: dominion and the rest of the weeklike maine releases at 5:45pm. on the government s controversial plans to fly some migrants to rwanda next week. the core has been hearing a claim from charities and campaigners against the home office which is due to put 31 asylum seekers on a plan to rwanda on tuesday. the first flight of its kind. lawyers have told the high court the government s policy is irrational and misleading. other the home office insists its plan is in the public interest and does comply with national and international law. our legal correspondent dominic casciani reports. a bed with a roof over it but is it safety and sanctuary? this is one of the reception hotels waiting in rwanda s capital, kigali, for asylum seekers from the uk due to arrive on the flight leaving next tuesday. legally controversial, but a
over the january 6th insurrection. [ chanting hang mike pence ] s. it s over. you better run, cops. [ stop the steal chant ] investigating the violence and the lies that fuelled an attack on this nation s democracy. tonight a january 6th select committee presents its case in prime time involving a former president, his enablers. the committee promises new evidence. what will it mean for america s future? let s start with cnn congressional correspondent ryan nobles. and ryan, 1,000 witness interviews. mountains of documents, and a promise that the public will see some things for the first time tonight. walk us through what to expect. well, the first thing is that anybody that watches this hearing tonight should not be prepared to see what they would think of as a traditional congressional hearing. committees are describing it as a multimedia presentation. we re going to see graphics. we re going to see sound bites from witness interviews that t tack place behind closed d
quickly, it only took once, i do not pull irons any more. what about other types of pain? do we learn our lessons first time or in such a rush to feel better we leave before class ending? when something terrible happens we want to move on, it is human nature, a defense mechanism. we change the subject. we avoid the topic, we move on so the pain will stop. but in our haste to feel better, do we sometimes leave before the lesson is learned? not a single person of good conscious who does not grieve in the aftermath of a mass killing. because the weight is heavy, we don t want to linger and move othe risk is we leave before the lesson is learned. so the pain hurts but it does not alter us. there is yet another classroom full of dead children and teachers, will this time be different? history says no. what did we learn? what changed? did the pain hurt or did the pain alter. if we re open to change, the question is what, how, what would work, what is a real solution versus anothe
that lesson was learned quickly, it only took once, i do not pull irons any more. what about other types of pain? do we learn our lessons first time or in such a rush to feel better we leave before class ending? when something terrible happens we want to move on, it is human nature, a defense mechanism. we change the subject. we avoid the topic, we move on so the pain will stop. but in our haste to feel better, do we sometimes leave before the lesson is learned? not a single person of good conscious who does not grieve in the aftermath of a mass killing. because the weight is heavy, we don t want to linger and move othe risk is we leave before the lesson is learned. so the pain hurts but it does not alter us. there is yet another classroom full of dead children and teachers, will this time be different? history says no. what did we learn? what changed? did the pain hurt or did the pain alter. if we re open to change, the question is what, how, what would work, what is a rea