because we have two to talk about, a staggering new on the biden border crisis, customs and border patrol or telling fox news that in the past four months alone, they are been nearly 300,000 got a ways, the ones that we know about that the cameras on the sensors pick up, plus last week agents told fox news they were having more than 1.2 million guideways since president biden took office, that does not include all of the ones in the country that we have no idea that they crept in. it is not only cities near the southern border that are feeling the effects of this, check out what happened in new york city last night. [screaming] harris: okay, protests broke out when dozens of people refuse to leave the watson hotel in midtown manhattan, the city is kicking them out and relocating them to the brooklyn cruise terminal, mayor eric adams has ordered construction of a temporary emergency shelter there for people who are in this country trying to stay here after crossing our south
i m here to see if i can trace just one person through one of these lost objects and shed new life on this dangerous journey taken by so many. my name is thomas naadi and i m a bbc correspondent. i m based in ghana, my country, but my journey starts here in lampedusa. this has long been an arrival spot for refugees seeking better opportunities in europe. i m here to meet one of the founders of a collective set up for objects lost by those travelling on this route. i m hoping to use one of these objects as a lens for looking closer into the migrant s story. indicative of so many, traced through a single object lost with along the way. giacomo shows me some of the objects closest to his heart. giacomo found most of these down and lampedusa, where for years, the authorities received. it s a slightly strange feeling to be standing here on this island in the footprints of so many. looking at all those objects, i could just imagine the pain, the sacrifice and the strength needed to
at a court hearing in new york. he s accused of falsifying business records. here is some of what he s said. the only crime that i have committed is to fearlessly defend our nation from those who seek to destroy it. (cheering) from the beginning the democrats spied on my campaign. do you remember that? they attacked me with an onslaught of fraudulent investigations, russia, prussia, russia, ukraine, ukraine, ukraine. impeachment hopes number one, impeachment notes number two. the illegal and unconstitutional raid on mar a lago, right here. (booing) they re lying to the department ofjustice, the department of justice, the unconstitutional changes department ofjustice, the unconstitutional changes to election laws by not getting approvals from state legislators. the millions of votes legislators. the millions of votes illegally stuffed into ballot votes illegally stuffed into ballot boxes and all court on government cameras. and ballot boxes and all court on government came
every time i see this view, my heart skips a beat. we re here! tenochtitlan, mexico city. so many emotions, because there s so much history in this exact spot. it all started here in tenochtitlan, capital of the mighty aztec empire, until the spanish invaded 500 years ago and changed its name to mexico city. the amount of churches you can see from up here there s 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. seven in one block. that s called the spanish conquest. [sizzling] over time, new spices and ingredients started to appear, carried across continents by traders and travelers from faraway lands. i don t know the secret to happiness. all i know is, every time i eat mexican food, i m happy. - yeah. - [laughs] i m eva longoria, born and bred in texas, with mexican-american roots, which makes me a texican. i m exploring mexico to see how the people, their lands, and their past have shaped a culinary tradition as diverse as its 32 states. mexico city is going through a major makeover, shedding it
it all started here in tenochtitlan, capital of the mighty aztec empire, until the spanish invaded 500 years ago and changed its name to mexico city. the amount of churches you can see from up here there s 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. seven in one block. that s called the spanish conquest. [sizzling] over time, new spices and ingredients started to appear, carried across continents by traders and travelers from faraway lands. i don t know the secret to happiness. all i know is, every time i eat mexican food, i m happy. - yeah. - [laughs] i m eva longoria, born and bred in texas, with mexican-american roots, which makes me a texican. i m exploring mexico to see how the people, their lands, and their past have shaped a culinary tradition as diverse as its 32 states. mexico city is going through a major makeover, shedding its old reputation to emerge as one of the world s greatest food destinations. - i love that mexican food is now that. it s not only, like, taco tuesday. - native