[wael] without facebook, twitter, google, youtube, appe ned. how big an impact has social networking had on our lives, it s huge. we have of the dogs on it. without facebook, twitter, google, u2, this revolution could never have happened. you guys end up spending 45 minutes or an hour instead of just going to sleep? yeah. managing my brand placements, it s a full-time job. your news fr om? before i get out of bed every morning, i m always on twitter. fake news can have real-world consequences. the pandemic wasn t real and we re here to take the country back. [music] the web is incredibly exciting because it is the fulfillment of a lot of our dreams that the computer would ultimately not be primarily a device for computation, but metamorphosize into a device for communication. [stephen] the promise of the internet from the 90s and the 2000s is that we were all going to share a big, digital community. you know, be part of the global network. and with the rise of
u.s. federal holiday. tonight it is going to be extraordinary. a concert that s uplifting and educational and only seen here on cnn. enjoying an extraordinary display of black talent of genres and generations here. the all-star lineup with earth wind and fire with september and the legendary chaka khan live on stage with ain t nobody. that s michelle turner next to me. and khalid with talk and ne-yo performing and also featured special messages. michelle obama and the first black vice president of the united states kamala harris and will hear from president joe biden. we ll set the stage for the show in less than an hour by talking to the woman known as the grandmother of juneteenth which is opal lee. amazingly young at 95. played a leading role to push lawmakers to formally recognize this holiday. so happy to be with you. it will be a production unlike anything we have seen. the first thing you hear groaning is next to me, michelle turner. i want to know who authoriz
answers. she s just deeply up to her elbows in mischief. inflation is surging. stocks are plunging. experts say a recession is coming. can biden shift the blame to the gop? republicans in congress are doing everything they can to stop my plans to bring down the costs on ordinary families. the american people are bracing for a pricey summer and they know who to blame. inside politics the biggest stories sourced by the best reporters now. good morning. welcome to inside politics sunday. i m abby phillip. donald trump s plot to hold on to power after the election came dangerously close to work jg that s an inescapable conclusion from the hearings investigating january 6 and trump was told over and over that the election fraud claims just weren t true. there was never an indication of interest in what the actual facts were. the theory that vice president pence could basically declare trump the winner wasn t true either. what the president wanted the vice pre
spenders, let them know, almost $2 trillion in deficit reduction. i don t want to hear anymore of these lies are reckless spending. we re changing peoples lives. maria: our lives are certainly changing. coming up former secretary of state mike pompeo on the number one threat to today and the mistakes that got us here from foreign policy to economics. as joe biden claims it is bizarre to blame him even as the president s approval rating plummets with key voting blocks abandoning him, minorities, independents and business. these are treacherous times. frankly the lack of leadership in washington is discouraging. for the president of the united states not once, not once, say i made a mistake, this is my fault, if you look every single thing that happened negative, the devil made me do it or somebody else. when is he going to show leadership including belly-up to the bar say this one s on me? maria: coming up the former president of the kansas city federal reserve, tom hoenig a
patrol falls with the migrants, thousands of pounds of illegal drugs are flowing freely across the southern border. dad jokes may be good for your heart, the impact is having a father figure in her life this father s day weekend. aishah: first americans at a breaking point struggling mightily for food and at the grocery store and gas for their cars but don t worry treasury secretary janet yellen is predicting that inflation is going to get better. i expect the economy to slow, we expect to transition for steady and stable growth. i don t think every session is inevitable that i do expect in the months ahead that the place of inflation is likely to come down. aishah: here s the thing, she s been wrong about inflation before and even apologized for it. remember this. i think it was wrong about the fact that inflation would take as i mentioned as anticipated large shocks to the economy that have boosted energy and food prices and supply bottlenecks that has affected our ec