about strains spreading in the u.s. the overall progress on vaccinations is encouraging. the daily rate is going up. the nation now averaging a new record for daily vaccinations around 2 1/2 million doses per day. that is a relief to see. this all comes as the biden add administration is scrambling to find shelter for migrant children at the u.s.-mexico border. 422 of those children are in u.s. custody. they plan to move thousands of migrant teenagers to a conv convention center in dallas. we ll get to more on the push to vaccinate america. elizabeth cohen is us with. the daily vaccinations keep going up, that s great. you have the big gatherings without masks like we saw images of and serious hesitancy, mainly from republicans. that s right. it s interesting. in a way we can t visualize the hesitancy. so many people are getting vaccinated which is great. i ve been talking with public health officials that are concerned that once everybody that wants the vaccine gets it,
risk, ridiculous hours, no support from you, and the mayor does nothing and now the mayor says we re going to get through this. i mean, really? you couldn t get through it when he told you about it. but i think that this is part of the ripple effect because that town is 65 miles from where george floyd was killed. the original, you know, ground zero of defund the police. and it s like you throw a stone in the pond and the stone just doesn t hit one place. it kind of keeps rippling across the pond and that s what we re seeing in this little town. and a lot of towns where it s the ripple effect of the defund police. and it s not going to work. it s just not going to work with when people think the police aren t worth the value that we know they are. and as for that cop who hit that woman, that s nassau county p.d. let me tell you, they are great! that police department is competent. they re experienced. it took not only competence knowledge of the law, because he can use deadly physical
and here, they have like high risk, ridiculous hours, no support from you, and the mayor does nothing and now the mayor says we re going to get through this. i mean, really? you couldn t get through it when he told you about it. but i think that this is part of the ripple effect because that town is 65 miles from where george floyd was killed. the original, you know, ground zero of defund the police. and it s like you throw a stone in the pond and the stone just doesn t hit one place. it kind of keeps rippling across the pond and that s what we re seeing in this little town. and a lot of towns where it s the ripple effect of the defund police. and it s not going to work. it s just not going to work with when people think the police aren t worth the value that we know they are. and as for that cop who hit that woman, that s nassau county p.d. let me tell you, they are great! that police department is competent. they re experienced. it took not only competence, knowledge of the law, beca
that this was really complicated. - back to the senate. - oh, lord. - then you head up here to the white house to get signed into law. - all right. you could see why this would be a little hard to follow or confusing for anyone who doesn t work in congress for a living. i mean, it s three, five, eight steps at least right here. so the provision that we re talking about that basically said you can t get rid of your student loans to bankruptcy, when do you start to notice it? - so actually, the first place a mention of it pops up is actually back here in this little detour to the rules committee. - okay. what does that suggest? - that suggests it was part of a manager s amendment, which include smaller things that individual members want that just aren t worth the time to debate because they re pretty non-controversial. - i see, so this is where you could kind of slip something in without a ton of public discussion, without as much attention. - yes. - this was a big step. now we knew whe
working, the economy seems to be cooling, byet one more rate increase. the expectation is probably a quarter percentage point increase. then maybe a pause, but there s big pressure from congressional democrats. for the fed to pause now. because they are worried that more rate hooiks could destabilize and cause a recession. we can show you regional stocks. at least they were up. higher interest rates have been one of the pressures on these banks. i m not excusing the management, i m not excusing the regulators, but it puts stress on the bank. that s one of the reasons that they think it s a mistake to raise them again. i why would a rate increase potentially exacerbate the banking stress? the problem is that a lot of these banks have a portfolio that s kind of caught out for interest rates the things they own aren t worth as much today as they would be in they hold them all the way to term.