not ones to write home about. 11.3% is the jump in wholesale prices from a year ago and came in lot steamier than economists predicted coming off the you know what it feels like when you buy things. consumer prices are up substantially. fastest pace we ve seen since 1981 back in reagan years. you have to go to art laffer to find that out. white house points out wages are up. here is the deal. wages aren t rising at the pace of inflation. you look at a pay cut of 3.6%. if you crunch the numbers inflation is costing the average american household $500 a month. setting on fire every single month because you aren t getting anything for that $500. bill: questions now including this how did we get here? many economists blame out of control government spending along the way. democrats are passed more than $3 trillion in new spending under president biden and they aren t taking their foot off the gas as they look to revamp build back better. let s go to mark meredith live f
thousands of people in areas at risk of flooding in pakistan have been told to evacuate their homes. aid agencies say floods could develop into one of the country s worst disasters as the heaviest monsoon rains in decades continue. nearly 1,000 people have died sincejune, while thousands more have been displaced. southern pakistan has been hardest hit by the rains particularly sindh province. it has received nearly eight times its average rainfall for august. rivers have also burst their banks in the north west khyber pa ktunkwa province. 0ur correspondent pumza fihlani reports from sindh. swathes of land across southern pakistan have been turned into islands. the rains have been unforgiving, and the water is still trapped between people s homes. homes, roads and infrastructure have been destroyed, and some villages completely isolated. this week authorities issued fresh warnings for people to get to higher ground. for some, that meant beside a road. families left with what
of so called quiet quitting ? thousands of people in areas at risk of flooding in pakistan have been told to evacuate their homes. aid agencies say floods could develop into one of the country s worst disasters as the heaviest monsoon rains in decades continue. nearly a thousand people have died sincejune, while thousands more have been displaced. southern pakistan has been hardest hit by the rains particularly sindh province. it has received nearly eight times its average rainfall for august. rivers have also burst their banks in the north west khyber pa ktunkwa province. our correspondent pumza fihlani reports from sindh. swathes of land across southern pakistan have been turned into islands. the rains have been unforgiving, and the water is still trapped between people s homes. homes, roads and infrastructure have been destroyed, and some villages completely isolated. this week authorities issued fresh warnings for people to get to higher ground. families left with what
that was donald trump s message to his supporters, encouraging thousands of people to show up in washington d.c. to protest a fair and free election. and wild it was. the pro trump mob stormed the u.s. capitol on january 6th, after trump told a crowd of supporters to quote fight like hell. this week s january six hearing will highlight trump s own words, and how his repeated lies of a stolen election radicalized americans. this morning, on meet the press, committee members stephanie murphy previewed tuesday s hearing, which is going to lay out the actions of violent extremists. we will lay out the body of evidence that we have that talks about how the president s tweet on the wee hours of december 19th of be there, be wild, it was a siren call. we will talk in detail about what that caused them to do, how it caused them to organize as well as who else was amplifying that message. and new late today, nbc news confirms for their oath keeper spokesman jason van tighten who v
collapsed on the street with several security guards running toward him on the video. he can be seen bleeding and holding his chest, according to kyodo news. he sustained a bullet wound on the right side of his neck. a chief cabinet secretary says police arrested a male suspect at the scene of the shooting in nara. it s not clear yet what might have motivated the shooting done. violence is extremely rare in japan. in 2018, japan only reported nine deaths from firearms. shinzo abe was japan s longest serving prime minister until he resigned in 2020 speaking from indonesia. us secretary of state anthony blinken expressed deep concern following the shooting within hours of a series of and former president trump reacted to the news of the shooting, saying, quote, this is a tremendous blow to the wonderful people of japan who loved and admired him so much. we are all praying for shinzo and his beautiful family. the current prime minister suspended his campaign following the shooti