rocket attacks in 24 hours as the military steps up its assault in ukraine. our reporters are here to cover all of the latest developments and we start there. nbc s richard engel is in dnipro, ukraine, this latest barrage of missiles, give us the latest we know about what s happening on the ground there. reporter: so ukrainians are shrugging it off. they so far say that the russian offensive, which was launched about two weeks ago, is not shaping up to be as devastating as province, the head of ukrainian intelligence earlier today said the russian offensive appears to be of such low quality that some field commanders don t even know that it has begun, that there has been intense activity from the russian side around bakhmut where we have been reporting over the last couple of weeks, but that in other areas, the russians are running so low on ammunition on artillery shells they are now in an ammunition conservation mode. so, yes, they are still able to launch rockets at unde
been. i told president zelenskyy when we spoke in kyiv yesterday, i can proudly say that our support for ukraine remains unwavering. meanwhile, russian president vladimir putin is dialing up his rhetoric against the west, suspending participation in the last nuclear arms treaty with the u.s., even using the word war as he sends a clear message about what russia has long called a special military operation. translator: i would like to repeat, they started the war and we used the force in order to stop it. complicating questions about the future of this conflict, china s top diplomat is now in moscow this morning. live reports from russia, poland, and ukraine in moments. meanwhile, back here at home, a compounding crisis in ohio, the head of the epa is back in east palestine today as a clinic is set to open to address the community s health concerns following the derailment of the train with toxic chemicals on board. can they treat the mistrust building in the community
twitter or planned the attack on twitter, so they really peppered both sides with a number of questions, but at the end of the day, the justices seemed unpersuaded, chris. so sam, you wrote this piece for axios titled big tech s future is up to a supreme court that doesn t understand it. and we got confirmation of your headline from justice elena kagan who said these are not the nine best experts on the internet. it s factoring in more than a lot of people in the tech vi thought it would. the court historically is not all that great at sort of anticipating technological advances, and to some extent, that s not really its job, right. like it tries to sort of solve problems by finding one principle that it could point to forever and ever and that s not really how technology works.
back in east palestine today as a clinic is set to open to address the community s health concerns following the derailment of the train with toxic chemicals on board. can they treat the mistrust building in the community? not sure whether to believe everyone or not. and they re concerned for third kids, they re afraid to drink the water, they re concerned for bathing their babies. plus, big changes could be in big tech s future. for first time ever, the supreme court is hearing arguments about a controversial internet rule that says tech can t be found liable for content posted by users. how this could change the internet as we know it. and we re keeping a very close eye on the courtroom in south carolina, right now, alex murdaugh s son buster is on the stand testifying in his father s double murder trial. details on his testimony ahead. we re going to start with the duelling speeches by russian president vladimir putin and president biden who set to speak in poland next hour