guns in this country. we ll bring you all the breaking developments from the supreme court as they all happen this hour. that s right. also this morning, we follow several economic stories. hours from now, we could potentially see the biggest interest rate hike in decades. experts believe that the federal reserve is poised to hike rates as much as 0.75%. that may cool inflation, american consumers would feel the impact in many other ways. mortgages, car loans, credit cards and student borrowing would all become more expensive. also this morning, in an effort to drive down historically high gas prices, the biden administration is putting pressure on oil companies for, quote, concrete ideas, lower rising costs. we are following all of that. also, new details on mike pence to block the certification of the election. vice chair of the committee. congresswoman liz cheney teasing ahead to tomorrow s hearing releasing a portion of a taped deposition with former trump white hou
joined me just moments ago. who taught him to hate like that. people that were killed were decent, law abiding people just doing what normal people do on a saturday. this is already being investigated as a hate crime. of the 13 people shot in the attack, 11 of the victims were black, and we re learning more about them, including the security guard that gave his life, there he is, trying to save others. had he not been there, more lives would have been lost and the community knows mr. salter. i had several times shopping, he was beloved by the community. he was a great person, a wonderful personality. anyone that knows him will tell you nothing different. that security guard one of the victims. the suspect is an 18-year-old white man. he allegedly chose and targeted this supermarket because it was in a majority black zip code and within driving distance where he lived. cnn learned a 180 page manifesto posted online before the attack reveals a meticulous, chilling level
late news, fox news at night. and breaking tonight, former secretary of state henry kissinger, one of the most influential american diplomats of his era has died at the age of 100. we ll take a look back at his life, his remarkable political career and lasting legacy. that will happen in moments. meantime in israel, the pause in fighting could end in the next few minutes as negotiations come down to the wire. but today a dozen more hostages were released and, for the first time, we are hearing from them about the horrors they endured. we covered ourselves with a sheet. that s all we had. not everyone had a sheet. the boys slept under the benches, the chairs, on the ground, because we wanted them next to us. trace: and when you think about what the hostages went through and are still going through, think about what s happening in one of california s largest cities where the city council just voted not to condemn hamas. they ve not been beheading and rareness israel murde
without the coronation. i think the word inappropriate without the coronation. i think the word inappropriate is without the coronation. i think the word inappropriate is too - without the coronation. i think the word inappropriate is too strong. i j word inappropriate is too strong. i think word inappropriate is too strong. i think it word inappropriate is too strong. i think it is word inappropriate is too strong. i think it is wholly appropriate to celebrate the5e think it is wholly appropriate to celebrate these occasions, from my point celebrate these occasions, from my point of celebrate these occasions, from my point of view, it is uplifting. if you are point of view, it is uplifting. if you are in point of view, it is uplifting. if you are in a point of view, it is uplifting. if you are in a pocket of society where you are in a pocket of society where you are you are in a pocket of society where you are struggling like the gentleman 5aid, you are struggling
so i can t speak to every bank individually, but the system itself is in quite good shape. i think the measures that were put in place on sunday evening i think were big, bold measures. they re not permanent. i don t think laws would allow them to be permanent and i think they give the government flexibility to step in and provide that liquidity into the system to make sure that each and every depositor that wants to take their money out or move their money has access to their money and the ability to do that. that s something that under the structure won t be permanent, but we don t need permanence. we just need enough time for those monies to get to where they want to get and to get the system to normalize without crisis pressures to be able to move forward. and do you expect, bottom line, mike, and i know you don t know and sometimes you can look at the ratios and the numbers, right? and then psychology wins. is it possible that we have more bank failures in coming