[inaudible convens] [inaudible conversations] the committee will come back to order. The gentleman from montana. Thank you very much. Thank you for joining us and i hope you didnt sever too much anxiety taking that Community Back to washington. A little bit of ptsd with the. One of the things i like to paraphrase is dwight eisenhower, listen from disinformation of information from of my colleagues on the other side. Dwight eisenhower said it looks easy when you live 1000 miles away from a cornfield that is exactly the problem in this body on a daily basis. Too many people are making decisions about Land Management in our part of the world they are not familiar with at all and unfortunately we have people making those decisions such as a director who was a known collaborator with ecoterrorist and secretary of interior who will provide documents and lobbying efforts that certainly doesnt help matters. Sadly to hold his hearing so that we, the people impacted the most by it can get Accura
Come on. Next friends. Could never love anyone except. Coming up. On the whole story. Such an amazing sensation. Welcome in the sky. The world is in such a difficult position. The lake used to go half a mile around the corner mad and go, go kill that thing. Good evening. Welcome to the whole story. Im anderson cooper. Tonight we take you on a journey around the world to meet people fighting against something that can be seen or touched, but his threatening our planet and the way we live more than a trillion tons of carbon gas has been released into our seas and skies over time. It comes from a lot of different sources, but the biggest is burning fossil fuels for electricity, heat and transportation. But tonight, cnns chief climate correspondent, bill weir, has found some reasons to hope. Some unique ways innovators are trying to capture contained and reduce carbon emissions. They are climate warriors, and they just may show us how to unscrew a planet. Attention humans of earth got good
sensation. welcome in the sky. the world is in such a difficult position. the lake used to go half a mile around the corner mad and go, go kill that thing. good evening. welcome to the whole story. i m anderson cooper. tonight we take you on a journey around the world to meet people fighting against something that can be seen or touched, but his threatening our planet and the way we live more than a trillion tons of carbon gas has been released into our seas and skies over time. it comes from a lot of different sources, but the biggest is burning fossil fuels for electricity, heat and transportation. but tonight, cnn s chief climate correspondent, bill weir, has found some reasons to hope some unique ways innovators are trying to capture contain and reduce carbon emissions. they are climate warriors, and they just may show us how to unscrew a planet. attention humans of earth got good news and bad news. good news is that the combined sweat and brilliance of the 117 billion or
come on. next friends. could never love anyone except. coming up. on the whole story. such an amazing sensation. welcome in the sky. the world is in such a difficult position. the lake used to go half a mile around the corner mad and go, go kill that thing. good evening. welcome to the whole story. i m anderson cooper. tonight we take you on a journey around the world to meet people fighting against something that can be seen or touched, but his threatening our planet and the way we live more than a trillion tons of carbon gas has been released into our seas and skies over time. it comes from a lot of different sources, but the biggest is burning fossil fuels for electricity, heat and transportation. but tonight, cnn s chief climate correspondent, bill weir, has found some reasons to hope. some unique ways innovators are trying to capture contained and reduce carbon emissions. they are climate warriors, and they just may show us how to unscrew a planet. attention humans of ea
son on tv, but you know that child of holocaust was reporting the news. the best revenge. is to survive and thrive. that s why it s so important that we educate and we show the world what was going on, and that s what we re doing. hello again, everyone. thank you so much for joining me this sunday. i m fredricka whitfield and us diplomatic personnel and their families are now out of sudan. they were airlifted to neighboring djibouti in a dramatic overnight evacuation more than 100. us special operations personnel were involved in the extraction. the u. s embassy in her tomb has now suspended operations. violence in sudan broke out more than a week ago. heavy fighting between rival military factions, leaving more than 400 dead and thousands injured. cnn s or in lieberman is at the pentagon for so or in what more are you learning about this operation? this was an operation carried out effectively in the dead of night by a fairly small group of special operations forces right ar