[applause] women and children are they primary victims of a conflic and of climate change, and there is no place that unfortunately tragically shows us that s more dramaticall than and ukraine today but there are a lot of complex a lot of other challenges that we have to take into account a we look at gender apartheid in afghanistan, the persecution and oppression of girls and woman exercising their freedom of choice in iran, and so many other places madam zelenka, can yo briefly talk about the women o ukraine. their resilience and how the have had to adapt to thi historic time, and how the contribute to ukraine s future [speaking non-english]
i understand that the symbols eyewear represent hate to many people, so peopl automatically have a conflic with that. when we come in here, we are forced to fight for our live against other races. it causes a lot of hurt in other peoples hearts i know, if i could remove it right now, i would remove it you know what i mean if i find somebody to hel remove it let s do it so if anyone s out ther were looking for somebody wh could help to remove this. please! - a collective group o individuals coming together fo
a few stops as david put it is that what we re seeing in is that what this is? look, but we have here is a record that has gone for a long time of falsehoods, words and statements and claims that simply don t add up. we could play the game he means well when he names a bill that is all but the green new deal, the inflation reduction act. was that just he means well. when he claims that gasoline prices which have skyrocketed occurred because of the conflic with russia, is that supposed t be heartfelt? is that supposed to be he means well when he claims that he has personally already gone to the
going to running to the rescue to save ukraine. and the troops are on the ground that we re talking to here on the border, they know that just as well. for them, this is just another turn of the screw in an eight-year-long conflic. this is not new for them. this has been grinding on for a very long time. for them, this is about ant individual movements or diplomacy or shifts in tone, to them, this is always going to be a threat, so they have this feeling of resigned boredom. one said that they were going to be sitting in this foxhole for quite a while longer. jose? jonathan bradley, peter alexander, helene cooper, thank you all this morning. now joining us is mikey sherell. it s a pleasure to see you this morning. what do you make of this news of 3,000 u.s. troops being sent to
much different view from what we see in the west as far as the conflict is concerned. finally, you ve seen president putin try to compare this conflic conflict implicitly to the russians fighting against germany years ago and it s a way of bolstering support. so the short answer is putin is concerned about popular opinion and his position at the head of the russian state but he s certainly not panicking at this moment. we will end this segment in total agreement between you two. michael, thomas, thank you both so much. you re certainly welcome. still to come this morning, more than 3 million people have fled ukraine since the start of the war. many of them heading across the border to poland. we ll take you there for a close-up look at a humanitarian crisis. plus, she lost her father in putin s first invasion and now