civil charges, if the justice department goes forward with mark meadows the way it has with steve bannon, that means there s a whole trial that has to happen before you get to the point where you might see some of the concession by the person charged. for instance, they have decided they re not having a trial for steve bannon until the middle of next year. that means that if he has any incentive to change his mind, we re many months off from that. mark meadows has filed a suit of his own against nancy pelosi saying they shouldn t be allowed to subpoena me in the first place. it s possible that gets adjudicated faster than a criminal complaint by the justice department would, if it were to proceed. but we ve seen again and again how long these things can take, and how congressional oversight and even impeachment proceedings have been frustrated by the lack of expeditious of resolution of these legal questions by the courts. gentlemen, thank you very much. we were able to reconnect w
here is a picture of the dog. where is the dog now? reporter: i have been so excited to hopefully tell you about this little chihuahua. it was in a home, actually just down the street from here, in a closet, not unlike this one. and we saw just regular people, neighbors, running in, trying to get this dog, because its owner, we re told, she was hurt in the storm and she is in the hospital. at some point the dog got out, it ran away. we talked to animal control, we saw them just a couple of hours ago with the dog. the dog is in good condition. they said they re going to hold on to it until they track down that owner and make sure that she is doing well and out of the hospital. they have rescued over 20 cats, just the hopkins county animal control alone, and some 18 dogs. they are still going, and it was a little bit of really great news amidst all of the rubble. not only did they find that dog but we re told it is doing really well, it s eaten, it was getting treats, it s doing
is that where this is headed? or is that where liz cheney sees as this being headed? well, you re right, she made that point. she read these text messages received by mark meadows that day including don jr., including fox news personalities, including allies saying you have to get the president to step forward and stop this. her point is he didn t, that the messages he put out were at best equivocal. she calls it dereliction of duty, that he had a duty as president of the united states to protect the constitutional process going on in the capitol that day, counting the electoral college votes that were going to ratify the election of joe biden. and by failing to take action, her argument is that the president of the united states may have in fact subverted the constitution because that process was going on. now, that s a variation of a theme we ve already heard, of course, that he was actually
two years into the pandemic? you know, that is exactly the question that i was asking myself, right? because in fact we discussed this maybe two days ago on news now, do you think the schools will want to go backwards and shut down and go online, and i said no, i don t think schools will want to do that, and now we see schools doing that. what we re balancing, the fundamental question is, we are already at the point where covid is going to be endemic. and so the expectation that we re not going to have infections is completely unrealistic. and we know that two shots the protection wanes, right? it certainly wanes with omicron, but it wanes with delta as well, for protection against symptomatic infection. i think where we re going as a country is that we are going to have to get comfortable with this idea that we re going to have infections and that everyone individually has to think about their risk tolerance and what they re willing to accept. the schools are doing the right