Transcripts for MSNBC Deadline White House 20210517 20:36:00 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
his arm demanding giving up a bracelet surrendering to u.s. agents one the more than 531,000 people who have crossed the u.s.-mexico border so far in 2021. on the edge of the flowing rio grand river discarded clothing, coats socks, shoes, now blankets for hundreds who crossed just this week in a move by mexican government in recent days mexican marines dawning camouflage scanning water front taking groups of people into custody an active presence while sheriff hasn t seen in his 40 years in val verde county. showing this administration that mexico, mexicans are trying to keep the border secure. migrants who do make it across border it is end of their physical journey yet just beginning in the request for the right to stay. now, in this specific region,
warning force will come back. labor force feeling more confident in getting back to work and that is how we re going to have to manage it. some states announce they will stop participating in some federal unemployment programs and hotel managers are hopeful that will help motivate workers to return. jon. jon: robert sherman robert, thank you. well after nearly two decades under ground noisy cicadas back in a big way with numbers expected in trillions. coming up, how homeowners are bracing for the invasion. i have an idea for a trade. oh yeah, you going to place it?
found a cicada in her car. i was having an outright panic attack, they re awful, i hate them. she admits she doesn t generally like any insects, but she s not alone in her anxiety over cicadas, which emerge from the earth every 17 years, in what can only be described as a biblical onslaught of swarming and noise making and they come out and make a noise like a horror movie, but they re harmless. they don t sting, they don t bite, they can t hurt people at all. a scientist at the university of maryland. here is a beggar one. oh, nice, oh, so cute. one myth about cicadas is that they re dormant when they re underground and only wake up after a spring thaw. they re actually really busy down there? they re busy, feeding on tree roots and the sap and
i hate them. [laughter] admits she doesn t generally like any insects but she s not alone in her anxiety over cicadas. which emerge from the earth every 17 years. in can be only described as a biblical unslot of swarming and noise making. so they come out all at once make this noise like a horror movie but they are harmless. can t hurt people at all. paula is a scientist at the university of maryland. here s a big one. nice. one myth about cicadas they re dormant underground and only wake up after a spring fall. they re actually really busy down there. they are busy they re actively feeding on tree roots, sap and actively developing. and when they do finally surface in swarms of millions per acre,