going, no matter what happens tuesday. joining us next, the man who faced off against gavin newsom in 2002 . john cox. i talked to the organizers of the recall. i thought it was necessary to get this done. i wrote a big check that got them through to a court date. this state was suffering under a man made drought, electricity blackouts. and the shutdown, and i thought the recall was necessary. here we are a year later. i think it s very necessary and i hope the voters recognize that and come out the next couple days to change the management of this state which is desperately needed. steve: i am looking at the backgrounds there and it features a bear. what you are emphasizing is
directing their anger at the regime. these people are shouting death to the islamic republic! prolongued drought and high temperatures have brought on a water crisis. it s devastated agriculture, dried up rivers, and led to electricity blackouts. khuzestan province, in the southwest, is at the heart of these protests. it sits on 80% of iran s oil and 60% of its gas reserves. in other words, it s critical to the country s economy. it also has the densest arab population. and that s often led to tensions, violence and attempted separatism. but it shouldn t come as a shock to iran s government. in 2018, the former head of iran s environmental protection agency said we re past the crisis stage. it s a water bankruptcy. our demand and consumption are way higher than the available water. this year, the world meteorological organisation warned that
Killeen-Fort Hood area residents woke up to a blanket of snow, single-digit temperatures and rolling electricity blackouts Monday after a winter storm passed through, crippling much of Texas in its wake.
Roads across the city were covered in 2 to 6 inches of snow Monday morning after hours of snowfall that started late Sunday. The white stuff made the road conditions worse after they already were hazardous after days of freezing rain and sub-freezing temperatures in the area.
A few cars and trucks were seen Monday morning driving slowly on interstates 14 and 35, where Texas Department of Transportation had plowed the roadway, however, conditions were still slippery.