moment, but first, president biden in south korea today where he is issuing new warnings to china and north korea. jacqui heinrich is in seoul with the very latest. reporter: good morning to you, david. in case the subtext of the president s trip was not clear enough, he wrapped up his final full day in south korea with a not so veil ised warning the china that they better not invade taiwan, or they ll face at least the same treatment that that russia is getting over its invasion of ukraine. our alliance between our countries is built on shared sacrifice. our joint commitment to the freedom of the republic of korea and our opposition [inaudible] reporter: before his state dinner with south korean president yun, biden sopped to sign a $40 billion aid package funding ukraine s military, having that bill flown to the other side of the world for his immediate signature so there ll be no lapse in funding. the moment underscoring alliance after china buzzed taiwan with a do
americans think we re going in the wrong direction, and it s primarily because of the economy. i think you re absolutely right. learn we live here, right? we re the ones experiencing it. i don t really care what s going on in china, i care about what s happening in this country, and i think a recession is here. a. david: danielle, we did have a fed official out, and he s kind of a hawk. he s the president of of the fed, his name is mr. bullard, and he was on fox business earlier week, and he kind of took issue with that recession charge. let me just play that tape. roll it. not year. reporter: next year? no, i don t really think so. that s not my base case. recessions would have to come because there s some really large shock, and i can t rule out that there d be some really big shock and maybe there would be. but i m not seeing it, you know, near term. david: danielle, he says he wants to get the fed s fund rate, the interest rates up to 3.5%.