the southwestern part of the state. claudia, what are you doing now? i m so owe i m getting important stuff. my paperwork. my husband s personal things. i lost him two months ago. now i ve lost my only home. so i m packing it up, taking it to my car. you re packing it up in a garbage can? yeah. have you the goe gotten any p yet? no. but that s okay. i m strong. i can get it, get the important things. all right, claudia, god bless you. thank you. all right. i ll be all right. claudia says she s strong, and that s what people are relying on, at least in the first early hours here, their own strength. some people have been asking us for water, food, and of course communication is a tough thing as well with all the cellphones down. right now really it s neighbor helping each other here until help from more than 35 states arrives. tucker, back to you. tucker: we ll assess the path of the storm and the damage that it s wrought with hurricane expert brian nor
seriously. they don t care about people. they care about advancing the power of the political party they belong to. if you need more evidence of that, joy reed went on to explain that the hurricane, the one we just saw, is not a moment to stop and reflect on the flailing jilt of life. no. it s another reason to keep our border open. watch. the reality is that humans, we re literally running from what the climate from the climate change that we re pretending isn t happening, but we re physically being moved around the earth because of it. it will actually be the single biggest cause of migration. we talk about migration being caused by conflict and wars, in syria and ukraine. it s going to be migration because people can t move. generally prosperous people can move first, because they can afford to, but when the grain stops growing, the fields start flooding, the poor people move too. we have to come to terms with