think of that, a year, for a war that vladimir putin once assumed would last only days. the u.s. continues to fund the good fight, another $2 billion heading ukraine s way, but not without some growing resistance in congress and growing concern even among some nato partners and just over the last 24 hours our g20 fellow members. we ll ask ukraine s ambassador to the u.s. what she makes of all of this and whether patience is waning for all of this. she s here and only here. then, what to make of china s mixed signals on this ongoing war even as it dangles a 12-point peace plan to end the war. volodymyr zelenskyy says he would meet with xi jinping. we ll ask brigadier general patrick ryder whether that s a good idea and former defense secretary mark mark esper on why he fears china might have other ideas. then, the young ukrainian mom who become the face of a war in her own backyard back with us. but this time elena is in a different backyard. how she got to safety and who join
gave everyone two days off. but if you look at the history of it, it s somewhat arbitrary. so i think what has happened today post-pandemic when everyone wants to work remotely, and everyone in my company, park place, everyone wants a freelance position, it s sort of a rebellion where people are saying we need more flexibility. so i think that the four-day workweek, you know, movement is just an outgrowth of the fact that people were working too hard. look at what happened, you know, danielle mentioned a company like google. google was one of the companies that had the ping-pong tables in the office, and you had sushi and you never had to leave and your dry cleaning, your gym neil: yeah. with the idea that all these companies would keep you at the office forever, you never had to leave. and i thinkable this is just a natural pendulum swinging in the opposite direction saying, it s enough. we have to fix this. and i think we ll end up landing somewhere in the middle. neil we ll se
well, they re totally different parties, first of all. yes. i don t want to pay you $2, so it is unprecedented we have this going on right now. i think nunez is actually trying to get to the bottom of what is going on. however, the timing of this is very concerning and it should not have been done in a freelance position. if any official, be it any administration, unmasks somebody for some sort of political motive, that is absolutely unacceptable. i think that nunez really needs to explain why he did it now, of all times, and why the president put out a tweet just the same morning that he did it. is he still colluding with the white house? ithe a chance it could blow up in his face though if they subpoena samantha power, susan rice, et cetera? if they were unmasking tied to bad behavior that members of the trump campaign engaged in with russians right. we don t know. susan rice in interviews has said that the you know, this
and doing amazing. i think it will be permanently diminished. reporter: according to the association of american editorial cartoonists there are fewer than 100, compared to 280 a few years ago. the heyday of newspapers is never coming back, so it s more of a freelance position, but there are still people out there willing to do it. he s more that willing to do it, and certainly able. his liberal commentary has gained him national syndication and a spot on the short list for a pulitzer prize last year. who were your i always wanted to draw x-men. i didn t get into political cartooning under the run up to the war. war is boring that s the title of his first cartoon novel. that same year bors took hess sketch pad to afghanistan to draw attention to the scenes there. now he s inkoppetted those into