it. inflation, it is zapping the strength of a lot of families. that inflation hit 8.6% last month, highest rate since 1981. majority of americans weren t even alive actually. u.s. families paying more for everything. gas, cars, food, housing, just to name a few. plane tickets, everything. and today fed is expected to rise rates three quarters of a point. so that means that people will pay more to get a car loan, houses and even college. that will taste bad, but the hope is that it cools down inflation overall. right now on wall street you re seeing a little bit of optimism here heading into this final fed decision here. in overseas market, mixed performance in asia and europe has opened higher this morning. this is a perfect day to talk to greg mcbride from bankrate.com, he knows something about interest rates, all kinds of different rates. hi, greg, how are you? good morning, christine, great to be with you again. so this rate hlike we re expecting, 75 basis point
11th hour with stephanie ruhle starts right now. uhle starts right now tonight, kicking off a critical week for this country, this from the first january 6th hearing, the primetime plan, and what a brand-new indictment reveals about the investigation. bluff, after another deadly weekend, more than a dozen mass shootings in multiple cities. are we any closer to actually ending the violence? and yet, another threat from elon musk, as he in his bid to take over twitter. as the 11th hour gets underway on this monday night. good evening once again. i am stephanie ruhle. and we are at the start of what could be a pivotal week for this nation. the january six committee is about to reveal what it has learned about efforts to keep donald trump and the white house, after he lost the election. on thursday night, the committee starts a series of public hearings, after nearly a year of investigations. according to the washington post, lawmakers will be relying on insider t
tonight s last word, the 11th hour with stephanie ruhle starts right now. starts right now tonight, kicking off a critical week for this country, this from the first january 6th hearing, the primetime plan, and what a brand-new indictment reveals about the investigation. plus, after another deadly weekend, more than a dozen mass shootings in multiple cities. are we any closer to actually ending the violence? and yet, another threat from elon musk, in his bid to take over twitter. as the 11th hour gets underway on this monday night. good evening once again. i am stephanie ruhle. and we are at the start of what could be a pivotal week for this nation. the january six committee is about to reveal what it has learned about efforts to keep donald trump and the white house, after he lost the election. on thursday night, the committee starts a series of public hearings, after nearly a year of investigations. according to the washington post, lawmakers will be relying
quickly, it only took once, i do not pull irons any more. what about other types of pain? do we learn our lessons first time or in such a rush to feel better we leave before class ending? when something terrible happens we want to move on, it is human nature, a defense mechanism. we change the subject. we avoid the topic, we move on so the pain will stop. but in our haste to feel better, do we sometimes leave before the lesson is learned? not a single person of good conscious who does not grieve in the aftermath of a mass killing. because the weight is heavy, we don t want to linger and move othe risk is we leave before the lesson is learned. so the pain hurts but it does not alter us. there is yet another classroom full of dead children and teachers, will this time be different? history says no. what did we learn? what changed? did the pain hurt or did the pain alter. if we re open to change, the question is what, how, what would work, what is a real solution versus anothe
that lesson was learned quickly, it only took once, i do not pull irons any more. what about other types of pain? do we learn our lessons first time or in such a rush to feel better we leave before class ending? when something terrible happens we want to move on, it is human nature, a defense mechanism. we change the subject. we avoid the topic, we move on so the pain will stop. but in our haste to feel better, do we sometimes leave before the lesson is learned? not a single person of good conscious who does not grieve in the aftermath of a mass killing. because the weight is heavy, we don t want to linger and move othe risk is we leave before the lesson is learned. so the pain hurts but it does not alter us. there is yet another classroom full of dead children and teachers, will this time be different? history says no. what did we learn? what changed? did the pain hurt or did the pain alter. if we re open to change, the question is what, how, what would work, what is a rea