last few years. this is a group associated with both al qaeda in with militias in libya next door and also foreign fighters in syria and iraq. tunisia has the greatest number of fighters in syria and iraq fighting with groups like isis. more than 3,000 according to government estimates. so that s a staggering number. hundreds of them have come back to tunisia. this is something that security officials in tunisia have been watching for some time but an attack like this specifically targeting a tourist area has not happened in a very long time there. it is a big shock to the country. as you can see there with the tourists coming in a number of them elderly, this is a destination for people that want to see the archaeological treasures of tunisia and so it s a shock to them that a museum like this particular has been targeted. this is supposed to be a beautiful afternoon for them at the museum taking their time and
about the question of cancellations, because as i say, this is not a web site problem. it s a lot of problems that have to be fixed. there has been so much attention to the millions of individual policyholders who have had their policies canceled. let s put this up on the screen. in the first month, for every one person that got insurance, 50 people lost coverage. but it now turns out millions more will lose employer policies. back in 2010, the administration projected about 14 million people who now get health insurance through their jobs will lose that by 2019. other government estimates are even worse. neera, hasn t the president misled all of us about the possibility that we could lose the plans we have? so, first of all, on these, i haven t seen these estimates of 14 million people from employer-based that was from cms. that was a higher coverage. cbo has done projections since then. they are much lower than that. so, i think i think we can really find the facts
there may be in other programs, but not in this program. i disagree. i just said the numbers were 773 million. 753 million spent fraudulently each year. guys, i ve got to go. we could talk forever, but i ve got to go. that s exaggerated. that s according to the usda estimates, the own government estimates. yeah, yeah. thanks, guys. terrifying night in one city as raging flames keep people endoors. we ll tells you where crews were fighting these fires. and good news for anyone who flies, you and your gadget will get to spend a little more time together. is that always good news? i guess it is when you re on an airplane and you re stuck.
leaving home for food. the sequester cut funding for the government s senior nutrition program by 5%. that works out to a $40 million hit to meals on wheels alone, the respected program that s delivered food to seniors for the last six decades. or think of the people who rely on public housing in washington. they make just $13,000 a year. that figure is so low because 40% of them aren t even working age. they re children or seniors. another 25% are disabled. the new cuts will put some of those people out into the streets. and if the sequester continues, about 125,000 public housing residents will face the same fate according to government estimates. now, look, i get the politics here. the poor and the homeless don t have the loudest voices in our democracy. they are, in a fundamental sense, politically invisible. their struggles are typically measured as merely a cost for the rest of us, not as a human or moral toll. and because of their powerlessness, washington only
at emergency rooms visits are up along with the concerns of heat related health problems. it causes swelling and weakness and a lot of stress on the heart and lungs. reporter: in maryland, residents like carl ton davis are still waiting for electricity to be restored one week after a storm knocked out power. it has been miserable. that s the truth. reporter: in the past month alone, the tore rid heat has left its mark in the books, setting 4500 daily record highs and 781 monthly record highs and breaking 238 all time record highs. it s not just the strength of the high pressure system parked over the middle of the country, we ve had ongoing drought, dry land and basically heat the air up more quickly and more efficiently. that s why we re suffering so much in places like chicago and st. louis. reporter: according to government estimates, the drought now affects more than half the country and farm experts say is quickly burning up the nation s crops.