what is the white house trying to hide? nothing. someone gave the president a statement to read on tuesday that was incomplete at best, misleading at worst. who? so i ve read out the president s statement. i ve read it out yesterday, what he said. he said that he respects or he takes classified information and documents very seriously. that s what he said. he said that he did not know that the records were there. he does not know what s in them. he said that. you heard from him directly on this. and his team has been cooperating fully, fully, and not only that, again, i ll say this, the attorney general said this himself, that he heard from the team shortly after. so we have laid out, laid out, what has occurred here. you ve heard from the white house counsel. i just read the statement from his lawyer. the and, again, you know, we take this very seriously. the president does as well. when will the white house release a log of visitors to the wilmington house? you
sort of chill and catch up. man, it s going to be speed-a-rama after that. good seeing you. congratulations again. we ll take a look at the weather, particularly in the south. we re keeping track of developments. this could be nasty weather already, and could get worse. tell us about it. it started early this morning with the tornado watches and warnings that had been in place. we re not done just yet. you talked about the south. look at this line extending quite a distance. this line alone from atlanta, in and around atlanta, extends quite a distance here. we have a couple of tornado warnings here. i want to point out, one tornado warning here, just outside of atlanta, to the south of atlanta, a confirmed tornado. that tornado, as we move in closer, has been a concern, because it is a dangerous situation. you move in tighter here, neil, just outside of peachtree city,
over jackson, over interstate 75. these storms continue to move to the east. as we go through the afternoon, here s that line. look how far it extends. we had a confirmed tornado close to the hartsfield airport in atlanta with the ground stop in place, as the storms were moving through. in alabama, where they started early today, 22 reports of tornadoes, video coming in of the damage out in the area, throughout alabama. we ll see more images coming in from georgia as we go through the evening hours. you can see from alabama, the tornado down on the ground. this one was one that we could see. some of the storms have been rain-wrapped. they weren t able to see them. from brad arnold, out there chasing the storm, you can see the rotation on the right side of your screen. that s been a major concern for us. we did have 22 reports of tornadoes. in addition, three tornado emergencies. what is a tornado emergency? they don t take this lightly at
we ve allowed it to happen. we ve gone backwards. we re apparently okay with it. many trains used to crack 100 miles an hour with regularity back in the 1930s. well, today our high-speed line on the east coast, the acela, averages 87 miles an hour. much of the world from spain to france to china is zooming down the rails while we regress. we travel back in time. then there s hartsfield airport in atlanta, the world s busiest, when they have electric power. they did not yesterday, thanks to an underground fire that also toasted the backup line. and as a result over 1500 flights were canceled along with all the holiday hopes and dreams of tens of thousands of air passengers idled. there s speculation tonight a power line was gnawed on by a rat. and if that s true, if something with whiskers and a stale can take down hartsfield, imagine what a determined hacker from
france to china is zooming down the rails while we regress. we travel back in time. then there s hartsfield airport in atlanta, the world s busiest, when they have electric power. they did not yesterday, thanks to an underground fire that also toasted the backup line. and as a result over 1500 flights were canceled along with all the holiday hopes and dreams of tens of thousands of air passengers idled. there s speculation tonight a power line was gnawed on by a rat. and if that s true, if something with whiskers and a stale can take down hartsfield, imagine what a determined hacker from north korea can do. all of this goes by the decidedly unsexy and clunky washington label of infrastructure spending. put another way, we get to spend our money on new stuff if we decide we want it. we then leave to washington to decide how to spend it and what could go wrong there.