i can t wait. sean: i ll be gone by wednesday or thursday. laura: i m laura ingraham. this is the ingraham angle from washington. you ll see the cable exclusive with three sorority members. they are alleging that the national chapter force them to accept a man in their sisterhood. first, scared and helpless. that s the focus of tonight s angle. that s how powerful forces want you to feel. they want to you live in fear. you re just hoping to survive. dependent on the government to tell you when it s safe. we saw this during covid with their constant fear mongering to keep the public compliant. we see it with attacks on free speech. we see it daniel penning, charges with second degree manslaughter. he has enormous public support. scroll through the list of comments on his page for legal defense fund. one donor writes, i m a small asian woman. i ve been terrorized in safe areas by mentally, disturbed and or racist with no one to come to my aid. i wish there were more peo
praised the antimissile defence systems which intercepted a berridge of russian rockets over kyiv overnight. let me show you the footage from the defence systems in action. ukraine says 18 missiles were shot down, including six of the hypersonic weapons that president putin had claimed are unstoppable. ukrainian officials have declined to comment on a claim moscow that one missile got through air defences to destroy a us built the latest barrage came just hours after president zelensky wrapped up a european tour, in which he was promised billions of dollars worth of new military aid by western allies. live now to kyiv where i can speak to the ukrainian lawyer and politician, lesia vasylenko. thank you so much for being with us here once again on bbc news. give me a sense of what it was like during the night with that pharos from russia. ~ ., , ., ., russia. well, it was one of the most intense nights russia. well, it was one of the most intense nights tonight, russia. we
fancn y. i ll see you tomorrow or thursday. i can t wait. all right. i ll be gonee by by wednesday or thursday. you ll see. fantastic. all right. t hurs i m laura ingraham.raham an this is thgle ingraham angle frm washington tonight. in moments you re going to seehe the cable exclusive with three sorority members from sor the university of wyoming s kappa kappa gamma chapter. they re allegingy member at the national chapter forced them to accept a man into their sisterhood and shattered their feeling of safety. scarebut first, scared and hel. that s the focus of tonight s angle. liv well, that s how powerful forces want you to feel.e they want you to live in fear, t so apprehensive that you re just hoping to survive depended on the government to tell you when it s safe . now, we saw this during covid with their constant fear mongering to keep the publicc co compliant. we see it.t on college campuses with attacks on free speech. we ve seen it with how they treat a man who
i will cap federal spending and finally balance the budget. i believe governor romney is a good man. but when he said 47% of the country consider themselves victims, think about who he was talking about. for conservatives across the country, they ve been frustrated for a long time. justice antonin scalia has died. i simply asked republicans to give merrick garland a fair hearing. i am running for president of the united states. there are questions swirling tonight around hillary clinton, and they concern a personal email account. you say you have the most transparent administration ever. it s true. it can be frustrating, this business of democracy. mahalo. as some of you heard, the state of hawaii released my official long form birth certificate. president obama, a first black president was constantly questioned, not really because of the policies, but literally because of who he was. it s not just that they disagreed with obama. the undertones of it w
the bbc s most recognised faces. welcome to the show. thanks very much for asking me. you have a new series for radio 4 called frontlines of journalism, billed as your reflections on the most difficult stories you have covered. one of those is certainly ukrainian we heard the news that the afp journalist had died, killed by russian artillery. he was 32 years old and this is a conflict you know very closely. yes, he was killed somewhere in the east, somewhere near bakhmut, where i have spent quite a bit of time, i was there at the end of last year, these things are tragic and in all the years i have been doing this, i have known quite a few people who have been killed. i was reading his twitter account today and if you go back to me the first he has posted a video where he and some soldiers, who are accompanying him are lying down and he is describing them, and it is pure terror as artillery fire comes in. in those moments, and you must have been in those moments, they must be