chance for secretary, thank you for your time. thank you. well we are now joined from lviv in western ukraine, and sadly, the frustration from zelenskyy is a very clear. the pace at which he feels the western leaders are moving. yeah, that is right, president-elect kate has welcomed the sanctions that the west has imposed on russian businesses that it was too late. if they had done it sooner, this war could have potentially been prevented. and while he is also welcomed the additional military support announced by nato in brussels, yesterday it really does stop short the full boycott on russian energy that president zelenskyy has been calling for, as well as the no-fly zone that he has been repeatedly calling for over ukraine. now that no-fly zone isn t being offered by nato because it does really increase the risk of engagement between nato
doesn t want to understand, or isn t being told the true costs of the war, it s different to make good cost/benefits analysis. and it s said that the peace talks have been there have been more attacks. reporter: kyiv and chernihiv, and president zelenskyy said russia appears to be planning a new offensive out here in eastern ukraine. our thanks for nbc s richard engel for that report. back in washington, president biden is considering releasing 1 million barrels of oil per day from the strategic petroleum research for six months in order to lower of price of gas at the pump.
bill: 2022. dana: food and drug administration lifting a major restriction on abortion pills. patients can now get them by mail just after a telemedicine appointment rather than going to the doctor in person. it comes as abortion rights have taken the spotlight at the supreme court. gillian turner is live in washington with more. big decision, gillian. it is. fda decision means that medication abortion, which has exploded in popularity, will now remain permanently available to women across the united states. what it does is allow women to have a telemedicine appointment and receive abortion pills via mail and terminate a pregnancy in their own home. legal experts are concerned this move, though, isn t being driven primarily by public health considerations. listen. it s always dangerous when either legal or medical decisions are driven by politics. there are very strong political winds propelling this question through the biden
type of credit can add to people s existing debt burden. when we looked at data from one major bank, and we looked at their customers who took buy now, pay later, one in ten of those customers were already in arrears when they took on a buy now pay later loan. and that for us is really good evidence that at the moment, that proper affordability isn t being checked at this point in the market. instead of at that point - knuckling down, paying off, you know, my debt and kind of sorting myself out - i essentially turned to buy now pay later services instead. when i started first using klarna, it was out of necessity because of the fact that i didn t have the credit card available to me because at the time it was maxed out. so, pretty much, when i started using buy now pay later services, i already had credit card debt. i had about £1,500 on one credit card, another for 500, and an overdraft for 1,000. so, all in,