makes a difference in this world. i want to sleep. good evening, everyone. i m alison camerata. welcome to cnn tonight . you ve seen the video of the brave police officers rushing into a school to save children. tonight we ll talk to an er doctor who was standing by ready to treat the victims, but none of the ambulances he expected ever arrived. some of our politicians today, saying there s nothing we can do about gun violence. doctors disagree. plus the overdose drug narcan will soon be on the shelves of grocery stores, gas stations, even vending machines. do they have it at your child s school? should parents keep it at home? we ll explain what you need to know. and tonight we bring you our next pulse of the people, this one on how technology like artificial intelligence is changing all of our lives. i sit down with a group of gen xers millennials and gen. z is to find out what level of glee or panic this causes now. technology is moving too fast for me personally, i can sa
for god sake whose side are you on? the head-spinning republican ideological switcheroo as president biden, the democrat, slammed the maga threat to the rule of law. while trump s republican pal threatened riots in the streets. plus, at any moment we re expecting the doj s response to trump s request for a special master for the classified documents he stole and stasheded a mar-a-lago. also, there was a time when republicans campaigned with messages like morning in america. now they think americans are lazy bums. not sure they would even want to govern a country of such supposed slackers. senator elizabeth warren joins me. we begin tonight with president biden in wilkes-barre, pennsylvania, near his hometown of scranton sending a sharp rebuke to the maga agenda calling out the republican and the right as the real threat to the rule of law. now it s sickening to see the new attacks on the fbi, threatening the life of law enforcement agents and their families for simply car
happened. you know it occurred to me as i was watching that, uh, conversation that literally on 9 11 3000 americans died afterwards we invaded two countries spent $2 trillion over 20 years because 3000 americans died. 45,000 americans die every year of gun violence. now that includes, um you know that includes shootings that includes accidents include suicides, but let s add it up, right? and to think that we can t come up with a solution for this. this is not an external enemy can internal enemy there is a solution. it s coming in november. 2024 vote there asks out. the people who are saying that they can t do anything. fine thank you for your service. get someone in who can americans have a choice? we really do. you don t have to go with republicans who are going to support the n r a. you can go in the republican primary and pick someone who is going to be for universal background check. who s going to want to do something so that our kids don t
senator elizabeth warren made forgiving student loans a central component of her platform during her campaign for president and while candidate who declared i have a plan for almost everything didn t become the nominee her ideas have played a huge big role in the momentum that made student loan relief a reality. while president biden s plan doesn t cancel all the debt it does help millions and millions of americans. up to one-third of the 45 million people holding federal student loans could see their debts foregiven and despite the republican effort to cast it as elitist, at least 75% of the debt relief will go to households making less than $28,400. hello, people, rich people s kids don t get student loans. they don t need them so biden s idea directly helps the working class and they know it s politically popular which is why they are flinging themselves around like drunken chickens including this laughably