today on inside politics, two major breaking stories out of the middle east. another massive blast at a refugee camp in gaza. we re getting new video showing the catastrophic damage as people dig through the rubble searching for bodies. we do not know yet who is responsible. is it the same camp that israeli forces struck yesterday. we re also covering a huge breakthrough, civilians are now leaving gaza for the fist time since a mass attacked israel. hundreds are waiting to move through the crucial rafah border crossing. u.s. officials believe more than 5,000 could ultimately be allowed to leave as part of a deal brokered by qatar. we have cnn reporters across the region covering the latest on all of these stories. melissa bell is in cairo. we start jeremy diamond near the gaza border. what do we know about this second blast? reporter: for the second day in a row, a massive blast appears to have hit the refugee camp inside gaza. this is the largest refugee camp in gaza his
more money for an accelerating american covid vaccine rollout now climbing past 109 million doses administered. that means more than one in five americans are now at least partially vaccinated. the global vaccine rollout also a big issue today, especially across europe. a few dozen recipients of the astrazeneca vaccine report dangerous blood clots. a growing list of countries now suspending use of the astrazeneca vaccine, including france, italy and germany. world health organization and european experts are taking a new urgent look at the issue. but the executive director of the eu agency that regulates vaccines says every piece of available data says the astrazeneca vaccine is both effective and safe. at present there is no indication that vaccination has caused these conditions. they have not come up in the clinical trials and they re not listed as known or expected side events with this vaccine. we are still firmly convinced that the benefits of the astrazeneca vaccine
Dc examiner Newspaper Office to learn about the papers Journalistic Mission and about the challenges facing print and online News Organizations today. We are back on this friday morning, november 10, our cameras are over at the Washington Examiner, and online and print publication here in washington dc. We are going to be talking with reporters and editors over there this morning about their mission, as well as news of the day so call in with your questions about journalism and the topics that they are reported. Putting us first is hugo, editorial director for the Washington Examiner. Hell talk about the publication, role of journalism today. Lets begin with the Washington Examiner. Guest the Washington Examiner is a News Organization, first and foremost, in its mission is to deliver straight news reporting to a nationwide audience. At the same time, its design and attention and its mission is to provide a coherent and sharp analysis and conservative commentary reflecting our values in
Ed rollins and it is going to get much worse. Howard dean it is a fraction of what it was before. The average age is well over 50. The average age of if you were on msnbc is 62 years old. On fox it is 68 years old. The bell curve stops at 35. No one over 35 watches any of this stuff. Facts [inaudible] [laughter] the truth of the matter is that all of this stuff, the evening route evening news, still the biggest way of getting the news out, is disappearing. We are in the big first quarter. For this problem of controlling messages, its only going to get more difficult as people get their news in different ways. Believe me, if something is on the front page of the new york times, the l a times, or one of the three big networks, its still a big story, but not as will big as it used to be. In 15 years that may not be true anymore. One of the most fascinating things to track overtimes in the white house is the seating and how its changed. There is a new seating chart. It is all that we would
Changing as much as we would like to see them change. I think what we are liking to see apropos is i think were liking to see iran strengthen lynx with russia and china which may share an interest in challenging the International Order which the United States and the west have have led for some time. Obviously that challenge is playing out not just here in iran but its playing out in places like ukraine and the South China Sea and so forth. Iran is much more likely to corporate with that broader effort than it is to try to draw close to the United States which is a much more difficult lift in a sense within the iranian system. So i think that at the same time also we could bear in mind aside here that iran has Serious International challenges. This has been alluded to. But remember, lifting sanctions certainly is very helpful to iran. But in a sense its not the only problem that iran faces internationally. I think there are significant political divisions within the regime. There are s