world. it is thursday, october 13th. i m christine romans. donald trump remains a clear and present danger to democracy. that s the case the january 6th committee plans to make in this afternoon s final hearing before the november mid terms. sources tell cnn we ll hear new testimony and recently uncovered evidence. the political coup and all of the events surrounding the attempt to overthrow joe biden s majority electoral college, the insurrection nair ray violence, the mobilization of the mob, all of it flowed out of the will and determination of one man to seize the presidency and that s donald trump. danielle diaz joins us live from washington. what else can we expect this afternoon? it s really important to emphasize this will be the last time we ll publicly hear in this kind of format from the committee. of course, the last time that they will have some sort of hearing to present to the american people publicly what they found in this investigation of donald trump
OXFORD – The University of South Carolina s College of Information and Mass Media has recognized University of Mississippi journalism professor and author Kathleen Wickham with the Ronald T. and Gayla
economy that is most sensitive to higher interest rates but we re not really sure when this bigger sort of tidal wave that i tend to think of could hit. economists put a range. that could have a magnifying effect. also just hiking rates so fast and so by so much. we have no idea what kind of dislocations that could cause in the global economy. that s another open question. just on american s understanding where this is headed. all of this uncertainty is looming over some of the pain that policy makers like chair powell and other officials have warned are yet to come. the fed tries to keep itself at
a period of years, not months. so the next version and the next generation of this malware will be much tougher to find. we discovered since we have had attacks on our infrastructure, our grid infrastructure in the past, it doesn t take much, given the interconnections here to knock an area out and then knock the whole country out. how close are they to doing something like that? we are so dependent on power, neil, if you hit that power, it s like a set of dominoes. it will cascade on to healthcare, on to transportation and banking and finance and our food supply. if you take out power, people s homes don t run, food spoils, you can t get emergency services, so you can pick a few things and shut done glen stations, people would still be okay with that. when you talk out critical things like power, it has a magnifying effect on the impact you can have, and then makes it easier to do bad things. what do we do in the interim? well, one of the things you have to this is something