He will release his own 100 page report on what he calls the stolen georgia election, two pages bigger than the charge sheet against him and his 18 accomplices. And well tell you how the us Treasury Secretary came to accidentally eat Magic Mushrooms while on a visit to china. First a Welcome Development here in the uk. Inflation fell sharply to 6. 8 injuly, from 7. 9 injune. But it still means prices continue to rise. Prime minister rishi sunak says it shows his governments plan is working, but he cautioned against complacency. The drop was fuelled by lower energy costs. But Core Inflation which looks at price rises excluding food and energy remained unchanged. According to the office of national statistics, the rising costs of hotels, air travel, and rents are among the costs keeping inflation high. Economists are still expecting Interest Rates the tool used by the Bank Of England to control price rises to be raised further. Our economics editor faisal islam reports. The heat may be c
and stuffing. jes the new wonder goods.et e still hot job. the fbi caught cat fishing. americans trying to secure the border for you. the bud light genie. yeah. i wish i waswas at the at that . he s going to need another boxer, bud light transitions back to a man. should we lee t them? cheers was not. b this is a government of the people. by thee people people and for the people no longer. it is now a government by the corporations of the corporations and for the corporations. corporatio president rutherford bayes at a time when rail companies were catapult ing america into the world s leading industrial power. gilde the gilded age was greed and corruption. tycoontions line the pockets of politicians while gobbling up american land acre by acre.by bribing public officials has always been a part of the business, and occasionally the fbi catchen parts wind of i. the undercover fbi operation led to the arrest and convictions of one senator and several congressmefn and o
who served for their manyeb years,od first associate deputy attorney general thenrs a deputy assistance attorney general. then special assistant to the attorney general, thenal chief of staff to theor attorneyne general, my view y generalattorne edthis department ispart destroying america, the 2024 election, violating every norm, every tradition. er. everything it inherited. it has criminalized politics, and i want to say c this, if we don t break the back of the departmentwant ofe justice. i will explainback that in a moment, it will destroy thisin country, and we won t be able to clawstro our way back, this is not hyperbole. i m not trying to be provocative. i don t need to be, we ll start. cnn. exclusive special counsel prosecutors question witnesses about chaotic oval office meeting after trump lost the 2020 election. multiple sources told cnn, stick with me, cnn, former trump campaign official cooperating in the 2020 election interference probe. sources familiar with the
other social networks existed like myspace, but mark zuckerberg s site really took off. it s less popular than it used to be with young people but the company insists it s still growing. it s the biggest social network in the world with 2 billion daily users. the most being in india and the us. two, facebook made the internet political. it was instrumental in movements like the arab spring as has become a key place for campaigning and debate around the world. for good and bad. in 2018, facebook agreed with the un report that it said it had failed to prevent its platform from being used to incite off line violence against the range of people and me in my. facebook made personal data valuable. and less personal. facebook proved that collecting our likes and dislikes is extremely lucrative. facebook s parent company, meta, is an advertising giant and takes the lion s share of global digital had money alongside google. it s also proven what can go wrong with all that data collect
we are still a long way from curing. we have been getting some reaction to all that from sir nigel shadbolt, researcher in al, professor at oxford university. he is the executive chair of the open data institute. health s a good example. drug discovery, prediction of disease, it s already performing at levels to analyse images from ct scans to x rays. there s a whole range of ways in which ai, which is great at finding patterns, great at producing outcomes, great at finding and applying the rules that might help us build better solutions, can operate to our benefit. health s a good example, but so is climate change, another existential threat. it will be the ai driven models that help us understand how the climate is changing and what we can do to ameliorate those effects. they will be hugely consequential. and one could really reel off a whole range of area where the benefits really are there to see. they ve been there for decades. we re seeing them more dramatically reveale