we will begin with the latest in the white house, cocaine investigation. it s now been over a week since the illegal drug was found in a common area of the west wing, and the secret service has been sweeping the area for any clues leading to a potential culprit, and that investigation could conclude as early as today. the contradictions in the location of the cocaine, the white house s timeline of events, and the incident has raised serious congressional concerns about the level of security be maintained at the white house. but, president biden does not appear to be at all concerned. he spent the weekend sunbathing near his delaware beach house. and, he has since headed off for meetings in europe, without publicly addressing that bombshell discovery, of who left the coke out. meanwhile, his press secretary think it s irresponsible to ask. secretary reporter: one fo, whether the white house want to the president. secretary jean-pierre: this question has been asked for t
with what ari said, narrowing this town specifically to talk about the transgender issue among young people, that is what worries me. i heard from a mother who said in the classroom that her daughter has said people are changing their pronouns daily, it s a fad among young kids in elementary school, and they think it s cool to change their pronouns. i worry about that. when you have nih studies, i will cite it exactly. the international of psychiatry, 2016, found that 85% of people with gender-dysphoric people limited around her after puberty. to make a decision to have a vasectomy or castrate yourself at a young age one potentially those feelings change later in life, that comment to me, is the singular focus. harris: kennedy? kennedy: i hope some of the people at brown identify as academic. [laughter] i would love it if they identified as freethinkers who engaged in free speech. i hope that number goes up over the years. that s what worries me about a lot of these schools, is t
and i think you re referring to one of the nih studies. a 60% of high school seniors say they do not think that marijuana is harmful, hurtful. 23% admitted that they smoked it in the last month. that s just admitted. if attitudes and laws surrounding pot are becoming more lax, what do you think is the most effective way to combat those? well, i was the author of the mental health parity act which treats those diseases. but the best path is prevention. when something is legal, the perceived harm of it, as you indicated in your citation there, is reduced. and that means more people will use. so the two most abused drugs are
morning government shutdown needs to end, now hurting sick people. have the house come here to apologize to my young daughter and others. i m very angry. now finally we re here and, you know, our government can t get its act together. they thought they might have to go home to florida without getting the medicine. but late wednesday a turn around, the family was informed mckenna s treatment could go forward. she s fortunate. about 200 new patients including some 30 children aren t so lucky. they won t get to join nih studies just yet. these patients are put on hold until the government is back in business. mckenna s dad says this just isn t right and he has a message for leaders in washington. get your act together. this is not a game. you re not you can t play politics over children s and other patients lives. now if this shutdown continues, that means that another 200 patients won t be able to begin their trials next week. sanjay? that s sad.
institutes of health in bethesda maryland so mckenna could start taking an experimental drug. with the government shutdown, the family was told there s a chance mckenna might not get the medicine. i hope it doesn t affect me or anybody else who needs the drug. reporter: her father waited and worried, tweeting wednesday morning, government shutdown needs to end. now hurting sick people. have the house come here to apologize to my young daughter and others. i m very angry. finally here and our government can t get the act together. reporter: they thought they d have to go home to florida without getting the medicine. late wednesday a turnaround. the treatment could go forward. mckenna s fortunate. about 200 new patients including 30 children aren t so lucky. they won t get to join nih studies just yet. patients are being put on hold until government s back in business. mckenna s dad says this just isn t right and has a message