hearing takes new turns. the january 6 committee accusing donald trump of scamming his supporters out of $250 million. laying 0 out the case that trump solicited money from backers by using lies as a fundraising tool. adding that he sent up to 25 emails a day, soliciting donations for illegal funds that simply didn t exist. but is it potentially criminal and will attorney general merrick garland pursue or prosecute it as such? those are the key questions emerging from the hearings overall. and there seems to be a new rift emerging from the january 6 committee itself on the very subject. whether they will make a specific criminal referral to the justice department. as for witnesses, some of the most stark testimony is coming from trump s former attorney general william barr who offered a line-by-line debunking of some of trump s ongoing lies about fraud. and he calls trump detached from reality after the election. cnn is live with the new reporting, trump s supporters, kai
started doing people that were younger than 16. you remember their vaccine is for 16 and older. but as you mention, let me show you, this is some of the youngest trial participants that we ve now heard. over 6,000 people age 6 months to 11 years. and then you have 3,000 adolescents, age 12 to 17 years. what s happening now is they re going to trial these, again, very young participants with various doses of the vaccine. 25 micro gram, 50 microgram, 100 mi microgram. they re trying to figure out two things, is this safe in people of that age and what is the right dose to give as well. after that, if those things sort of if they get the information they need and sprois proven safe, they can bridge these trials to existing trials. meaning, hey, we get a lot of information. they could get some results early. as you heard, dr. fauci said by the fall potentially high school students potentially could have a vaccine. i was going to ask you about the timeline there. so if this go
(SGI) - In line with the concept of green credit applied across various sectors, green initiatives in construction must deliver well-defined environmental benefits that are initially assessed, quantified, and subsequently tracked and reported by the borrowers throughout the project's execution.
sign at the top. well, huge drops in crypto. why, and what does it tell us? well, i think if you consider it a riskier asset, even those who are crypto supporters say it s riskier than stocks and bonds. you re seeing that the riskiest assets are getting hit the hardest. we see a flocking to a safer haven. safe bets, consumer names, kelloggs, coke. things that are risky are getting hit the hardest. people are going with less risk and more value. le companies that make things that you can measure and assets that store value, that s what you want to be investing in. i mean, crypto bllook, blockchain technology has changed the world. no question to the marlts of that. but crypto, especial you ve seen pump and dump schemes.
ukrainians facing, it s not that great yet. but you re right. i m sure at some point in afghanistan it happened with the body bags and all of that and how fed up the army got with the war. i don t know whether we re i don t know how far we are away from that point. neil: yeah, neither do ukrainians. they re hoping it resonates back home. that s the only way they see this ending. thanks, director. thank you. neil: all right. what we do know in the meantime is 3.5 million refugees seeking out safer haven. poland accounts for more than half of them. that s where you will find aishah hasnie. aishah? hey, neil. we know that the vast majority of these refugees coming in from ukraine are women and children leaving their houses and husbands behind in their homeland to fight the war that is opening up the door to a very