parts so that is also a very important report coming out by the end of next week so plenty to keep wall street investors anxious of there for us in new york thanks. it was written finland has an income security net that is a series of benefits to ensure the unemployed can make ends meet but the system is increasingly out of date one problem those who receive social benefits lose a chunk of them whenever they get a job that creates a disincentive to finding work so finland recently tested a basic income that is a no strings attached payment to see if that would free people to look for work today they released the results and here s how the study worked the trial began in two thousand and seventeen and was just concluded in december a period of two years. recipients receive five hundred sixty euros a person no strings attached and tax free those who receive social benefits still
along russia s borders, to start hedging their bets, cut their own security deals with vladimir putin, for their own survival and start bernding to his will. wolf? i understand you ve been told that the concern over president trump s potentially pulling out of nato is even greater now that james mattis is no longer the defense secretary. that s right, analysts were telling us when mattis was defense secretary. america s european allies, they were reassured that a senior trump administration official had their back, mattis had been a former nato supreme commander. the allies are said to be worried that the security net is also gone. thank you, brian todd. coming up, the breaking news. the attorney general nominee who will oversee the special counsel s probe. he won t be bullied, and robert mueller should get the time and resources he needs to finish his job. [cell phone rings]
from people in manila like ryan barlow on he wants to be an electrical engineer the night shifts are wearing him down i go to work at night and then i go to school in the morning and any don t know how that how i ve done it. it s no idea. the outsourcing industry generates over twenty two billion euros and employs over a million people in the last decade alone the industry has grown by up to thirty percent and makes up eight percent of the country s g.d.p. manager my loose of us john is proud of her workers they have this and but they they are able to turn it around from an i recall or they turn it into making failed . mary shelley s santos works in a call center to the filipino extended family works like a security net for the difficult working hours she s living with her children her parents and her and. i just got sick last week to
what else fed into this result? a couple of things. theresa may put forward a program for government, her policy document and there was a key policy in that about paying for elderly care that she reversed because of the unpopular reaction within days. it made her look really weak. she was saying she was offering strong government. she looked weak from the start. the terror attacks played a big part. theresa may was responsible for britain s security not just as prime minister but for six years before that as homeland security secretary. and people were so angry that these terrorists slipped through the security net when warnings were given. jeremy corbin did a good job on the campaign trail and seemed to get young people fired up. all those factors went into it. brexit didn t really play a part. shannon: do you think there is a bigger message about a pendulum swinging one way or another beyond the u.k.
routine i.d. check. nbc has more from milan where it all happened. hans? reporter: german and italian authorities are investigating just why anis amri decided to come here, a neighborhood of milan, after slipping through germany s security net. he was shot and killed just behind me after exchanging gunfire with two police trainees. the bullets that fell amri ended the manhunt but didn t close the investigation. fingerprints from his corpse matching those inside the truck that barrelled through a berlin christmas market. but forensics not answering how the 24-year-old tunisian became radicalized, why he decided to return to italy where he spent 3.5 years in prison, and why milan. his brother offering no answers, telling nbc news that he was ashamed of what he did. translator: in milan reporter: in milan, police