s reproductive care from state to state, and how it could influence the 2024 race. as the 11th hour gets underway this friday night. good evening. once again, i m stephanie ruhle. in less than one hour, it will be one year since the supreme court overturned roe v. wade. revoking the constitutional right to abortion that it had established. that decision coming from the conservative majority on the high court. the latest nbc news poll shows 61% of registered voters disapproved of that very decision. in the years since that ruling, abortion has been banned, or made unavailable, in more than a dozen states. and it is severely restricted in nearly ten others. today, president biden signed an executive order to expand access to birth control. his administration s latest effort to protect reproductive rights. late this afternoon, biden and vice president harris spoke about those rights. we stand for the freedom of every american, including the freedom of every person, everywhere
menace, they had farmers here since the an outbreak like this can last up to 60 minutes because they normally stick to the desert and away from people, but this time they found their way into and this is what about it looks like right now a town covered in dalliance of these crickets they are not aggressive they do not staying, they do not bite, but that doesn t mean they are not causing problems. they only attract more, because they eat their own dead. both gross, and a hazard. i feel like i hear them crunching. roads can usually become slick, with bug juice, and the smell. it just smells like that rotten bugs everywhere. all the time. the hospital, the scene out of a war. we had people out there with leaf blowers, and trying to keep the sidewalks clear. it has mostly been on, but there are a lot of bugs left helping, around and a lot of mental anguish lingers.
time they found their way no town. this is what elko, nevada, looks like right now. a town covered in millions of these crickets. they are not aggressive. they don t sting. they don t bite. but that doesn t mean they aren t causing problems. killing them only attracts more because, well, they eat their own dead, both gross and a hazard. i feel like i hear them crunching. reporter: roads easily become slick with bug juice. and the smell it smells like dead rotten bugs everywhere all the time. reporter: the hospital a scene out of a horror movie. we had people out there with leaf blowers, brooms trying to keep the sidewalks clear. reporter: the swarm has mostly moved on, but there are a lot of bugs left hopping around and a lot of mental anguish lingers. ooh! reporter: a minder of the futility of man facing mother nature. steve patterson, nbc news. you say it or i will. yuck. all right. up nextxt, a blastst from