lawrence: good evening, welcome to cross country. each week we address the issue stops facing everyday americans. much o talkingf that about woke. and yous combat can ting the so-calle tell me that i md . wrong because i m from that s the very movement where the this came a. oh, you re dead wrong that wasa squad membergenda. if cori bush you. and oppose thf course she hase wh this allo ee th backwardse woke, you are now,t being or just a aware of the issues bigo. plaguing black america, then u i m all on board. say i m but s just it anti-woke.. the congren i don t want not only wants us people to bla tot for all blackj americans people to get in to speak up line with her pr them solutionsselves. you shou. i ll giveld be on t yw examples that will people who are w be talking about tonightoke because we are sa during our show. let s take education. i totally see where our system has failed black kids, especially those that livem racist, and bigoted, stop talking about woke. law
Come on. Next friends. Could never love anyone except. Coming up. On the whole story. Such an amazing sensation. Welcome in the sky. The world is in such a difficult position. The lake used to go half a mile around the corner mad and go, go kill that thing. Good evening. Welcome to the whole story. Im anderson cooper. Tonight we take you on a journey around the world to meet people fighting against something that can be seen or touched, but his threatening our planet and the way we live more than a trillion tons of carbon gas has been released into our seas and skies over time. It comes from a lot of different sources, but the biggest is burning fossil fuels for electricity, heat and transportation. But tonight, cnns chief climate correspondent, bill weir, has found some reasons to hope. Some unique ways innovators are trying to capture contained and reduce carbon emissions. They are climate warriors, and they just may show us how to unscrew a planet. Attention humans of earth got good
got a lot to cover as you saw there in our five things. so let s start with brand new details in nashville and that school shooting and questions about how the shooter was able to buy so many guns. police say the shooter was being treated for an emotional disorder but was able to legally buy seven guns before murdering three children and three staff members at a private christian school in nashville. and there s brand new reporting from the new york times about the shooter s past, now, the shooter s former teacher at an art college told the times that years ago, the shooter had an emotional breakdown in her class when she had trouble creating a password for the school s online student portal, and in recent years a shooter had been grieving on facebook about the loss of a romantic partner. there s new, harrowing police body cam video that shows officers rushing in and confronting the shooter. we have sync up both angles released by officials warning for you now, okay? i just w
stories this morning. first in nashville. new details about the shooter who killed six people at a christian elementary school. and we ve determined that audrey about seven firearms. from five different local gun stores here legally. ah they were legally purchased. three of those weapons were used yesterday, but parents felt that she should not own weapons. they were under the impression that was when she sold the one weapon that she did not own any more. i said thursday. of course it s wednesday. the parents of audrey hill hill also gave critical insight into hail state of mind will be live in nashville with details just ahead. plus an unprecedented ruling and a new setback for trump s legal team. a judge has ordered former president vice president mike pence to testify. federal grand jury is now getting a chance to ask pence about his conversations with the former president. in the days leading up to january, 6th. we begin this morning, though, in nashville, where cnn s car
reelection bid as soon as next week. for the latest details, we turn to cnn s phil mattingly, who joins us now from the white house. so what s the latest phil? you know, pamela four months the president s top advisers have been very clear behind the scenes that the president was going to launch a reelection campaign. what they weren t clear on was when that would actually happen, and it seems like now we have some sense of a timeline that to some degree has taken a lot longer than people expected. the president is planning and may go forward with the decision to launch his reelection campaign as soon as tuesday of next week. now that date is important because it was. it will be the four year anniversary of the day he launched his 2020 campaign, a campaign that he framed as the battle of the soul of that for the soul of the nation and campaign where he eventually defeated then president donald trump somebody who may be his general election opponent again in 2024. now advisors