0 songs, so i knew uptown girl and ymca. the others ymca is great. 100 weddings, i m hundred years old. the trump rallies. good memories of it. repurposed in a good way. i end up with the weddings that play a lot of barry manilow o mandy. america reports now. sandra: thank you, harris. former vice president mike pence is pushing for parents rights in iowa. he visited the early caucus state to denounce radical gender ideology in public schools. john: pence is calling on conservatives to take a stand and protect american values. they say they have no choice but to fight and win a culture war against the left. the former vice president joins us to talk about this and a whole lot more coming up. i worry about down the road 3, 5, 10 years from now, what if there s a cancer outbreak. we cannot pick up and move our 15 years of roots overnight. we cannot do that. even small doses of chemicals over a long period is ugly. sandra: people in east palestine ohio a
cnn newsroom with max foster and i want to talk about what we have seen coming through from and bianca nobilo. turkey, the turkish government it is tuesday, february 7, said 23,000 personnel from 45 9:00 a.m. here in london, new across turkey and syria where countries have either been the death toll is now more than dispatched and are on the ground 4900. or making their way there. the world health organization is warning that numbers could 4800 buildings from the initial increase by eight fold. assessments have collapsed. more than 11,000 buildings so we re talking about many more have been damaged and rescue crews are digging through the people possibly stuck under the rubble in a race to find rubble. the big concern here is that the survivors. there have been some successes death toll will increase. like this 14-year-old boy pulled 20,000 people are currently injured in turkey. from the collapsed building after more than 24 hours. so trauma response will be he has been taken to
i used to visit afghanistan until 2017 when we set up the charity there and then i didn t have to go because the charity is connecting doctors through mobile phones to smartphones. i m a humanitarian. i wasn t affiliated with a political organisation or the previous government. i would love to go back to help afghan people. we re still helping through our charity and i would love to see my own siblings. the charity you called it arian teleheal and we re going to talk much more about it. but before we do that, i do want to explore your experience because it s pretty extraordinary. and it seems to me you bottled up much of what happened to you as a kid for a long time after you left afghanistan, and then progressively over time, you began to open up about it, not least because you ultimately took the decision to write a memoir, in the wars, which i ve been reading. why did you bottle it up for so long? it is a trauma response, actually.
i m a humanitarian. i wasn t affiliated with a political organisation or the previous government. i would love to go back to help afghan people. we re still helping through our charity and i would love to see my own siblings. the charity you called it arian teleheal and we re going to talk much more about it. but before we do that, i do want to explore your experience because it s pretty extraordinary. and it seems to me you bottled up much of what happened to you as a kid for a long time after you left afghanistan, and then progressively over time, you began to open up about it, not least because you ultimately took the decision to write a memoir, in the wars, which i ve been reading. why did you bottle it up for so long? it is a trauma response, actually. trauma is an experience which is very painful for many people, whether it s through war, whether it s through other experiences such as covid.
until 2017 when we set up the charity there and then i didn t have to go because the charity is connecting doctors through mobile phones to smartphones. i m a humanitarian. i wasn t affiliated with a political organisation or the previous government. i would love to go back to help afghan people. we re still helping through our charity and i would love to see my own siblings. the charity you called it arian tele heal and we re going to talk much more about it. but before we do that, i do want to explore your experience because it s pretty extraordinary. and it seems to me you bottled up much of what happened to you as a kid for a long time after you left afghanistan, and then progressively over time, you began to open up about it, not least because you ultimately took the decision to write a memoir, in the wars, which i ve been reading. why did you bottle it up for so long? it is a trauma response, actually. trauma is an experience