world. i m fareed zakaria coming to you live from new york. today on the program, the justice department throws 37 charges at former president donald trump. saying he mishandled classified documents. the indictment say the papers laid out everything from america s military weaknesses to foreign nation s nuclear capacities. what does it mean for u.s. security? should he have been indicted? i m an innocent man. i did nothing wrong. then, artificial intelligence may be the most important development of our time. but is it the most dangerous as well? we know it will replace jobs and blur the lines of reality but it could be a larger existential threat? i ll talk to geoffrey hinton, known as the godfather of ai, who said, yes. the worry is can we keep them working for us when their much more intelligent than us. also, how do you end extreme poverty globally? it is a very tall order. but ajay banja wants to do just that. he s the brand-new head of the world bank. he s tas
that was donald trump s message to his supporters, encouraging thousands of people to show up in washington d.c. to protest a fair and free election. and wild it was. the pro trump mob stormed the u.s. capitol on january 6th, after trump told a crowd of supporters to quote fight like hell. this week s january six hearing will highlight trump s own words, and how his repeated lies of a stolen election radicalized americans. this morning, on meet the press, committee members stephanie murphy previewed tuesday s hearing, which is going to lay out the actions of violent extremists. we will lay out the body of evidence that we have that talks about how the president s tweet on the wee hours of december 19th of be there, be wild, it was a siren call. we will talk in detail about what that caused them to do, how it caused them to organize as well as who else was amplifying that message. and new late today, nbc news confirms for their oath keeper spokesman jason van tighten who v
the president out in farm country today pushing the same, tired talking points. blaming pollutant and those greedy corporations. bite and to take responsibility as we learn the surge in prices is stuck at a 40 year high. g.o.p. lawmakers calling out the president for his inaction. joe biden will blame anyone but himself for this. he s blamed chicken farmers, everyone else under the sun. president biden is flailing around, swinging blindly, hoping something will land. the truth is that the biden administration just keeps kicking its own after 14 months, nothing is built. nothingness back, and nothing is better. he was supposed to give his ideas on inflation yesterday. what were his ideas? it s everybody else s fault but his spirit biden gets blamed for record inflation. finding one group willing to defend. guess who? a democrat in office, the deficit goes down, the economy flashes, and the republican comes in and destroys it all. and they want the democrats to co
and now the food crisis produced by the ukraine war have pushed maybe 100, maybe 150 million people back into poverty. at this point, is there a simple solution to that? is it large scale debt forgiveness for all of the countries all around the world that have had this double-whammy. it is more than just debt. debt is an extra complication, but at the end of the day, over the last three or four decades, the growth of the fight against poverty benefits principally by the creation of jobs and the best way to fight poverty is to give a person a job. both for their economic growth but also their sense of dignity of the sense of independent and we should not forget that. it is not the handout that makes the biggest difference to generations. that got set back. yes, by ukraine an the war. yes, by the circumstances of other fragility and refugees in
its fourth month, refugees in eastern europe are rebuilding their lives. and we are getting some help from their neighbors. among them, two american moms living in prague. they are helping ukrainians who fled violence, find a home away from home. my colleague richard lui recently traveled to the czech republic, and had a chance to speak with them. richard? yes, thank you, alicia. you know, these two american mothers, one from midwest, went from the southeast, they re taking things into their own hands, doing which many americans watching the ukraine war have wanted to do, finding a way to help. and with no end in sight to the russian invasion, these women are doing what they can to help fleeing refugees, by creating new homes for them, away from the fighting. reporter: i came up inspired youtube video, not from happy-go-lucky teams, but from ukrainian more refugees trying to guard their youth, taped