separate shooting incidents. banks making big moves to ease the fallout after silicon valley banks collapse. more than $3 billion. new york community bank is expected to buy out a big chunk of signature bank at $2.7 billion. at the free throw line. walker comes in. and he scores! [cheers and applause] steve: good morning, syracuse, new york. it is 8:00 in the east. you got 30 degrees for a daytime high of 50. by the way, today is the first full day rather the first day of spring. it eventually arrives the vernal equinox doesn t 5:24 this afternoon. welcome aboard. our number three for this monday march 20th 2023 in ainsley s place today, we ve got rachel. it s great to have you. rachel: it doesn t feel like spring. steve: it is 30 degrees. brian: grab your tank tops, your muscle starts. put on your tight pants. rachel: is this your wardrobe at home? brian: when it is spring, i have no choice. rachel: he is from long island. brian: let s get to it. i
his incredible story of survival, nearly a year to the day since a devastating blast from ukraine almost took his life. but first, democrats getting slammed for attacking the twitter files, journalists and an explosive hearing, liberals claim freedom of the press unless it is something that makes them look bad, democrats ripping the reporters who broke the story exposing how twitter worked with the feds to silence free speech. elon musk spoon fed you cherry picked information, which generates another right-wing conspiracy theory. is it true that you have profited since you were the recipients of the twitter files? you have made money? it is probably a wash honestly. no, you have made money you did not have before, correct? but i have also spent money i did not have before. attention, eyeballs, money, all of it points to problems with accuracy and credibility. judge jeanine: the attacks going even further. dems also try to intimidate and demand to know the source o
ironically, putin s denial of ukraine s identity has strengthened what he set out to destroy. my guest is olesya khromeychuk. writer, historian and sister of a fallen ukrainian soldier. even now, do ukraine s allies understand what the stakes really are in this war? olesya khromeychuk, welcome to hardtalk. thank you so much for inviting me, stephen. it s a great pleasure to have you in this studio in london. and you live in london. you re the director of the ukrainian institute here in london. you re an historian of ukraine and eastern europe. and yet, i am sure that a lot of your mind is in ukraine. what kind of a distance do you keep from the daily reality of your homeland being at war? perhaps only physical distance, i suppose. the distance that, i suppose, would take 2a hours or so to cross, because at the moment we can t fly to ukraine any more, and it takes about 2k hours to get to my hometown now, which the journey that usually would take me 2.5 hours to fly to my home
authorities on both sides say they are taking immediate steps to end the violence. now on bbc news, it s hardtalk with stephen sackur. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. in vladimir putin s mind, ukraine is a fake state manipulated by the west. his effort to drag it back into the russian world began long before his all out invasion a year ago. back in 2014, he showed his contempt for kyiv sovereignty in crimea and the donbas. ironically, putin s denial of ukraine s identity has strengthened what he set out to destroy. my guest is 0lesya khromeychuk. writer, historian and sister of a fallen ukrainian soldier. even now, do ukraine s allies understand what the stakes really are in this war? 0lesya khromeychuk, welcome to hardtalk. thank you so much for inviting me, stephen. it s a great pleasure to have you in this studio in london. and you live in london. you re the director of the ukrainian institute here in london. you re an historian of ukraine and eastern europe. and
some were violent and some turned deadly. william was killed in the confrontation between national guardsmen and students protesting the war in vietnam at kent state university. joe lewis was shot twice that day as was allen both survived and feel it necessary to remember the four who died understanding it could easily have been them it was a tense time troops coming home called baby killers. might be ripped out of a classroom and september to a jungle. they protested civil rights, women s rights, antiwar. these movements changed the course of history. today college kids want to be in the history books too. but they don t know what to protest. segregation is illegal. there is no draft and women have more rights than us sure, there s problems, crime, fentanyl, chinese balloons. but these kids don t care about any of that so they protest words pronouns and isms. lock themselves in a building for 10 days, why? because they wanted more money for the quote division of institutio