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shootings have moved the issue of gun control to the front burner. another pressing challenge is unfolding at the southern border, where the growing number of migrants, especially children, overwhelmed authorities and sent the administration scrambling for solutions. we have a great group with us this morning. we have nbc's gabe gutierrez outside hhs migrant detention facility in southeast texas. he was the only reporter allowed in. and nbc's julia ainsley covers the dhs. gabe, let's start with you. what did you see when you're inside that facility? what really stuck out to you? >> hey there, geoff. we saw children. they were calm and appears to be in good spirits. what's significant about this, reporters are asking for access to these type of facilities for weeks and our team was able to go in as far as the pool team, so other media organizations, and this is the first time during this recent surge that reporters were allowed in. now, we should make the distinction, this is an hhs facility, department of healthp human services. this comes after these unaccompanied migrants are processed within border patrol facilities. over the last couple days we've been seeing images of overcrowding at the cbc facilities. when we went here, we went along with the congressional delegation as well as white house officials. when you walk in there's a big sign painted in it that says welcome. and we saw staff members, more than 1,100 members trying to get to some sense of normalcy, but it's difficult given the dangerous journey they had here, geoff. we saw an intake center. that's where the kids are given double bags for close and go through a medical screening, including a covid test. it should also point out more than 100 children inside this facility have tested positive for covid-19. they're then put in a dormitory with negative pressure and isolated. there are 766 unaccompanied migrant children in this facility right now, the latest count. the capacity is slightly more than 900, geoff. we should point out we also visited this facility back in 2019. that's when it was first opened by the trump administration, it was shut down several weeks later. this time around the biden administration opened it in late february. it began taking unaccompanied minors from border patrol facilities january 10th. one thing i did not expect, we saw several kids wearing hats in the texas heat and we understand now they're able to knit them inside. there's also trailers for the need for virtual representation due to covid. and classrooms where they have six hours of construction before day. but this is a scramble to find space at the southern border, geoff. the biden administration says it had the bed capacity reduced, hhs had the bed capacity reduced because of covid, by 40%. they also blamed the trump administration for a hiring freeze that limited the number of hhs staffers. but, again, there have been mounting questions in terms of access and transparency for these facilities. reporters have still not been allowed inside these crowded cbp facilities. >> let's take a step back. we have new numbers that show 14,000 children are in hhs custody or border patrol. and "the washington post" took a look at the numbers overall and found this so-called surge actually fits a pattern of seasonal increases in border crossing. but on top of that, you've got all of this pent-up demand. help us understand, put all of this into context for us if you can. >> yes, absolutely, geoff. you're talking about a very important distinction here. the short-term comparisons and long-term patterns of migration flows, if you put those two side by side, that's what you're hearing from cbp officials tell us, it is a pattern that is repeating itself. it's a seasonal change. the weather is warmer and people are inclined to make the journey compared to the harsh winter weather. you will also see that decline in the hotter months of the year as we go towards summer. this is, so to speak, the peak season of migration. but in addition to that, one other important aspect was in the year 2020 everything was shut down. borders were shut down, governments were trying to shut everything down, not to stop the flow of migration but really contain the impeachment. that is also something the trump administration imposed to use title 42 to expel migrants that came into the united states back into mexico under the public health act. the difference now this administration obviously trying to set the tone with a more humane policy. but at the same time keeping the border closed. what they are seeing, two factors, one seasonal change and seasonal increase, in addition to the pent-up demand to try to make it to the united states, so anyone -- and most of the experts we've spoken to about this, will tell you the idea of trying to expel the migrants who enter the united states as we've seen throughout the past year, it does not work as a deterrent, it rather works as a delay tactic. over the course of the last year, those who were not able to get into the united states, are now seeing the opportunity and that's why you are seeing this increase in numbers but also very in line or proportionate to what they've seen in the past during these similar months. >> julia, we just learned the hhs secretary and dhs secretary mayorkas are expected to brief senators later today regarding the challenges at the border. we also learned president biden is going to put vice president harris in charge of addressing this border situation. look, where does she start really? >> that's a good question. and today we could expect the briefing will be at a back drop of the people like ted cruz and john cornyn going to the board e., republicans using this as a political moment to try to hang this around the biden administration saying this is a biden border crisis. so all of this is on the shoulders of the vice president as she goes to central america and mexico to work with the countries on what we call the push factor. those are reasons why people are leaving their countries in the first place. and as we know under the trump administration, geoff, that was a complete 180 the way they worked with those countries. what they did there is took a lot of money that would have gone towards things like usaid to help farmers survive the next drought. instead they took that money and put it all towards enforcement. now we will see senator -- vice president harris go into these countries trying to turn back the other direction, trying to work with them on these things that are really hurting these people and their way of life there and try to figure out how they can combat violence but also talk about ways to try to step the flow of migrants that are coming from central america and mexico. she has a lot on her shoulders not just from a humanitarian standpoint but political one as well. >> and can you build on julia's point, because i have done reports on this, and they say the real crisis isn't the southern border but honduras, el salvador, to julia's point, what they're actually fleeing. >> yes, if you talk to foreign policy experts because this is where it gets a little more complicated. foreign policy experts will tell you what is happening in those countries is a combination of things as julia is saying there. you highlighted a whole host of systemic problems, corruption, economic challenges, gang violence, drug trafficking. all of that created a power vacuum in a lot of these countries that made it difficult for good governance to emerge. compound that with what we have seen over the past year, devastating economic conditions in the country. the imf said the economies of central america, certainly northern triangle countries, is going to shrink in 2021. so you can expect as these situations get worse, economically you will see an increase of migrants trying to their way to the united states. compound that with what we've seen on the climate front, hurricanes creating natural disasters, forcing people to leave their lands. there's no agricultural economic base anymore to supporters to sustain the lives of the hundreds of thousands of people who rely on it. so you have a very complex situation, which the united states, a lot of people have criticized, has been a part of over the decades in its involvement in those countries. they have been a force unfortunately in the eyes of many in destabilizing these countries. that in some ways has come back in the eyes of experts to haunt the united states with what we are seeing now. it will be interesting to see if the administration adopts a new approach in terms of how to establish good governance, how to build the capacities of these countries to have more economic sustainability and democratic practices that would allow people to stay and live in their countries. >> and, julia, you wrote an article and you wrote after the election, biden's team was trying to get the trump administration to get in front of this problem. can you explain what happened? >> essentially, they could have had a head start here to try to stave off a lot of that overcrowding that gabe was talking about. we know in the beginning of the transition, when the transition finally got off the ground in early december, the biden team started bringing up to trump administration officials, look, we see this flow of migrants increasing, especially unaccompanied children. and then the federal government said the trump policy expelling unaccompanied children could not stand. and that's also when joe biden decided we can't let that stand. but they saw the numbers rising and said we need more beds. primarily, and also because gabe points out, than hhs capacity was diminished. so without hhs, you had the overcrowding at the border stations. they were asked to begin looking at new facilities but instead say the trump administration sat on their hands. they got no reasons as to why they did not act and it was not until january 15th when hhs secretary alex azar finally just started to look at the sites. he finally allowed that to happen. but that really put them two months behind the ball of where they needed to be in terms of getting the capacity ready to handle children we now these crowding into border patrol stations. >> nbc's julia ainsley, gabe gutierrez, great insights this morning. now to colorado, the suspected gunman expected to appear in court just about an hour from now. nbc's steve patterson is in boulder and joins me now. steve, bring us up to speed, what's the latest. >> just as you alluded to in just about an hour from now, we're expected to see the suss expected shooter for the first time since he was led away in custody days ago, his appearance, demeanor, mannerisms, his voice. make no mistake though, first appearances are largely procedural affairs. the judge will likely read his rights and charges and then make sure he understands his rights and charges, all in an affair that will last the better part of five minutes. for a nation struggling for a reason why, this is certainly a flashpoint in character. to that end, i spoke to two young men who say they knew the suspect back in high school, angel hernandez, said he was on the suspect's high school wrestling team and that he largely talked about, as we hear in a lot of these mass shootings, a culture of bullying centered on the suspect and also outburst of anger from that suspect back in high school. and he's saying that not to excuse the shootings, not to assign a motive in this case but just to let people know what he knew about the suspect. as, again, a matter of character. here's what he said -- >> i think he was just tired of all of the bullying and everything going on and just lashed out. that's the thing, i don't know why he would have those little episodes and would be perfectly fine. that's why i'm like how the heck did he get to now? >> meanwhile, federal, local officials working around the clock searching for a motive as a community mourns. geoff? >> nbc's steve patterson, steve, thank you for your reporting. breaking news in the last hour, we learned weekly jobless claims fell below 700,000 for the first time since the pandemic started over a year ago. it's a sign hiring is picking back up as states loosen restrictions. but we're not out of the woods yet, more than 780,000 americans still filed claims last week. coming up -- one key issue expected to come up in president biden's press conference later today, gun control. but when the senate planning two weeks off, can he do anything besides executive actions? and my sit-down with ralph north as he signs a law to abolish the death penalty, the first southern state to do so. network at no extra cost. and plans to mix and match, so you only pay for what you need. the plan is so reasonable, they can stay on for the rest of their lives. aww... and on top of that, nobody gives you more entertainment you 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'cause we are. for president biden's first press conference since being sworn in. it comes two days after he called on congress to pass gun restrictions like background checks and ban on assault weapons. that was after a gunman killed ten people in boulder, colorado, on monday. that shooting also renewed the senate's efforts to reform the country's gun laws after the house passed two bills earlier this month but the senate is also going home for two weeks starting today. and the path ahead for those bills is unclear. we're covering every angle of this story so i want to bring in nbc's carol lee and garrett haake. and as you know well, since you covered him when he was vice president, joe biden was behind the obama administration's gun control effort after he was vice president after the sandy hook shooting and that wound up being the presidential election president obama said. so now that former vice president biden is now president biden, is he thinking about a similar approach? what is he thinking about now? >> yes, this is an issue very familiar with president biden. you know, former president obama put him in charge of looking into what they could do after that sandy hook shooting and they largely wound up where potentially the president will wind up in this situation, which is taking the executive action routes. the president said he wants the senate to pass the house also he already passed so he's pushing for existing legislation to move through congress but nothing new and at the same time officials say he's looking at taking executive actions. and there's a range of actions they say he's looking at. one area that he could make some headway on is on strengthening background checks. for instance, he could do something executively, he could send more funding to cities to help fight gun violence, things like that. but the real teeth will come in legislation. as you noted, the senate is out for a couple of weeks so there's nothing that will happen imminently even if the president could get the senate to move and get the 60-vote threshold he would need for the senate to pass this legislation and do things like he said to renew the assault weapons' ban, expand background checks, ban high-capacity magazines, things like that. in the meantime he's looking at executive action and that's frankly just something that is a tool that he has but it's not going -- not going to have the kind of impact you heard the president talk about wanting to have on this issue for a really long time now. >> and, garrett, we just saw a bipartisan group of lawmakers talk about what's happening at the border. is there any chance we might see that same group or different group of democrats and republicans try to work together to address gun violence? >> oh, sure, it's possible they will sit down and talk but on this particular issue, not too differently from immigration. emotions run high on both sides. finding room for compromise here has been the challenge. i mean, it was back in 2013 where you had the last kind of major effort for gun control push on then the manchin/toomey bill. in the same space you don't have all democrats on board. john manchin thinks the background check bills that pass the house go too far. there's very little interest from republicans in reforming the same elements as gun safety measures as democrats want to reform. i think maybe the sweet spot in the middle here, i have heard a lot of conversations around red-flag laws. a lot of these laws exist even in conservative states like florida and indiana and there's some interest on the republican side maybe trying to deal with the mental health aspect of this. that makes gun advocates on the other side a little bit nervous. that red flag while making the kind of middle ground here, i'm struck, as you mentioned and carol mentioned, by the fact the senate is going home now, this has been a problem that has bedevilled the gun safety movement for quite some time. after these major shootings, you do see this surge of interest, surge of focus and then it dissipates over time and we only get serious about this on capitol hill around tragedies. that's been the pattern for years. >> yes, it's a great point. jim, you worked in the white house. you also led the obama-backed organizing for action group that pushed for gun control. to garrett's point, democrats are not all on board with the current gun legislation being considered. republicans don't have much of an incentive to work with democrats. there's a new poll out showing two-thirds of americans want tougher gun laws but that number is dropping among republicans. so given all of that, what is the best way forward for president biden. how should he navigate all of this, do you think? >> this is one of these issues which makes the american public think washington has lost their minds. you have 90% support for background checks because the red flag law garrett was talking about had 85% support, and you have a president who feels very deeply and has huge history with these issues. you know he was co-sponsor in the 1990s with the assault weapon ban. led the efforts with president obama what to do and how to move forward. what biden needs to do to say to the country, it's time to actually get something done here. and he needs to figure out what can move on capitol hill. i think they'll look at the manchin/toomey bill that moved in 2013 and see if that's a place they can start and a place where john manchin can actually move forward and be part of the solution here since he has issued with the house-passed bill. but the overall problem theme we're not talking about, the nra's absolute hold on the republican party in washington. this is a party that is run by the nra and until we can figure out a way to break that stranglehold, passing bills like this are going to be incredibly hard. >> a question about that though because the nra is really a shell of its former self. it filed for bankruptcy protection. it's under investigation. do you really think it still has a stranglehold on the republican party? >> oh, my gosh, yes. if you look in the states and look at the numbers, they parrot the nra. i agree with you, they're in court. their chief executive being accused of fraud. this ought to be the moment where people are starting to walk away from them but you see no evidence of that. even republicans, over 70% of republicans want to move forward on background checks. and yet no republican member of the united states senate is doing it. it's not because they don't think it's a good idea, they're afraid of the nra beating them in a primary. >> jim, what do you think? are we going to get meaningful gun legislation any time soon, yes or no? >> yes. look, i think you'll get something done. you have joe biden, the single-best legislator of his time, is going to try to find a way to move forward with something. i think garrett's on to the right question. can we move forward on red flag laws? can we do something? and then he will use every piece of the executive order he has. this is a precious-built moment for joe biden, who is a guy who can quietly get things done behind the scenes. if there's anyone to move the stalemate through, it's joe biden. >> jim messina, carol lee and garrett haake, our thanks to all three of you. coming up -- president biden is expected to announce a new what he calls ambitious vaccination goal. what does that mean for when you can get your shot? that's coming up next. 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my sub has bacon. choose better be better and now save when you order in the app. subway eat fresh. but not jayson's sub. as we continue to return to classrooms... parents like me want to make sure we're doing it safely. especially in the underserved communities hardest hit by covid. trust me, no one wants to get back to classroom learning more than teachers like me. using common sense safety measures like masks, physical distancing, and proper ventilation. safety is why we're prioritizing vaccinations for educators. because together, we all have a responsibility to do our part. and together, we will get through this, safely. there was a time when this represented the future. but this, this is the future. the future of communicating of hearing and connecting with life. and this, is eargo. no appointments no waiting no hassles. and they are practically invisible in your ear. now you see it. now you don't. if you have hearing loss now is the time to do something about it. shake off the winter blues and spring into action with $350 off eargo neo hifi. act now for this limited time offer. a new pandemic milestone this morning, 75% of americans 61 and over have received at least one dose of the vaccine. and overall one-third of adults received one shot. and astrazeneca, which is not yet approved for use here in the u.s., is 76% effective, after the company said it was 79% effective just days ago. the revision comes after u.s. health officials said the company may have used outdated information in its vaccine trial. meantime the navajo nation is reporting zero new coronavirus cases or deaths in the previous 24 hours for the first time this year. that follows an aggressive immunization campaign. 38% of navajo citizens have been fully vaccinated. the tribe, whose land stretches across utah, arizona and new mexico, had the highest per capita infection rate in the u.s. at the height of the pandemic. meantime, multiple white house officials tell nbc news that president biden is set to announce a new ambitious vaccination goal at his planned news conference in just a few hours. it comes after the president said last week his administration had reached its goal of 100 million vaccinations within his first 100 days in office. president biden is also set to announce a $10 billion investment to expand access to covid-19 vaccines and build vaccine confidence in the hardest hit and highest risk communities. nbc's heidi przybyla is live at the fairfax, virginia, government center with new, exclusive reporting. heidi, thank you. what can you tell us? >> well, nbc learned president biden is making an unprecedented investment in the medical reserve corps. that is the growing army of nurses, doctors and medical staff that run the center, the backbone to many mass vaccination centers. i have been speaking with local officials here, geoff, and they say this funding will be a godsend for securing this type of public infrastructure in other pockets of the state and other pockets of the country that are more underserved that may be harder to reach individuals. this reserve core is now becoming a permanent part of our public infrastructure, geoff, and i spoke to one of the volunteer nurses this morning and i want you to listen to what she has to say. i think lost in a lot of this story about vaccinations is the human side of the story and the fact many of these individuals, like the nurse i spoke with, they're doing these 12-hour shifts for free. take a listen to what she had to say -- >> our elderly population, this is the first time they've been out of their house in months and months and months to get their vaccine. the look of relief, it's amazing. the folks who come in are so grateful and delighted and they cry. their children bring them in, their children are in tears. i'm getting chills talking about it. it's so emotional to be able to say, you know, i give them a shot and i touch them and say you've got a little shot of hope. >> so justice is a well-funded center and the intent with this funding is take this model more nationally into more underserved areas, geoff. >> nbc's heidi przybyla, thank you for that reporting. joining us now is former cdc director dr. tom frieden. first, let me get your reaction to heidi's exclusive reporting that president biden will make the biggest investment ever in the volunteer army of doctors and nurses and support staff to increase vaccination. >> the medical reserve corps is a great thing. it gets retired or otherwise available medical professionals able to be deployed quickly for covid and other things. it's been used well in the past and it's a great shot of hope for that reserve corps as well. however, geoff, it's not a replacement for strengthening our corps public health services. you definitely need the reserves but mostly you need the regular crews. >> yes, and president biden, who is also expected to set what he's calling an ambitious vaccinations goal, after he met his goal of 100 million shots in the arms. so what goal should he be shooting for to make a department in this pandemic, do you think? >> i think we need to continue to keep up the momentum. the vaccines are working. we are seeing tremendous progress but we're not out of the woods yet. we still have to mask up, avoid indoor air with people not in their households and for the upcoming holidays, limit travel for really essential. beyond that, making sure that we reach all communities where vaccine is enormously important. already vaccinations have prevented at least 40,000 deaths in this country and the benchmark, more than two-thirds of people over the age 65, have at least started their vaccination series is terrific. it is saving lives but we have to keep the pace up, keep the masks up and keep our distance up. >> in terms of keeping pace, should he double it? should he try to go to 2 million shots a day? what number do you think would be a good sort of threshold? >> well, what i would like to see most is an improvement in equity issues. we are seeing big gaps between black and white, between white and latinx groups and it's not just certain groups but wide-ranging groups. we are seeing high reluctance in some rural voters, in some trump voters. i participated in a vaccinating focus group with trump voters and really it's important to have the right messengers and right messages for different groups. it's going to be crucially important to allow every doctor who wants to to give this vaccine in their office. that's the key benchmark moving forward. ultimately, in addition to the community vaccination sites, in addition to pharmacies, we need to have this available in any doctors' office who wants to give it. >> let's talk about the astrazeneca news, because that company is now saying it's vaccine is 76% effective instead of 79% effective and that follows the u.s. health officials saying the company might have used outdated information in its vaccine trial. if this vaccine is eventually approved for use here in the u.s., when it comes to vaccine acceptance, do you think the damage has already been done here. how do you get the public to trust this vaccine is faced with so many issues having come -- safe with all of these issues coming up? >> with more getting done, we will have more information on safety. but severe hospital and death appears to be even higher and the difference between 76% and 79% isn't even that important. what is important is the company up its game in terms of the quality of its work. i'm afraid people will assume there's something evil going on. but there's an old saying, never attribute to malice that can could be adequately explained by incompetence. that is the company had one misstep after another and how it handled it, hasn't dealt with vaccines before. i don't think they're ill-intentioned. i think there's terrific scientific work behind it. it looks like a highly effective vaccine and will be very important for the us and around the world. >> dr. thom frieden, we appreciate you. coming up next -- my exclusive sit-down with virginia governor ralph northam after passing laws for gun controls, and equity, could this turn his state around and why his policies as a doctor pushed him to sign a different bill. policies as a doctor pushed him to sign a different bill skechers max cushioning footwear. they've maxed out the cushion for extreme comfort. it's like walking on clouds! big, comfy ones! oh yeah! is now a good time for a flare-up? 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>> when one looks at the history of close to 1,400 individuals have been executed. the great majority of those individuals were african-american. and so that number is disproportionate. virginia is proud of a lot of things but one thing we shouldn't be proud of is we executed more people than any other state. and this is our time to right that wrong. >> reporter: it's the culmination of a years-long battle by democrats who argued the death penalty is inequitable, ineffective and inhumane. you took a tour of a death chamber earlier today. what is your response to the argument people say there are some crimes that are so heinous that capital punish smt is the only remedy, it's the proper remedy? >> two wrongs don't make a right. and taking that tour, i had never been in a death chamber, and i'm glad i went in, but it was a very, very powerful experience. and i would say especially as a doctor, i saw the burning where individuals are placed and strapped down and an iv is started. and then they're provided a lethal injection that ends their life. i, as a doctor, i've put a lot of ivs in but i administer a medicine or fluid that maintains life. it was very powerful, and i will never forget it. and it just reaffirms we're doing the right thing. >> an effort to ensure equity, he says, in virginia's criminal justice system. >> something i am so proud of, geoff, i watched virginia evolve over my 60-plus years and i'm proud to say virginia is a very diverse state. it is that vie versety that diversity that makes us strong. as we move forward we want our life to be long, our doors open and welcome people to virginia. and i think this is an important step to doing that. >> joining us now is nbc news senior political editor mark murray. mark, i have been looking forward to talking with you about this. virginia, it strikes me, is a case study of what can be done when one party, in this case the democrats, control both the statehouse and governorship. most people when they think of progressive politics they think of states like new york and california, but really virginia has passed legislation like gun control, voting rights, dozens of racial and social equity bills. these are all pieces of legislation governor northam signed into law and they've done it quickly. what can democrats and other states and what can democrats at the federal level learn from what governor northam and what democrats are doing in virginia? >> yeah, geoff, it's all about winning up and down the ballot. democrats in virginia have dominated the ballot for the last 15 years, going a whopping 13-1 in the presidential gubernatorial and senate contest. and then we saw during the trump era that democrats did very well in races for state legislature, winning control of the state legislature. and it's been a combination fueled by the growth in the virginia suburbs and diversity which governor ralph northam was talking about and that spelled democratic success. when you talk about virginia, it is playing out to me at a federal level, where joe biden, who is kind of a middle of the road, ideological democrat, is president of the united states and then linked by democrats narrowly controlling the house of representatives and barely in control of the use senate and that way you're able to produce progressive policies. that formula winning and then pushing the agenda being played out. obviously you mentioned in virginia but also to a lesser extent in washington, d.c. >> and i asked the governor about his sort of legislative success. and he said policy making is about timing and opportunity and making good use of both. so what other states do you think have the greatest potential for sort of a red-to-blue shift so they can be repeats like we've seen in virginia? >> geoff, when you talk about the growth of the suburbs, diversity, democrats have potential opportunities in places like arizona, where joe biden won the presidential election, where we've seen democrats winning back-to-back senate contests. also in georgia, where democrats won the two runoff for senate and control for the senate as well as joe biden winning that state in the presidential election. but as we saw in virginia, that did not happen overnight. in virginia, it was about a 15-year crusade, fueled by an unpopular president trump. so, you know, what democrats are going to need to do is continue to win in georgia and arizona in 2022 when there are gubernatorial and senate contests and win the legislature, which is one of the hardest things for democrats to do and will be one of the hardest things for democrats to do in places like arizona and georgia if they want full control. >> nbc's mark murray. mark, appreciate you as always. and my thanks to governor northam for that interview as well. coming up in just a few hours, the ceos of twitter, facebook and google are set to testify before the house about the spread of misinformation on their platforms. that's unfolding as a new report finds seven of the lawmakers who are part of this hearing spread misinformation about the election results themselves. so are they really the best ones to be drilling these tech giants? we'll talk about it coming up. b. we started with computers. we didn't stop at computers. we didn't stop at storage or cloud. we kept going. working with our customers to enable the kind of technology that can guide an astronaut back to safety. and help make a hospital come to you, instead of you going to it. so when it comes to your business, you know we'll stop at nothing. so when it comes to your business, starting today, nobody has to settle you know we'll stop at nothing. for less than the very best. because only verizon gives you 5g from america's most reliable network at no extra cost. and plans to mix and match, so you only pay for what you need. the plan is so reasonable, they can stay on for the rest of their lives. aww... and on top of that, nobody gives you more entertainment you love like disney+, hulu and espn+ on select unlimited plans. you even get one of our best 5g phones on us when you buy one. and it all starts at just $35. only from verizon. ♪ mom and dad left costa rica, 1971. and in 1990, they opened lrazu. when the pandemic hit, pickup and delivery was still viable. that kept us afloat. keeping our diners informed on google was so important. the support from our customers, it honestly kept us going. i will always be grateful for that. ♪ . this morning, we're watching several stories developing right now. we just learned north korea launched two ballistic missiles into the sea of japan. the launch was confirmed by the u.s., japan and south korea. that's happening after north korean leader's city kim young told biden not to move forward with the planned military exercises with south korea. in the middle east, one of the world's largest container ships the size of a skyscraper is blocking all water traffic in the suez canal. it ran aground tuesday. that's bad news for all of us. you might have seen the impacts at the gas pumps. shipping experts tell us it could affect everything you see from food, furniture, clothes, electronics and car parts. meantime, here at home, agriculture secretary tom vilsack said 0.1% of the trump administration's covid farm relief went to black farmers. less than 1%. 99% of that aide went to white farmers. he adds the trump administration's pandemic response made existing disparities even worse across the u.s. economy. and on capitol hill, congress will grill the biggest names in tech about misinformation on their platforms in just a few hours. the ceos of google, facebook and twitter are set to testify and this hearing follows a dozen state attorneys general saying facebook and twitter need to do more to fight anti-vaccine content on their platform. jolene kent. we saw this before the election. nothing came of it. democrats want to focus on what led to the capitol riot so what can we expect in this hearing today? >> reporter: well, the one bipartisan thing that everyone seems to be agreeing on is that the status quo is just not working when it comes to these state platforms and the information you can getting off of them and the massive disinfo and misinformation is spreading. but you can expect to see lawmakers take two different attacks, expect democrats to talk about january 6th and what led to that far right and content there, was able to spread ahead of january 6th. you can expect more republicans to be focused on censorship and issues they focus on before when it comes to affecting elections and free speech and issues like that. but a lot of focus is going to be on stex 230. mark zuckerberg, himself, saying there needs to be some reforms to law. he will be proposing an idea that it needs to be a different kind of updated regulation, basically, proposing that they create content moderation systems. while that seems like a good idea in theory, it could put social media platforms competing with facebook on the back foot, making it more expensive for them to do that. zuckerberg plans to say instead of immunity, platforms should be required to demonstrate they have symptoms in place for unlawful information and removing it. this is coming from covid information as well as january 7th. these tech ceos coming before congress, yet, again. the question is, will new regulation be proposed? >> when you talk about misinformation, we should note "the washington post" found that seven republicans on the panel that's holding this hearing that they, themselves, spread misinformation by claiming the election was stolen after trump lost. we, of course, know that was a big lie. so that's one thing. but to your point about regulations for these platforms, to these big tech companies need or want their own version of the fda to regulate them? >> well, they're all saying that they're opened to regulation and they've long said that, every ceo you can expect they will be saying that yet again. but we also know that ceos like jack dorsey are talking about a trust deficit when it comes to social media platforms and its users. but the real question here is, are these lawmakers ready to ask questions that could lead to concrete change? because in the past, as we have covered, we've shown you that lawmakers are not necessarily the most well informed when it comes to understanding how these platforms work. i'll never forget in 2017, senator orrin hatch was asking, how does facebook make money? he had to explain to them, sir, we run ads. hopefully, this information will be overcome and we will see more change on the horizon, but a lot of disagreement as to how the change ought to happen when you look at the lobbying effort of these big techs. >> yep. that wraps up this hour of msnbc. hallie jackson picks it up next. msnbc. hallie jackson picks it up next. exactly jen! calm + restore oat gel is formulated with prebiotic oat. and strengthens skin's moisture barrier. uh! i love it! aveeno® healthy. it's our nature.™ ugh, there's that cute guy from 12c. -go talk to him. -yeah, no. plus it's not even like he'd be into me or whatever. ♪♪ ♪ this could be ♪ hi. you just moved in, right? i would love to tell you about all the great savings you can get for bundling your renter's and car insurance with progressive. -oh, i was just -- -oh, tammy. i found your retainer in the dryer. thousands of women with metastatic breast cancer, which is breast cancer that has spread to other parts of the body, are living in the moment and taking ibrance. ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor is for postmenopausal women or for men with hr+/her2- metastatic breast cancer, as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole significantly delayed disease progression versus letrozole, and shrank tumors in over half of patients. patients taking ibrance can develop low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. ibrance may cause severe inflammation of the lungs that can lead to death. tell your doctor right away if you have new or worsening symptoms, including trouble breathing, shortness of breath, cough, or chest pain. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection, liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include low red blood cell and low platelet counts, infections, tiredness, nausea, sore mouth, abnormalities in liver blood tests, diarrhea, hair thinning or loss, vomiting, rash, and loss of appetite. be in your moment. ask your doctor about ibrance. so jeff, you need all those screens streaming over your xfinity xfi... for your meeting? uhh yes. and your lucky jersey? oh, yeah. lauren, a cooler? it's hot. it's march. and jay, what's with all your screens? just checking in with my team... of colleagues. so you're all streaming on every device in the house, what?!! that was a foul. it's march... ...and you're definitely not watching basketball. no, no. i'm definitely not watching basketball. right... 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