the latest want. good evening, peter. peter: good evening, bret. all six branches of the military are constantly training and conducting exercises to make sure they can be ready for anything. but the commander-in-chief has decided if they really want to be ready, then all 1.3 million service members must get the covid-19 vaccine by mid september. you can consider this memo today as what we would call in the military a warning order a warning order to the force that this is coming. peter: president biden explained, quote: being vaccinated will enable our service members to stay healthy to better protect their families and to ensure that our force is ready to operate anywhere in the world. next up, teachers could be required to get the shot and they won t be told to do it by lawmakers but rather teachers union leaders. as a matter of personal conscience, i think we need to be working with our employers, not opposing them on vaccine mandates. many more could be on the way.
vaccinated person that i ve still diagnosed with covid-19. plus who still hasn t gotten the vaccine and can they be convinced to get it? and the bipartisan infrastructure deal facing another hurdle this hour. progressives are not happy. some promise to tank a top biden priority if they don t see action on voting rights. a pathway to citizenship and police reform. up nfirst today, the war chz changed. the war has changed. that s the rethink everything take away from a brand new alarming cdc document that says delta covid variant is as infect x as chickenpox and new precautions are needed. days ago scientists put the delta variant on par with the common cold, believing each infected person transmit the virus to maybe two other people. the new analysis says each infected person on average is actually infecting eight or nine others. cnn national correspondent christen holmes with more on the alarming, alarming findings. christen? yeah. john, i mean, there s no doubt about i
dropping masks. summer escapes. how an r.v. rush could crowd the great outdoors. ghost town, we visit point roberts washington, cut off from america with no place to go. and later, the class of 2021, we celebrate a grad who went from patient to practitioner. i would be lying if i said it was easy. this is the cbs weekend news from new york. here s jericka duncan. duncan: good evening, in an exclusive interview with cbs face the nation, prime minister benjamin netanyahu of israel says there is no clear end in sight to the violence between israel and palestinians in the gaza strip. netanyahu also defended his nation s military strike. civilians have taken the brunt of the violence. today at least 42 people died including ten children. israel blames hamas saying it is targeting leaders and infrastructure linked to the militant group. cbs imtiaz tyab is there. reporter: the horror in gaza is only getting worse after israeli air strikes flattened three buildings today
justices and in cities across the nation. meantime, in ukraine, first lady jill biden made a surprise visit to the western part of that country meeting with ukraine s first lady. this as president biden and g-7 leaders met with volodymyr zelenskyy. a live report from ukraine is minutes away. in the bahamas, officials are investigating the sudden death of three americans at the sandals resort. we ll have the latest on that case with dr. marc siegel. to the protests on the supreme court draft leaked opinion upon abortion rights. in wisconsin they are looking into a fire at the headquarters of a pro-life group. reporter: rich, here in new york city the mass at st. patrick s today need environmental rall did go on as planned. there were no disruptions. in wisconsin they have an investigation happening right now. a suspicious fire at a non-profit that supports anti-abortion measures. the police chief said it appears the office was significantly targeted. rallies out in houston, ch
decision. very well-crafted, and i think it will go a long way toward bringing our country together, which our country needs. you cannot take somebody out of a race. the voters can take the person out of the race very quickly. but a court shouldn t be doing that and the supreme court saw that very well. sandra: all right, moments ago former president donald trump riding high into super tuesday, both in his electoral and legal battles. reacted to the massive win from the supreme court that blocks nationwide efforts to keep him off the presidential ballot. hello, welcome everyone, i m sandra smith in new york. and john, a brand-new week, here we go. john: and this is a big week. so much going on this week. i m john roberts in washington and this is america reports . trump celebrating the unanimous ruling moments ago calling it an inspirational and unifying moment to bring the country together. sandra: fox team coverage, kerri urbahn is here, fox news legal editor and for