being taken to slaughter. rupert murdoch admitting his fox hosts endorsed, his word, trump s election lies on air. and that s not all he s confessing as fox fights a $1.6 billion lawsuit. and an outfront investigation tonight, our david culver traveled to the epicenter of the covid-19 outbreak, the virus likely leaked out of that lab in wuhan, china. let s go outfront. good evening, i m erin burnett. outfront tonight, exclusive new information about putin s staggering losses. russia has now suffered more combat deaths in ukraine than in all of its wars combined since world war ii. this is according to a new analysis by the group csis. you ll remember we were bringing you those satellite images every day as the buildup happened. the number of russian deaths per month now, they say, is 25 times higher than it was in chechnya, 35 times the number killed in afghanistan. in a moment we re going to have much more on this new analysis. i also want to bring you tonight th
Imagine you are a patient about to undergo Brain Surgery. If it goes well, it could save your life, if it goes wrong, you could end up paralysed or dead. You want to believe your surgeon is infallible, a superhero but he is not, he is all too human, just like you. That emerges from the extraordinary honest writing from henry marsh, giving us a rare insight into the mind of the doctor. Is that reassuring or troubling . Henry marsh, welcome to hardtalk. The veryjob description, brain surgeon, i think in most people it prompts a sense of awe and maybe a little bit of fear, as well, and certainly mystery. But youve decided to lift the veil on what it is really like and i wonder why. I was subject to that myth of Brain Surgery myself when i decided to become a neurosurgeon many years ago. I suppose i was Drawing Attention to oneself, as any writer is doing when writing a book, and i am the youngest of four, i have been Drawing Attention to myself from an early age, if you ask my family i wa
I am stephen sackur. Imagine you are a patient about to undergo Brain Surgery. If it goes well it could save your life, if it goes wrong you could end up paralysed or dead. Of course you want to believe your surgeon is infallible, a superhero, but he is not, he is all too human, just like you. And that simple truth emerges from the extraordinary honest writing of my guest today, one of britains leading Brain Surgeons, henry marsh. He has given us rare insight into the mind of the doctor. Is that reassuring or troubling . Henry marsh, welcome to hardtalk. Thank you. The veryjob description, Brain Surgeon, for most people it prompts a sense of awe and maybe fear as well. And certainly mystery. But you have decided to lift the veil on what it is really like and i wonder why. I have been subject to that myth of Brain Surgery myself. I decided to become a neurosurgeon many years ago. I am the youngest of four and i have been Drawing Attention to myself from an early age. I wanted to convey
difference between donald trump and bernie sanders in terms of the economic policies. he s trying to look at some of those things. he s going to have to stand up to donald trump. so, david, desantis is also now trying to go beyond florida in a lot of ways. when ed that interview with mark levin, he talked about, oh, sure, i m from florida but i m also from pennsylvania and ohio. here he is. i grew up in a town called dunedin, which is in the tampa, st. petersburg area. my father s from western pennsylvania. my mother s from northeastern ohio. that is like blue collar salt of the earth. we do have a culture. and so i grew up in that culture. but really it was kind of those rust belt values that raised me. okay. so, david, you spent a career
ukraine, that s taylor. and kent today managing the situation from washington and watching control of ukraine policy get pulled out of his hands and into this other group. sondland and volker and giuliani who had been watching develop power with the president and in foreign policy since the spring. i think the comment that was interesting. george kent presents this differently and that is that he felt it was incorrect to do this in ukraine. not just because it was incorrect but very specifically that the u.s. efforts in ukraine, a country that is at war with an adversary in russia, this just was counterproductive to the type of work that the united states has been trying to do in eastern europe. right. i mean, this is somebody who has spent his career dealing with eastern europe. the former soviet states. and he talks about how u.s. policy since, you know, the late 80s, early 90s has been to develop institutions in these countries. to develop the rule of law in countries that not