Two doctors and a woman authorities called the ketamine queen. Im going to say it again, as clearly as i can. I am proud of my service to this country. Anyone brave enough to put on h the uniform for our great un country, including my opponent, i just have a few simple words. Thank you for your service and sacrifice. I said to vladimir putin, i said dont Do It, and i told him things, what i do. And he said no way. And i said way. Today we take the next step forward in our fight. Thank you, joe. Thank you, joe thank you, joe falls, i have an incredible partner. She is going to make one hell of the president. Let me tell you what our product 2025 is beat the hell out of them. The launch of the 2024 Democratic National Convention is just two days away, but democrats are already entering up the excitement. The Harris Campaign saying it is holding a weekend of action, leading up to the dnc with more than 10,000 volunteers at a 2800 events across battleground states. The events will feature
life in america for the better. when all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i m chris hayes. well, history was made this weekend. there have now been four impeachments in american history. donald trumps the subject of half of them. the second impeachment concluded saturday, and it was by far the most bipartisan impeachment ever undertaken. last year, mitt romney became the first senator in all of american history to vote to convict a president of his own party pursuant to an impeachment. and on saturday, seven republican senators voted to convict donald trump. the final tally was 57 guilty, 43 not guilty. the most bipartisan impeachment conviction vote in the senate, following the most bipartisan impeachment vote in the house last month. a 53-47 majority is a big majority. it s a divided country. if you are running for office, and you win by 14 points, you have trounced the opposition. it s not a close race. in fact, public opinion almost exactly follows t
of will be in the milder zone. some significant snow to begin with in the mountains in the north east. on saturday there will be some sunny spells and temperatures up to about 12. warm christmas eve, back to you, i2. warm christmas eve, back to you, sophie. thanks, matt. and that s bbc news at ten. this is bbc news. we will have the headlines at the top of the hour as newsday continues straight after hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk, i m stephen sackur. are the machines about to take over? that basic fear seems to underpin much of the discussion about artificial intelligence, and parallel developments such as synthetic biology. the latest wave of tech advances offers us extraordinary new possibilities, but do we flawed human beings have the will and the means to contain and control them? well, my guest is mustafa suleyman, ceo of inflection ai and the author of a challenging book on al and us. is that a doomed relationship? mustafa suleyman, welcome to hardtalk. thanks for havin
mustafa suleyman, welcome to hardtalk. thanks for having me. it s a great pleasure to have you here. now, you, in your career, are wrestling with the complex relationship between us humans and increasingly intelligent machines. it seems, if i ve got it right, that you re not so much worried about the machines you re worried about us, our wisdom. is that right? it s a great way of putting it. i mean, i think the great challenge we have is one of governance. containment means that we should always be in control of the technologies that we create. and we need to make sure that they are accountable to us as a species, they work for us over many, many decades and centuries, and they always do way, way, way more good than harm. with every new type of technology we have, there are new risks risks that, at the time we experience them, feel really scary. they re new. we don t understand them. they could be completely novel in ways that could be very harmful. but that s no reason t
mustafa suleyman, welcome to hardtalk. thanks for having me. it s a great pleasure to have you here. now, you, in your career, are wrestling with the complex relationship between us humans and increasingly intelligent machines. it seems, if i ve got it right, that you re not so much worried about the machines you re worried about us, our wisdom. is that right? it s a great way of putting it. i mean, i think the great challenge we have is one of governance. containment means that we should always be in control of the technologies that we create. and we need to make sure that they are accountable to us as a species, they work for us over many, many decades and centuries, and they always do way, way, way more good than harm. with every new type of technology we have, there are new risks risks that, at the time we experience them, feel really scary. they re new. we don t understand them. they could be completely novel in ways that could be very harmful. but that s no reason t