we can t continue to hurt the education of our children. as omicron spreads, how can schools make it work? new york city mayor eric adams joins me to discuss ahead. plus, terrorists attack, on the anniversary of an insurrection, one republican lawmaker backpedaled while other pushed for truth. that s how democracies die. are we doing enough to stop that? i ll speak to a prominent republican, governor asa hutchinson, in moments. hello, i m jake tapper in washington where the state of our union is having cold war flashbacks. the u.s. is entering a series of urgent meetings with russia this week, at one of the most precarious moments with that nation, since the fall of the soviet union. on monday, u.s. officials will meet with their russian counterparts in geneva in an attempt to deescalate the crisis with ukraine which russia seems poised to invade, with the ability to quickly mobilize twice that many. following the bilateral meetings in geneva, representatives from
will russia actually invade ukraine? or is vladimir putin saber-rattling to get western concessions? we made it clear it cannot move on ukraine. and what will china do in 2022? what are the implications for its neighbors and for america? also the global economy, will there be more inflation, less productivity, fewer babies? i will talk to experts about it all. usa! and i will bring you a preview of my latest cnn special about the threat to american democracy. one year after the january 6th attack on the capitol, is the republic really at risk? i believe it is. stay tuned for a clip of the fight to save american democracy, which airs in full tonight, 9:00 p.m. eastern. first, here s my take. in just the last ten days almost a dozen people i know have tested positive for covid-19. two of them had a rough time with it, saying it was comparable to a full-blown case of the flu. the others had a day of chills or nothing at all. when asked about symptoms, one of them h
left open, and what happens in cases like that, it allows the smoke to spread in a rapid fashion. it appears as though many who were injured in this case was due to smoke inhalation. i spoke to a young man who was an uber driver. his loved ones were in the building, and he s seeking information, so i can only imagine the uncertainty that is really engulfing those who have families that are connected. but this tragedy s impact layers apart from each other. and we re going to try to get as much information as possible to all those who are seeking it. i want to get right to cnn s polo sandoval live at the scene. polo, just an awful situation. is there any word yet on what started this fire, how it spread so quickly through that large building? reporter: yeah, and not at this point, too, jim. that s going to obviously be part of the investigation. that s really going to be a big focus here. but just to get a sense of what happened here, that fire starting at one of those ap
uk and south africa where omicron has already peaked with no major increase in deaths deadly flooding in the northwest. one man swept away, others rescued from the tops of their cars now 57 million are under winter weather alerts new details as tennis star novak djokovic sits in isolation trying to enter australia. his lawyers say he already had covid. the terrifying cliff collapse caught on camera. boaters racing to safety and special delivery a message from this ups driver that inspired so many across the country this is nbc nightly news with jose diaz-balart. good evening we are entering a new phase in this latest covid wave driven by the highly contagious omicron variant. first, came the explosion in cases and now come the hospitalizations in some areas the health care system is buckling under new pressure the virus is so widespread many healthcare workers are testing positive and calling out sick, and there s a lot of seemingly conflicting information. this
grew up in or charity you have long supported. they are very different. if you are episcopalian you kno exactly what we are talking about. if you get in to the sierra clu and protect the sierras, you ge it too. everywhere in this country formally respectable organization seem to have gone off the deep end. have you listen to national public radio recently? npr was always a little nutty, but in a familiar, nonthreatening kind of way. the public radio station ran niche cultural programming most of the time. the celtic music hour or bluegrass show. for decades public radio s most popular feature was something called car talk. remember that? a show where two italian mechanics from boston argued about the relative merits of fuel injection. they gave you free advice on ho to fix your honda. and then in the morning on driv time all npr stations aired the news from washington. there was the morning edition i the morning. there was all things considered on the trip home. and times npr