the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from georgia reserves his time. the gentleman from missouri. mr. graves: thank you, mr. speaker. mr. speaker, i might point out to my colleagues how much of a national emergency this is. it was president obama who recognized this crisis at the border. in 2014, president obama requested $3.7 billion in emergency supplemental funding for what he described as a humanitarian crisis, a humanitarian crisis at the border. he specifically cited an increase in family unions trying to cross the border and a lack of resources to accommodate them. with that, mr. speaker, i yield two minutes to the gentleman from alabama, mr. aderholt. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for two minutes. mr. aderholt: i thank my colleague for yielding. i rise today to oppose the joint resolution to overturn the president s declaration, i think it s very clear that there is a national emergency that exists on our southern border because of the high ra
overwhelmed the border. here s the deal. we are sending back people first of all, the idea that joe biden said come because i heard the other day that they are coming because they know i am a nice guy, well, here s the deal. they are not. i can say quite clearly don t come and we are in the process of getting set up, don t leave your town or city. greg: wait, you didn t encourage migrants to come over? then in the very same breath you say don t come yet, because we are not ready? like america is a rock concert in the doors don t open until 9:00? he literally just did what he denied. too bad there s no tape of him saying you shouldn t come oh, wait. i would in fact make sure that there is, we immediately surge of the border. all those people seeking asylum, they deserve to be heard, that s who we are. we are a nation who says if you want to flee and you are fleeing oppression, you should come. in a heartbeat we would take another 2 million. i would also move to inc
steve: new at 5:00 a pleasant , hill man is now in the polk county jail charged with 2 counts of lascivious acts with a child. court documents show that 18-year-old kyle calvert used a social media app to communicate with someone he knew was a minor. calvert asked the victim to perform sex acts with other young children and record it. his bond is set at $40,000. stacey: the south carolina deputy who slammed a student on the floor and tossed her several feet is out of a job. kevin cooney is following that right now. kevin: stacy, this is deputy benfield s. deputy been fields. he has been fired after this video of a violent arrest quickly went viral and sparked national outrage. the richland county sheriff says the student was being disruptive and refused to leave the classroom. but he says what happened with the deputy was not acceptable. it continues to upset me when i see that video. it s the fact that he picked that student up, and he threw the student across the room.
laura: his mother who did not want to show her face on camera defends her son, saying he got the victims were older. he said the room was dark and he can t see the girls. how old they looked. he went by what they told him and they said they were 17. laura: police say calvert new the victims were minors. as a parent myself it is scary. laura: mitch mortvedt with the iowa department of criminal investigation says more social media sites means internet crimes against children in iowa are up 400% in the last seven years. he adds there are things parents can do to protect their kids online. know your children s passwords, nvidia contacts are, know who their friends are. know the applications and apps they are using. eric: he also recommended not allowing them to have a computer or tablet in their bedroom. with $40,000 cash bond. elizabeth:elizabeth: a local mother says her disabled son was assaulted at school. the charges stem from an incident at jesse franklin taylor educat
for many professionals and corporate managers. super, super, super-duper hot. it s crazy. the 40-hour work week is history. daddy! okay, hold on just a minute. 60-to-80-hour work weeks are now the norm. you don t think you re working too much? no. do you? no. do you? no. you re brainwashed. [laughter] maybe we re all crazy. maybe we are. [clock ticking] we have eight weeks of vacation. eight weeks of vacation? eight weeks, yes. like most frenchmen marchand has no guilt about taking so much time off. in fact, it s the law. full-time workers in france are guaranteed at least five weeks vacation and a maximum 35-hour work week, with no paid overtime allowed. and not everyone is thrilled about working even 35 hours. the aim is to keep your job without working. welcome to 60 minutes on cnbc. i m leslie stahl. in this episode, we ll examine our relationship with work. how much is too much too little, and who should decide? but before we loo