welcome to the whole story. i m anderson cooper. we take you into a world few get to see up close, the world of super yachts. private boats, some longer than a football field. they can cost hundreds of millions of dollars, and it seems there s plenty of buyers. since the pandemic, more people than ever are building and buying them. business is reportedly booming. they ve become status symbols for the super rich and striking symbols of economic inequality. their impact on the environment and the oceans is a topic of debate. the u.s. has seen some super yachts of russia s elite, and now your tax dollars are surprisingly being spent to keep their ships in tip-top shape. cnn s alisyn camerota takes us inside this hidden world of super yachts, and her first stop, the monaco yacht show. this is monaco. land of the ultra wealthy. dotting the harbor like crown jewels are some of the world s largest super yachts. that s no surprise considering this is the richest country in the worl
the measure. lucas tomlinson is on the lawn of the white house with more on the story. hey, lucas. jacqui, many people are wondering if the president is so concerned about the environment why doesn t he want to go to east palestine. the president says he wants to go, but didn t give an exact date. i ve spoken with every democrat in ohio and in pennsylvania and laid out what i think the answers are and we will be implementing an awful lot into of the legislature h here. as you mentioned off the top, jacqui, what some would call a negligent discharge, a memo was accidentally fired off or posted the biden administration looking to increase royal fees off the coast of alaska, despite saying lower fees would help attract investment. the department favored higher fees, it constitutes the balancing of economic and environmental factors. senator joe manchin says he s outraged by the memo and says to fox digital is crystal clear that this administration is putting their radica
ancestral home to commemorate the anniversary of the good friday agreement that ended 30 years of hostilities between catholics and protestants. will tim scott run jay ensley i will speak to gun safety advocate justin jones ahead of the vote to send justin pearson back to the statehouse. good day, everyone i m andrea mitchell in washington as president biden begins a deeply personal overseas trip to the republic of ireland. at first visiting northern ireland, still part of the united kingdom, 25 years after the good friday agreement, that ended ed decades of violence this took a long, hard years of work to get to this place it took people willing to come together in good faith and to risk boldly. it s up to us to keep this going, to keep building on the work that has been done every day for the last 25 years. joining me is the founder of irish american magazine who served as a key back channel negotiator between bill clin toclinton and the ira. the president landed in
homeland security is looking for a new force to head to the southern border to wait for it, to do chores. they are recruiting defense officials on a volunteer basis to do housekeeping, prescription runs, and other menial tasks to help manage that migrant influx all on the taxpayers dime. julian turner is live in dc with the exclusive details. this is so hard to believe and yet somehow i m not surprised. we have been as you said given exclusive access two internal homeland security and pentagon planning documents that revealed these voluntary military officials are going to deploy to the southern border to provide support services to migrants crossing into the u.s. legally and illegally. new experience is required just a willingness to serve, which will cover cost for military officials to leave their jobs at the pentagon and traveled to the border for 60 days at a time. this support will help ensure that migrants arriving at the border receive compassionate and timely care,
he was the one who came out and said flatten the curve, and that flattening the curve kept going on and on and on. now, when it comes to schools, he s not telling a fib here. in july of 2020, i interviewed him and he said we have to get the schools open by the fall, but note he had already set a policy of lockdowns and closures that were extended to the schools. so the issue of collateral damage, mental health effects, socialization, nutrition, eye care, the mask overuse, the issue of not being with your peers that we were so worried about was extended and he talked about it in july 2020, but i think the horses were already out of the barn. we saw from other parts of the world that you could leave schools open and the spread did not increase. john: to that point, dr. siegel, it s one thing to say we want the schools to open, but it s another to set conditions or be among the people setting conditions that make it impossible for those schools to open. and at the same time, t