telling reporters their pain and their loss has not diminished. i think about my brother over and over again. i have no choice. you all have no choice. you see him every day on somebody s tv, somebody s t-shirt and it s pain that we re feeling every day. my brother said i can t breathe multiple times. but the officer sat on his neck with a smirk on his face. my brother screamed, tell my kids i love them if his soul left his body. i can t stop thinking about that. and now just this weekend there s a new video emerging of another man also in police custody, telling officers i can t breathe. police body camera footage from fresno, california. this was taken in 2017, three years before floyd s death. wa watch. please. i can t breathe. knock it off. knock it off. joseph, can you breathe? yes. all right. i can t breathe. get his feet down first. then we can work on his arms. joseph, are you okay? joseph, are you all right? are you all right? joseph? that m
dateline london. hello, and welcome to dateline london, the programme bringing together foreign correspondents based in london with bbc expertise. i m geeta guru murthy. after the crisis, the deluge. keeping economies afloat has cost exchequers around the world a fortune and now, as we peer towards the end of lockdown, thoughts are turning to how we pay the bills. will there be a deluge of new taxes? the austerity of 2008 seems out of favour now so will there be a continued flood of spending? will economic activity bounce back rapidly or will tax revenues take a hit as unemployment rises? it is often said that if there are three economists there will be four opinions, and i am joined today by marc roche from france s le point and stephanie bakerfrom bloomberg. and here in the studio, at a safe social distance, the bbc s business editor, simon jack. thanks forjoining us and welcome to you all. in britain, the chancellor, rishi sunak, presents his budget next week. there s pres
even now, decades later, the world is still fascinated by charles manson and his crimes. we take you inside his world of drugs. he would dose them with lsd. sex. he slept with all those girls. and rock n roll. they really did listen to the white album over and over. with new interviews. he says, gary, this is your last chance. and new details. he would always frame his statements, this is what i believe, and the girls all believed it. the murders. these people were brutally butchered. the mayhem. charlie was acting meaner towards the girls. the madman. maybe i should have killed 400, 500 people, then i would have felt better. he symbolizes the horror that can be possible in this world. hello and welcome to dateline. charles manson was a man of small stature and monstrous delusions. the one-time amateur musician believed he would be bigger than the beatles. after that dream was crushed, it was replaced by a chilling fantasy, a nightmaris
hello, and welcome to dateline london, the programme bringing together foreign correspondents based in london with bbc expertise. i m geeta guru murthy. after the crisis, the deluge. keeping economies afloat has cost exchequers around the world a fortune and now, as we peer towards the end of lockdown, thoughts are turning to how we pay the bills. will there be a deluge of new taxes? the austerity of 2008 seems out of favour now so will there be a continued flood of spending? will economic activity bounce back rapidly or will tax revenues take a hit as unemployment rises? it is often said that if there are three economists there will be four opinions, and i am joined today by marc roche from france s le point and stephanie bakerfrom bloomberg. and here in the studio, at a safe social distance, the bbc s business editor, simon jack. thanks forjoining us and welcome to you all. in britain, the chancellor, rishi sunak, presents his budget next week. there s pressure from new con
seditionist expruz president doesn t want the party who worships him to speak his name. and another capitol rioter is very sorry and would like to get out of jail, please. and peel tack emthe she-cessoin. women and the economy, and how we can do right by them. another hour of velshi. good morning, it is sunday march 7th. i m ali velshi. this morning, covid financial relief is days away from becoming a reality for millions of americans suffering through know fault of their own as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. president biden s $179 trillion covid relief bill finally made it way through the senate on a 50-49 partyline vote with every republican voting no. last year, they passed the $3.3 trillion c.a.r.e.s. act. with the overwhelming support of both parties. but this one, under a new democratic president republicans blasted as part sap and excessive in its spending. seems odd, perhaps politically motivated. it is almost like they are more interested in seeing a dem