Janet Jalil
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, this all comes a day after a jury in New Mexico found Meta liable for the way its platforms endanger children and expose them to sexually explicit material and contact with sexual predators.
Let's hear from someone who knows the inner workings of Meta.
Frances Haugen is a former Facebook employee who became well-known as a whistleblower.
former Facebook employee Frances Hogan.
Well, our technology editor Zoe Kleinman says the LA verdict is groundbreaking.
Zoe Kleinman, let's turn to the conflict in the Middle East now, which has been raging for nearly four weeks.
The Iranian regime has dismissed President Trump's claims that they're ready to make a deal, saying it has no intention of negotiating with the US for now.
Instead, Tehran has set out demands of its own, including compensation and guarantees that it won't come under attack again.
Iran's foreign minister Abbas Arachi said messages may have been conveyed between the US and Iran by friendly countries like Pakistan and Turkey but that didn't amount to dialogue and the fact that the US was now talking about negotiations showed how its position had weakened.
Despite being constantly rebuffed by Tehran, the White House insists that it is very close to meeting its goals in Iran.
Speaking at a Republican fundraising event in Washington, President Trump repeated that negotiations were underway.
Our correspondent David Willis told me that the conflicting messaging and President Trump's handling of the conflict is causing divisions in the Republican Party to deepen further.
We're starting to see signs of frustration on the part of lawmakers who up to now have given the Trump administration pretty wide latitude in regard to the waging of this war.
Some emerged from classified briefings
on Capitol Hill yesterday complaining about the lack of detail in regard to such things as the possible deployment of ground troops and concerns have also been expressed about the rising cost of the conflict and the lack of a timeline and indeed perhaps the most outspoken concern
was expressed by Congresswoman Nancy Mace of South Carolina.
And she said she left the briefing troubled by what she described as shifting explanations and unclear military objectives.
And she later wrote on social media that the longer this war continues, the faster it will lose the support of Congress and the American people, Jeanette.
David Willis.
Meanwhile, as attacks on Tehran continue, many Iranians are still trying to flee the country.