
Biden tours damage and meets with families left homeless by Colorado wildfire
CNN
President Joe Biden on Friday toured the damage left by the wildfires that swept through Colorado last week, meeting with ffamilies who lost their homes and businesses in the blaze and making clear his horror.
Biden, speaking at a recreation center in Louisville, Colorado, said the damage was hard to see up close.
"Jill and I, and my team, have surveyed the damage of the Marshall Fire and it's as devastating as it looks on television, as devastating as many of the environmental crises as I've seen in the last year," Biden said.

Before the stealth bombers streaked through the Middle Eastern night, or the missiles rained down on suspected terrorists in Africa, or commandos snatched a South American president from his bedroom, or the icy slopes of Greenland braced for the threat of invasion, there was an idea at the White House.

More than two weeks after the stunning US raid on Caracas that led to the capture of Nicolás Maduro, the political confrontation over the future of Venezuela is rapidly coalescing around two leaders, both women, who represent different visions for their country: the acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, who stands for continuity, and opposition leader María Corina Machado, who seeks the restoration of democracy.











