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tv   The Chris Wallace Show  CNN  February 17, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PST

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it's time to get together with some smart people to break down the big stories. today, we're asking just how crushing, not ruling by a new york judge ordering donald trump to by 355 million in penalties we'll be to the former president's personal fortune and political future. then with vladimir putin's biggest opponent dying in prison, and usaid for ukraine on the verge of collapse does washington have the will to stop russia later and forget someone's looks? some people are now finding love using a credit gore the gang is here and all ready to go. so sit back, relax and let's talk about it first up.
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that devastating ruling in new york, a state judge ordered donald trump and his companies to pay nearly 355 million in a civil fraud case and banned him from running a business there for three years. the latest chapter in a week full of legal drama. but will it affect trump's bid for the white house? a tale of two cities in donald trump's legal battle is this week. first in new york, where on friday, a judge ordered trump and his companies to pay 355 million in a civil fraud trial and ban trump from running a business in new york for three years. >> there was no fraud meanwhile, in atlanta, explosive testimony from fulton county district attorney, fani willis the issue whether she and her team should be disqualified from bringing trump to trial for election interference because of our
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romantic relationship with special prosecutor nathan wade her removal would delay or might even end the case. >> these people are on trial for trying to steal an election in 2020. i'm not on trial no matter how hard you try to put me on trial. >> and back in new york, a judge ruled trump's criminal trial over alleged hush money payments to porn star stormy daniels will start in late march around the same time, trump is expected to clinch the republican nomination up in your run for election to be sitting in a courthouse in manhattan all day long? >> here with me today, podcaster and author kara swisher, author and conservative pollster kristen soltis anderson new york times journalists and podcast host, lulu garcia-navarro, and john mccormack, senior editor at the dispatch welcome everyone. good to have you here. >> lulu. >> it's a lot of money, but how damaging is this judgment in the civil case $355 million
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pennel, a ban on doing business for three years in new york for donald trump how damaging is that to him? personally and politically? >> i mean, i think let's start with the personal. it's hugely damaging if you think about donald trump, you think about how he's branded himself, how he puts his name on all its buildings, how he has always tried to use his personal fortune to push his own political brand. and so this really hits to the heart of that. and we've heard people that are close to him like michael cohen and others talk about how this was really the most painful case for him because it really goes to who he is and how he brands himself in the world. >> and >> politically, i think also it's damaging i mean, at the end of the day, what they're saying is that he can't run a company. how can you say that you can't run a company? and then ask someone to run the country. >> well, of course, it's a new york judge who's saying he can't run a company. kristen, it's a civil case, not a criminal case. he's got for her those, but no jail time. with this ruling. but it is as i
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said, a whale of a lot of money. so how damaging personally and politically, so politically, i think it's unlikely to actually be that damage jkn, part of why is that had this ruling come down, say eight years ago in the midst of that 2016 republican primary, it really would have undercut his message that he's a winner and he's great at business. but that is so baked into the views, especially the views that republican voters have of him, that this is not going to change anything about the republican primary. and it frankly probably won't change in july about the general election. but personally, because it is so much money, he has already been bleeding entities like the rnc dry to try to pay for his legal bills. so the fact that this number is so large and you add this on top of the what, 100 million that he now has to pay because of the defamation suit. i mean, this is huge sums of money for someone who it turns out may not actually have the huge sums of money he claims. you have to pay those lawyers. >> they grabbed him by as well. that's what i do here in this
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case, and that's that's a very sensitive spot for donald trump. >> it is just someone said that once its second my head this is what's important here as well. there he has the money and he has i interviewed robbie kaplan this morning, who was who won that at $3.3 for e. jean carroll. >> and she was noting the >> money is where it hurts him. that's really where it hurt when it was a large number versus 5 million in the previous lawsuit that she won. it really hurt him. and in this case, she's not entirely clear if he has the money to pay any of it because when he put the bond up for the last case, he paid cash of his own money. he did not get a bond which is you can also do because what i've seemed to understand is he doesn't bond. he can't get a bond from people who do that >> i want to ask you, kara, about normally that would be enough news on donald trump for the week. it's only one of the stories. we also have that spectacle in georgia. they hearing of fani willis, the
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fulton county prosecutor, and whether she should be removed from the georgia interference case because of a conflict of interest because of a romantic relationship with her lead prosecutors, nathan wade smoke or fire? >> smokey smoke. smokey smoke. i don't get as anything to do with this. of course, they're going to try this. i see why you wouldn't a trial like this >> i think she's right. she's not on trial, but she's on trial a bit like, i mean, people are paying attention to her. i think they'll probably the judge will not take her off to trial watching it, though. i changed my mind. i said previously that what i believed was that this was a terrible lapse of judgment, which is true, but i will say watching her. she was convincing to me and i think she did a lot to kind of change the narrative to what to what she is not on trial. it was sorted the way that they were going after her felt achy to me. i felt that she actually was not very lawyer lin
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>> there were hitting her where it was it to do with his personal life and of course, which i thought the way that she he acted was appropriate. all things considered, it's not just her personal life that it is the fact that her personal life intersects very clearly with the case by bringing this alleged romantic partner into the case. i mean, that's the problem is she can say all day long this is personal, this is personal, this is personal. they're not going after her for dating someone that they don't like. there going after him for nato, someone >> i want to bring in john under this, that's not really why they're going after, why they're going after, or they're saying that she hired this fellow because the fact he was going to get paid a lot of money by the government. and then she was going to benefit from that because he was going to take her on nice trips that it was it wasn't just a relationship it was a conflict of interests. i mean, i'm going to ask the question i ask kara smoke i'd certainly embarrassing. it certainly doesn't show a lot of good judgment in the case of somebody who's going after the president, former president of the united states. but is it going to get her thrown off the
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case? >> i think so. i think the facts or bad i think essentially she's been accused of height during her boyfriend to enrich him, enrich yourself with taxpayer money. the allegations that count there was testimony that this relationship began back in 2019. she asserts that this didn't happen to 19, that they became romantically involved after the fact that would help save her in this case if she can prove that, but she wasn't able to do that. furthermore, she said it, well, i reimbursed him with cash payments there were no atm receipts. i think that it just looks really bad and she hired someone without a lot of without a lot of relevant experience on a hugely consequential case. i just think this is a mess all around. >> is he wrong? >> he's not wrong, but it's a mess all around. you're absolutely right that it's a mess all around. i can't decide obviously, what the judge will or will not see in this case. i don't think that they proved it. i think that they had an explanation. i think that the one witness that said that they had had this relationship in 2019 has her own ax to grind. and so, you know, it's it's a big mess for sure that she might get thrown off the case.
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i am not convinced. absolutely. yeah >> no, we're not done yet. there's more. >> the hush money case involving stormy daniels. now this isn't about trying to overturn that election. it's not about classified documents but it sure looks like this is going to end up being the first criminal trial that the former president faces or any former president is our face sometime in late march, lulu is the hush money case weak sauce. >> i mean, honestly, it's a felony. i mean, what they are actually discussing there is a felony. and of course, when week when we list the enormous amount of cases that we're discussing here, i guess if you try and rank them, then perhaps it might be slightly less consequential, but it is a serious case that might land him in prison. the reason why i think this one is the weakest of all of them and why i think it was a disaster that this was the one that went first in terms of the indictments, is
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what they're trying to do here is take something that is unethical. it is tawdry in his gross and they are trying to claim that it is a campaign finance violation from a really long time ago and it really just checks a lot of boxes. if you are the kind of person who's saying, i think they're just coming after donald trump because he's donald trump. this of all the cases looks the most like that. >> and it's the first one is to be i think the electron interference case in washington said it says quickly, john, i think i'm i'm skeptical this case or >> any case is going to have a political impact because trump has already been held liable of the worst charges brought forward against him by e. jean carroll accused a defamation over heinous sexual abuse. i mean, the fact that he's already been held liable for that that isn't gonna move the needle. >> what is then there's donald trump's worldview saying russia should do whatever they're held. i want with some nato allies. but on the heels of alexei navalny's mysterious death, will republicans still back trump's rhetoric? also ahead as covid guidelines ease, there's a growing phenomenon
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world leaders to fight back against putin in the wake of her husband's sudden and mysterious death. >> he was brave he was principal president biden, quick to assign blame, make no mistake. >> putin is >> responsible for navalny's debt. putin is responsible navalny's death comes at a pivotal moment for the us as the partisan divide grows over how to counter moscow and whether to help ukraine in its war against russia. we are not going to be forced into action. house speaker johnson signaling he won't bring the senate's foreign aid package to the house floor, which includes $60 for ukraine. the gop shipped on military assistance in lockstep with donald trump has ramped up threats to sacrifice nato allies allies who are behind in their defense spending to russia >> no, i would not protect you. in fact, i would encourage them to do whatever they held a his words putting european leaders on edge and the suggestion that
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we are not standing up for his order that does undermine its security of all of us lula what does navalny's death say about putin, his power, and whether the west has the will to stand up to him. >> i mean, first of all, it's a dark day. i saw the news and it actually fills me with a real sense of foreboding and fear because navalny occupied a space in russia that was unique. he was someone who people could still look to and say there isn't opposition. there is hope that there could be a different russia and with his passing, i think we are now seeing putin truly unopposed consolidating his power. what we've seen even in just a few hours since navalny's passing is just complete repression inside russia. and so i think it is indeed a sign of very
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dark things to come >> and all of this comes the same week that you have donald trump saying that encouraging russia to go after any nato allies who are delinquent in their payments. and republicans signing on and a very surprising way here's florida senator and longtime defense and talk marco rubio defending trump >> he doesn't talk like a traditional politician and we've already been through this now you think people had figured it out by now. i haven't zero concern because he's been president before i know exactly what he has done and will do with the nato alliance john do you think trump and republicans would really abandon nato >> well, there's a reason that congress passed the bill to make sure that trump couldn't do this. they basically trump proofed our military lines with
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them saying that the president cannot unilaterally pulled back from nato. i think that was very important. think, that people like marco rubio know better. i think they know that trump means what he says he's been on the scene for a decade now >> but the thing i've heard about that is he might not formally be able to pull out of the treaty. but if he's elected, if he's president, he can, he'll decide unilaterally whether or not to send troops in and enforce article five an attack against one. there's an attack against all, even if that one is, is a country that's delinquent and its payments and congress can't do anything about that. >> that's true. i mean, you don't know what trump would do in that situation. the fact that he would not be surrounded by people like james mattis in the second term, he'd be surrounded by people more like steve bannon. that is reason for concern. >> he says what he says, he's did he do this with the muslim ban? everyone was saying he wasn't going to do it. and then of course he tried to do it. >> he believes what he says. and believe what he says. i mean, you can quote my angelou when someone tells you who they are, believe them. i mean, he
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says it out loud in in very uncertain terms and marco rubio's but i mean, this is another for me looking at marco rubio. it's another example of just how all of the independent thought within the gop has just collapsed in front of trump. >> i want to pick up on this year, the democratic response because trump had barely gotten the words out of his mouth and president biden jumped on his comments about nato. here's president biden >> know, or the president. our history has ever bowed down to a russian dictator for god's sake, it's dumb, is shameful as dangerous. it's un-american and in a poll last spring, 62% of americans had a favorable view of nato, while 35% had a negative opinion but there is a party split, 76% support for nato among democrats 49% support among republicans. kristin is biden's foreign
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policy, which is the traditional foreign policy standing strong for nato, standing strong against russian aggression in ukraine. is that good politics for november are not so standing strong with nato. i would say yes. remember, there's been one time that article five has been invoked and that was to come to america's aid after 911. there's a reason why so many americans think that this is important at the same time, i don't think it's wrong to say that our allies need to do their part if you're going to be part of the club of nato and you're expected to spend 2% of your gdp on defense. you need to live up to that. so it's not wrong to say we need our allies to do their part. they just can't wait for the united states to come round to us. and if if trump had stopped there, i think it would have been very aligned, but a you're right. he sat there and he actually has an affiliation with putin. let's stop pretending parts of this party don't have a really strange affiliation mission to the russian. >> that's why i think the death of alexey navalny this
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week has really, there have been some very encouraging statements that i have seen from folks like house foreign affairs chair mike mccaul from texas who says, look putin >> we think of him >> akin to hitler right now as somebody who wants to go take little pieces of europe i was equating navalny to what happened. >> congresswoman, >> congressman in a heinous statement was >> comparing the death of navalny, what's happened to president trump in these trials? let me just, let me quote one person which is alexander soldier nielsen from the gulag archipelago unlimited power in the hands of limited people always leads to cruelty putin is a murderer. he's a murderer. let, >> let's talk about where the rubber really hits the road because nothing is going to happen with nato right away. but it is going to happen in ukraine. the house has left town for two weeks, and speaker jaw, as johnson says, when they get back, that priority will be to keep the government funded, not approved military aid to allies like ukraine in an israel. meanwhile, and this was astonishing to give you a sense of what kind of shape ukraine has in russia and forces are
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reportedly firing ten shells to every one. the ukrainians fire so the question lula, is, we talked about nato, are republicans really going to abandon ukraine? >> it's increasingly likely. i mean, i would have said it was unimaginable, but i think it's increasingly likely. and i think what that is going to cause is complete chaos. i mean the way that the republican party is talking about this is as if everything is on a ledger and money is the most important thing. and these alliances are going to impact us. i mean, this is about america's safety. this is about what is in america's best interests. and that's why the one thing chilled me so much. because what we are going to see if america doesn't step up and help ukraine, is that it's going to come home to roost here. >> all right, going to move on from political protocol to work protocol will explore the growing issue that has many set
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>> hi, melanie zanona on capitol hill and this is cnn closed captioning bronchi by meso book.com >> we've offered a free book about missile filial moscow for ten years call 1808724901 are going to msal book.com >> there are reports this week, the cdc he was planning to revise its guidance for covid isolation. instead of staying home five days, the agency has considering a new approach, go back to work or school as soon as you've had no fever for 24 hours and your symptoms are improving this got us to thinking about a broader phenomenon, sick shaming, where workers with a cough or a sniffles feel no matter what they do, stay home or go into the office, they can't win. on one side, there's a fear of boss will judge them for staying home on the other co-workers will judge him for coming in. so kristin isn't
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wrong for coworkers to come into work when they're still sick? >> my policy at my company is if you are contagious, stay home because i would much rather have one person stay home and get well, then try to come in and tough it out. and the next thing i know, half my company is sick, the next week it is the courteous thing to do that if you are contagious, stay home and you know, if you're contagious, if it's early enough and you're sneezing and coughing, i mean, you know, this is this is why i think it's important for employers to have good trust and relationship so what their employees where they can say, you know yourself, you know what you're capable of, you know, if you have just a tiny little sniffles, you're not going to give it to anybody else. just work from home. you can tough it out verses trying to pressure people to grit his boss, boss boss. yes. but it turns out that there are some bosses who we're not as nice. and as trusting as kristen is. take a look at this recent survey. 24% of managers, then
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workers who take sick days often lie or exaggerate their illness. and one-third, this is surprised me. often asked for medical notes as proof of eldad so lulu, given that as opposed to creston, should workers feel pressure to come in even if they're said i mean, this is the problem. i blame the boxes because we always blend the boss. yeah. but but look at that, look what we just seen. i mean, that is of course people are afraid, but have you ever sat at next to someone in their sputtering and they're expected rating everywhere and it's disgusting >> first of all, yeah. but i mean, it's disgusting first of all, i don't want to be near it. and then you're worried about being sick. and also if the person is sick, are they really being as productive as they can? i mean, i think it's very shortsighted. i'm sick usually now since i've >> toddlers from september to march or april what kind of thing? and i just got my covid booster finally. but i work from home so that i don't really have those issues except
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for here and i'm doing great >> i am vaguely sick. that's what i would say, but it's this idea of the fights that we had over the masks and everything else. has to end if people don't feel they should be able to stay home and not be assumed to be liars and if they go into work, they should think very hard about the workers they might, in fact, well, i'm gonna i'm gonna pick up on the issue of masking because cdc guidance is still that after you get covid, you should mask for ten days after testing positive. but according to a poll, last fall, 55% say they never wear a mask outside the home, while 45% due to some extent, whatever that means. so john, whether it's covid or a bad cold, i guess the question i have is should masking be not mandatory, but should it be mainstream that it's just the right thing to do if you come into work and your sneezes
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sneezing or coughing, love alone, you have covid i think we need to slow more common sense here, you know, people like kristen said, people used to know if you have a fever, stay home if you're sneezing and hacking on the first couple days, stay home, wait a few days. i think that masking if you want to wear a mask, wear a mask. i don't think that you should shame people for not wearing a mask >> i just join them for wearing, a mask because you know what if you >> do that, you're going to be you're the one person you're going to end up shaming someone who's got like going into chemotherapy and they had their white blood cell counts they're really not so don't judge anybody, just let's all be a little more relaxed. let's get back to our common scene and other carpentry emergency is over. let's go back to common sight in other countries, asia, they were masked unilaterally when you're traveling there and it's much more, people just do it when they're in public places. i don't think that's quite gotten here, although i have to say i see a lot more mask wearing regularly here and i don't think all of them have covid or have necessarily, but there's sort of, we've shifted over to what they do in asia for sure in europe, there's more mask wearing and people have been pay on covid,
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should there be masking? you know, you're feeling sick >> i think people just will. i think that's the way that trend is going. i do i think people feel comfortable to wear a mask for two weeks. i think you have kids going back to school after 24 hours, no fever. i think it just too much to ask them that were masking. it also has actual harms where people can't no, learning disability of language. language. okay. >> i'm going to go to one last aspect to >> that, and that is kids because it turns out that more kids are missing more time in school than they were pre-pandemic. so kristen, as a mother and i think people will say a mother to be, where are you on your kids and they're going to school when they're sick. >> well, so as somebody who grew up in florida, you know, things like the amount of colds in the weather, the way that it affects things here in the winter, it just seems it's so different. but i do think that when and my kids are of age to go to school. if you have a fever or something, gastrointestinal, of course,
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stay home, you're not going to be spreading that, but i do think that asking a toddler to be home every time they have the sniffles means that they'd never be able to leave the house and their parents would never be able to get anything done. so i do think common sense if it's not a fever or if it's not gastrointestinal they send you home. they send you the other way. just say my kid came home the other day. >> i was fortunate enough to meet your lovely daughter just before the show. how sick does she have to be to stay home? >> oh, she has to be a desk door. and i'll tell you why because the other problem here is that there is no paid family leave in this country. my employer. >> let me just say it does have that. >> but many employers do not. and what does that mean for parents? what does that mean? it means that parents absolutely are stuck between a rock and a hard place, which means that they cannot get money. >> i mean, if if she if she's not really sick, your sunday or to school because now i'm a bad parent. she's a good i'm just asking a question. okay. no. i think listen. i'm generally
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speaking, i think she would have to be pretty sick in order for me not to send her to school. and also because of learning loss for lots of different things. the main thing is don't infect other people, whether their children or adults speaking of school snow day isn't what it used to be for our kids. or ross. then using your credit rating to score a hot day, our panel gives us the irna on both. that's next united states of scans with jake tapper tomorrow at nine on cnn. >> dry skin is sensitive skin too. in its natural treated that way with a vino daily moisture formulated with nourishing prebiotic ode. it's clinically proven to moisturize dry skin for 24 hours. >> aveeno >> how long have you been tracking the value of our car? should we sell it? >> we hold our low mileage is paying off. you think we should >> already sold? the carvana,
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>> thanks buddy >> is feeling dry, tired, stressed, get a boost of moisture with bio true hydration, boost eye drops for comfort throughout the day. they're preservative free, gentle, and made with naturally inspired ingredients stay bio true to your eyes >> the source with kaitlan collins, week nights at nine >> once again, has time to ask our group, yay or nay, on some big talkers first job, while many tuned in to see taylor swift at the super bowl. another music superstar also made headlines beyond, say appeared in a verizon add and released two songs from her new album titled act to which to
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the surprise of billions of her fans as a full fledge country album here's a taste of one caught called texas a holden >> there was a lot of thought of rocking out here to hurt. >> so kara, will you be getting information to get by? >> so excited i love that song testings holders great to the second songs released, his great, she's a texas girl. you know, she's a there's a lot of country the feelings creole, all kinds of things that are music louisiana. so i am thrilled. i love her hat, the outfits, the entire thing is fantastic. >> the country community has not always been as welcoming to black country artists. however, in fact, folks at one radio station in oklahoma initially refused to play texas hold them
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before changing their mind. kristen, how do you think beyond say will be received by the country music establishment? >> i hope more warmly than she was in 2016 when her amazing album, lemonada, came out, had a song on it called daddy lessons. it is a pro second amendment song about fathers raising their daughters to be tough as nails it is pure texas. it's amazing. and the grammys said, we won't consider this for the country music category back in that year. i hope things have changed in eight years because it's an biance countries amazing. >> also the beehive will have a word with that country station next. well know, they've, they've slept. next, move over tender. there a new dating app focused on finances, score wants to attract singles with credit ratings of 675 or higher. and hopes people will find love and financial stability john, are you yea or nay, on finding out about somebody's money situation before you start dating. >> well, i'm a nay on this dating app and i think i'm a
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nano all dating apps now i got lucky. i met my wife in 2010, so i ms the whole dating app seen by the skin of my teeth, but it just sounds brutal to be reducing people to all these superficial categories. we need, we have a serious dearth of socializing this country, the atlantic had a great article this week saying that socializing america face-to-face has gone down by 30% in two decades. so get away from the dating apps start meeting in person. more parties america, because people never happens there. i've >> never had i think of view it and you'll be as the romantic in >> i'm glad you've recognized that. >> yes. so how were you on the idea of finding financial information out before you go out in the day, it gets depressing. >> i think it's super >> depressing. >> i happen to agree hey, i mean, in this sense, to be fair, nobody wants the surprise of someone's credit score being zero when you found the love of your life. because marriage is not only and unions are not only romantic, but they also are financial that said, i do think it's a little depressing finally, we all remember when a big snowfall, this to me is depressing, when
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a big snowfall, men kids got to stay home and play outside but during this week, store across the northeast, new york city schools as students to take classes remotely prompting a major glitch when more than 900,000 kids tried to log on that morning, qarrah europe attacking, but you're also a mother of four? yes. >> so when it's a snow day, do you think it should be remote learning or in-person sledding? >> i obviously sledding, but at the same time, i not unlimited. i think this no day is over because remote learning has sort of dawned that said remote wondering didn't work well during the pandemic of the many things that work well, home delivery, all kinds of remote working, remote education was really problematic. that said on just a snow day, i'm sorry, kids, snow days over >> she's wrong. i my answer is fine. go out, play, get called. and particularly with global warming, there aren't got to be that were taken my kids slipping on a weekday up next, the cool technology that's
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>> meanwhile at a vrbo, when other vacation rentals are just for likes, try one the economy is simply not working for millions of hard working families. they're working harder than ever and they still can't make enough to get by to afford food and medicine to even keep a roof over their heads. we need to build more housing that's truly affordable. we need to address this terrible epidemic of homelessness. we need to invest in good paying jobs, union jobs and investments in our future. this, this is why i'm running for the us senate. i'm adam schiff and i approve this message.
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pretty go to deal dash.com right now and see how much you can save king. >> charles >> wednesday on cnn >> under the radar this week, revenge against the robots. take a look at this, a crowd at talking a self-driving taxi in san francisco, just a few days ago, spraying it with hey smashing its windows and setting it on fire. and there was a less aggressive protests, folks putting cones on driverless cars sensors to incapacitate them from moving
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all part of a growing backlash against robo taxis over safety concerns this week way bowel, the google company that operates the taxis, had to recall software after two of its cars hit the same truck and october california's suspended another company's license after one of its cars dragged a pedestrian down the street, kristin should people be afraid of driverless cars? >> i confess that personally, i really nervous to get in one, but at the same time, the people involved in many of those stories you just talked about do not seem to be the safest most rational people that i would feel comfortable getting in a car with people are very irrational. people are distracted, people are dangerous getting in a car no matter who is operating, it is inherently dangerous. >> and that's and that's the point. it's it would be like biden signed, don't compare me to the almighty, just the alternative waymo and an insurance company analyzed seven million driverless miles
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in three cities and they came up with these numbers. take a look way most driverless taxis, so an 85% reduction in crashes resulting in injury over human drivers? yes. so qarrah, should we be? torching driverless cars, obviously not the only one here that's driven them a lot. i've driven all the versions of these things and i ride waymo all the time in san francisco. >> there's any problem getting in the lab and there's nobody in the face of a problem getting the back of the crazy uber driver to i just i know i've had that happen. no. i think it is the way things are going to go. they will there'll be they will be less dangerous, they will. humans are usually the problem when it comes to cars and it's inevitability, they can burn a car as much as they want. they protested google buses. there's still coming into san francisco. this is the future, is driverless cars and they will get better as we get worse. that is just the way it's going to be. >> a tech ceo bought $14
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million to a r2 32nd ads during the super bowl to go after the autopilot technology on tesla. here's a clip from one of those ads two months later, a self-driving tesla blew past stopped school bus, putting a child on a ventilator with a fractured neck and broken leg. still, tesla does nothing. boycott tesla to keep your kids safe? >> so lulu, are you with the protesters in san francisco? are you what are those folks? like carol, who's going to get an account >> neither. is there a middle road here? i don't want don't want to charge your car and i don't also want to get into the back of one. i mean, this is a little bit like the luddites, you know, i agree with qarrah that this is the way things going, but i don't think that technology is there yet. that's correct. that some of it >> isn't something you but if you're getting in it, you can say, well, it's not ready yet, but we're getting there. >> it's complicated in this case, but they're much safer. i hate to agree with elon musk, but there much safer. >> well, that's a news story,
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right? the panelists back with their takes on hot stories and productions or what will be at the news before it is no, that's right after the break you wouldn't elon musk to be a headliner wars vegas that's what i want to do >> they had the biggest entertainers in america >> vegas's always marketed itself on its naughtiness. >> and the only way you find out what you can and two, is if you do it's unlike anywhere else in the world. >> vegas, the story of sin city premiere sunday, february 20, we fit they ten on cnn >> have you heard sling tv offers the news you love for less weight. you look and sound just like me. actually i am you. because on the same news programs on sling for less, you mean you're me but for less
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799 a month golf bunny, it's 775383882 or visit home serve.com. >> manu raju on capitol hill and the cnn >> it's time for our panels, special tags on what's happening or predictions of what we should be looking out for. >> so prisca, >> with your best shot. >> well, russia has been in the news a lot over the last week and a story that i think flew a little bit under the radar is that russia has now a, it's alleged that they've used hypersonic missiles in ukraine, which is really troubling
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because it means that our traditional missile defenses not work. and second, there was a bit of a kerfluffle on capitol hill over new intelligence that there may be a threat of russia wanting to shoot down satellites space. we have a space force thankfully now, but they haven't really had to go into battle. i think this is all going to continue to shape our debate about things like aid to ukraine and fighting putin, lelu, you have your mind on politics today. >> i know surprisingly, well what got me thinking is this. we're so fixated on donald trump and on president biden and the presidential race that i was very interested in, the senate race. and i'm very interested in ohio and sherrod brown, anytime you have a democrat in a deep red ruby state, you know that there's gonna be a lot of money he and a lot of focus and right now, there are three people who are running to try and unseat him. and one of them is bernie moreno one of them is frank larose and the other one is
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matt dolan, and one of these three, which is moreno, has been supported by donald trump and we've seen him surge and i think it's gonna be very interesting if he can is really the right person to try and take on the very popular sherrod brown john best shot >> we learned this week that no labels is running out of top-notch candidates who they might recruit to run for president on a third party independent ticket. we didn't under suite that west virginia senator joe manchin, the democrats that he's not going to do it last week. larry hogan, former governor of maryland, said he's not going to do it. so where do they turn? i'm not quite sure, but i will keep an eye to see if they try and recruit chris christie >> really. >> that's why i would keep my eye on that. >> although he said he's hell bent on not electing donald trump's that, but he said earlier than this month that he thought that if you've got a strong republican at the top of the ticket, maybe you could siphon votes away from trump's. so this is what christie said publicly. i'm not sure if they'll actually make a play for how right. >> you seem to find analysts amusement and my tech illiterate do so hit me with your brush, john well, this
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this week, someone retired, bart andriy, who you don't know about, you don't have the designers of all your beautiful products that you have from apple and jony >> ive obviously is the most important one, but this was part of a team and he is one of the final ones of that team have designed all the beautiful things we've been using all these years. and it's a big, a big moment. these industrial designers deserve lot of credit region. >> you're pulling it because i have the iphone 15, which i just got this week and tell them what i what i traded in an iphone six. >> when you said that to me, i was like, who has an iphone six? i was like, did you drive your big meal bicycle up to the apple store when you told the panel here that i had an iphone on six, they all kind of recoil as they should. but this is a beautiful phone and now you have spatial. >> thank bart for it, right, gang. thank you all for being here. thank you for spending part of your day with us and we'll see you right back here with the iphone 15. >> next place they can picture if i do not

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