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tv   The Chris Wallace Show  CNN  February 24, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PST

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>> mesothelioma is >> really all >> we do hello again. >> and >> welcome. it's time to get together with some smart people to break down the big stories. today, we're asking with nikki haley vowing not to drop out no matter what happens today in south carolina? are there good reason she should stay in the race? then new sanctions against russia following alexei navalny's death. but will vladimir putin even care? and what does a tooth go for these day? apparently not as much as it used to. the battle is here and ready to go. so sit back, relax and let's talk about them up further south carolina, republicans are voting today and that state's gop
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presidential primary and while front one are donald trump says this should wrap up the rice. his top challenger says, she's just getting started. >> i'm not going anywhere >> nikki, haley's pledge this week. >> i'm campaigning every day until the last person votes >> regardless of today's outcome in her home state of south carolina. i don't think she knows how to get out the trump campaign telling reporters they are trying march 19 as the latest possible date, trump will have enough delegates to clinch the republican nomination >> our campaign is going to be over very quickly, very, very quick. >> which houses the former president looking past haley and calling on on a president biden to start debating him. as soon as possible. >> i'll do it right now on your show. i'll challenge him right now, but trump isn't taking his base for granted. comparing his legal troubles to the political persecution of alexey navalny who died in a russian prison camp, form of
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navalny, it is a form of communism or fascism here with me today podcaster and author kara swisher. rayyan salaam, president of the manhattan institute and national review contributing editor, new york times journalist and podcast host lulu garcia-navarro, and editor of the dispatch and los angeles times columnist jonah goldberg. welcome back everyone. q. >> kara, why should nikki haley stay in the race? >> why not? there's no downside for her now she's already burned the boats with these statements. she's been making. it's not like she's going to get to be vice president or a cabinet position. and for the future, it's better for her to be in and keep talking about the issues that matter to her and also to create a contrast in case something happens again, as i said, it's non-zero chance that something could happen. and so why not do? >> but if something did happen and we're talking about a conviction or a health event
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isn't it? nikki haley, the last person the maga base of this party would go for perhaps, but i think it just raises her profile. there's nobody yes, she can talk to you can get well-known. she gets interviewed. it's there's no downside here for her to do this and she has the money. >> i think there's a downside and i'll tell you what it is. if you look at the latest poll, you see that now 36% of republicans have a negative view of nikki haley as opposed to 34% that have a positive view. you're actually seeing the longer she campaigns, the less republicans actually like, that's been, she's losing ground, noise, gaining ground and so and so if she wants to be the standard bearer of the republican party in its current incarnation, i think that's really bring in ruy khan. does nikki haley, you have a good reason to stay in the race even if she loses this is expected, you will, by a large margin. tonight in south carolina. and even if she loses on super tuesday, i'd say that the best strongest reason for her to stick around is to look to the experience of someone who's
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very different from nikki haley. that's bernie sanders bernie sanders ran for the democratic presidential nomination in 2016. he was considered an absolute no hopper at the time, and he stuck in the race until july. now, bernie sanders was not ultimately the democratic nominee. he didn't win in 2020. what he did do, however, is build a real movement within the democratic party if bernie sanders hadn't run in 2016 for better, for worse, we wouldn't have alexandria ocasio-cortez. we wouldn't have a solu of self-described democratic socialists in the party pushing the party leftward, pushing even moderate middle-class joe biden, far the left when it comes to his actual policy agenda. so the precedent here you're could be the nikki haley is actually trying to find that traditional conservative reagan republican lane and say that, wait a second, right now, it's trump. who is the establishment within the party? and we represent a different direction. i'm not saying that's necessarily going to happen, but that's a pretty reasonable reason for her to
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stick around. >> i think ron's right right. either i don't like the analogy to bernie sanders. i would make the analogy mortar ronald reagan. reagan ran 76 and created a faction within the republican party that said, okay, it's our turn now, nikki is setting yourself up that. even if she loses what she owns, shirley will barring some deus ex machina. she setting herself up at minimum to be able to say, i told you so as someone who has very little concern about the republican party these days, but does want a healthy right of center political party in this country. you need some check on trump if he's going to be the nominee and creating a faction within the party that is not not associated, that is not automatically pro trump in every regard is a good thing for the country, then the perilous trump's moved to declare the race over by challenging president biden to start debating. now. but trump skip the gop debates and biden has dismissed trump as someone outside political norms who tried to overturn the last election, lulu should biden debate trump.
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>> yes. and i'm saying this as a journalist because i believe and also as someone who believes in democracy, i mean, i think i've had a big problem with the fact that trump has not wanted to participate in any but these gop debates i think it's been good for him. i think it's managed to actually sort of swell support and sort of places him as the front runner. but i mean, i want to see a healthy debate. i want these two people to come together and actually talk about the issue. >> would you say if he clinches the nomination by mid-march start now or wait till labor day no. >> i think he should i think i think you should wait but let me just put a caveat here. i think biden should debate trump. i also think it's very important how he debates trump. i think i would like to see, first of all, it'd be with the fact-based media. i would like to see someone like you, chris, perhaps moderated perhaps someone like kara, perhaps someone like me i'm just saying the second thing i would like to see is that i'm not sure that i would like to have it be with the rabble-rousing
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public. and i mean, this is from the far left and the far right pesky voters. >> those pesky, but those pesky >> voters do not just if there were just regular voters, that's one thing. but what we're going to see now is perhaps agile potatoes on both sides, on the left maybe people who are angry at biden over the issue of gaza. and on the right, maybe people who are very much pro trump should the president of the united states share a stage? with someone and an accord that standing that platform to someone who says he didn't lose the last election. it was stolen >> i don't i honestly don't know. i mean, there are two different questions here. one is is it in biden's political interest? and then that is predicated on the question of is he physically up to doing it? i think there's good reason to believe his people don't think he is. if if he wasn't willing to do what typically softball interview for the super bowl. they may have real concerns right or wrong that doing an hour-long debate with donald trump he may
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not have the stamina for it. the cognitive condition to do it. that said, i think the fact that donald trump didn't debate in the primaries and that donald trump has basically refused to concede the election and said the election was stolen. it gives him an excuse not to debate trump that i think most of the biden gettable voters would forgive if joe biden doesn't participate in debates. that is a tell that democrats are thinking hard about a plan b. if there were some kind of open primary as her client columnist for the new york times, lulu, his colleague has floated this idea that wait a second. if you have a new democratic nominee emerge in the late summer, early fall, that's something that could really change the dynamic of the race. >> if i fantasy >> so deeply pessimistic about whether or not biden can handle himself. the bar would be so low. but if biden breed to take partner debate and was basically sticking to his talking points more or less competent so that would be
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here. >> rate is going to happen. they're going to have a debate. this is just it's gonna be after labor day and biden is still the candidate at this point. i know everybody loves all these different little scenarios, but that's where we are right now. and it seems that that's very good. biden's actually been out and about a lot more lately, which is interesting he's got to debate him. he can't refuse to debate, is a bad look if he doesn't and he's got i if i were him, i'd go with my come on, man kind of attitude like come on man, you're a liar, come on man, you're crazy and do that contrast if you just said there would be a big help? yeah. >> i want to just bring up one more question. every trump indictment, jonah has solidified. trump's support inside the republican party but with the death of navalny, trump is now comparing his legal troubles to what navalny went through in a siberian prison. question is the maga base got a by the navalny comparison. >> i think that people have drank the kool-aid will or are they at least the forgive it as
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they forgive all sorts of rhetorical excess from trump i will say that i'm pretty profoundly disgusted by the amen corner aim inquire that trump has had with these comparisons, we have people like nick good gingrich basically saying that we are morally equivalent to the soviet union or two our putin's russia. it's the kind of anti-americanism that my crowd used to criticize of the last, sorry to say, i think he has a point. i think that if you're in new york are right now, think about whether or not you have any conservative candidates in a blue state. what's going to happen to you thinking about the targeting, or if you're a left-wing candidate it a red state. this is something that's going to set a dangerous precedent >> well, i got to say the maga base likes grievance though it does sell. meanwhile, president biden invoked new sanctions on russia in response to navalny's death. but given vladimir putin seems to do whatever he wants, will those sanctions even matter? then new presidential rankings are rotten. there are several surprises that have the panel and me fired up and lighter help water. nasa is cast and
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>> we the united states, you're going to continue ensure that putin pays a price for his aggression abroad and repression at home. >> biden meeting with navalny's his daughter and widow this week as she vows to continue her husband's fight, playing killed half of me, half of my heart, and half of my soul. but i still have the other half. yeah. and it tells me that i have no right to give up what putin is as ruthless as ever ahead of the country's elections next month russian police, detaining more than 400 people last weekend for publicly morning navalny's death, putin's regime also being blamed for the killing of a russian pilot in spain months after he defected to ukraine by dramatically flying over the border in an attack helicopter. and then there's the detention of a russian american ballerina who donated $51 to a ukrainian charity. her boyfriend begging for her release. >> i do believe that america will bring it back to me ryan will put and care about this
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latest round of sanctions >> i don't believe so. he spent a decade and have hardening the russian economy and making that economy robust against us sanctions. and one thing that's frustrating for me frankly, is the fact that we should have thrown everything we had at them at the beginning of this conflict, which by the way was way back in 2014. but certainly when they launched a new major invasion i think that this has been handled rather poorly from the beginning by the biden administration. and i think that this is too little too late. >> well, it's interesting the biden administration announced it is moving to seize $700 million in russian assets which they hope at some point to transfer to ukraine but to ryan's point, we could confiscate $300 of frozen russian bank reserves which raises the question loop couldn't the white house have done a lot more a lot earlier if they really wanted to get putin's attention
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>> i think they could have, but i also think that sanctions are an imperfect mechanism to inflict pain on the russian economy. i think what we're seeing at the moment is an administration that really is running out of options. >> you >> know, they're not able to give ukraine the funds that they need we're seeing ukraine really being pushed back in a serious way. there's a real concern that they might lose the war because i've covered conflicts for a long time. and what i will tell you is that you lose it inch by inch and then you lose it all at once and we're in a very precarious situation right now. and i think what i would like to understand is what is the plan here? what is the plan to make sure that this aggression does not continue to go unchecked before we pursue the aggression in ukraine. i want to just follow up on the issue of navalny his widow, yulia
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navalnaya it has been a profile encourage all he or she is right after her husband's death >> know glob match to move the most important thing we can do for alexey and ourselves is to keep fighting harder, more desperately and more fiercely than ever. >> kara can navalny's widow keep the resistance going? absolutely. and her her her daughter to who is with by who also met with biden. both i've met them briefly, very impressive and they have to keep doing it. i worry further. i worry for their safety, 100% that's the first thing i thought of. >> well, let me say, when months after that russian soldier after flight, they find them in spain and they immediately kill off. of course, we don't know that it was the russian, but we assume it is. there's a long rage. let me just say. he said last week, putin is a murderer. this is what he does. he goes around the globe and does this, he did it to navalny. you tried to poison him. he eventually guild him in this prison. he will go
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after anyone who is, who is in any way protesting. he does it to people that are putting flowers down. this is a repressive regime, regime run by a thug and i, but i do think there is hope when people continue to speak out, you've seen it over and over again in history whether it's nelson mandela or anybody else, there are moments where people do fight back brushes a tough place because of the grip that putin has on this country. >> but, but all of that assumes that there is a resistance that yulia navalnaya can can mobilize. i've been the fact is that after the russian invasion of ukraine, almost 15,000 proteins esther were were detained and hundreds more rounded up this week, as kara says just for placing flowers, many of them at places to commemorate navalny so is there it's more daunting than that because there is also hundreds of thousands of russians who left the country because they
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protested the war. so the seed stock for a domestic uprising of any, how much of a difference could navalny you may well look, i mean you meant lulu mentioned nelson mandela. you can think of vaclav hovel. there are lots of people who looked like they were making king, no progress whatsoever, but they were following soldier nielsen rule of let the lie come through that come into the world, but not through me. and by laying a moral foundation and being bold and having great forces come to their aid. at the end of their story, they actually had remarkable success and you can't predict it lots of people who are roic ended up dead, but she's doing what she should do. its and the only thing you can hope for is that it has a galvanizing effect when a galvanizing effect can work, i want to get now back to ukraine because they are suffering serious losses on the battlefield just this week for us to pull back from the city of abdivka. and here's a ukrainian soldier who was part of that retreat >> hello. >> but we didn't have enough
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people when didn't have enough shells, we didn't have enough possibilities to throw them back little-o >> you touched on this before i want to get back to it now is ukraine losing this war? and if so, how responsible are the republicans? some republicans in congress who are blocking? any more security aid, military aid. >> i mean, let me start with the second part of that, which is the republicans are responsible at this moment for not doing what they should for playing politics with aid. that is very important. so that's the first thing they bear. the bear the blame. i think there's no question about that. the second part of this is ukraine losing the war. i mean, i think it's there are in great peril. they would say that they're in great peril. and you know, one of the things that we know putin wants is for the ukrainians to come to the table to perhaps negotiate some of their territory away. that is a nonstarter for the ukrainians at this, at this time, there's a real push here in this country among the republicans to get some sort of a peace deal hill that might
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cede some of the territory to putin. the problem with all that is that what you are actually doing is saying, okay, it's okay that you invaded this country and it's okay that you did this and killed so many people. and we're going to reward you with giving you some territory on if if you don't do that. and i mean, the question is, it seems that we've got a stalemate. they they, they're moving in centimeters one way or the other kind of like world war i, where they basically went for four years in the trenches in the front lines, didn't move so is ukraine losing the war is just a slight shift in the stalemate. and what's the endgame here? there's been a >> very positive development which is the fact that europe is to a much greater degree stepping up to aid ukraine fundamentally, the problem is that the biden administration has not established some clarity regarding its priorities, regarding how its going to approach this conflict over the long term. i think that there actually was a deal to be made with many republicans had you said, look,
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here are the priorities were setting, here are the things we know we need to focus on vis-a-vis china. and when it comes to ukraine, f 16s, a tens, f 15s, there are variety of weapons systems that we are phasing out where we could have said we're going to provide that early. we're going to move those over you don't have for trump, the biden administration had an opportunity. they spent hundreds of billions of dollars in the inflation reduction act that could have gone to rebuilding america's munitions industrial base that would have been a massive political win and a massive strategic win. the problem right now is that in the short term you have some zero element to this. we only have so many high-mars exactly fix that. let me use anybody else it's about the fact that knew that there were not giving them money or defense industrial base of donald j. trump or defense industrial base is barren and we need to rebuild it. and the biden ministration is failed on that front. >> all right, i'm glad we have settled this. we've got plenty of time to talk about the fight here in this room and the fight in ukraine coming off, we're
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sinking our teeth into an economic indicator apparently found under our kids pillow. but first four score and a couple of minutes from now, the new presidential rankings that have our first president dropping and the current commander-in-chief in a surprising position it's hockey day in america what a moment in the nhl on tnt? it's celebrating america's hockey legacy with a marquee doubleheader. yes. on sunday, first, boats take on the depth dial up his game in a tough of prostate, rice stocks moved by crosby covered by the flyers, lightning flyers tomorrow with 12, 30 tnt. >> why choose asleep numbers? smart bad. can it keep me warm when i'm cold >> wait, no, i'm always hot.
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$19 >> wire ran hates america tomorrow at eight on cnn >> close captioning brought to you by meso book.com mesothelial omar. it's all we do with local offices throughout the country on just how you get the compensation, you deserve, 800 to eight to 44, 44 who is our greatest president this weight scholars weighed in with their latest survey ranking, all 45 american presidents rating abraham lincoln, franklin roosevelt, and george washington as the top three. by the way, the father of our country dropped one spot bots last time as for our three most recent presidents, take a look at this. barack obama moved higher in the top ten, the number seven, joe biden debuting on
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the lasted 14 ahead of ronald reagan and woodrow wilson and donald trump, right? a dead laughed at 45 jonah is trump really are worth president. >> he might be the worst person to have been president. that's a debatable proposition. but it used to mean that we had the great, great man theory of history. greatness didn't necessarily mean good, right? i mean, hitler was man's time magazine's man of the year. stalin got a twice because there was this idea that important. we're saying, great, right? so but what is great mean? they don't really say in their study, if great means consequential, you can't put trump dead last because he was a significant consequence to our politics. he put three supreme court justices on the court do i think he made america worse? quite arguably. but the important with only one point i want to make about this, these polls are incandescent. lee stupid >> they do not tell us anything interesting about the president's themselves they
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tell us very interesting things about the people being pulled when you take a poll at cpac or something like that, you don't it doesn't say whether or not the policy they endorsed is correct. it tells you something interesting about the people responded to the poll. the fact that these political scientists i think that joe biden is the 14th best president in american history, tells you a lot about them and nothing really that i know not to 14. he's well, i want to pick up on that. >> joe biden. >> 14 at u2's flops ahead of ronald reagan >> i am i would say ronald reagan was more consequential. you'd have to, whether you liked him or not, he was important president, even just for tear down that role. you know, he did a lot of things, a lot of terrible things around aides and things like that. but nonetheless, very consequential president and incidentally, i'm just going to him ronald reagan has dropped seven >> ronald reagan was an important president and he wasn't important he just was there, just, there's no way around it. you know what they both agreed on though, because they actually broke it down to like political persuasions. and
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they, and both republicans know both republicans and democrats agreed on bill clinton, bill clinton, which i thought was very funny. >> one of the bias >> and these things i would have kept washington one washington's number one, there's actually a lot, not a lot of recency bias because there are some who have gone up and some who have gone down who are more reason. which of all the rankings of the 45 ticks you off the most rayyan know where to begin. the idea >> that joe >> biden, three comma joe biden with another the president is probably fine, but i do think that is recency bias. barack obama at number seven, bill clinton as high as he was george hw bush not everyone's favorite republican granted, but he was ranked in the 30. someone who, in his one term compared to joe biden was just enormously consequential in having shepherded the end of the cold war or it's just again, what i wanted to pick a dead one. it's all right. >> james polk deserves to be
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much higher. >> okay. good. okay. i mean, i do have to say this about obama. i like barack obama flying, but to be number seven, up non spots. incidentally, i would have wanted to 15 i'm going to go into my head of to give you some dead president okay. madison and monroe? yeah. >> lulu, who takes you off? >> i think this is like nerd prom. i mean, you know, i mean, i was a working name for this show at one point >> okay. so >> yeah, i'm just i'm just going to recuse myself because i'm just going to take a page from jonah spoken say that it is it is a little bit silly to have this debate. ultimately, i couldn't rank them. >> lincoln washington, and that's where i stop. >> we owe in washington being number three. number two. yeah. i mean, at a minimum, me you how do you explain that? well, look, i mean, he was is that person responsible for independence. i mean, that's >> just so you know, he wasn't
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the only bias. there's also an inherent in these polls all for years going back 50 years, they've been doing these kinds of things presidents who expand the role of government get rated higher than president to mind their own business, president, calvin coolidge always ranks low because he doesn't do the things like fdr and woodrow wilson did of expanding the role of the administrative state, expanding the role of government. political scientists like that stuff. george hw bush, who managed to keep prime problems at bay, goes low. people who do big consequential things that expand the role of the presidency. george >> w bush and keeps problems at bay as opposed to like going into kuwait and stuff. i mean, this is part of it. listen, this is this is part of the whole problem of course, i'm engage, i just was like, well, you know i mean, of course i'm engaged. the problem with all of this is as follows. >> you know, >> when we look at these figures, we don't actually look at their entirety of what they've done. and, it is based on your own political persuasions that you would rate george hw bush higher than perhaps a bill clinton.
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>> let me say with washington, the reason he dropped disease woke of it i love the fact that we all sit there and say, oh, this is crazy. and that of >> course we love it. of course we do know that i get by with a little help from my friends as they give their yay or nay, on the beatles coming to theaters. and it's taking the fab four on a long and winding road united states of scandal with jake tapper tomorrow at nine on cnn >> when dehydration gets real your pony advanced hydration is it just for kids? pedialyte helps you hydrate during recovery. >> meet the jennifer's each planning their future for the chase mobile app. hello, new apartment. >> one bank for now for later. for life tastes make more of
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what's yours >> ai is redefining work. artificial intelligence is super our own human intelligence that's what we'll move business forward machine learning, robotics and generative ai are increasing productivity, accelerating decision-making, and the impacting our lives at work and beyond is real value is and how companies use it to empower their workforce and earn trust with customers to maximize your ai and hi investment turned to assure rsv is out there for those 60 years and older, protect against rsv with a wreck sv, a rx is a vaccine used to event lower respiratory disease from rsv in people 60 years and older, wreck speed is not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients, those with weakened immune systems may have a low response to the vaccine the most common side effects or injection site pain, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, and joint pain. >> i chose her xv rsv >> make it a wreck. sv not
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flossing well then add the wo, of listerine to your routine new science shows. listerine is five times more effective than floss ever reducing plaque above the gum line for a cleaner inner, healthier mouth >> this >> three field the world. >> my name is cody archie, and i'm erica and were first-generation ranchers from central texas. and because of tiktok, were able to show people from all over the world where their food and fiber come from. >> we have door per sheep and we have beef cattle for the sole purpose of going into the food chain. we use tiktok as a tool to inform people of what we do. and while we do it, there's just a plethora of knowledge and information swapping going on there. tiktok is helping us protect this way of life for future generation i'm getting vaccinated and pfizer's pneumococcal pneumonia vaccine >> tell him in because i'm at risk for pneumococcal pneumonia oh, really gotten pneumonia
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vaccine. but i'm asking about the added protection of prevnar 20. >> if you're 19 or older with certain chronic conditions like asthma, diabetes he's copd or heart disease or are 65 or older, you are at increased risk for pneumococcal pneumonia, prevnar 20 is approved in adults to help prevent infections from 20 strains of the bacteria that caused me kochel pneumonia in just one dose. don't get prevnar 20 if you've had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients adults with weakened immune systems may have a lower response to the vaccine the most common side effects were pain and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, fatigue, headache, and joint pain. >> want to be able to keep my plans. >> i don't want to risk ending up in the hospital with pneumococcal pneumonia. >> that's why i chose prevnar to ask you dr. or pharmacist about the pfizer vaccine for pneumococcal pneumonia >> hey, as liz got you going through it, grabbed new column for q or asthma attack, nikola is a once monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma, not for sudden breathing problems, allergic reactions can occur, get help right away for
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swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing thing infections that can cause shingles have occurred, don't stop steroids unless told by your dr. tell your dr. if you have a parasitic infection may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain and fatigue and, that's going to asthma specialist if new kala is right for you. >> so would you get to nashville hot tenders and three mandarin orange tenders about you, three classic tenders for butterfly, shrimp forthcoming baby, i, when somebody needs a new hand, thanks for sharing >> i'm not the buffet guy the south carolina republican presidential primary tonight at six on cnn once again, we, want to get our groups, yea or nay, on some water cooler >> stories up first, it's time to come together for four new beatles movies. now, in the works one biotech about each band members, john paul, george, and ringo. oscar winning director sam mendez was behind the project which should
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hit theaters in 2027. rayyan don't let be down. are you yea or nay, on movies about each of the beatles? >> i am yay for the beatles cinematic universe, if and only if yoko ono gets her own disney plus series genius conceptual artist legend in her own time without yoko no-go. >> are >> you being serious, big dead-serious. yoco is a legend. >> lula >> i don't even know how to follow that. i'm gonna loss for words today yes, i am. >> i've never lost forwards. >> ye on all of them. i think that this is exciting. i love the beatles and, you know, and it will introduce him to whole new generation. >> all right next, calling all want to be martians nasa is looking for, for volunteers who spent a year living and working inside a 1,700 square-foot mars simulator. the mission to help the agency evaluate what systems the first men and women on mars will need. kara, are
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you yea or nay, on spending a year inside mars dune alpha. >> what i do it no, but i think is important to do things like this. i've actually done a lot of reporting on this in interviews with biophysicists to a space, an astrophysicist not biologists astrobiologists, who tells you what happens when you live on mars, you have to be underground or else you become shortened stupid, really pretty much the radiation, the gravity everything. there's all kinds of effects on your body on that planet, on the red planet, do that much higher to lose >> i'm going to let that one go. i'm going to let that one go. but it's i think it's important to do those things because we have to campbell we've been parroting elon musk here, but we have to be a multi-planetary species. i would like elon musk to go to mars and stay there and tell us what it's like that would be great. >> there you go. jonah. >> it's unanimous. i'm a i'm a yea i want to humanity to be an interplanetary species. >> there you go. finally. >> and you might want to get your children out of the room for a minute. the tooth fairy
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is now paying less for your kids, pearly whites, the national average for a single tooth. i love this graph drop for the first time in five years to under six bucks the group that tracks the tooth fairy and yes, there is such a thing. says it's likely do i knew it was going to go out. is likely due to high inflation and the tooth very being tapped out. lulu, are you yea or nay, on tooth deflation? and what does a tooth go for in your house? >> so a tooth cause for in my house, quite a lot but i actually saw this graphing was horrified that i've been overpaying and being extorted by my own child and the worst part of this going to tell us what we give, like ten to 20 i know. i know. but then put them let me explain. we were actually out of money and this is how my daughter found out that the tooth fairy wasn't real because because a whole big thing, go cash the to talking about the two i'm sorry, i'm sorry >> varies real. the
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>> tooth fairy is really real, but the parents given assist sometimes. you know, i think this is a really good healthy sign of parents banding together and saying when enough is enough they ought to do that about smartphones and sure as heck should do this about teeth as well. you could get a perfectly good tooth from bangladesh or a cameroon or anywhere else for i heck of a lot less than five. so globalization wins again. let's get those teeth prices down, down, down. >> i can't tell if he's kidding or not. i freaking of thing. so one airlines it's monday moves have gone under the radar and just might take you off the lead with >> jake tapper, cnn with days of four pain hits fast. so get really fast. only tylenol, rapid release jails have laser drilled holes they release medicine fast for past payments and now get max drink topical pain really precisely where you
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out it was psoriatic arthritis. who knew there could be connected for me, consent ics works on both five years and counting. >> did you know people with psoriasis on the scalp have a four times higher risk of developing psoriatic arthritis, which have left untreated lead to permanent joint damage. coast syntax works on all of this and help stop further joint damage. >> talk to your dr. find something that works for you. >> series allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema and an increased risk of infections. some fatal have occurred. tell your dr. if you have an infection or symptoms had a vaccine or plan to work by bd symptoms developer worsen, co-senator, still working for me >> find >> relief that can last. ask your dermatologist about cassette deck how are we ever going to find a car to fit our bucha and that fits all abbas i don't want to spend more than 30 k j. i want something we can go camping and sky and we need parking assist oh, carvana.
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>> by your car that uv with carvana upon his first day of retirement, mark as rodgers made a contract with themselves. i will never again work for another man or woman oh, todd especially common. >> i lay down my badge, abandoned my corporate phone plan, and i'll get a new plan with consumers cellular without a contract without sacrificing comfort >> let's go over >> when freedom call we're here to answer. >> this is a tempur-pedic mattress and eats designed to help make aches and pains a thing of the past by relieving pressure points and supporting your body in a way no other mattress can for a
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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. >> the story of sin city tomorrow at ten on cnn >> under the radar this week,
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another increase in those annoying and ever-growing airline fees american airlines jacked up its baggage fees tuesday by 33% to $40 for bags checked at the airport. some airlines are expected to follow suit while others are pushing a competitive advantage all the things stay even longer >> it's been going on for years, airlines introducing and then increasing fees on everything from bags to seat location to food and drinks. in other industries like cell phone carriers, have noticed >> yes, please. that'll be $23. your ad says it's free. >> it is for our economy, ultimate passengers who paid extra. i was just have water cash, ricardian for water lulu, our airline fees, driving you crazy? >> yes. this is absolutely outrageous. they're doing it
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for a reason, which is to jack up their bottom line. but you know who this hurts. it hurts the people who are trying to get a cheap air flights and cheap tickets. because if you're flying first-class you're flying business class, or you have one of their credit parts with the really high rates, you get your bags for free. so it's really just the people who can't afford expensive tickets at this really hurts ri khan is this just the free market at work will look, you saw that southwest is saying, i'm pivoting in this direction. other airlines are pivoting in another direction american airlines, delta, these airlines have agreed to major concessions to their workers, to their baggage handlers, to their pilots. that has to come from somewhere and they're making a bet that we're going to allow how some folks to pack light and some folks not to and you're going to make that choice the alternate to this as jacking up the overall price of airfare. and i think that for a lot of folks, they think i want to be able to make the choice for which arleigh card things are going to choose. i think this is a totally sensible and reasonable thing, and we're
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lucky that different airlines are experimenting with different approach approaches. >> its workers fault as usual, not the same. >> i'm glad to have ours paid decently and therefore, i'm happy to pay yes, seven extra bucks to that target that we're going to make new pays for oxygen dollars for next, spirit airlines. >> asked for a soda and they looked at me like i was buying something from the prison comments here. so like some of that stuff it does bother me. at the same time, i think rian's right, look, profit margins for the airline industry are comparatively narrow from industries and the money has to come from somewhere. if you're going to stay profitable. and you know, like being able to transport through the air at 100 miles an hour is actually a really great thing. >> and magical one of magical and kara, i'm sure as someone who travels a lie, do you have figured out a way i think to outsmart the system? well, i've filed lot so i >> get those free things all the time. i get free food, free bags and free everything. so because i'm an important person and you're trying versus aren't for people who
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are families for example who can't pack light, who can't just stuff everything in an overhead bag. it actually hurts them. plus, i'll also say it slows down, getting on the plane. do you know why? because everyone is shoving ginormous carry-ons in the overhead bins and it takes forever. and so for all sorts of reasons, it is made flying less. it's and don't you want people to find a little bit less this >> is a question here. to europe. >> keep talking about this, but while the panel is back with their best shots on some hot stories and look at what will be in the news before it's due. that's right after the break. so you get everything everything really in the white guys? yeah >> candidate john edwards cheated on his cancer-stricken wife, had a baby with his girlfriend and then try to pass it as a campaign staffers kid. >> we're here to get your side of the story. >> united states of scandal with jake tapper, new episode
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we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. direct redefining insurance i'm evan perez in washington. >> and this is cnn. >> close captioning bronchi by guilt visit guilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands has the designers like your heart racing, had inside a
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prices new every day, hurry. they'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% or so guilt.com today >> it's time for our panel's hot takes on what's happening or predictions of what we should be looking out for a low-low hit me with your best shot. >> i would like to rip biden's impeachment. now, can we actually bury this and please move on. we saw this week? but one of the main quote, unquote whistleblowers, who had who the impeachment was all built around fbi informant. an fbi informant. and what has come out is that he has now been indicted for lying and he has also said that a lot of the information that he had was possibly given to him by russian intelligence. now he is clearly an inveterate liar. we don't know if that's true. but at this point, the entire house of cards that this was built on has collapsed. and so what i would really like to see is congress move on from this risible, risible thing?
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>> very good. use the word reza bowl. i'm >> russell >> fry, they'll have to go look it up. right. hon, you're taking a trip into pop culture this week, a very rare trip. saturday night live has been irrelevant for decades, but actually think that they have a shot at achieving ticked up so many people did. i'm sorry to say that, but they have they've should i have to watch it and 30 years cultural relevance. once again, they're having on shane gillis, a very popular comedian who as it happens a little backstory, he was brought on as a cast member for snl back in 2016, and he was almost immediately bounced from the show because of some of his more offensive and edgy routines. the fact that they're bringing him back on to appeal to a different audience to demonstrate that there or can be second act when it comes to snl, i think it's a sign of maturity for the show and actually a sign of a larger change in our culture, a moving away from cancel culture, and an embrace of the fact that look, comedy has got to speak to a lot of different audiences if it's going to be relevant kara best shot, they had trump as a host by the way, they've, they've done that for best
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shot, the alabama embryo decision. i think it's going to have real impact on the election and give bibo by the ivf decision to make embryos, children. i think the abortion issue was starting to fade a little bit as a power thing and now it's way back in the news, especially because only 6% of americans are against ivf. many people have been helped. this is about families and mistake the hospital made indeed but it's really something that's going to badly effect going to bring it back to especially what what the alabama supreme court said is that these frozen embryos are people and therefore, if you dispose as they, as they have frozen embryos, because oftentimes they harvest a bunch of them that you could face all manner of charges. >> hospitals are stopping doing these alabama, this hurt their economies. all these rulings are going to hurt economies of these states. >> and i gotta hey, republicans from donald trump on down are running as far as you asked mike pence had a child conceived through ivf know, but
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they're running as far away from this alabama decision as they can run. joe high, bring us up. well, that's donald trump is wrong. >> what that he can run and hide from this. it's going to stick to him >> there's been a lot of talk about how laura trump, who trump wants to put. and as the co-chair of the rnc, as well as chris lacivita think is his name. who's going to be basically the day-to-day manager of the place, how they are going to orchestrate paying off trump donald trump's legal bills and have massive purges of the rnc. i think both of those things will not happen either at all or at least not until after donald trump is the nominee. >> i just checked bag because i had an idea. you're going to talk about this. they've already paid pacs or super pacs, everything over 70 million in legal bills. it's an astonishing number and it's only going to go up gang. thank you all for being here and thank you for spending part of your day with us. we'll see you right back here next week.

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