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tv   The Lead With Jake Tapper  CNN  March 4, 2024 11:00pm-12:00am PST

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use of ai and autonomy, raising questions about their intentions at a critical time. military experts warn the risk of a major global conflict, no longer a distant threat, but a looming crisis, ongoing wars in the middle east and ukraine threatening to spill over highly sensitive technology, moving at lightning speed >> golden rule to china pays close attention to security risks posed by military applications of ai technologies china's military capabilities, expanding at an unprecedented pace simmering tensions over taiwan and the south china sea >> setting the stage for a catastrophic showdown. as the world teeters on the brink of a new era of warfare, machines making life and death decisions on the battlefield will ripley, cnn, taipei thanks for joining us. the lead starts now
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>> welcome to the lead. i'm jake tapper this hour, a forceful moment today from the israeli ambassador to the united nations trying to get the world holds attention about atrocities of war against israel. >> the rape cannot continue. the sexual violence cannot continue hamas must be eliminated rapist mass murder, and must never be given a free pass by the un. and terror cannot, can never be tolerated hey underscoring that he says acts of sexual violence by hamas, including raping women held hostage, have not stopped. what the ambassador says needs to happen before any kind of ceasefire between israel and hamas can be reconsidered. plus the election days so big it goes by super tuesday. we're on the cusp of it primary contests in 16 states plus american samoa can't forget them. why tomorrow means so much, no matter which date you may live in. and leading this hour.
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efforts to take donald trump off 2024 ballots in maine, in illinois, and colorado now shut down that in the wake of today's unanimous ruling that applies nationwide by the us supreme court. the colorado supreme court had argued that trump's actions on january 6 violated excuse me the insurrectionist clause clause of the 14th amendment to the us constitution. now while the justices of the us supreme court did not weigh in on what donald trump did. the justices did agree unanimously that colorado could not unilaterally remove trump from its ballot joining us down to discuss former federal prosecutor elie honig and elie, you've been predicting this exact outcome for months. was there anything in today's ruling? that stuck out to, you know, jake, i think when you take the politics out of this and you take the donald trump of it all out of this. the result is fairly straightforward strictly on a legal and constitutional basis, and it's not often that we see a nine to nothing ruling, but the justices did agree, in fact, that it is not up to them
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the states to enforce an execute the 14th amendment. you saw at justices alito and thomas in agreement with justices sotomayor and kagan on that point, it's simply could not be as a matter of law, as a matter of constitutional interpretation, that every state gets to do what it wants, because otherwise that would leave us it's with a quote, patchwork of different states doing different things according to the decision. so it's a rare 90 opinion and i think they hit the nail on the head here. >> now we saw two concurring opinions, one by justice amy coney barrett and one by the three liberal leaning justices. they really had a big disagreement there. >> yeah, i think the actual amount of disagreement here isn't that much when you drill down on it, it's important to understand all nine justices agreed. it's not up to the states. the five justices in the main opinion said it has to be done by congress. only congress can enforce this. the other four justices said, well, sure, maybe congress can do it, but there also may be other federal means of enforcement. now, frankly, i don't know what
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they mean by that. i don't know what federal entity other than congress would be capable of enforcing this. so there's a bit of disagreement about who can enforce this. could it be just congress or some other? named entity. >> but >> at bottom where they agree and what's really decisive here is held up to colorado. it's not up to maine, it's not up to illinois. it's not up to any individual state. so today's opinion does not directly address whether the court thinks president trump's actions on january 6 and around january 6 qualify him as an insurrectionist do you think the justices should have addressed that? >> not at all. there was never any chance at all, jake, that they were going to make a finding? yes, he did know he did not engage in insurrection. you and i have talked about that many times two reasons. first of all, that is not what the us supreme court does generally speaking, they don't make findings of fact, they don't hold trials or hearings it's except in very rare circumstances, not applicable here. there was never any way they were going to make a finding on that either way, none of the nine justices makes a finding on that. and second
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of all, they didn't need to make that kind of finding. this is a legal and constitutional and procedural decision. it would have been superfluous they if they reach that question. so the us reum court is going to hear oral >> arguments next month on this presidential immunity claim, whether trump has immunity for any crimes you may have committed as president most observers seem to think trump's going to lose that case what do you think? >> i agree in this instance with most observers, but i also think it's important to understand what donald trump is arguing and what he's not arguing. he is arguing to an extent that he has blanket immunity for everything that happened while he is president. he's going to lose that. that's ridiculous. he's also made this argument that, well, first he has to be impeached and then convicted by the senate. and only then can he be indicted. that too, i think is ridiculous. but there's a third argument that may get some traction, which is to the extent the charges relate to conduct within the scope of the presidency, he is immune for that. that could cause the justices to give some real consideration, ultimately, i don't think trump prevails on that, but that one's not a no
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brainer. >> the supreme court only took about a month to rule on this colorado case to keep trump off the ballot pretty expedited how do you compare that with the schedule they have for the immunity deal question? >> well, they've already said a longer time scheduled for the briefing and argument in the immunity case, but it's important to note to keep perspective here, the schedule that they've set on the immunity case is actually quite a bit shorter than the ordinary briefing schedule expediting this a bit certainly not nearly as much as jack smith would want them to expedite it, but i do think it really court sometime in june and then that leaves maybe a very narrow window potentially where this case can get tried before the 2024 election. i think it's unlikely, but not quite possible. >> all right. elie honig, thanks so much with me now in studio, former trump lawyer, tim parlatore. tim, thanks for being here. big, big picture. what's your reaction to the ruling by the us supreme court today? bar in colorado and any state from removing trump from
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the ballot under the force 14th amendment is not a big surprise. i think anybody watching the oral arguments expected that it would go that way. not only that, it would go that way, that it would be unanimous. and i think it was a good decision, particularly on the issue of this is not a states issue. you have the states don't have the power to pick federal officers. >> so what do you make the court choosing not to address at all whether trump's actions on and around january 6 qualify as engaging in an insurrection led you said correctly it wasn't an issue that was really before them. and i think that they would really want to try and avoid that and keep it as narrow as possible and obviously that was one of the issues between the different opinions is how narrow they were. but to actually come to a factual finding, i don't think it's something that would have been properly before them to begin with. >> yeah. plus, you have different bodies that have reached different conclusions it was on that you have colorado that says he wasn't an insurrectionist. and then you have the senate in the
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impeachment trial where he was acquitted of that so to try and synthesize all those decisions is well beyond what the supreme court's scope is on this. >> did you see anything in the opinion? today? they give you any hint as to how the court might rule on the question of whether what trump did on and around january 6, as president, that he has immunity from as former president. >> i thought it was interesting how the the dissenting opinions or rather the concurring opinions were saying that the majority went beyond the scope of the questions were asked and one of the things if you look at the manner in which they granted cert for the the immunity they changed the question. they narrowed it and they changed it from what either side had asked for. so they've kinda thrown out the whole impeachment judgment clause and they've thrown out blanket immunity. and the way that they instead phrased it is something that i think they could come to a decision that
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says, these are what the contours are, and then throw it back down to say have a pretrial hearing to decide which parts of this case would fall within immunity in which ones? but not trump's court schedule is about to get only busier. his first trial in the new york hush money case district attorney alvin bragg is set to begin later this month. his florida classified documents case set to begin in may, though the judge said she might revisit that timeline. trump has been able to manage his dual legal campaign schedule thus far. do you think that's going to change though, is the trials consume more of his schedule >> i'm sure it is. i mean, when you're on trial, you're in the courtroom all day, every day, and certainly in some of these courthouses, you're not allowed to bring your phone and, you know, maybe they have different rules for the former, for former president with the secret service detail. but a lot of a lot of his time is just going to be taken up. and then once you get out of court at the end of the day, it's exhausting. and so i do think
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it will impact. >> do you think that trump will end up in a federal courtroom? before the november election or do you think ultimately the federal trials, which is the classified documents case, and the january 6 case from jack smith are going to be delayed until after the election. and then obviously if he wins, he'll he'll dismiss them. >> i think the january 6 trial gets pushed out past the election and the classified documents i give a 50, interesting, if you were still representing donald trump, which of all these cases would you be most concerned about? >> classified documents? >> classified why? >> i think that that is the case. that is the most likely to survive an appeal it's in the friendliest jury pool jurisdiction. there are a lot of good arguments on either side, so it is definitely a good jury question, but i think that there there aren't as many legal challenges that would cause it to be overturned on appeal. >> all right. tim parlatore, always good to see you. thank you, sir. thank you. turning our politics lead, donald trump's supreme court victory lap is propelling and him
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straight into tomorrow's super tuesday contests, where he is expected to win big. but even if he sweeps every state, mr. trump will still be shy of enough delegates to officially clinch the republican nomination for president. but the lone ranger facing him, nikki haley, she's holding a rally tonight in texas he's fresh off a gop presidential primary win in washington, dc. the first woman to ever win a republican presidential primary ever she's gearing up for what could be her last stand against the former president, cnn's kristen holmes, is in west palm beach, florida. cnn's kylie atwood is in fort worth, texas kristen donald trump has gotta be feeling pretty good about his prospects heading into super tuesday tomorrow >> yeah, jake, look, they're feeling good on mobile one. they are very much aware of that nikki haley has not said what she's going to do pass super tuesday. she pledged to stay in through south carolina, should pledge to stay and through super tuesday. but anything beyond and that what they're hoping for is to see her drop out tomorrow night. now, as you said, he is going to still be shy of those delegates, but what they are hoping for is to really try to
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get some momentum the him partaking republicans who were looking for an alternative and it's not just voters, but also donors. they want to get that money brought in. they also want to get that support brought in. people who were still looking at nikki haley. now they're also feeling good about these various legal issues. one, we saw what happened today. they were expecting a win in the ballot case. they believed it it was one of their strongest, if not, they their strongest case when it came to all of his mounting legal issues, donald trump responding on truth social, saying that it was a big win for for america. but the other part of this that they were looking towards was this immunity claim. they are still feeling very good about the decisions of the supreme court to take trump's immunity argument, not just because they want this immunity claim to be argued out in court. obviously, you heard elie, their most advisers, allies don't actually think this is going to go oh, anywhere. >> but >> the big thing about this is that it does delay the trial, and that is what they've been trying to do since day one. if you talk to all of donald trump
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advisers and allies, they fundamentally believe that donald trump is not going to face any of these federal trials now, before the election in november >> kindly, why? why is nikki haley choosing taxes for this rally on the eve of super tuesday >> what nikki haley's campaign does not think that they're going to win texas, but what they do think is that this is a place where they could pick up some delegates say it is a big state. they point out and delegates are awarded by congressional district. so she's visiting two places today, houston and then here to fort worth where she thinks that she could pick up some delegates as they keep saying that this is a delegate game for them. the other thing jake is that tonight when nikki haley speaks here in fort worth, it might be the last time that we hear from more before most of the polls close tomorrow on super tuesday, that's because there's no events planned for her tomorrow. she's not planning to speak. her campaign says that's because there are some states it's where polls don't
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close until midnight. eastern time, and this is an area right here in fort worth that's crowded. there's a lot of folks in from out-of-state who are visiting. this is a very popular place. texas to come and see the cattle shows. the cattle show just went past me. i was talking to some folks who are from fort worth though. i just spoke with this man behind me who is with this cow and he was saying that he likes nikki haley. he likes her determination, but he's with the donald. he's going to be voting in the primary tomorrow for donald trump. >> all right. kylie atwood and forth for texas and kristen holmes and florida. thanks so much to both you oval office access. but president biden reveals in a new sit-down interview and whether this type of coverage helps or hurts his case, that he is fit to be reelected. that's next now at t professionally installs google nest products, cool. >> you all >> your home is safe and smart. we're gonna, ms you can check it on your home our mis system,
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this entire election calendar. it's setting the stage obviously for 2020 rematch between donald trump and joe biden, which means tomorrow could be nikki haley's last stance so far. haley has won just one primary, the dc contest held this weekend. we should note that is the first time that a woman has ever won a republic look in primary in the history of the united states. but that said let's bring in our panel. so guys, last hour i spoke to nikki haley, asked her if she plans to stay in the race past super tuesday. here's what she said. >> well we've said as long as we're competitive, we have been intense states just in the past week, i just finished a rally here in houston, texas. we had well over 1,000 people show up and these are people this isn't an anti-trump movement. this is a pro-america moving so that's not the clip from that interview. that's going to go viral. but do you think this is the end ultimately, if nikki nikki haley's campaign, i don't think it needs to be and i say that
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because i was with her on saturday in raleigh, north carolina and the event that she had had to get moved, i went to the wrong place twice because they moved it twice to bigger venues each time. and the very large venue she had was filled to the rafters of people who were there and there's something that's going on out there in the country right now, we see some extent in michigan for democrats as well and look, does she expect to win north carolina or texas tomorrow? no. but she's getting sizable numbers of voters who are saying we're not want to see this move movie again. and that she has money to continue. politicians don't get out of racist because they've run out of things to say, they run out of, they get out racist because they've run out of ways to stay at the longevity for her. is there it may not be in the traditional primary or caucus structure and not saying that she isn't run third party there are several younger than biden and younger than trump candidates out there who are looking beyond 2024, they're looking at what happens to their party, what happens to campaigns and politics after trump and biden are no longer
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able to run for office. >> so today the new yorker published an interview with president biden. he said down for a rare oval office interview with evan osnos and the article asness writes, quote, describing biden, his voice is thin and clotted and his gestures have slowed. but in our conversation, his mind seems unchanged. he never bungled a name or a date on quote, no, hasna spent 40 minutes with biden. this is on january 17th. video has not been released of the interview what do you think of biden choosing this kind of venue? we should point out evan osnos wrote a biography of joe biden. he is somebody that the president trusts and someone who knows the president very well. but is this what he should be doing, or is it do you think he should be doing more? tv interviews where people can see them? well, ultimately, people are going to see him on thursday and whatever he does in the run-up to the state of the union address is sort of immaterial. good. he was he was fine and lucid and okay. his voice was a little off, but on it for a print interview that no one has seen but what he does in front
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of congress and in front of the nation in the world on thursday night is a much bigger deal. and i can tell you having worked on opposition on state of the union, states of the union? what we do is we break down on things in issue, in issue by issue, manners. we try and do rapid response to the president said this will push back there. he said that will push back there. they're doing that in the house and senate republican conferences right now, but they're also prepared or if something goes wrong for biden, that's where i'll use a word media often uses. that's what republicans will pounce, and that's where the country is going. that's what the country is going to be looking for. what he says is important, how he says it may be more of a state of the union is hardly the mass media of opportunity that we who are into politics seem to think it is president biden was what it was in the '90s, right? yeah. >> if president biden is actually reaching more people on tiktok despite the controversy of how tiktok operates as a platform he's reaching more people there than he is anywhere else. that ability to take a message and go to multiple different platforms is going to be
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critical for either president and at the end of the day, what evan osnos said in that article about what we have been through in the last four years and how unemployment isn't a good place, how we're past covid and the pandemic, the type of stability that we have by the numbers in this country is not something that we we had under president with >> are two possibilities here of what will go viral in the state of the union. one, joe biden has a great zinger against republicans who juror him or boo him. last time happened, last time or something goes wrong for him. and every platform we'll see that. so >> in the interview, biden says he's the best democrat to beat trump, a new york times sienna college poll releases, we can choose biden is trailing trump nationally by five points. the biden campaign says, look, most people haven't even tuned in and it is true that a lot of voters don't even necessarily understand that it's gonna be joe biden versus donald trump. amazingly enough but if the election were held today, even democrats, i know think that trump would win.
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>> it is inconceivable to me that we are doing biden and trump all over again. but that is facing today and come october, i think everybody will have to decide who they want at thanksgiving, which uncle they want the crazy racist one, who just kind of spouts off and makes comments about women is like, oh, he's from a previous time i'm or the one who's probably a little bit more serene and maybe talks a little more slower. but you could actually go to, for some good advice about what to do. >> so a biden says he doesn't think trump's going to concede if he loses. this november, he says, quote losers, who are losers are never graceful i just think that he'll do it anything. he'll do anything to try to win if and when i when i think he'll contest it, no matter what the result is, do you agree? it's probably right. that's what history has shown us. and in the run-up to 2,016.20, 20, trump didn't say the quiet part out loud. he said the loud part loud. yeah. if i lose, it will be rigged. there's no reason to expect we wouldn't do this this time as well. >> and this also is saying that he's running effectively on a retribution can mean if you disagreed with me, then and you disagree with me now, we're
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coming for you. if this is very very, very personal, it's not about the american public when it comes to donald trump. >> and remember when, when donald trump lost the iowa caucus in 2016 to ted cruz, which he lost, he said it was stolen from him yeah. which it was not it was not cruz won it fair and square this weekend at a rally in richmond, virginia, trump said he wouldn't quote, give one penny to any school that has a vaccine mandate or a mask mandate. former congresswoman, republican congresswoman barbara comstock from virginia, noted like most states, virginia requires mmr vaccine, chickenpox vaccine in polio, et cetera. so trump would take millions in federal funds away from all virginia public schools. >> i have i have a first grader and a preschooler, so we are well into the being in a young age school is a petri dish. and the last thing i can consider steve of is that we would actively reintroduce measles into the mess. now i will give you that the covid vaccine rollout was less than ideal. not everybody understood the science, but herd immunity is part of why we are living
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longer in society as a human civilization, the idea that we would put that at risk because of individual choice or people refuse using to understand science. that's an individual choice. public schools are about the public good >> i agree 100% and trump had success with operation warp speed. you know, he he claimed credit initially, he's walked this back in a bizarre way. trump's not a leader quite often he looks at where the base is going and follows. he does this, say perfect example. so it's super tuesday eve what do you guys gonna be looking for tomorrow? >> all >> about margins, especially in suburban area. suburban areas where nikki haley was on thursday and friday or friday and saturday, raleigh and charlotte. good examples what are those margins and what does that tell us about donald trump's weaknesses and nikki haley strengths to continue and whether or not biden can pick up those nikki haley voters theoretically, i suppose that trump has said you're not welcome. >> and remember these are republican voters, right? so it's not like the vast majority of people who are unaffiliated
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right now are able to actually cast a ballot at the moment. so i'll be looking at what the republican women, suburban women turnout would be. >> all right, so both of you guys can be looking at republican suburban women. it sounds like thanks to both you appreciate it looks for lives super tuesday coverage tomorrow we've seen races, one consequential de, special coverage begins tomorrow evening at 06:00 p.m. eastern here on cnn and streaming on max coming up next on the lead in the wake of war between israel and hamas and skyrocketing anti-semitism here in the united states, i'm going to talk to the author behind this provocative headline today, quote, the golden age of american jews is ending. i will ask him what he means by that. stay with us >> vegas store. you have sin city next sunday at ten on cnn >> year-old phenom
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to keep san francisco moving in the right direction. please join me in voting yes on prop e. whoa, how did you defeat them? please join me in voting with a little kung fu strength and by connecting my devices to the most powerful force of all. skadoosh. hah, huh? cool right? amazing. harness the power of xfinity internet and stay connected to the things you love. ah, they'll be like this for hours. hello dad, hello dad, hello da. uh-oh. good bunnies. ahh! competence reset your style, learn more at reset smile.com. >> in our national lead recent data from the anti-defamation league shows that anti-semitic incidents sumy united states, dramatically escalated in the first three months after the october 7 hamas attack on israel and israel responding
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militarily, 3,291 incidents in three months in the us. and the feeling many american jews share right now seems bleak. atlantic staff writer franklin foer puts it this way, quote, the golden age of american jews is ending antisemitism on the right and the left threatens to bring to a close and unprecedented period of safety and prosperity for jewish americans and demolish the liberal order they helped establish unquote and franklin foer joins us now. so that's a rather powerful headline. what exactly do you mean the golden age of american jews is and they're coming out of the post-war era after the holocaust all of the discrimination that jews started to had faced previously in american life, quote, is that universities, restrictive housing covenants, they all began to fall to the side. relative took decades. it took decades, but relative to other countries in the diaspora america became this golden land where jews became a third of
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the class at various ivy league schools, they achieved all of this cultural and intellectual and political influence. and they were able to help shape the way that the country thought about essential questions about diversity, about tolerance, about the rights of minorities. many of those things that they push forward, good for the nation, but they were also good for american jewry okay yeah. >> and in your piece, you write not only about right-wing anti-semitism, but you're right about the left embracing anti-zionism being against the state of israel. and that there are examples on full display in california's bay area, an area that's considered to be pretty liberal. explain so i had started to hear incidents of antisemitism in california. there was a menorah, unlike merit in oakland that was desecrated in thrown into the lake, there were examples of graffiti populating, but i started to hear about what was happening in schools where teachers who were very progressive began to try to mold their students into very
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passionate advocate on behalf of the palestinian cause. but they weren't teaching this very complicated issue in a complicated that way. they were teaching it in a very black and white way. and so when that began to be translated into the classroom, students received it like kids do. they heard that jews were stealing people's lands and that jews were bad people. and so there was this epidemic of bullying that happened all across the bay area against jewish go against you and you're talking about like what like junior high, high school, grade school? >> yeah. >> in every division i was hearing stories that were pretty heartbreaking about what's happening in metric schools. there were walkouts on behalf of the palestinian cause in middle schools oftentimes encouraged by teachers, yeah, and of course, we can all support palestinian rights and want them to have one palestinians to have a free and fair and thriving democracy without bullying jewish kids. >> what i mean, i think one of the things that american jews experience, it's different
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from other ethnic groups and minority groups, is that when something happens in another country, people's first response isn't it? when, when something happens in china, if people's first responses and to go break the windows of a chinese restaurant, they have response, isn't to ask people well, they find on the street what's your position on that? but that's a burden that's imposed on american jews. >> so speaking of the bay area, just last week at cal berkeley, the university's newspaper, the daily californian, reported the protesters shut down in event hosted by jewish student groups with protesters chanting, long live the intifada and killers on campus. this is the same university berkeley that as a last month move to dismiss a lawsuit over alleged failures to prevent anti-semitic discrimination, anti-semitic discrimination on campus. and this is just one of many colleges in the us where the israel-hamas war is a contentious issue, including your alma mater columbia university in new york, which you describe in your piece as a quote graphic example of the collapse of the liberalism that it insulated american jews. it's a microcosm of a society that is lost its capacity to express disagreements without
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resorting to animus are you surprised to see this happening at columbia and berkeley and other more progressive schools? >> not entirely surprised but i think i'm surprised at the scale and the scope of it and the way in which disagreements over israel take this form that tracks so many of the tropes that we've heard in the anti-semitic cannon for so many centuries that what criticizing israel is a very normal and natural thing to do. many american jew who's wrestle with is the questions, questions about israel. they have their own criticisms of israel netanyahu was like a 15% approval rating in israel i mean, it's yeah, nobody criticizes him more than israelis. >> nobody in america believes in a two-state solution. more than america jews according to polling but when the word zionism is thrown around, the way that it's evoked on college campuses. it often seems as if it's a synonym for jews. and so criticisms of israel end up acquiring all of these other elements that like
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i said, that the deep well, that deep reservoir that the western mind as of anti-semitic imagery and tropes ends up getting attached to the word zionism. >> so obviously there's a lot of anti semitism on the right as well. i mean, the north carolina tomorrow is going to nominate for governor in all likelihood somebody that has said anti-semitic things, lieutenant governor robinson and when you've talked to juice, what are their concerns about going forward from the republican party? obviously all this from the progressives we've, we've discussed, right? >> so one thing that i think the partisan mind in american polarization makes us do. but sometimes get into this competition, which side is worse than the other? when it comes to antisemitism, i think that's kind of a silly, conversation because it exists on both sides and that donald trump, when he came to office, gave this huge wink to have white supremacist and unleashed this wave of antisemitism. and i think anti-semitism on the left and anti-semitism the
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right some ways feed off of one another because there had been to boost that it existed in american society that had kept anti-semitism locked away, that had prevented it from seeping into political conversation, into polite conversation unfortunately, now, we've busted the lock and that taboo has been been broken. >> and there's obviously a horseshoe theory of this. the left and the idea that politics is not a continuum. it's more like this. the far-left and the far-right meet a horseshoe when they agree on hating jews. and i've seen like susan sarandon retweeting like people who are essentially nazis. and a lot of right-wingers are capitalizing on anti-israel sentiment. >> yeah, believe you, me, if you looked at my twitter feed right now, you'd see that happening all over the place and it is i think symptomatic of the problem that we're describing, which is the breakdown of the liberalism that had governed so much of american life for so long. >> all right, well, it's a provocative piece worth reading. it's neat landed right now, frank foer, always good to see you, sir. thanks so much for popping by the israeli ambassador to the united
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nations is making a strong argument against a ceasefire deal here he says hostages are suffering. he says many are still victimized sexually, and he says a ceasefire would only make matters worse for them. the preconditions, this israeli ambassador is demanding of hamas before a ceasefire can happen. that's next super tuesday, coverage begins tomorrow at 06:00 p.m. on cnn and streaming on max overactive bladder or o >> ab can change your world my going hiking just to hike to the bathroom reaching for the bar. just to reach for paths waiting for the sunset. just to wait for the style discovered. jim tessa, a once a day pill, proven to reduce all three key symptoms of lab leakage episodes urgency and frequency and adults do not take if you have unknown allergic reaction to jam paso or it's
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>> grow. your business easily with freelancers, supply >> a new united nations report out today concludes that sexual violence against israeli women took place during the hamas-led october 7 attacks on israel the united nations envoy said, after holding dozens of meetings with survivors and witnesses of the october 7 attacks, plus former hostages, health officials, and others. they found, quote, reasonable grounds to believe the conflict-related sexual violence occurred during the october 7 attacks in multiple locations, including rape and gang-rape in at least three locations, unquote. the report found clear and convincing evidence that some hostages being held in gaza were still being subjected to sexual violence, rape, and quote, sexualized torture the un called for humanitarian ceasefire and for hamas to immediately release all the
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house is still being held. the un also asked israeli officials to give the un access to investigate sexual assault allegations of palestinian women being held in israeli detention. cnn's bianna golodryga joins us now and bianna don't the conclusions here underscore the importance of hamas releasing the hostages. now yeah. and let me read to you further what pramila patten, the un representative on sexual violence in conflict, wrote on that specific issue with regard to sexual violence committed against hostages, both on october 7 and currently in their reporting with respect to hostages, the mission team found clear and convincing information that some i'd been subjected to various forms of conflict-related sexual violence, including tape and sexual torture and sexualized cruelty, inhuman and degrading treatment. and it also has reasonable grounds to believe that such violence may be ongoing. this is all so some of the concern that hostages that had been released has slowly but steadily been reporting in terms of what they heard and
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what they saw and why there's so much concern about those hostages that remain at least 100 and there are reports that maybe 30 or 31 may no longer be living, but they're all remaining in gaza, so there is more pressure for these hostages to be released, and there is more pressure for hamas to agree to a deal that would hold at least a six week ceasefire that would see these remaining hostages, especially the women and the most vulnerable be returned home. >> yeah. so you note the report recommends a ceasefire. here's what the israeli ambassador to the united nations, gilad erdan had to say about a ceasefire. take a listen the rape cannot continue the sexual violence cannot continue. and hamas's survivor survival through a ceasefire, cannot continue to be promoted advanced here instead of calling for a ceasefire with no preconditions, the general assembly in every human body should be demanding that hamas terrorists, they should turn
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themselves in and release all hostages these are the only acceptable terms for a real ceasefire >> so i wanted the issues there. he's going into is the fact that the discussions are not about hamas releasing all the hostages there, about hamas releasing some of the hostages. how do you think his speech is going to impact negotiations if, if at all? >> well, it appears from our reporting that israel didn't even send a delegation to cairo and that is given that hamas doesn't seem to be living up to some of the expectations that had been set for them in terms of letlow listing names of the hostages they have remember jake, there hasn't been any proof of life. there hasn't been a red cross visit. there's no information as to how these hostages are doing. hamas's even suggesting they don't may not know where all of these hostages are. so you can see both sides here really? stuck in their corners. i think what pramila patten is advocating for and calling for us given her two-and-a-half weeks in israel where she spent time meeting with over 30
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people and photo and reviewing 5,000 photographs and going over the evidence, herc concern really is about those hostages and getting them out as soon as possible. the >> report also noted that there is a limited amount of evidence. are firsthand evidence individuals talking about there being victimized due to large number of casualties. a lot of these women were killed or kidnapped, not to mention widespread crime scenes. so a lot of this we may just never know, i guess, but that's also not strange when it comes to sexual violence. >> yeah. in sexual violence, whether it be reported cases of rape or whether it'd be sexual violence in war conflicts and pramila patten said that she was not able to meet with any survivors of sexual assault, and she asked for them to come forward, but she acknowledged how difficult that is in some continue to undergo medical treatment and just don't feel comfortable going forward. that doesn't negate any of these
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allegations. and a lot of these evidence that has been presented in this report, jake, right now, obviously, there's physical evidence and obviously there's eyewitness testimony, not to mention, of course the former hostages, bianna golodryga. thanks so much for that report coming up a tragic chapter of us history usually not taught in american schools though it is on the verge of making cinematic history at the academy awards. >> he was going with matt lane for time >> the new arrival alarms, the brotherhood of muscle musculature and our features signal power and performance attributes. they've never seen in this the whole a new breed ready to swarm, ready to stick ready to electrify the defiant? our packed all new hybrid electric dodge hornet rt performance, electrified and to options for you. >> take a look at when it's
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time for us to pick it up and hey, you on the spot hey, you on the spot >> nad "overflowing with ideas and energy." that's the san francisco chronicle endorsing democrat katie porter for senate over all other options. porter is "easily the most impressive candidate." "known for her grilling of corporate executives." with "deep policy knowledge." katie porter's housing plan has "bipartisan-friendly ideas to bring homebuilding costs down." and the chronicle praises "her ideas to end soft corruption in politics." let's shake up the senate. with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. what do i see in peter dixon? with democrat katie porter. i see my husband... the father of our girls. i see a public servant. a man who served under secretary clinton in the state department... where he took on the epidemic of violence against women in the congo. i see a fighter, a tenacious problem-solver... who will go to congress and protect abortion rights and our democracy.
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because he sees a better future for all of us. i'm peter dixon and i >> green light is better than burj thing. >> your family's financial future. >> i'm paula reid in washington and this is cnn >> in our pop culture lead some of the most celebrated names and film or gathered sunday for the academy awards hosted by jimmy kimmel. and it couldn't be a historic night for up and coming actress lily gladstone. she is the very first native american to be nominated for best it's actress. this is for her performance in martin scorsese's killers of the flower moon. recently at the smithsonian museum of the american indian. i got the opportunity to talk to gladstone and scorsese about the film which has received ten oscar nominations >> oh they have the worst land possible but they outsmart everybody. >> had all along in the 1920s,
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members of the osage nation in oklahoma, where some of the richest people on the planet, they had all this oil money so much that they go buy a rolls royce run out of gas and then go buy another one. >> but an era of prosperity soon gave way to a reign of terror >> as white >> men plotted, schemed and systematically murdered at least 24 members of the nation to take that wealth for themselves. >> lot of money, sir. >> there are some families that are grieving to this day. >> it was a dark chapter in our nation's history. >> it's one of the worst racial injustices one of the most sinister crimes occur in this country when we don't often learn about in our classrooms. >> thank no mistake. it was not by the public schools that was not it was not in the curriculum, but it was the subject of david grants 2017 bestseller, killers of the flower moon, the osage murders and the birth of the fbi, which served as the inspiration for this film adaptation,
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co-written and directed by martin scorsese. >> it isn't simply a case of who did it >> sent down from washington, dc to say about these murders? >> so you want about them >> say he's doing it because i tell you the first shot i take of people coming into the town. they all did it they all did. we all did it. >> scorsese says at the heart of the film is a love story. >> this insanely bizarre love story. >> between molly kyle, played by lily gladstone in a standout performance. >> oh, is that so make goseq and earnest burkhart, portrayed by leonardo dicaprio. >> i don't know what she said unless men, indian for handsome devil it's also where this great analogy for this greater betrayal can play out. >> that was hard to fathom and a lot of ways how this woman and stuck by someone who is so duplicitous but it was true. all of it was true. >> these kinds of films can help us heal or at the very
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least help us come to grips with our tortured racial past. >> here's the flower moon is not just retelling history it's also making cinematic history earning ten academy award nominations, including a best actress nomination for gladstone, a first for a native american. and martin scorsese is now the most nominated living director in the history of the academy. kyiv said this is the most important film you're ever going to make. did you say that? >> yes, i did. yes. >> because i've been >> exploring who we are as human beings what we're all capable of under certain circumstances would i have been coming plus it to >> it's powerful movie. you can stream killers of the flower moon. now on apple tv, it's also available to rent or buy on other video on-demand platforms. coming up, fly eagle, fly the emotional announcement today from beloved philadelphia foot while player jason kelce philadelphia
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satellite free, directv never thought i she the day our lifespans are quite short. extreme directtv without a satellite dish, are you gonna do this thing with my neck just for a bit. >> super tuesday coverage begins tomorrow at 06:00 p.m. on cnn and streaming on max >> to sad day in our sports lead. although next stop perhaps canton today, legendary philadelphia eagles center jason kelce announce tearfully his retirement from professional football after 13 seasons said an emotional press conference, kelce shared his favorite memories of his football career from his first little league games to his final plays with the eagles >> some people struggled to play in this they can't handle the boos, the media for our fans consider it a great blessing to play in the most passionate sports town in america >> of course. >> he also touched on his unique >> relationship with his brother and