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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  March 9, 2024 11:00pm-12:00am PST

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are flimsy guardrails at best, you can still drive between the lines. so rod's tale is a cautionary one-- a camera-grabbing, over-the-top example of how bribery, extortion, and graft easily sneak into our political system behind ambition and enormous egos. and if politicians or the public feel the same way he does, then another rod blagojevich is just around the corner. i didn't break a law, cross the line, or take a penny, okay? but i never said i wasn't a [bleep] idiot. [laughter] thank you very much. thank you very much. thank you very much. thank you very much! -awesome. thank you so much. -yeah, thanks. appreciate it. really enjoyed it. you're all right. i wish you the best. we'll see how it ends up and who cares. that's true. find out-- what are you gonna do, throw me back in prison? -no, but i mean, like, -you can't hurt me, man. >> we what do you want me back in prison? no, but i mean, he can't hurt me >> very warm. welcome to our
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viewers here in the united states and all around the world. i'm paula newton, the head >> here on cnn newsroom, a biden trump rematch begins in georgia the to trade attacks in dueling rallies plus the violence and chaos in haiti is only getting worse. we'll hear stories of survival from the most vulnerable. >> and did you just push your clocks and our ahead while some love it, some hate it will have more on daylight saving time from the man who wrote the book on it >> live from atlanta >> this is cnn newsroom with paula newton and we do begin with us race for the white house and another set of nominating contests. now, just two days away on saturday, president joe biden and republican presidential candidate donald trump held dueling rallies in georgia the key battleground state is one of a handful of states holding presidential primary he's on tuesday. both men are ramping
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up attacks on each other as it becomes clear, they will face a rematch later this year. mr. biden drew a stark contrast between his administration and his predecessors in a fiery speech in atlanta saturday, he also slammed the former president for the company has been keeping including hungary's authoritarian prime minister viktor orban and republican house member marjorie taylor greene, who interrupted the state of the union address here's a guy is kicking off his general election campaign in the roman up with marjorie taylor greene could tell you a lot about a person who keeps company when and yesterday he was hosting at his club victor or ban says he doesn't think democracy works, calling a fantastic leader seriously >> he's been sucking up to win him. >> anyway cnn's steve contorno
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was there at trump's rally in north georgia and has this report >> former president donald trump held a rally saturday in rome, georgia. his first is becoming presumptive republican presidential nominee. he wasted little time in his remarks going after joe biden. in fact, he also made fun of biden's delivery of his speech at the state of the union tonight to go, we all heard cookie joe's angry, dark, hate-filled rant of a state of the union address wasn't it didn't it bring us together emerging border, bring the country together. >> joe biden should not be shouting angrily at america. america okay, should be shouting angrily at joe biden, a major focus of trump's remarks was on the situation at the us southern border and ahead of his remarks, he met with the family of laken riley, that is the 22 year-old nursing student who was killed in georgia allegedly by an undocumented man trump also criticized president biden for saying that he shouldn't have
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used the word illegal to describe that individual. >> and i say he was an illegal alien he was an illegal immigrant. he was an illegal migrant. and he shouldn't have been in our country and he never would have been under the trump policy. >> biden can you shouldn't be apologizing for apologizing to this killer. >> trump's visit the georgia is the first of many expected in the coming months, the peach state is gonna be one of the top battlegrounds in the 2024 election. it's one trump lost by less than 12,000 votes four years ago. and his team knows it's going to be close to this goal round steve contorno, rome, georgia, cnn, joining me now is andra gillespie. she's a political scientist at emory university. good for you to be with us. quite a weekend in georgia. now, if we try and set the scene here, of course we know that biden's win in the state was very slim in 2020. what hurdles does he face if he has a shot at winning the state
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again >> a georgia still has more republicans than it does democrats. and so democrats are going to have to find every possible voter and get them out to vote on election day both sides are talking about the possibility that they're going to be protests non-voters in this election, democrats just can't afford to have as many as republicans can have and still be able to win the state. >> so >> the advantage is that democrats have beaten donald trump in this state before. >> and >> they've also beaten trump attached senate candidates that have been compromised as a result hello to that. but this is not 2020 covid isn't happening. and so they're going to have to run a perfect and flawless campaign and get every democratic vote out in order to be able to keep on to the state. >> yeah, it's so important really when you think about that ground game in georgia, i wanna do want to talk about the former president, though he has challenges of his own right i mean, he's pin indicted in this state for allegedly interfering in georgia's 2020 election results and now he's still feuding, of course, with
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georgia's republican governor. how do you think that affects him in the state? >> well, i expect that there's going to be a rapprochement between former president trump, n governor kemp. brian kemp might not campaign vigorously for donald trump, but i don't expect him to tell republican voters to stay home, where to go vote for joe biden. so i don't think that that's going to be a problem, at least as far as the indictments have have gone so far, republican voters seem in nord to the fact that trump has been indicted as much as he has. and trump is actually been very successful in framing his indictments as persecution that actually ends up affecting all republicans in the state. so we has a base of support around him that's really strong. there are some polls well, that suggests that he would lose some voters if he turns out that he actually is convicted. but the delay strategies that he is using are effective. and so we're going to wait to see whether or not the one case that probably will finish before the election will have that effect because it's
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the stormy daniels case and it's the one that legal experts i, guess of the four indictments, four sets of indictments that have been brought against him. >> understood you know, immigration is a real focus in georgia this time around, especially given the gruesome murder of lincoln riley, a nursing student from georgia a venezuelan migrant who entered the country illegally. he is charged in her death, but i could not believe the striking difference with biden and trump through these campaign rallies. biden interview even had to apologize for calling that suspect any and yet trump boldly use does these words in georgia, including this weekend does it help trump presses point on immigration? it's a really stark difference between the two candidates it certainly helps to press his point with his base. who cares an awful lot about immigration and is helping to propel that to the top of the issue. salience
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board in the 2024 election. so you have to keep in mind that for a lot of people that care about abortion, care about abortion, but they also care about immigration. and in particular, if you're watching certain media outlets, it's been something that's been at the top of the new cycle for years and laken riley's death helps to focus attention again on that issue. and they're using it to focus on the cooperation between local government officials and the federal government. so at issue here is just the notion that athens clark county wasn't turning in people who they are quite arrested for minor crimes and forming ice that they had undocumented people in their custody. and so this has now become a flashpoint in local politics in that area. and it's certainly something that donald trump and the republicans are going to make hale and they are making hay of it as evidenced by president trump let's comments today. >> yeah, it certainly is going to be an interesting race in this state, given all the issues that you just highlighted. thanks so much really appreciate you joining us >> thank you.
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>> time may not be on his side, but us president joe biden is still holding out hope for a ceasefire deal in gaza by ramadan in an interview on saturday, he said his cia director is conducting last-minute talks in israel. and mr. biden said remit could still be hammered out before the muslim holiday begins, sunday night, us president, who's been supporting israel also express concern about the growing death toll among palestinians his red line but i'm never going to leave israel. the defense of israel is still critical, so there's no red line. i want to cut off all weapons so they had don't have the iron dome to protect them. they don't have. >> but there's >> red lines that if he crosses in the country cannot have 30,000 more palestinian as a consequence of going out, there's other ways to deal to get to, to deal with the with
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the trauma caused by hamas and it's like i will look the first time i'm going over i sat with a man. i sat with a work camp and i said, look, don't make the mistake. american made >> now the death toll from an israeli strike in central gaza has now grown to 13 people. that's according to palestinian hospital officials who say the strike hit a building in the area on saturday we have to warn you now the next video, you're about to see is incredibly disturbing. some children were apparently wounded in saturday's strikes. as you can see here in this footage from the aqsa hospital, this footage was obtained by cnn. it shows hospital workers scrambling to help a child amid chaos after the strike cnn has reached out to the israeli military for comment. now, the military says its operating to dismantle hamas military and administrative capabilities. meantime, the us is moving ahead with a plan to build a temporary floating pier for aid deliveries in gaza. and military officials say the
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equipment for the project is now on its way. there us and jordan conducted new airdrops of aid on saturday as un officials warn of a looming famine in gaza, the two countries dropped tens of thousands of meals and other aid. clarissa ward has more now on diplomatic and humanitarian efforts it was just about ten days ago that president biden seemed very confident. he said that he hoped for a ceasefire to be announced on monday. this is last monday, obviously that did not happen. now, we are heading into ramadan this coming monday and it appears that no one is closer to being able to establish a deal. we do know there are attempts to continue to hash out a deal for some kind the other release, obviously, of the hostages and also a temporary ceasefire to ease the absolute dire humanitarian situation. inside gaza, which continues to spiral, really out of control.
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we've heard updated figures again tonight from the health ministry inside gaza. they are now saying the 25 have died as a result of acute malnutrition and dehydration. cnn cannot independently confirm that because international journalist this are not allowed into gaza to report on the ground, but it's certainly gels with what we have been hearing from groups like the un, who have warned that hundreds of thousands of gazans and the northern part of the enclave our one step away from famine, who have announced, as you mentioned, that four out of five people do not have or four out of five households, i should say specifically do not have access any longer to clean water. and while these aid drops show a certain level of intention and goodwill they according to aid we're going to stations are not terribly
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efficient and effective in terms of the mechanism for actually distributing aid. we heard from one humanitarian worker who said they're a great photo op, but they are terrible in firms of trying to make sure that people on the ground get the aid they need. what aid agencies are saying is that they needed to be distributed on the ground in order to distributed on the ground, you need some kind of a ceasefire and you need more openings into the gaza strip to ensure that the aid can get to some of those more isolated pockets are thanks, to clarissa ward there in israel. meantime, us and coalition forces shot down at least 28 houthi drones around the red sea on saturday, us defense officials also say there were no reports of any commercial ships being damaged during that airstrike the wave of drones comes as allied forces continue to hit the rebel group in yemen the houthis started targeting ships in the red sea shortly after the israel hamas conflict
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began. now, months of bloody violence and chaos in haiti is only getting worse displacing thousands of people in the process >> and he says they've been here about a year-and-a-half before that. they were in brown home that they said because of the gang violence, it was overtaken. your home was burned down gangs continue their rampage. will hear from the children who are paying the price welcome to stormy heights >> where the windows are always pellet pellet fiberglass is the strongest material for windows and patio doors fiberglass brain is even scratch and dent resistant. hello, windows tested for extremes, designed for your beautiful and healthy looking eyes. it shouldn't be a compromise lumify eye eliminations. three non irritating products developed by the experts at bausch and
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way. there's a pro for that >> served grow like you've never for even happen >> the international community is keeping a very watchful eye on haiti as the country plunges further into chaos, us secretary of state antony blinken and kenyan president william ruto, or discuss the worsening situation during a cost saturday and underscored their commitment to try and restore security to the island nation violence is spiraling out of control in haiti, and a prominent gang leader warns of civil war. unless haiti's prime minister resigns. but as cnn's david culver reports, he is in fact just back from haiti and he is telling us that the situation on the ground is
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already extremely dangerous >> salami is often an abandoned airfield. turned makeshift campsite. we step into those cramped space, the cadeau families home, by non her family's only bed. we need eight-year-old woodjina cadeau looking at us with eyes that have seen the torment and suffering that is engulfing haiti >> do you remember where >> you were when the bullet hits you when you've got shot? with her four-year-old sister, keeping close watch, woodjina tells me she was playing with friends when they were caught in the crossfire of a gang, shoot out she and her friends hid, but not quickly enough. >> a >> bullet tearing through her back and out her abdomen. her dad frustrated by life. and he says they've been here about a year-and-a-half before that. they were in their own home. but they said because of the gang violence, it was overtaken. your home was burned down so here they are hoping to have found what would have been a safe refuge. but he says, not even this is safe feel better.
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okay >> chaos now grips much of haiti, especially the capital port-au-prince. for the first time, i haitian security source tells us rival gangs are now working together but you know, wide-scale series of attacks against the government going after the airport, police stations and prisons, the terrible toll of the violence felt nearly everywhere even here behind the high walls of kisatoo family's home for children run by sister pasi. >> the rules here >> posted on the wall, children must be friends with ms be friends. get along getting along >> that's the challenge here. >> sister pisces lived in >> port-au-prince for 25 years. the last five of which she's dedicated to creating safe spaces for children many of those here orphaned because of the deadly gang violence could read things good after year
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mark >> c sub reference. >> don't >> you see really in danger preference? >> gang >> members are asking your depression? yes. yes. yes. >> some of the gang members themselves, just kids. this 14-year-old says he was recruited at 11 i can't go to school. he tells me wishing he could escape the gangs control. i watched so many people get killed and then i have to set their bodies on fire. he says outside of haiti's capital, it's more often the anti-government protests rather than the gangs paralyzing cities in jeremy, we drive with members of the world food
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program to a local school. >> these kids have not been in school since early january >> will tell you why the catholic priest who runs it shows us around just noticing on the chalkboard here in the last date, january 11th and it's the last time the kids are actually inside this classroom since it's been kind of violent protests erupted in january, making it too dangerous for the schools. 234 students to travel to for the staff. here, it's heartbreaking >> do you think about them and what's been now more than a month that they haven't been here. do you think about their situations is pretty sad for them for hot sauce because >> he knows it's about more than missing out on an education
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>> group i've noted there are to eat >> hunger is what drove this young team to go out at night alone in gang controlled territory last year, hoping to find food instead, she tells us she was attacked and rape, giving birth in january to a baby boy, the sun i'll likely gang members she thinks i can't abandon him. she tells me my mother struggled a lot with me, so i have to do the same for him. even if it is a child raising another child. she says, children bearing the brunt of a broken country that is spiraling further into chaos. with each passing day. david culver, cnn early voting is underway across parts of russia ahead of the presidential election next week, and that includes occupied areas of ukraine where russian forces have taken
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control and it would be a big surprise. of course for safe president vladimir putin doesn't win this vote given most opponents have been barred, locked up, or worse, mr. putin is expected to hold power for years after signing a new law in 2021, allowing him to run for two more terms. >> still to come for us united airlines just had a very bad week, not one, not two not even three, no, four major incidents involving their airplanes. that's ahead. coming up us >> national guard troops are now patrolling new york city subways. why some new yorkers? >> so happy about it >> back room deals, cia secrets, affairs, bribery, corruption, prostitution so much more to the store knighted states of scandal with jake tapper next sunday at nine on the >> planet fitness black card is
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is facing backlash for sending >> national guard troops into new york city subways to help tackle crime. now, the critics aren't just politicians or subway riders even some in the new york police department are now blasting the move with the department's patrol chief saying on social media, quote, are transit system is not a war zone. polo sandoval has our story so this is the first weekend for these two security measures to be in place after new york governor kathy hochul made that announcement of >> approximately 1,000 more personnel added to the subway system here to try to really reassure the passengers that use the nation's largest transportation system. here in puerto point out, though that the governor making very clear they will have a very principled, very main objective here. terms of what we can expect, which will be to assist with those random searches, things like luggage, and also
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purses its important point out that these are actions that we've seen before from the nypd in the past. so this will essentially supplement those efforts in the past. this after recent very highly publicized incidents that have taken place on the new york city subway system, though it's important to point out that since in new york city mayor eric adams increase the number of nypd personnel up patrolling the mta system. there has been a decrease in the number of some of those violent incidents. however, new york city officials she's here again, mainly governor kathy hochul here, hoping to reassure some of those passengers again, this was the addition of roughly 750 personnel with the national guard in addition to about 215 state police and also mta police. here's how some of the folks who use his system every day feel about these new changes. >> i think it's can be sometimes hard to like process the statistics when you hear about really scary high-profile incidents. so some of it is
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certainly an motional reaction >> just >> like the comfort that i get from the presence of the national guard's people is probably somewhat emotional but it helps me go about my life. so i appreciate it. never had a problem on the subway system with all now on railroad, i think everybody that works in this system and does a great job. this is new york city stuff has been happening for as long as i can remember >> and of course no changes come without criticism. there is some of those critics who say that there is no evidence that indicates that some of these random bag searches can actually serve to prevent some of these random attacks that we've seen in the past, then the less governor kathy hochul maintains that one of the main priorities is to make sure that the people who used his system every day, you'll say for doing so, polo sandoval, cnn, new york joining me now is mitchell moss. he is the henry heart rice professor of urban policy and planning at new york university's wagner graduate school of public service said,
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i thank you for joining us. i do not know if you've been on the subway in the last few hours, but let let me ask you, is this about six safety or is it about politics because it is an extraordinary move >> politics is always going to find a way to insert itself into the safety issues. new york because we have a1 half million people and the subways are not an airplane. the subways are viewed as something that are sacred space in fact, they've been quite safe for the past. have, you know, 30, 40 years. it's only recently since the pandemic that we've seen a rise in crime on the subways. and since the beginning of 2024, we had three homicides. the politics is very simple. the governor of new york matter who it is democratic, republican sits in albany a tiny town race 100,000 people on one or two days a year. they loved coming to new york and mentally and things are getting attention. and governor hochul saw that people concerned about crime, and she took the weapons she has, which are not very many, which are the state troopers and the
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national guard. now, let's be very serious the national guard has a military force. they can't arrest anyone. they are there for disasters, there, therefore, terrorism and during the post 911 environment, they were involved in helping make the subways safe by checking people carrying dangerous objects. however, new york police department is quite adept at fighting crime and brought grind down there during the bloomberg years and giuliani years. and of course, it grows during the de blasio years because of the pandemic. and what we have now is a surge of basically violent antisocial behavior as well as having a much more lenient criminal justice system. here, getting to really the heart of this, because what we want to know is how new yorkers are reacting to this. and do you you think that they feel really some of the futility of this, like why couldn't the the transit cops continue to do this job >> well, the mayor adams asked the met governor if she would provide more money to pay for police overtime. and instead of
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giving the mayor money, she sent down the national guard. i think mostly it was realized that it is not something that guard know how to do. they may be good in making the apple orchard safe, or they're not going to make the subway riders safer some people like looking at them, especially the commuters at grand central but recently there they are for cosmetics, but the utricle purposes to make people feel good, we >> need cops, not national guard people on the subway platform outside of a core business is that's where the crime is we have fewer people for the on and off the train. and i think there's a real tendency to forget we did this in the '80s by having police walked up and down subway cars and subway platforms. so rather than having groups of national guardsman hanging out out and be together and grand central, we need to have police in the system on the platforms, in the cars. this is nothing done the national guard would know what to do >> i don't have a lot of time left, but tell me when you've been speaking. we've been showing pictures of people
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getting their bags checked. how much is this going to irk? new yorkers and others as well, because this is really an infringement on some civil liberties that we've all grown used to i think the reason new yorkers are going to get tired of it as they understood that the subway system is based on trust by >> having all these people together, you trust the person next to you is not going to be a risk. two years safety, >> no one gets on the >> truce train taking a slow walk to the subway, everyone in new york is walking very quickly. what makes new york is they like to move fast. so being held up to show, show your bags when most people carry very few things in them, except basically personal items, is going to be something that they're going to resent over time. i think this is a mistake by the governor. she doesn't know really what makes new york is feel good, which was getting on and off the subway safely. not having their bags checked. >> okay. >> professor michel moss, thanks so much really appreciate it.
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>> thank you >> united airlines flight from san francisco to mexico city was diverted to los angeles friday officials say one of the plane's three hydraulic systems experienced an issue in flight the airbus a320 was carrying 110 passengers and crew members and did thankfully land safely in la. now, this is the fourth issue the airline has experienced this week alone. they included a tire falling off a plane just after takeoff on tuesday, an engine catching fire in flight on monday federal officials say they are investigating all of these incidents. and i a troubling report out of indonesia, the country's transport ministry will launch an investigation after two batik air pilots fell asleep during a recent flight to jakarta. now that's according to the state news agency, a preliminary report released on saturday on the pilot and copilot fell asleep at the same time for nearly 30 minutes that
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caused the aircraft to actually move to an incorrect flight path. none of the 153 passengers and four crew were hurt during a flight. and there was no damage to the aircraft. now, it was apparently not an isolated incident, if you can believe at the reports and the second in command had slept during the flight prior to this incident, the pilot in command meantime, then asked permission to also rest in the second in command, took over the aircraft around 90 minutes into the flight. the second in command, then inadvertently felon asleep. >> that's >> all according to the report just published. >> now, we are getting ready here at cnn for my freedom day later this week, a day dedicated to raising awareness in the fight against modern day slavery. just ahead, we'll have the story of a man in india who helped rescue two children in his neighbor tomorrow.
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>> why is china targeting taiwan? >> and if the conflict boils over, what's at stake for america, fareed zakaria presents an in-depth look, taiwan, unfinished business tomorrow at eight on cnn demand for energy is growing. and so as the need for american oil and natural gas, it's time to turn the lights on >> america's resources are abundant. our nation is a global leader in reducing emissions and innovators and delivering more energy sources to secure our future. nine in ten americans agree, american oil and natural gas are vital to our account. >> light this is a hot flash. this is a hot flash but this is a nod flash for moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms due to menopause. veozah is the first and only prescription
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>> walk for freedom is a coordinated campaign across hundreds of cities to raise awareness to fight modern day slavery shortly after participating in a march in india, men notice to children in his neighborhood exhibiting signs of being trafficked. cnn's vedika sud met him and explains how his awareness resulted in their rescue last october, tens of thousands marched in cities across 57 >> countries in a collective call for justice the walk for freedom event organized by e 21 and australian-based anti-trafficking ngo is a default global awareness and local action in the fight against human trafficking.
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>> familiarizing yourself with what trafficking looks like in your local community and around the sphere of influence you have in the world you live in. so that they can take action this clarion call resonated with an indian girl up single roy >> thank you for your pleasure is mine. >> this way. he >> 21 is now putting his story onto film with cnn, got exclusive access to a corporate trainer by profession, royal attended several campaigns hosted by a 21 on human trafficking, but it was a march for freedom in the city of kolkata last year. he says that changed him what i did learn is we are educated people, we are young people living in city, urban lives. yet we are blind. too many things. that seems very normal to us. for example, little children working in the shop below the age of 14 years is something which is not right, which is illegal >> adi, after the awareness
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campaign, roy identified two cases of modern-day slavery in his neighborhood >> i spotted two little girls doing hard domestic labor. one was a young girl around the age of five and the elder one was ten years old, the younger girl was dragging a bucket, having read greene's in it probably twice her weight. and the elder girl was also helping her with it this time when i spotted it, it stored my heart. i knew i had to do something about it. >> and he did write immediately alerted local authorities who then raided the house and rescued the girls. the miners were moved to a shelter home. but for millions of children in india rescue remains a distant dream in a country where according to government estimates, each sherine, what traffic every day in the year 2022, di to anti-trafficking laws and greater awareness to help identify cases of child labor attrition helping bridge
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this gap organizations like the movement india, aiding local communities with information to identify and report trafficking all we want is that every single citizen would be able to spot the signs of trafficking. and when they do know the action to take with the help line number to call, which is a lot ok. lindsay or or even the local police. there are bodies that exists to rescue, that exists to intervene. it's about citizens taking that proactive action and this one action has and continues to save children from the clutches of modern-day slavery. vedika sud cnn moment by please join us this coming thursday for my freedom day, a day student-driven >> event, raise awareness of modern slavery okay, there's more to come here on cnn just ahead. some love it, others really hate it to daylight saving time. here again, we'll
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have more of the time change after the break >> only a band guard you're more than just an investor. you're an owner that means your priorities are ours too. our retirement tools and advice can help you leave a legacy for the ones you love. that's the value of ownership >> from friends coming over to moms, coming over so many ways to save life ready wallet, happy, but 365 by whole foods market >> demand for energy is growing and so is the need for american oil and natural gas. it's time to turn the lights on. >> america's resources are abundant. our nation is a global leader in reducing emissions and innovators and delivering more energy sources this to secure our future. nine in ten americans agree american oil and natural gas are vital
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popped into the future. you might call it it's daylight saving time. some people love the time change, others yeah, they hate it joining me now is david peralta is the author of sees, the daylight, the curious, and contentious story of daylight saving time. and i want to thank you for being here, obviously on the day. where are we all have to get a hold of ourselves and change the clocks? you and i both know this is annoying for many people >> end yet >> all of this gets started and please remind us why we have to do it. >> okay. well, it really goes to the original idea. a concept goes back to benjamin franklin in 17, 84 but he didn't really have a mechanism to, he wanted to get people to wake up earlier, but he didn't have a good mechanism for it. so the guy who led to the system we have today worldwide and then
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william, will it in early 1900s in england, he proposed it to parliament. they didn't accept it. but when we're once started, the germans had heard of willis idea and they adopted it. so we've really got the first by the germans are world war i to save energy during the war i'm effort and eventually every country and what we went on both sides utilize it. and that's how it's thought it we are a long way from that. why are we still doing it in 2024? >> well, it has it has i think a great many advantages for most of the year spring, summer, and fall daylight saving time has a lot of great advantages. it, first of all, it's an extra hour in the nicer spring and summer evenings it gets people outdoors, so a little bag, little bit of banter for health, it also reduces traffic accidents. it reduces outdoor crime, like mugging, and it
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reduces energy usage. so it has lived for good benefits however, if you try to use daylight saving time in winter you will get very light sunrises. and in the us, for example, light of the major cities would have sunrise's at 08:39 and so most everybody be waking up in the dark and so when we tried it once in the us in 1974 during an energy crisis, and nobody like daylight saving time in the winter so therefore the viceroy you to have a compromise is that they liked saving time for three-quarters of the year's spring, summer, and fall. and then for four months we have in the darkest months of the year, we have standard time. so there's sunrise's they don't too early, but you you hello, this is contentious, is even in the title of your books. so would there be an upside though to just staying on standard time you know, back all the way from the clocks. lots just stay
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where we are. you know, that some states, a couple of chosen to opt out. some countries have opted out. what would be the big deal if we just stayed and didn't happen? >> yes, you would gain that one hour of wash of sleep per year. but what you but who says you to lose 280 days when you would have an extra hour of daylight in the evening, when everybody would use it. if you had standard time in the summer, you'd have the sun rising in many parts of the us, for example, before, for 30 am. so nobody would be utilizing that daylight. and would just be sleeping through with this way we take that same day that we're wasting in the morning while we're sleeping and move it to the evening where we can use and enjoy it. so you he losing a lot if you had saying the time all year round. >> well, especially it spring forward, i think many people aren't aren't enjoying it, so so for the people who really don't understand why we have to go through this disruption
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at all. i mean, what can you say to them? what's one thing you can tell us about daylight savings time that they may not know which will help them deal with it in the day to come >> well, if you think about it, daylight saving time when you lose that hour of sleep, it's no different than going from chicago to new york london, to paris, or beijing to tokyo. i mean, sorry, tokyo to be beijing, to tokyo. in each of those cases because you who's an hour and yet people do that all the time bound fairly what people do when they travel, however, is when you go to a different time zone, you may make an adjustment before you leave, maybe a sweep a little wouldn't go to sleep as whites that they leave. maybe you make many points the next morning. >> and i think i think people can minimize their annoyance at that oozing of that hour by sort of planning for it a little bit better >> all right. i only have this is going to be a yes or no answer. do you predict that we
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will see the end of daylight saving time though in the next decade, let's say there's quite the movement afoot >> know, because when it's been actually, when its people have changed from daylight, same time, they haven't liked it and they had an ac went back. all right. so you're saying is here to stay, so we all better get used to it. as no >> improve predicted, but that's what i was what i would think. >> all right. here are monday's on that. i appreciate it, david. thanks so much >> okay. thanks so good to be with his paula >> we did learn a lot. there, didn't we now, this has been in fact the warmest winter on record in the continental united states, us government scientists looked at data from last december through last month they say the average temperature of 37.6 degrees fahrenheit or 3.1 celsius is the mildest since they started keeping records in 1890s the unusually warm weather has been rough on some ski resorts and
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other businesses that of course depend on snow as well as a last glacier is close to disappearing at least partly because of climate change. government officials say they have a plan to save what's left of it. but not everyone is happy about how they want to do it. >> the >> effects of climate change are giving some mountain lovers their last look at venezuela's la corona glacier located on humboldt peak and the andes mountains. this sheet of ice has gone from 450 hectares to just two. in lesson it's than a century. >> why not >> it's been a lengthy process witnessing the gradual disappearance on a glacier. when i hiked in december 2023 with a team of scientists and filmmakers, it was really heartbreaking. >> but triggers says the disappearance will impact tourism as many people wants traveled to climb the glacier let's now turn largely to bare
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rock and is unsafe to step on. in december, the venezuelan government announced a plan to save la corona. i want to implement a technique used on ski slopes in warmer weather and cover it with a thermal mesh to maintain its current temperature. >> but >> critics are too keen on the idea >> like we strongly and unequivocally opposed this project. since this project is being organized without respecting the law, some environmental assert challenging the government and believe it's too late to reverse the already heavily impacted area we say microplastics from the thermal mesh can have harmful effects on crops, lagoons, and the air. and point out that no environmental impact study has been conducted for the plant think >> ignoring the environmental consequences of transporting and depositing over three tons of plastic here you can have grave implications for the fragile high elevation andy, an
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ecosystem. >> some researchers say luck old ana, as about four to five years before eat is completely gone. while others estimated it will disappear in two years and melting glaciers are affecting the entire continent from venezuela to argentina the andes have lost 30 to 50% of their ice cover in the last 40 years. that's according to the united nations environment programme so apparently there's been a million-dollar, aren't heist in italy, nearly 50 gold pieces by sculptor umberto mastroianni were stolen from an exhibition near lake garda. now, one of the pieces called man, woman was found on the grounds of the exhibition, but the others unfortunately, there's still missing. the theft happened wednesday night. the thief or thieves apparently, they knew what they were looking for nearby jewels were left untouched only the muscle muster yoni pieces were taken a new ms world has been
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crown just hours ago, christina peskova of the czech republic became ms world 2024. the 23 year-old law student and model competed with more than 100 contestants in mumbai, india saturday. during the interview portion of the competition, muskova spoke about, we're moving think the stigma and shame surrounding menstruation saying that quote, being a woman is a gift. administration should not be a taboo subject. let's go over, is now the 71st ms world >> i'm paula newton. i want to thank you for your company, kimbrunhuber pink things up from here with more cnn newsroom. he'll be here smoke >> to be a headliner. was vegas. that's what i want to do. >> vegas, the story of sin city. next sunday at ten on cnn hey, i'm gonna go grab a pickup game with the guys, okay? okay. live it up. taking the car. >> what
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they told us we were being unrealistic. told us to think about our future said it was too late for us. and passions don't pay bills >> but what >> they didn't know is that dreamers make their own victory demand for energy is growing. and so as the need for american oil and natural gas, it's time to turn the lights on. >> america's resources are abundant. our nation is a global leader in reducing emissions and innovators and delivering more energy sources to secure our future nine in ten americans agree, american oil and natural gas are vitarel
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absolutely free text dra w to 369369. today, >> hi, melanie zanona on capitol hill >> and this is cnn

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