tv CNN News Central CNN March 18, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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central >> if there is any question left, donald trump's settled in general election candidate trump is exactly the same as primary candidate donald. some saying this weekend it's going to be a bloodbath that if he is not re-elected, trump was talking about the future of the auto industry in america, but many heard warnings far beyond that >> and then there >> was, well, this, the predictions last warning he doesn't get elected seeming to speak to the future of democratic elections in the us >> if this lecture, if this election isn't won, i'm not sure that you'll ever have another election in this country. >> and then there was also this, his latest attack on migrants >> if i had prisons that were teeming with ms 13 and all
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sorts of people that they've got to take care of for the next 50 years, right? young people, they're in jail for years. if you call him people, i don't know if you call them people in some cases, than not people in my opinion, these are bad. these are animals >> cnn's alayna treene, it's tracking all of this for us and alina, you were at you recovering this rally when this all happened this weekend, how did those remarks come off at the rally? how are they looking? de republicans are having to answer for them right? well, kate, donald trump, very much use dark rhetoric to paint this doomsday picture of america. if he were not to be reelected in november and it's the same type of fear mongering we heard him use in the lead up to his first white house bid and something that he used successfully and effective really to claim the white house back in 2016. but look at that rally, it was unclear what exactly donald trump was referring to when he argued that there would be a bloodbath if you were not to win the
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election. and his team argued that it was he was referring to an economic bloodbath, that this was about the auto industry. take a listen to how donald trump put it we're going to put a 100% tariff on every single car that comes across the line. >> and >> you're not going to be able to sell those guys. if i get elected now, if i don't get elected, it's going to be a bloodbath for the whole that's gonna be the least of it. it's going to be a bloodbath for the country that'll be the least of it >> so kate, donald trump also in those remarks on saturday, spoke about january 6. he referred to those convicted on january 6 or for their role january 6, as hostages, something we have heard him do before, but given both of those comments, he did receive a lot of criticism, not just from democrats and the biden campaign who did jump on those remarks in that rhetoric. but also from past allies, people like his former vice president, mike pence, who very much took issue with how donald trump was character but are rising. his use of the term hostages,
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referring to what he argued was not appropriate language given there are american hostages still in gaza and other republicans as well saying that this type of rhetoric is concerning there's also then the major policy issue when it comes to the election, the donald trump is also weighing considering in the >> process of deciding if he's going to back a national abortion ban. what are you hearing about this? >> yeah, it's really interesting because i've spoken with donald trump senior advisers at length about this issue, and it's one that they've long tried to avoid. they've been very vague about what he would do regarding an abortion ban or if you would institute one at all because they recognize that it's not it doesn't play it politically well, particularly with republicans and throughout the primary and over last year, donald trump, unlike his other republican primary challengers, really refuse to weigh and he's been towing this line of saying, yes, i was the one who installed the three very conservative supreme court
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justices who ultimately helped overturn roe versus as wade. and that's kinda throwing red meat to the pro-life wing of the party. but he's also been very careful in saying that he wants exceptions that he thinks the issue is a political loser. and so it's interesting to see whether or not he will actually come out with a potential ban or a more clear policy on abortion given given he is now in general election campaign mode and he, as well as his team recognize is that this is an issue that could really alienate a lot of the key voting blocs that he's going for, particularly suburban women and women across the country who see this issue has not something that they want to support hello in a train. >> thank you so much for your reporting as always jump. >> as for president biden, he has west this week to campaign in key swing states out there. why? >> because he needs to >> with me now cnn's senior data reporter, harry, yet and when i say he needs to harry, what's changed? >> yeah.
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>> and i need to share this information chin with you. all right. let's take a look here. this is the biden versus trump match up. remember, biden barely one arizona back in 2021 up by well, less than a percentage, 0.1 nevada by a little bit more than two percentage points. look now where we are in the 2024 polling, joe biden's numbers to quote tony blair are weak, weak week donald trump up in the polling average in arizona by five up and nevada by five percentage points. if these poles hold, donald trump would be the first republican presidential candidate to carry this overstate since 2004 when george w bush carried out what appears to have changed in size. >> some >> of these numbers that you're looking at? yeah. what is a key? >> group that seems to have changed? how about hispanic voters write a core part of the democratic constituency normally back in 2020, joe biden carried hispanic voters in arizona by 24 points. he carried him nevada by 26 points. look now, joe biden is still leads, but these margins have shrunk significantly been cut by more than half been arizona 11 point being cut by a
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third of where he the lead was back in 2020, it's just an eight point advantage for joe biden. and this is what we have seen as well nationally, joe biden's polling numbers among blacks and hispanics have dropped significantly. and that is a big reason why. and these two states arizona and nevada, his poll numbers have become significantly how big of a reason, because you talk about these two states and you're talking about a pretty significant share of the electorate. yeah, if you >> want to find swing states where hispanics are going to make a major difference in this election, you can't find to better swing states and arizona and nevada, and nevada among likely voters who make up 23% of the electorate in arizona, 20%, none of the other swing states, those six closest states that biden won in 2020 by less than three percentage points. do they come anywhere close? georgia, michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin make up less than 10% of the vote. so that dropped that you've seen with biden among hispanic voters if they're gonna be felt anywhere, it's gonna be a nevada and arizona. and as those earlier slide showed, he
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certainly feeling it right now. so as you noted, nevada has become part of the democratic map in general to the white house, arizona, a relative newcomer if president biden war to lose both nevada and arizona this time around, what, what do you need to do? >> yeah. >> he would basically need to run the table, john. so a fight and lose this is arizona and nevada. he likely must win at least three of these four again, those six closest swing states, georgia, michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin. now, biden could do it if you want. michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin, he barely get to 270. here's the issue right now. biden seems to trailing not just in georgia, but in michigan as well. and if he leaves loses these two john, i can't find a map that would work for him so it's simple math at this point. biden's behind an arizona. he's behind in nevada. he's behind and georgia. he's behind in michigan. and if that map told ball game over, most likely donald trump wins. all right, >> so you can see what he's doing with some of these travels this week heading out west, trying to do what he can and at least in arizona and
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nevada, harriet and thank you. thank you very much for that sarah. all right. just moments ago, cnn learning the united airlines ceo, it's going to unveil new protocols after it string of recent maintenance issues that have freak patients two passengers out. the us is getting new help in cracking down on spyware this as us officials are telling cnn new government phones have been targeted, plus a brand new documentary taking a deep look into stormy daniels chaotic battle against donald trump will have all that head vegas the story of sin city. sunday at ten on cnn >> how long have you been tracking our cars value with covana? >> just like seven months. should we sell it? we hold hold silver vans are going for more right now. should we are low mileage is paying off. you think we should depreciations really heating up we just did
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airlines ceo is stressing safety after five in-flight >> incidents, justice month, including a wheel falling off. we all remember an aircraft that was in flight, a panel missing from the fuselage and flames shooting out from an engine of one of the planes in letters to customers scott kirby says, the incidents are a reminder of the importance of safety and they have sharpened their focus. cnn's pete muntean has more on this. what else is the ceo telling customers who are really concerned after seeing all of these things happened. so in succession no doubt that united airlines is it a bad couple of weeks of headlines, but now it's ceo is sending this message to all of the airline's customers, insisting that the >> airline is safe and also laying out new changes that the airline is making. there had been at least five in incidents involving united airlines. this past month. and in this new message, united airlines ceo scott kirby says, while all these incidents are unrelated, that these incidents have the
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airlines attention and have sharpened our focus. the latest incident was on friday, united boeing 737800 landed admitted for an oregon with a belly panel missing, was first discovered by somebody on the ground when the plane pulled up to the gate, united said this did not affect the flying characteristics of the plan. so this was not known by the pilots and they did not declare an emergency. united says all of the incidents this month are under review. now, a hydraulic fluid incident traveling one of its triple 7's leaving sydney a united triple seven losing that. we'll on takeoff from san francisco as 737 max eight skidding off the runway in houston. here's what the airlines doing. it's adding an extra day of pilot training starting in may. it's also redesigning training for new hire. mechanics united says it will so put more resources into managing its parts supplier network because the question investigators or want to know is whether or not some of these incidents are maintenance induced. kirby says the
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incidence are reminders of the importance of safety, but no doubt that customers have taken note the good news here, sarah, nobody was hurt in any of these incidents. >> i think we're all curious. is this a consequence of us just paying more attention to the incidents or are there actually more incidents happening here on planes? >> i think it's a little bit of both. so remember the 737 max, nine door plug blowout on alaska airlines back on january 5th, that really highlighted serious quality control issues at boeing and that is now under investigation. the other incidents like the united incidents, also the latam incident, as that flight was landing in auckland, new zealand, where passengers got hurt. those are most likely you can categorize as one-off. so the good news here is that aviation is incredibly safe in the united states. the last time there was somebody hurt or killed, excuse me, on a commercial airliner in the us was back in 2018. that was a freak incident on a southwest
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airlines flight when a fan blade came off one of the engines and killed the passenger sitting next to it the last time there was a fatal crash involving a us airliner was back in 2009, the colgan air incident, which led to really significant reforms in pilot training and experience acquirement. so these incidents are not really rising to that level. most of these things happened day-to-day, but they typically don't get put up in lights. there's just a bit of a moment here where people are paying more and more attention to onboard incidents, onboard commercial flights in the us and abroad pete muntean, that explains it. thank you so much for your reporting. >> i'm john, have you got so worried your phone is listening to your conversations? us officials warn that it could be stinks for you and it has a major nine national security implications, phone-hacking is on the rise. what the biden administration is doing about today is the last day to fill out your march madness bracket. that's depending on if you count the play in games, we will tell you what you need to know to impress your friends, embarrass your enemies. and
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lawn guaranteed. it's time to trust your experts. a true green, go online today. >> my fellow citizens need to be better when you're not normal. it makes me want you to be dead. >> beaver being normal good regime streaming exclusively on macs >> america's fight to protect federal employees and us national security against spyware hacks is getting a boost. the white house says, six more countries will soon be joining their pact to crack down on phone-hacking. >> us >> officials tell scene and the new cases that they're seeing have raised serious national security concerns. cnn's sean lyngaas has this reporting is joining us now, shawn, tell us
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more about what you've learned okay. this is >> growing >> momentum, international momentum to try to tackle this very insidious issue. where in the last decade you've had an explosion of companies that are quite obscure, lurk in the shadows, operate in the shadows. uv shell companies to market spyware, which is basically malicious software that government clients often by to surveil dissidents journalists, human rights activists and has gotten a lot more attention in the last few years. and this is a sort of a turning point, if you will, because the biden administration is welcoming two countries that had a bit of a checkered, checkered past on this polin which was roiled by a scandal involving spyware wherein the new government is accusing the last government of using spyware against its political opponents. and ireland, which has host to accompany that the us treasury has sanctioned for allegedly being in the spyware business. so this is what activists are calling growing momentum to try
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to make this less of a ramp an issue where you don't have this wild west of companies that are operating the shadows and selling their software to the highest bidder, cape shawn, what made the biden administration so alarmed by all of this >> yeah, that's the key and their opening up in a new interview with cnn, with the nsc official telling cnn that basically alarm bells were ringing two years ago when the us government started to discover spiral we're on the phones of senior us diplomats. now. it's traced to diplomats working on three different continents, ten countries. and it became a counterintelligence national security risk because they, us officials suspected and their suspicions were confirmed that intelligence was being collected on some of these diplomats and that they were worried that us officials, us agencies were potentially buying the spyware from the very companies that were being used, whose tools ready being
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used against us diplomats. so it was sort of a perverted cycle there that they wanted to break and they're talking about it in more detail to cnn and they had before kate fascinating and i think ringing alarm bells is an understatement when you talk about that cycle that you were just describing and you're learning about extremely important. thank you so much john, for bringing us the reporting. john. >> right. dr. say it is a matter of life and death. republicans say it is censorship. the supreme court will decide on how far the white house can go to fight misinformation online. a fountain of lava spewing from a huge volcano. tourists forced to evacuated country's biggest tourist biden. there's no end in sight >> this is the big dam
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heavy price i'll go we're on the massachusetts coast. >> this cnn >> stormy daniels, the adult-film actress who started a fire storm in 2018 after revealing hush money payments made to her by donald trump is making headlines again, she has out with the new documentary today titled stormy she speaks out about her legal battle against donald trump and the impact it's had on her life. >> every time i stood up, i got kicked out even harder and i hit rock bottom just want to to stand up for myself. >> you'd never saw my name that didn't say porn star in front of it. because we're not considered human and won't give up because i'm telling the truth cnn's kara scannell joins me now. this is new
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documentary stormy is being released in just days after donald trump's upcoming trial and the new york hush money case involving stormy was just pushed back the timing of this interesting yes, sarah needs so this documentary is planned to be released today, and it is now released and it's you showed there. it does give this behind the scenes, look into how stormy daniels was navigating this story. you'll remember the hush money payment was made in 2017. that's all connected to donald trump's criminal trial. that what it's supposed to begin on monday, but now won't begin until april 15, but stormy daniels at that time sign this deal that was secret. this documentary now gives the behind the scenes look at how she navigated this. once it did break out into the public, just a few months later in 2018 and then became a bit of a sensation in the documentaries you show. so it kinda has some of these raw moments. it also shows some interactions that she had with her next attorney, michael lava
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naughty. he then you'll remember was convicted of stealing nearly $300,000 from daniel's and is serving a 14-year prison sentence. but so many legal entanglements here that all come together, all beginning with this payment in 2017. now, this was this documentary was coming out trump's lawyers had actually asked the judge to dismiss the case or to delay the start of the trial because of the publicity that this documentary would bring just one week before jury selection was set to begin. there were some other issues who's that trump's lawyers brought up, including a trove of documents that they've received from federal prosecutors who had brought the criminal case against michael cohen in connection with these campaign finance violations, as well as some other crimes. so they had raised that as an issue. that was the reason the judge agreed to postpone the trial until at least april 15th, and he he is going to have a hearing next week to get into some of these issues around the documents that were turned over. but all the
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publicity, all the attention was one of the reasons why trump's lawyers brought this to their attention. the previously the judge had said, do you think you're going to have less pretrial publicity in march, april, may. it's not as though that's going to go away, but certainly hey, this is one area that trump's team is focused on. they're saying that stormy daniels should not be allowed to testify in the case. she did not go before the grand jury. it's important to know, but she is on the prosecution's list, so she may be taking the stand. but as it is for now, everyone will be back in court on monday, but this trial has now been pushed off to at least east april 15th, and the judge will decide if that is going to be the date that sticks or if he will give trump's lawyers additional time to prepare their defense. sarah mean, in 2018, it was the biggest story out there for many, many months. kara scannell. thank you so much for your reporting. john so this morning, a debate about one, a bloodbath is really a bloodbath and whether donald trump meant it in a nice way,
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>> he said in a speech over the weekend in this morning, he's on his social media platform saying he was only talking about a bloodbath in the auto industry free if he is not elected, but it is important to say it wasn't the only thing he said would happen if he's not elected. listen >> if this lecture, if this election isn't one, i'm not sure that you'll ever have another election in this country. >> are with us now cnn senior political analyst and senior editor with the atlantic. ron brownstein and rob. what i want to talk about here is there's a discussion about what he said, what he meant, what probably matters most people is what he will do if he's elected president again and you've got a new article out in the the atlantic where you have this discussion. >> yeah, >> look, i mean donald trump across a broad range of issues is running on a much more militant agenda that he ran on 16 or 20. and when you look at the civil liberties and civil rights area, personal freedoms, they really are three broad buckets where he is pursuing
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potentially major changes in the way americans live their lives. one, he's talking openly about weaponizing federal law enforcement to go after his political enemies to, he's talking about nationalizing many of the rights rollbacks that have been underway in the red states to impose them on blue states as well, bans on transgender, gender, conforming care for minors for transgender kids. national abortion ban their republicans in the house who had proposed national aversions of the don't say gay laws and some of the voting rights restrictions and then the excuse me, the third bucket which may be the most controversial of all, is about using federal force in blue jurisdictions. i mean, he is stephen miller has top aide on immigration, has talked in explicit detail about mass deportation internment camps for undocumented migrants in the us, and sending the national guard from red states into blue states that don't
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want to cooperate as well as trump talking about using the national guard to round up homeless or simply to fight crime in blue cities. so in all of these ways, we are talking about a major change in the rights and liberties of americans potentially in a second trump term, particularly in applying the regime that is settling over red states onto people in the blue-state. and this is stuff that presumably he would do again, no matter how he described it out with words like bloodbath and whatnot policies that he is proposing or people around him are proposing. now, when it comes to the issue of migration this matters because it's something harry and i rise talking about right now, which is at right now, president biden is losing in arizona and nevada, which are two states. he 1.20, 22 states he would like take to be part of his his collection of states, right. in 2024. what do you see among the hispanic vote in those states and among these policies. >> this is one of the critical tensions i think in this election, donald trump is ahead in those states because he is running not only better than he
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did in 2020 among hispanics, there, he is running better among any republican. every is running in the mid '40s and that's what he's polling nationally. if you look at the polling carefully in nevada and arizona, joe biden is basically where he was in 2020 among white voters when he won the state, he is losing these states at the moment because of his decline among hispanic voters. now, at this point there are probably not that many of those voters who know that donald trump is talking openly about, not only for defying the border, but mass removals of people already here, complete with internment camps and the use of the national guard. and i think the question of after the culinary workers union say in nevada and phoenix and other groups spend months making hispanics. they're more aware of these policies can trump sustain the levels that he's at which he needs at the moment, to flip these states. now there's a lot of discontent with biden among hispanic voters about
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inflation. in particular. but whether he can hold an more than george w bush, more than ronald reagan among hispanic voters when more of them become aware that he's talking about the largest deportation program in american history that seems to be an unanswered question. i think this gets to the issue of what he would do. yeah. as president, not just what he's saying. and again, this is part of your atlantic piece here. deportation, you're saying deportation of people who are already here, which is a different issue for many voters than strengthening the border percent. i think it's i think it could be potentially a a very significant issue in a look opinion on immigration has moved right under under joe biden, a majority now support remain in mexico, a majority now saying polls, they support building the wall, but trump, as is his want, moves beyond where he was and he is talking about something unprecedented in american history, by the way, this goes to a core issue in this election. donald trump wants the election to be primarily, i think retrospective comparing his four years in office with
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biden's four years in office or maybe his first three years in office. first biden's four years in office and saying basically, everything was better, immigration was better, inflation was better. biden needs a prospective election many ways he needs voters to be focusing not only on what each of them have done with their time in the white house, but what each of them would do if returned to the white house. that's where he the democrats seem more vulnerability for trump than necessarily in the retrospective comparison in 20 seconds or less, what's your view on the language, on the violent language that donald trump does use. >> he always finds a way to phrase it. and so it's defensible and that there is an alpha but there is no question that he is constantly using violent language in a way that energizes his supporters and maybe sends ominous sales to the far fringe of his coat coalition. ron brownstein, always great to see you and even more specialists you in person. thank >> so it's free speech versus disinformation that is at the heart of the battle i don't right now before the supreme court, how much power should
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the federal government have in removing disinformation online. today, the justices are hearing oral arguments on just that. brian fung is tracking this for us. he joins us now, ryan what are we going to hearing from the justices? what does this get to? >> yeah. kate, this case is all about the first amendment. did the biden administration cross a line when it pressured social media companies to remove health misinformation around covid-19. and election misinformation around the 2020 elections. the case was brought by the states of missouri and louisiana in which those states argued that the biden administration violated the first amendment when it suggested to social media platforms, hey, this content violates your terms of service. you may want to consider removing it from your platforms. this is raised a lot of first amendment concerns because there is traditionally a difference between persuasion under the first amendment and coercion. and coercion is what's prohibited under the
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first amendment. the government can't force online platforms to remove content, but hypothetically can encourage the platforms to remove the content and where that line is, is what the supreme court is going to be dealing with. and the us government says, it never threatened negative consequences for platforms that didn't remove the content as they requested. >> and the ripple effects of the potential decision on this case could really be huge. >> yeah, huge for everything from including public health terrorism, and election security going forward, this is a case that could affect the 2024 elections because if the biden administration can't reach it out to social media companies to warn them of content they're seeing out there of misinformation or issues like foreign interference, then that could have a direct consequence on what americans see as they
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prepare to head to the polls this november. and that could have a huge downstream influence on not only this election but future elections as well. >> brian fung. thank you so much as oral arguments gonna be getting underway shortly, sarah all right, you can see what's happening. march madness upon us. we all know it's not just about the game on the court, but the game everyone can play. gambling, filling out those brackets as to who will win so far in the women's tournament, the number one seeds are undefeated, south carolina, caitlin clark, and the iowa hawkeyes. along with usc and texas. andy scholes is with me now to help sort out which men's teams have the best chance of winning at all. >> i >> love that we know the women's teams and that we're paying attention to them partly because of kaitlan >> oh, certainly sarah, and that the women's tournament is going to be so exciting and a lot of people gonna be filling out those brackets today as well. but i'm here to help you tried to fill at those men's
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brackets because there are some trends that will really help you could potentially zone in on who's going to win this tournament. you, we all like picking the upsets in the first couple of rounds, but it's really if you want to win your pool, it's about trying to pick that champion and there's a stat that could really have to do. it's called ken palm. it measures the team's offensive and deepens of efficiency and every single champions since 2002 has been taught 40 offense and top 22 in defense. and who are the teams have qualified for that right now, we got houston yukon produ auburn arizona, tennessee, north carolina, and marquette and either some good teams missing here. why? well, look, creighton, they according to ken palm they couldn't win right now because they're just not good enough defensively. i always say one of the big 12, but offensively, they can't win. same goes for kentucky defensively. duke is close, but according to the last 22 years and ken palm, they would not win the national championship this year. now some other trends to look at. the last 19 champions have been in the top 12 in the week six ap poll. you look at this, who's not there that we showed you just a second ago, auburn. so you can
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basically cross them off. now, yukon there, the top overall see though the overwhelming favorite to win the tournament this year. but it is super hard to win back-to-back national titles and college basketball since 1974, only duke in the '90s and florida in the mid 2000s, or able to pull it off. it's very hard to do. dan hurley and the huskies can do it, but it's not going to be easy now if you lost your first conference tournament game no team has ever done that and gone on to win the national title. tennessee did that. so you can basically across them off as well. and i always like to show this map to that red line right down the middle. >> no team since since 1997, i should say, every single champion has come from east of that line. who's on the wrong side of that line arizona. so let's bring up that graphic a second ago. arizona's crossed off. they're on the wrong side of line. tennessee lost their confidence first conference hello game cross them off abrera was not net. week six, paul, i'm crossing them off. i'm only crossing off yukon just for the sole fact that is super hard to win back-to-back national titles in college basketball. so who should you
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paypal, houston, purdue, north carolina. they're all one seats and you look at this one seeds have 126 it's time since 1979, it is certainly the safest bet. and sarah, if you perhaps went to school at one of those ones seeds, the university of houston. >> you're obligated to take them in your that's your love go with, but just some pointers there when you're helping fill out your bracket, they're due on thursday before the game start at noon. >> we'll have to sit down and talk about it, but i do like one thing that you did, andy and i'm i'm going to say this to you, john did you notice the back-to-back winners, the champion back-to-back, where the university of florida, it should be noted is one of the two al-hussein. unfortunately, they're nowhere in the horse. this year, but their goddess, the thank you. you did that for me and i appreciated andy jaw and i am going to clip and save that appeal right there because i need to sit down with what andy scholes. >> yeah. he just told us how to
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do it. how do we that was the most useful information that we may get this morning, eddie, she'll stay here agrarian much for that. really appreciated it all right. >> gang >> violence, gripping a nation, the us state department says, dozens of americans have now been airlifted did the safety and then just in the interview that blew up a deal, don lemon just posted his conversation with elon musk. we've got brand new sound from the tenth since discussion >> we're here to get your side of the story. >> why do we keep ending up here? >> you can't write this stuff. >> you're night, it's states of scandal with jake tapper sunday at nine on cnn >> it's a new de one were are shared values propel us towards a more i should future through august, of partnership built upon cutting-edge american, australian, and british technologies will develop state-of-the-art next generation that builds something stronger together
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securing dictated peace and prosperity for america and our allies we are going forward and stay together >> the edge and rash of moderate to severe eczema disrupts my skin night and day. despite treatment, it's still not under control but now i have revoke run voc is a once-daily pill that reduces the itch and helps clear the rash of eczema fast some are invoked. patients felt signals if it can interleave as early as two days. some achieved dramatic skin clearance as early as two weeks. and many taking invoke saw clear are almost clear skin in run vote can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb series infections in blood clots, some fatal cancers including lymphoma and skin heart attack, stroke, >> and gi tears occurred people 50 and older with a heart disease risk factor have an increased risk of death, serious allergic reactions can occur tell your dr. if you are may become pregnant help heal your painful skin disrupts the
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>> to be a headliner wars vegas guess what i wanna do >> they have the biggest entertainers in america >> vegas is always marketed. it's done hold on. it's not enough. >> and the only way you find out what you can do is if you do it >> unlike anywhere else in the world, vegas the story of sin city sunday at ten on cnn knew this morning we are learning that north >> korea launched a pair of suspected did ballistic
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missiles off of its east coast. the united states has condemned this mesial launch. it comes as us secretary of state antony blinken is in south korea, attend the third summit for democracy the family of the late supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg is demanding her name be removed from an award after it was given to tesla ceo elon musk and rupert murdoch jim ginsburg called the awards a desecration. it says his mother would be appalling the two that obviously stand out here are elon musk and rupert murdoch when you think of trying to create a more just society, which of course principles mom's ultimate goal. those are probably about the last names that would come to mind >> after weeks of spring-like warmth, more than half of the us population will get hit with temperatures at or below freezing singh, this week, the majority of these folks will be with us along the eastern coast
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of the united states. and sarah, last hour i mentioned that i was hoping the cold weather would to kill the weeds with an s in my lawn, a viewer said it sounded like i was saying it would kill the weed growing in my law and that is something completely different. i met the weeds grow all right. okay. i will take that into consideration, john right now, a volcano erupting and iceland spewing ash and lava into the air. just look at those pictures. a geophysicist who survey the eruption over the weekend says it's the most powerful so far, officials have ordered evacuations and a nearby town. and at the famous blue lagoon, despite the eruption, iceland's airport remains unaffected and it's operating as usual. joining us now is christopher hamilton, planetary volcanologist and associate professor at the university of arizona's lunar and planetary terry laboratory christopher, thank you so much
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for joining us. you've been to this particular volcano volcanic eruption. can you just give us some sense of what it's like to be there, what you see, because the pictures are absolutely beautiful, knowing that they can be very destructive as well. >> yeah. well, today would be a horrible day there. it's close to freezing, rainy, and high winds. this area, although it's really close to reykjavik, is actually very, very remote and largely uninhabited. and the first few years of the eruption took place in a part where there were no people, wasn't directly affecting the town and everybody had a fantastic show that has changed since december when the eruption site moved much closer to the town of grindavik. it's very active fishing port, very important site. and this has really changed the overall character. so it's absolutely beautiful when it's erupting, it's in this absolutely wild and rugged area. but now it's actually affecting a town infrastructure that's a concern to the entire country. >> there was an emergency
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called by authorities there i do want to ask you about whether or not science is getting closer or is in a good place to try to predict when these happen. because i think there have been three eruptions the past four months yeah the science is actually really getting much better for being able to understand the inflation. so basically the whole area is a part of the mid-atlantic ridge, which is moving on to this peninsula. and the areas i was breathing is magma comes into it and you can see that from satellites and from gps so people have a really good idea of when the ground is swelling. but what's happened is that the area is and so cracked with hundreds of thousands of earthquakes since 2021, that now it's kind of leaky. >> so >> before you can think of a magma chamber is like a pressurised caygle when you tap it, you get a really high discharge rate and the beginning and then it wanes but now that cake is really cracked with all these different eruptions. and so the warning time is getting to be much shorter. and in fact, for this most recent episode, the
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largest of the episodes we've seen since december. and in fact, during the entire span of the eruption, that was very little warnings. so it's a change in character we can predict it but not to the hour, but we can certainly see it to when particular days that are going to be at risk. >> i think you've talked about how many earthquakes you said 100 of thousands of earthquakes have happened since 2021. were there quite a few. do you see quite a few before you start seeing this eruption is an indicator? >> yeah, that's very good, good point so in 2021, there were actually 40,000 earthquakes in february for about months leading up to the eruption. and everybody in the country in reykjavik and going was feeling good and knowing that something was changing so the earthquakes do typically continue up until the last moment when the magma gets so close to the surface that from there it just burst through and a single event. but seismicity is a major indicator for the movement of magma as it's traveling towards the surface what do you see? what
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do you smell? what do you hear when you are standing close enough to experience not putting yourself in danger, but close enough to experience this kind of eruption. here so these are called the fuselage eruptions. so they're dominated by lava flows that are being in placed and they're moving over the ground and they're radiating a lot of heat. if you were to look at them, they're really glowing red and an orange would be like opening an oven. you can just feel your skin begin to dry. and there's also in this area a lot of hamas and vegetation that begins to burn a little bit last summer, they were referring to it as muster those burning sort of mordor like area. and so some of the smoke can be an issue and in the instance here, if the eruption does make it to the sv, that's of general soft flow character of the lava could dramatically change with interaction with seawater. and really the main ones are, when you begin to get
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too hot lava interacting with seawater, it can produce a chlorine gas, which is extremely nauseous, even hydrofluoric acids. so while some of these eruptions are just beautiful to be able to sit back and watch if it does become an ocean entry and it's really just a few hundred meters away from potentially getting to ocean entry points. then they character would change and be very dangerous >> how quickly is the lava moving? because everyone watches sometimes it's just extremely slow as it gets closer and closer to civilization. but in this case the closest town is it is in danger. how quickly is it moving? do you have some sense of that >> yeah. so as i mentioned, these magma chambers are a bit like these cakes. and so in the beginning you're going to get a huge approach. many, many kilometers or miles of fischer just all opening and a curtain of fire called a love what fountain. and when that love is very, very hard, it's very fluid. it's moving almost like
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water or oil at those temperatures a little bit more viscous, but it very, very fast once it cools and starts to get a skin on it a little bit of a across the rule, focus into channels and move more slowly but one way to look at these flows is that as long as you keep the tap going, it, the flows are going to continue to march forward. it's a little bit like a zombie slow moving and eventually just continuing to march in march, in march. and so as long as the eruption keeps going, the lava keeps going to so very fast in the beginning. and then slowing down with the sort of relentless march. >> christopher hampton, i have to tell you, i wish i would've known that the title volcanologist existed when i was in college because that is a really cool job. thank you so much for geeking out with us this morning. appreciate your time >> thank you. sarah has led to find just this morning, the first state department charter flight evacuating us citizens from haiti has landed in florida on board more than 30 americans who were trying to escape the castle skating gang.
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gang violence has been gripping haiti right now. cnn is the first major news network in haiti since this all began, cnn's david culver has been in port-au-prince for us where police in the area are now relying on community vigilantes to help them combat the gangs >> so police stations like this one here in port-au-prince, our main targets for gang. they feel like as soon as they can get hold of a stage in like this, they can then take sees, you take control of much of the community, and they've tried coming after this one many of times reinforcements have been built up not only because of the police, but because of the community they'd go barricades all around here for the police station to function. properly. they need to allies on the community and to have these almost vigilantes building a lot of the barricades to keep out any gang members >> so haitians are quickly becoming refugees in their own
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city. in their own country, hundreds of thousands of people have already been displaced by the violence. some even tried to take shelter in schools. now this was a school here in port-au-prince, haiti. and every single classroom, if we pass like this one here it is now becoming dorm room. essentially. >> there are dozens if not >> hundreds of people who have made this a recent campsite. and you can see a lot of them are following surrounded are curious what we're doing because for them it's a distraction really. and you talk to a lot of these folks and they've come here in the past couple of weeks because of the just a recent surge in violence and gangs taking more and more territory here the city. but these folks have also been on the run from their own homes for months if not years. >> she just got this small bag of ice and she's gonna cook it up for seven them. tell me they don't know where their next meal is going to be. one little
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girl, eight years old, saying she goes to bet every single night hungry. >> and a >> lot of that is because in the past two weeks, in particular, supply lines, especially for a programs of international aid the world our ram had been severed those organizations are trying desperately to get to them. it's not just about getting into port-au-prince, it's been about having them into communities like this. the challenges logistically are immense. they're dealing with this at a level that they have not faced prior. i mean, it's unprecedented. and the pain sensitive, the kid's eyes and their parents who feel helpless at this point but for them it's about pushing forward i asked one woman how you get up every day move ahead with the grace of god admitted in the same breath that sometimes they feel they'd be better off dead than living david culver, cnn what it prints
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