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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  June 13, 2024 6:00am-7:01am PDT

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big announcement coming from president biden's overseas trip. a new rfc in a new central starts now just in ukraine front ends center at the g7 summit in italy. and before he even arrived, ukrainian president zelenskyy said, he's ready to sign off on new security agreements with the united states and japan in just moments, donald trump returns to the nation's capital to meet with gop lawmakers and his vice presidential contenders on capitol hill. what could happen as he makes his very first visit? back to the capital as a certainty, capitol hill, as a convicted felon and making a second bid for the white house plus body armor and a lieu of ammunition, a traffic stop in new york city by the nypd leads to a disturbing discovery. what it means just ahead, i'm sarah
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side. you're john berman and kate bolduan. this cnn news central any moment now, donald trump is set to arrive on capitol hill to rally support among republican lawmakers for his campaign at the very same time, president biden is getting get to meet with ukrainian president zelenskyy to show his support on the sidelines of the g7 summit in italy biden and zelenskyy expected to speak to reporters this morning as world leaders gathered, there are getting ready to announce a fifth the billion-dollar loan for ukraine that biden is now hoping sends a message to russia and show you some live pictures we've seen live pictures of the ukrainian president meeting with some of the world leaders gathered there and now split-screen to donald trump he's sitting down with republican lawmakers friend and some reluctant allies behind closed doors, seen as a robertson is in italy.
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>> kristen holmes in washington. christina want to start with you. you've been talking to trump's team and lawmakers. what what are you expecting to happen today? >> yeah, kyiv will look, this is the first time the former president and has had this kind of meeting with republican lawmakers, sends one becoming the presumptive nominee and two, since becoming a convicted felon. and on the trump side, they're really saying that they want this to be about quote, unquote, unity, rallying the troops behind the former president, getting them their messaging in sync ahead of what is likely to be a very contentious several months leading up to november. now we are told that he is expected to talk about one, how he plans to win, how to beat biden in november, but to what? 2025 agenda would possibly look like talking about his policies is proposals, immigration and the border economy, all the things that we hear him talk about regularly on the campaign trail, on the lawmaker side, it sounds as though they are in line with what donald trump is going to say. they want some
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kind of conversation around unity, bringing the party together. that's been very fractured in recent months, particularly on the house side over speaker johnson before that, of course speaker mccarthy, but they're also looking for some kind of insight into what they can be doing to lay the groundwork on the hill, on the legislative side ahead of november, if donald trump is going to win to kind of prep for that kind of thing to pass those laws, or at least get the ball rolling on that. now, he is meeting with house republicans and center polygons separately. we expect a very different vibe, so to speak, house republicans have described this as likely to be more of a pep rally people were talking about wearing their donald trump clothing on the senate side. he's gonna be graded by some of his biggest skeptics including senator mitch mcconnell, the two of them have not spoken since january 6, the election was certified for biden. they have had no love lost between them. trump is routinely insulting mcconnell. now mcconnell has endorsed donald trump, but again the two have not spoken. that's going to be balanced
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out though by the fact as you mentioned, some of those potential vp contenders will be in the room to provide him that kind of pep talk like atmosphere, gate pep talk, rally, all of the above. >> zero, they're saying coming out, that's for sure. thanks. presence of nick. soon we're also going to see in italy, we're going to see president biden with ukrainian, with ukrainian president, as i mentioned, what do these coming announcements? of new support for ukraine, what does it mean for ukraine this means some consistency, uncertainty going forward the assurances that we're going to hear the bilateral announcement that will come later today that we're expecting between president biden and president zelenskyy will be those security promises that president zelenskyy was looking for last year from nato. >> he of course wanted the maximum. he wanted the article five effective membership of nader than an attack on one
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including ukraine would be an attack on all everyone would come to his defense. >> what is getting is a series 32. >> and this is the 15th in this series of bilateral security agreements with different countries. this is the one where president biden. this doesn't have a fixed financial amount attached to it, but in essence it says, if ukraine is attacked by russia in the future after in a scenario where this war, war has ended, is attacked in the future there within 24 hours. there will be a response. it we'll be an issue where the united states is has ukraine's back. that's over and above all the military humanitarian financial support they're getting at the moment. the multilateral deal that's on the table right now and we've seen president zelenskyy sitting there that beautiful large olive wood table with the g7 leaders. it's olive wood because that's a staple in this farming community in the
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southeast of italy here, olive trees are absolutely everywhere. so there's sitting around this large olive wood table. and zelenskyy hopes to hear how these g7 leaders does have agreed the finances for a unique way to loan $50 billion to ukraine. they're planning to use those 300 billion worth of frozen russian assets, use the profits off of that to lend the money to ukraine the underwriting of it, if you will, ridden, it seems between the united states and the european union, the questions go like this. what happens if ukraine defaults who carries the canon pays the money? and of course, whereas does the extra money come from if the profits from the 300 billion don't make the 50 billion total. so these are the bits that we understand are being ironed out and should be broadly speaking agree. and some terms today all right.
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>> much more to come from italy today, nick, thank you so much. kristen holmes in washington on the donald trump front for sure. john. all right. with us now cnn global affairs analyst kim dozer, also with a cnn political and national security analysts david saying, or who i believe is in italy for these meetings, david, let me start with you. there's this security agreement between the united states and ukraine. now a ten year security agreement, but to what extent is this a ten year contract with a huge opt-out clause in january of 2025. if donald trump is elected oh it's. got several opt-out clauses john and the possibility of president trump's election is just one of them. >> so this is basically an executive agreement. it's made between president zelenskyy and president biden. and the us hopes that there will be similar for agreements with each of the other g phi g7
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members. and right now, as presence linskey is sitting with of course those leaders and he's going to be hearing about this the problem is this an executive agreement can be undone by another president. the next ex-president. >> think of the 2015 nuclear agreement with iran, which was then undone by president trump in 2018 the second problem is that there is no dollar amount attached to this agreement. payment and there won't be for the rest of the year because congress has, after a long debate, already given $61 billion so they'd be up for more money next year. and so what he's getting is basically an agreement in principle with no amount of cash and no particular commitment of what kind of response the us would bring if there was a second large invasion came. i'm
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looking at pictures right now of the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy sitting around that table at the g7 and you go around that table and look who's their uk prime minister, rishi sunak. good chance he's not prime minister in six weeks or so. emmanuel macron from france, there's an election there. he'll still be in power, but his political party could lose everything. olaf scholz right there on the left from germany. he just suffered a huge sets setback there. >> so if you're zelenskyy looking around that room you know, how secure do you feel that the promises you're getting and the people you're talking to will have any juice luck if here's the landscape, you're worried. >> if you're putin sitting in moscow, you're sitting there saying uh-huh. let's see if you all are going to be there next year. >> all of these deals can be undone on by this rise in anti-democratic authoritarian leading and in some cases, pro russia parties that just one in the eu elections.
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>> and i just came back from a couple of reporting trips in the baltics and the caucuses. and the fears that i hear among the european politics missions. i spoke to an opposition politicians who are fighting for democracy is that slowly through threat of force disinformation, and also the price that europeans are paying in their economies for higher prices because of sanctions against russia that putin is winning by degrees whereas the us is still in some ways dragging its feet, not getting enough of the weapons to ukraine fast enough to make a difference before you've got this resurgent of authoritarian governments across europe president bind davis sitting at that table, how closely are these other countries and other leaders watching the us election wash watching what's happening here, looking forward to two weeks from now where there's this debate everyone i
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spoke to is fearful of a trump. second administration. >> they were quizzing me everywhere i went how close do you think it is a what do you think it will mean? >> we'll he really be for russia? people i spoke to in armenia are worried that in order to do a deal with putin, to get putin out of ukraine, that trump mike say, hey, just take our media. it's on your border you've long wanted to reassert power there so it's a real fear and it's something that they're spending a lot of sleepless nights planning for. meanwhile, there also refreshing their trump administration address books, reaching out to the people who potentially might come back into the white house, just in case david sandi or i thought i lost you there for a second. how much in terms of foreign policy does the biden administration think it might be able to get done in the remaining months of this term
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well i think. >> they they think there are a few big things they can do. one of them you're likely to see later on today, which is going to be resolving the issue of what to do with the 300 billion in russian assets that the russians somewhat inexplicably john left in western institutions, financial institutions, before they did the invasion and so the formula that they seem likely to come up with is that the us and some of its allies will issue a $50 billion loan immediately to the ukrainian. so they'll get the money right away and it would be repaid from the interest on that. those frozen assets, they basically put that into some inspiring accounts that would go repay the loan that would be a difficult thing for president trump to undo later on. >> but the big initiative, i
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think that everyone worries about the most john is simply this. that when biden first showed up at a g7 meeting when he was newly elected. it was in britain. he basically said, we're back alliances are back and today, i think as everyone sits around that table, they are wondering will these three or four years of the biden present? president, see be the blip in which alliances came back for a little while where did they come back on a sustained basis? and that's really the major foreign policy the division between president trump and our foreign president trump and president biden david sanger. >> great to see you. kim dozer as always. thank you so much. sarah conversation, john. >> all right. coming up a scene, an exclusive with foreign georgia special prosecutor, nathan wade ahead. the question, are kaitlan collins asked that hadn't him stop the interview for a bit? plus, the nypd may have forwarded a major attack after an officer finds 1,000 rounds
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of ammunition, body armor, guns, and law enforcement style uniforms in a car what we know about the case and the suspect coming up and a state of emergency parts of south florida swamped huge downpours bringing a month's worth of rain all in just a couple of days. and it's not over yet the most anticipated moment of this election. >> and the stakes couldn't be higher hi, are the president and the former president. one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debates thursday, june 27, nine live on cnn and streaming un-backed look in the
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her from prosecuting the 2020 election interference let's case against him and his allies in the state of georgia. >> now this is coming as a former special prosecutor, nathan wade smoke exclusively to cnn for the first time since being forced to resign from the case for a romantic relationship that he had with de a willis. here's what nathan wade told cnn's kaitlan collins, when asked if he regretted his actions do i believe that my actions cause this delay? >> no, no, no, i do believe though that the timing of a personal relationship, but i had was probably bad. it was bad timing but you don't pick and choose when those things happen. they happen organically and you deal with the cities tuition as it comes. >> do you have regrets about it? >> the only thing i regret is the timing of it joining us now for marietta, georgia, where de a fani willis is expected to speak in just a few short
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hours. >> we have our nic valencia. the timing is the big issue here though. it was a big issue in the case because there was a question about whether they started this relationship much earlier than they admitted to in court papers. tell us what more you heard in that that stood out yeah. >> there's still some question marks as to whether or not they were fully truthful on the stand when they were asked about the timing of the relationship and adding to the bizarre furnace of this interview was the media consultant that interrupted a very simple question from our kaitlan collins to nathan wade. when did your relationship with fani willis begin? >> just. look at what happened when that question was asked just clarify. >> when did the romantic relationship between the two of you start? >> yeah so we get into there's been this effort to say that. okay. these these exact dates
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are are at issue and these exact dates are i'm getting i'm getting signaled here everything okay just to revisit the question was to clarify when the wrote romantic relationships started and when it ended sure. so i believe that the public has through through the testimony and other interviews, the public has a clear snapshot that this is clearly just a distraction. it is not a relevant issue in this case, and i think that we should be focusing on more of the facts the indictment in the case yeah, such a bizarre moment. >> they're the case here. the trump criminal cases currently at a standstill. of course, fani willis survived ultimately survive those disqualification
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hearings because wade stepped down. that was decision given by the trial judge really an ultimatum, but that decision from the trial judge is now being wade by the georgia court of appeals and they're not going to decide anytime soon. all but guaranteeing that this will not go to trial before the november election. now, we are expecting to hear more from fani willis later today. she's speaking at this church behind me to thousands of congregants, faith leaders from across the state. and last time she had a similar speech like this, the speech got politicized and she who was accused by trump's attorney here in georgia, steve sadow, a prejudicing potential jurors in this trial by what he called bringing up the race card, alleging that she was being attacked for her relationship with nathan wade because she was a black woman and he is a black man. i talked to a source in her inner circle and they tell me that fani willis is not expected to touch really any of these national issues talk about the case she's going to instead focus on criminal justice policy. remember, she's up for reelection this year for that seat. and fulton county. so that speech is expected to happen here in the coming hours. sarah. >> all right. nick valencia. thank you so much for all your
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reporting on this. >> john knew reporting on what donald trump will tell republicans on capitol hill his first trip there since the insurrection as he had raided by a new ad from the biden campaign. and then a man arrested in new york with a staggering arsenal as there are new concerns in the united i'd states overall rise in terror this election season, stay with cnn, with more reporters on the ground and the best political team in the business follow the voters follow the results, follow the facts, follow cnn deliveries happened order that this happens. >> sox that happened. >> he get out of their charlie's have to back at the pitch all that's happened, either with ring, learn more at rnc.com, the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love then i found a chance to let in the light,
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be ready for monday sign up for free, visit otter.ai, ai or download the app in these territories they don't come try you these enlarge this year everyone had much needed, but yeah in american saga, rigid r this morning, donald trump will be in the nation's capital meeting with house and senate republicans, including many of his vp contenders and also a
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few former outspoken opponents. >> all of whom are expected to be a rallying around him today clearly a show of force that donald trump is no doubt looking for right now. it is the first time that trump will be on capitol hill since then since january 6, and the insurrection, the biden campaign, making sure to mark that occasion, releasing a new ad today to remind voters on january 6, donald trump, lit a fire in this country, stoking the flames of division and hate. now, he's pouring gasoline. they were unbelievable budgets pledging to pardon. you extremist who tried to overthrow our government. there is nothing more sacred than our democracy, but donald trump, ready to burn it all down joining me right now, former data, democratic congressman max rows and former white house spokesman for george w bush, pete seat. >> let's talk about the meeting first and then about how biden is biden? campaign is marking it i want to read for you how the new york times put it about the goal that trump
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has kind of going into these closed-door meetings. the agenda for the meetings is not entirely clear. it campaign officials at the meetings with lawmakers would be focused on policy, on issues including the migrant crisis. one lawmaker planning to attend who was not authorized whereas to discuss the meetings said no agenda was apparent. other than mr. trump seeking to generate enthusiasm. >> what is this all about? >> well, extensively, it's about building unity and getting everyone to lock arms in support of a forward-looking agenda, right? that's what the campaign says. >> i think sounds like a talking point. you would put out however, again i wrote it. i wouldn't tell you if i did, but i think the subtext here is donald trump and he may even verbalize this is shape up or ship out, right? it is a one-way street when it comes to unity and loyalty and donald trump's republican party three and all these members are going to have to get on board with his agenda, whatever that is, come 2025, if he's elected and
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that that message will be delivered in some way, shape, or form. >> it is one way to draw the line, if you will. i mean, max, it's like show up and then show you're on the team or you are out and there's in some way kind of eliminates the the leinz that we always here, which is the, i'm just running my, i'm focused on my own race and i'm running on local issues or dodging questions and saying, i haven't seen that tweet yet. >> it's one way it's a tactic. >> so who knew donald trump would be acting like an arrogant bully look, there's one thing in the background here which is trump wants republican leadership to do everything they can, both now and into as long as it takes into the future to remove his felony convictions that is priority number one. now, what's interesting as well is that you see the republican leadership releasing an agenda for their first 100 days that they presume they will have republican power over all of
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the federal government. >> and i've actually found it shocking what they have openly said that they want to do if they can and actually be competent. >> what does well, what's shocking is, is one the blatant hypocrisy and contradiction of it. they're saying that they want to reduce the federal deficit demonstrably, while also executing a massive tax cut for the rich doubling spending on our armed forces as well as doing a whole myriad of other corporate giveaways. it's the return, the resurgence of trickle-down economics and the american people don't want anything to do with that. secondly, they talking about constantly law and order, law and order at the same time, they want to tie the hands of the attorney general and the justice department. the very signature arm of our law enforcement throughout the country. >> so yet again, it's these myriad of contradictions because they have to appease donald trump first and foremost, because they're sinc of fans to him while at the same time trying to appeal to an extremist maga base, as well
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as just what is the permanent fixture of republican politics, which is tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy contradictions though in politics though not, say in washington, not shocking. >> i will say that the ad, that the biden campaign is putting out, since you are in the business of giving democrats advice, pete marking that this is his first trip to capitol hill since january 6. and what they're putting out smart move they're going to remind voters over and over again about january 6, they're going to remind voters about all the outlandish things that donald trump has said over the years. >> but we keep looking at polls and what do polls show? the american people care about the economy. they care about inflation, they care about immigration. the biden campaign is not talking about those issues because they're losing on those issues. so they're going to campaign on what they feel they need to campaign on to try and distract from the fact that biden's policies are
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not working. >> i haven't. i i've heard from democrats that the who've been on the show to say the biden can means it needs to stop talking about the big, the big, big, big, and start talking about what impacts blue-collar workers, what impacts everyone. >> i mean, getting back to the basics, if you will. i mean, look but the donald trump's threat to democracy according to joe biden, it's how he launched his campaign in 2020, successfully is how he relaunched his reelection campaign in 2024. but to pete's point the, where the pull stand does that show that it is not resonate or people don't care? >> no, absolutely not. because if people didn't care, you want to have seen really remarkable success amongst democrats up and down the ballot over prior elections since donald trump yeah, came onto the scene really, it was only 2016 where the maga movement had a successful electorial outcomes. now the democrats can chew gum and walk at the same time, and they have
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to yeah, you got to talk about bread and butter issues people are off about prices you have to talk about that and point them to rising wage gains, unprecedented economic output and production and much better days to come with the leadership of the biden campaign. but we can't just scoff at things like democracy and the threat of fascism and authoritarianism as if they're just little side issues that that are meaningless people care about that and they've demonstrated that at the ballot box over and over again. >> it's good to see you guys. thanks for coming in because you see you too. >> so body armor, acts as 100 rounds of ammunition awaited whip the guy fawkes mask, just a few of the items the nypd discovered in a man's vehicle, new information he should about what they say he was doing a protesters arrested after they rushed onto the field at the congressional baseball game.
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the joint terrorism task force, although they do say it's too early to know if this is terror-related senior chief law enforcement. and intelligence analyst john miller has been reporting on the story since the beginning. what are you learning this morning? >> well, this morning they're conducting search warrants at a couple of locations they believe are associated with the subject, what they're looking for is the answers to all the questions you just raised? when they had him after the arrest, talking, asking about what what was the intent with an mta vast a bulletproof vest within nypd logo on it, the guns in the ammunition. they didn't get a clear answer. and then they got a request for a lawyer, which of course stops the questioning. so what they're looking forward today is, can we find a computer? can refined additional phones? can we get into his electronics and determine who is he talking to? who is in a chat room with is there a plan or a plot in one of these devices? on the other hand, there may not be any of that in their discussions with
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family members. i'm told by sources who are following this. we have a guy who's grown distant, who's been out of touch, who has been somewhat paranoid, who has been using different drugs so we don't really know what was going on in his head. >> oh, it gets to the issue of connected to or inspired by with a person like that carries out an attack. sometimes this distinction without a difference, at least for the potential victims, john, on the other side of this, how often do you get these answers? do the answer's always come in an investigation like this. >> they always come they don't always make sense since i think of two things when i look at this case, the first terrorist attack on my watch in the nypd was a individual names al thompson, who radicalized himself online because he was failing at every other aspect of his life and attacked three police officers armed uniformed police officers on the street with a hatchet splitting one of their heads open almost killing him. and he was gone down. in
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that incident. but then i think of the last incident when i was with the nypd, which was frank james, you'll remember 2022. he was riding on the subway. he led smoke grenades go and then open fire, shooting ten people. and when you went through all of his computers and all of his chats and all of his postings in his youtube he had an agenda, but it wasn't connected to anything else and it didn't make sense. and as you point out, it won't always make sense the issue with this case today is we don't know if he had a plot or a plan, but he had a car full of things to carry one out and that's a concern. where does this fit in the overall threat environment now, john, because we keep hearing for people inside the intelligence community and people who have been in the community before, that, there does seem to be a rising threat or at least rising concerns. well, there is and that's extreme by the way, if you follow the latest article in the journal foreign affairs, you have mike morale, the former deputy director of the cia, graham allison, a harvard counterterrorism expert and weapons of mass destruction
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expert, both saying, all lights are blinking red quoting from the language that was used before 911. and why are they saying that? they're saying that because counterterrorism resources have been shifted away since the end of the war in afghanistan and iraq to problems like china and russia. while the problem is expanding, groups like isis, cortisone, and think about the nine individuals from tajikistan who were arrested in the united states over the last few weeks after crossing the southern border sources are telling me that they believe those nine individuals were in touch with various isis quay facility let tasters and we're being inspired to do something here on us soil when i read that article the line that struck me was stated intentions of terrorist groups, the growing capabilities they have demonstrated in reasonable in recent successful and failed attacks the fact that several plots in the united states have been foiled point to an
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uncomfortable but simple conclusion, put simply the united states faces a serious threat of a terrorist attack in the months ahead, what they're saying is we've really got to double down and do the kinds of things we don't even think about. like working more closely with the pakistanis on isis cortisone, or even the taliban who ice scars on his fighting. >> any alarm bells do seem to be bringing john miller. thanks so much for being here. i appreciate it. >> thank god. >> chaos broke out. a national park yesterday and climate activists are now facing federal charges after storming the field at last night's congressional baseball game and washington ten capital police, they quickly jumped into action as you see arresting the protesters, the group climate defiance posted a video on social media as it was all, kind of playing out and happening, taking credit for the chaos as they are protesting the fossil fuel industry. south florida hammered for a third day of heavy the rain now 8 million people are facing the dangerous risk of flash flooding. five
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counties are under a state of emergency some areas we're looking at a month it's worth of rain coming down in just two days. a flood watch has now been extended through friday and includes miami and fort lauderdale, more than 100 flights or ready canceled out of airports in both cities. today's spacewalk for at the international space station, it has been postponed because of what is being described as a space suit discomfort issue. nasa astronauts tracy dyson and matthew dominick. they remove their suits an hour before they were expected to exit the airline. block. the mission was to remove a faulty electronics box, but now not so much clearly, nasa has not yet announced be rescheduled date for the walk. and it also has not elaborated on said discomfort issue with said space suits sara, i have discomfort issue with regular suits, so i totally get it. the pair crazy what it's a discovered to me thank you. all
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right. just ahead what doctors are finding as the world tracks a disturbing uptick in young patients being diagnosed with cancer okay, everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition, are strength and energy with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein it's really been a gift having mom live with us. but as a nurse, my training told me she needed more help than i he could provide. so a connected with the place for mom, my senior living adviser understood are unique situation. she quickly recommended communities and set up tours, a place for mom helped us get to a decision and now mom is so well cared for. >> talk to an expert senior living advisor today at no cost to your family, depicts it helps people with asthma brief
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harrys.com slash shave to claim your $7 trial. >> the leaf with jake tapper today it for on cnn a disturbing new trend, cancer cases in younger people are on the rise. >> early onset cancers defined as cancer cases diagnosed in people under 50-years-old increased global, globally by a staggering 79%, while cancer cases among people older than 50 is skewed to drop off a bet with me now, is dr. elizabeth komen. she's a medical oncologist with nyu langone health. and the author most importantly of all, in her
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head, the truth and lies. early medicine taught us it's about women's body and why it matters. i have to say it is my favorite medical book it really is, and my favorite book of the year. partly because as you know, i have just returned from a double mastectomy. this is my first de back and i wanted you here to talk us through this because so many young people are also getting cancer, which completely shatters me to think of what they have to go through. so i want to talk to you about do we know why younger people are across the world are getting cancers now? >> now this is an area of such tremendous interest in research and it's heartbreaking. we know that the rates of cancer, as you said, among young patients are rising in certain diseases, particularly breast cancer and colon cancer. it's so important that people be connected to a physician or talk to their doctor if they have any new symptoms in my field such as breast cancer over 14,000 women under the age of 40 are diagnosed with breast cancer every year, many of these women are finding their
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breast cancers themselves because they're doing self breast exams. that is exactly how i found mine. right and have been taken care of by the best doctors i can imagine it. msk, i do want to talk to you about that journey because the diagnosis is a shopper to your system. but really what has shocked me, what is really surprised me is the amount of time that you have to deal with this. this is an a. >> you know, okay. we're gonna do the surgery. we're going to do chemo and then you're good to go. it's ten years for example, of having to take for me medications, ten years and checks constant checks. can you give people an idea of what this means when you get that cancer diagnosis, especially for someone who is young, right? >> right first of all, i'm so glad to see you back and healthy and well, i know everybody here is as well. >> it's an honor to truly be here. so talking about that marathon of a diagnosis, it's really different depending on what a woman or man or anyone has really been diagnosed with. but it is a marathon and it's a
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two-fold marathon. there's the marathon of the biology of okay are you doing chemotherapy? are you doing radiation? are you doing hormone therapy? what does that look like? and when someone is first diagnosed, sometimes hearing what that plan looks like gives you those landmarks just like a marathon. where are the hills? where's the finish line? >> but the other is the psychological marathon? >> of what does it feel like to be diagnosed? what does that trauma look like? and even when you reach the finish line and maybe you've finished your surgery, there's this psychological trauma that continues and we need to make sure that when we care for patients were caring for them, their bodies, but also their soul when they're diagnosed but in the years thereafter to really integrate what is a very traumatic experience for many, many people so that they can move forward with their lives and thrive. yeah, it really fills exhausting when you when you try to game it out because i like to get things done fast, right? >> this is not that. and so it's really sort of okay. i've got to go through this and i need to try to have a healthy
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mental state while i am doing this because it just makes things worse when you feel terrible about what's going on. i do want to ask you what compelled you to write all in her head because you have so many stories really deeply personal stories from women. and what it is that stood out to you that women say to you as they're going through a really, really difficult time. >> sure. >> what my book on her head, as you know, is in part about women with cancer. but for the most part about women's health. it's an understanding that we are not small men that head to toe. we are different. we present with different diseases this says, we have different symptoms. and for so long, much of women's health care has been dismissed understudied undervalued, and misdiagnosed, and many women have been told it's all in their head. for example, 80% of autoimmune diseases are found in women. and it can take up to five years for many of these women to be diagnosed so what compelled me to write this book was yes, i take care of women and many instances in the hardest moments of their life.
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>> but it was the sacred heartbreaking stories of women feeling invalidated for things potentially even unrelated to their cancer diagnosis shame about their bodies. >> where does this come from? how do we unpack that legacy and help women get the care they really need moving forward, you really have things in there that help advocate for yourself as a patient, which is hard to do when you're standing in front of someone who's gone through i don't know, a dozen years of schooling to be in the position they are. there's a power differential and there's one story that really sticks out. i'm going to tell you which one it is. it's in the beginning of the book where a woman who was literally dying from cancer, she, she wasn't going to make it says, i'm sorry for sweating to you as she's on her last breath it just struck me. this book is so important. thank you. elizabeth common for coming in and talking about this with me. i adore you. i think you are just a wonderful asset to the world. thank thank you so much for being here and for your advocacy my pleasure. all
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right. everybody come on. come on. come on, man. so come on, john cake, jon and kate always come here. this is where you live. you can get it. let's go come on, come up from but from behind there i see you. come on, brian. where are you? brian girls up there. you never gonna make it down. come on. come on. c. okay. so our crew it's shy, not when they're telling us what to do. come on, come on, man. so don't monaco you not to shoot this. you could just leave it as a one shot and it would nobody cares come on. come on, fellas coming out here one camera, frankie lula, the day i just lock it down because just lock it down and he's hiding because i'm pretty sure he's wanted by the fbi. i just want i just want to say thank you to all of you without your kindness, sending me notes, jokes memes, all of the things flowers, just stuff for my head. not drugs, just like
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things to lie on pillows and things had enough of those. he's concerned it's like, wait, i sent you but this crew i would put up against anybody anywhere yet. yeah. you anybody any where they are the best people in this world to work with. and i am for one so grateful for all all, but even you philly, all of you. >> sometimes this question and to the crew in atlanta. thank you. thank you. thank you for all that you have done. i had flowers. i walked in this morning, my my room smelled really good. it doesn't always because there's a lot of shoes in their apologies but this has been the hardest time in my life. and you have made it so much better. so thank you. thank you to you all. >> i'm proud of you, sir. >> you're easy to yeah. >> you're so proud. >> thank you for joining us thanks so much one, reading
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sabbath yeah, that's not good happened huge things happen happened there with three, learn more at rnc.com. >> if you have chronic kidney disease, you can read the risk of kidney failure with parse sega because they're places you'd like to be for seeker can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections and low blood sugar a rare life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur, stopped taking four sika and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of disinfection and allergic reaction ketoacidosis we had to take our old gas heating that was a huge project. >> i was so overwhelmed because i started contacting people off of anjie to work with people that knew what they were doing. it was a game and changer. >> get started today at andy.com it st. jude.
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>> we don't care who cures cancer. we just need to advance the cure the heart of st. jude is to take care of children with catastrophic diseases and to advance our curates but we need to be able to do that for everyone it's a bold initiative to try and bump curates all around the world. but we should, it is our commitment honestly, i was scared when i was told age-related macular degeneration could jeopardize my vision great. >> one more thing to worry about. >> it was all too hard to deal with in the beginning, but making a plan with my doctors to add present vision was easy preservation, a ready tube contains the exact any i recommended clinically proven nutrient formula to help reduce the risk of moderate to advanced amd progression. thanks, depressor vision. i feel b1806 510200,
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