tv CNN News Central CNNW June 17, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT
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they don't have to be go to facet.com to get your free score today. >> the leaf with jake tapper to today had four on cnn closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelial victims call now $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> you may be entitled to a portion of that money. all we 8085920400. that' with idential here on cnn, joe biden is hitting donald trump hard, criminal and a new ad while trump is plotting his path forward meeting with house speaker mike johnson to see what they can do to hold the house. >> and they use that power if trump wins back the white house and with summer is still three days away, the oppressed so
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heat wave is smothering a us humidity, driving the heat index into the triple digits. >> and this could be just the beginning of a brutally hot summer for americans and a new study suggesting the looming threat of an earthquake and tsunami. and the northwestern us of a size rarely seen on this planet and science contests are warning no one is ready. >> okay, we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central right now, speaker mike johnson is meeting with former president trump at mar-a-lago. >> the two liters said to be working out their game plans as trump tries to win back the white house and republicans tried to keep control of the house of representatives this is happening just days after trump held strategy talks with republicans in washington, the former president's first trip
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to capitol hill since the january 6 attack, we've seen it and selena train with us now to be a fly on the wall in this meeting, collina exactly luck. >> i mean, it does come just days after donald trump was in dc meeting with house and senate republicans and the big goal for that was unity. and so today i'm told the big goal is we need to stay on message and we need to get the right candidates elected. now, remember, speaker johnson has a very slim majority in the house and it's proven difficult. it's been very hard for him to get some notches, key priorities passed in the house, but also the general standard type of procedure packages as well. and so this goal benefit to this meeting, i should say, benefits both donald trump, but also how speaker mike johnson and richard hudson, the chairman of the national republican congressional committee, and look donald trump in the past has in his endorsements have carried a lot
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of weight. we know that many of the people he's endorsed have gone on to win their primaries. however in 2022, many of those people, even though they won their primaries, ultimately lost when it counted on election day. and donald trump since then has really had fewer endorsements from my conversations with trump's team, they argue that they really do not i want to be putting their weight behind people that they don't think it can win. so what i was told this meeting is about is really trying to get on the same page about who to endorse him as well what the messaging should look like. ours they look ahead to november now the other part of this that i find really interesting is donald trump and mike johnson have grown a relationship over the past few months as he become speaker. and recently after donald trump's indict are not unindicted excuse me, his guilty verdict in his manhattan trial and 34 counts of falsifying business records. trump called mike johnson and complain to him about how he wants republic blinken's in congress to be doing more to wage war on democrats. and in order to do that, he needs more
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republicans in his majority. and so that's part of all of this as well. >> all right. we'll have to see what comes out of this, but it's a fascinating time, alaina, thank you for the report for us. >> ten days before the first biden trump debate, right here on cnn, the biden campaign is going after trump for the first time one of their ads is calling the former president a convicted criminal, listing is 34 felony counts and other court defeats all to try and make a contrast that the biden campaign is hoping we'll win over voters. here's one part of that, 30 clip this election is between a convicted criminal who's only out for himself at a president who's fighting for your family let's take you to the white house now with cnn senior white house reporter kevin lib tax. so kevin 50 million spent on airing this ad where exactly is it going to be seen? >> yeah, it's in all of the battleground states according to the biden campaign. and you
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know, i think the timing is very intentional ten days before this cnn debate as the biden campaign really works to build up that contrast with former president trump. you really can't imagine a sharper way of making that contrast than in an ad like this. you know, really going aggressively against the former president's legal issues, showing his mug shot not really kind of ticking through the felony counts, the accusations of sexual assault, the accusations of fraud, really trying to frame this as a choice for voters at the end of the de, the biden campaign really views this summer as the best chance for them to put that choice in front of voters into their living rooms through these tellers provision ads for so long, there had been this debate among democrats about how aggressively to go after president trump's legal issues. president and biden had seemed at points reticent to talk about them. certainly as the trial was unfolding, very wary of stepping over that line
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of ethics. this ad i think answers some of those questions the campaign very much leaning into this effort to brand president trump a felon, to brand him a criminal. this is backed up by $50 million. that's part of this larger battleground state add by really putting to use that cash advantage that the biden campaign has been enjoying. for so long. president biden really trying to increase that advantage over the weekend at the fundraiser in los angeles with president obama, with george clooney the biden campaign says that raised $30 million. that's a record for any democratic candidate ever. so really giving you a sense of how much a time and effort they're putting in and to the campaign war chest. all with the effort of trying to put biden and trump that contrast that choice in front of voters. now, the trump campaign in did respond to this ad. they said that the contrast between president trump strength and success versus crooked joe biden's weakness, failures, and dishonesty will be made
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clear on the debate stage next week but certainly, i think what you're seeing here is the biden campaign making very clear that at the debate on the airwaves, and certainly in the months for the election, they're going to make very clear where president trump's legal status stamps boris low tack life for us from the whitehouse brown let's talk more now with cnn senior data reporter harry enten. >> all right, harry, what does the number show when it comes to trump's support? with black voters yeah, this is a block that donald trump is going after. >> and if you look at where the poles stan now versus four years ago, you just see a significant change. all right, so go back to 2020 among black voters had pulls at this point, joe biden had 86% of the vote. donald trump had 7% of the vote look at where we stand now. yes. joe biden, still ahead here by a significant margin but trump has closed the margin also significantly his support, 7% four years ago at this point, look at that. he's
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troubled at each triple that up to 21%. now joe biden from 86% to 70%. another way to look at that is the margin. it was 79 points at this 0.4 years ago, right now, it's at 49 points, a shrinking of the margin of 30 percentage points. that is a tremendous shift. briana that sure is. all right. what is the makeup of voters who might consider flipping from biden to trump? >> all right so. you know, i love digging into the cross tab, so we have the top line here among black voters. but let's dig a little bit deeper. and this really just gives you an indication of where this black support from dot for donald trump is coming from. all right. if you look at black voters at the age of 50 or older, this is the margin bar in verses trump four years ago at this point, biden was up by 83 points all right. that's shrunk a little bit, a little bit. >> it's down to 74 points now, but nothing massive, nothing major here. >> this is nine points. but look among black voters under the age of 50, bianna, oh my
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goodness, gracious. it was at points at this 0.4 years ago, look of where that margin is now et just 37 points. that is a shrinking of the margin of more than half i said earlier on on our air that i was speechless. i still am speechless because you go years and years and years looking at numbers, looking for when there was a significant shift, when something truly changed in the electric, if this polling is anywhere close to being right? this is one of those historic moments where something we've never seen happen before, at least in our lifetimes, is happening. black voters under the age of 50 are leaving joe biden, the democratic party. and while he's still leads, that lead is significantly, significantly smaller than it was just four years ago. >> what happens here when you put a third-party candidate in the mix yeah. >> all right. so let's put a third party candidate in the mix and robert f. kennedy jr. all right. this isn't a battleground states, arizona, georgia, michigan, nevada, pennsylvania, wisconsin. i got all six of those is out pretty quickly. binds up 63% to 23%.
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so somewhat similar to what we're seeing now nationally, take a look though what happens when you add rfk junior and he gets 11% of the vote trump drops, but just by nine points, look at this. biden dropped by 14 points em more than that lock. >> here he, just gets 49% of the vote, less than a majority of the vote for a democratic candidate among black voters, truth is briana. i've never seen anything quite like it yeah it's really stunning to look at the poles we'll have to see how this plays out. i know you're waiting for that. harry. thank you so much. we appreciate it. thank you. still become a heat wave, not seen in decades, is sending temperatures well into the 90s and higher for more than half the us pirate relation plus this our president biden, is hosting nato secretary general at the white house, at the forefront, natalist role in ukraine. >> and later how students at middle school in houston have to dodge trains just to get to school. we have those stories and much more coming up on cnn
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news central debate in america, as biden and trump meet and only cnn has complete coverage with unrivaled access and exclusive ria post a bag analysis follows cnn for every countless moment, followed debate night in america begins june 27 at seven trains painted sense, what isn't on this? trains ease the power of del ai and to see hundreds of miles of track clearing the way you
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crisis. or at my goal, obviously this is not the first conversation we've had about this. it's sadly not going to be the last this heat wave in the northeast, the great lakes could be the longest in 30 years. so about a generation. is this what summer is going to look like from now on yeah, hi, brianna. >> it's good to be with you. and unfortunately, yes. >> this is a glimpse of not only what our future will look like, but in fact, it will look quite a bit worse than this. >> we will see more widespread and hotter and longer lasting heatwaves in the future if we continue to heat up the planet. and so all of this gets worse if we continue pumping carbon pollution into the that ms fear and warming up the planet. that's the bad news. the good news is we can still do something about it. we have to stop making the problem worse by getting off fossil fuels how much of a health risk are we talking about here and what can people do to protect themselves? yes. so certainly
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he risked a heat waves extreme heat is sometimes called the silent killer because it may not be as dramatic as some of the other extreme weather events, tornadoes and hurricanes and wildfires that lead to human mortality. but in fact, extreme heat leads to far greater mortality, especially among the young and the older. and in particular, when nighttime temperatures stay very high and the body the human body isn't able to cool down at night and recover from that heat. that is particularly a problem. that's one of the things we're seeing with this heat wave. not only very high, high temperatures, but we're we're going to see very high, low temperatures. >> so the heat waves are colliding of course, with hurricane season and then when you look out west and earlier than usual, fire season what does this tell us about the bigger picture when it comes to climate change yeah, we're seeing record flooding down in
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florida. >> we are seeing early wildfires out west and california. we are seeing extreme heat in the midwest and the eastern united states it's an all of this is actually connected to a very persistent jet stream pattern when the jet stream sort of gets stuck in place in those big, high and low pressure centers get stuck in place. you have extreme rainfall and flooding or extreme heat and drought and wildfires day after day. and that's what we're seeing in here's a very important zero point. the fact that we're going to see more extreme heat on a warmer planet that's obvious, that's an obvious impact of human-caused warming. but one of the subtle impacts that we're just beginning to really understand is how the actual pattern of the way the planet is warming up is changing the behavior of the jet stream and leading to these very persistent extreme configurations that give us these, these unprecedented extreme weather events and the climate models that we use to
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predict the future appeared actually underestimate the impact that climate change is having and creating these very persistent jet stream patterns these extreme weather events. and so if anything, our models are actually underestimating some of the key impacts as i like to say, uncertainty isn't our friend here. >> that is so alarming. i do think that people are hearing the alarms specifically in some places where they can't get insurance, right? whether it's for flooding or it's for the threat of wildfires. there are people who are really experiencing this in a very real way. michael. so what do they need to be doing? what do we all need to be doing? going to try to reverse course here yeah, you're right. >> i mean, uninsured ability as i like to say, is the first step to uninhabited ability, right? if we can't ensure our homes against extreme wildfires and floods, then pretty soon we're losing vast amounts of area where human beings can live on a planet with a growing population patient, and growing
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demand on space, on food, on water. what can we do to make this to prevent this from getting worse? and again, that's the good news. one of the things that we've come to understand over the last decade and a half is that the warming of the surface of the planet halts fairly quickly when we bring our carbon emissions to zero. and so there's a very direct and immediate impact of our effort to decarbonize our economy. now here's the thing we've got to bring carbon emissions down by about 50% over the next decade and down to zero within a couple couple of decades. if we're going to prevent the warming, the planet from warming beyond roughly three degrees fahrenheit, where we'll see far worse consequences of climate change. and so, as i like to say, there is urgency, but there is agency. it's not too late for us to act yeah. >> we just have to hear those alarms and they are going off very loudly. michael mann, always great to have you. thank you so much thank you. boris we
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want to zero in on one of those fires burning out west, hundreds of people in southern california are forced to evacuate because of a raging wildfires, just about an hour north of los angeles. >> dry brush and fierce gusty winds are fueling the post fire that erupted saturday in the city of gorman it scorch more than 15,000 acres and right now, it's only about 8% contained. >> cnn national correspondent camila, but now is watching the fire-fighting efforts and give me love this morning, you felt some of those 70 mile an hour winds that are fueling the post it's fire. >> how we're conditions where you are right now well, look at least i can sand. >> it was hard to sand. i couldn't even see earlier in the day, but now i can actually be here, but you're still seeing a lot of the wind and look, it's not about me, it's about those guys and women back there because these firefighters had been here 24/7 evan and these wind conditions
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were making it really difficult for them. and so what we're seeing is a continuous effort here on the ground to get all of these hot spots at cleared out and you're have them working with the chainsaws with hand tools they brought in the hose earlier. and so you're seeing these efforts on the ground, but you're also seeing the efforts in the air. we tried getting close to the fire line just a few moments ago and it's impossible essentially to get in there. but some of these firefighters are hiking up the mountain to get to that fire line into continued you battling these flames, you guys were just talking about climate change. what happened in this area is that we had so much rain in california over couple of years that a lot of the grass, the bush, the trees, all of that grew and that creates that fuel for this fire. so as things heat up for the summer those conditions is essentially what makes these flames uncontrollable. they have gained some, they've made some progress in terms of containment for this this fire.
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it was at 2%. we're now at 8% so we have seen it improved, but we've also seen the acreage burn continuing to grow now, more than 15,000 let acres. and you mentioned evacuations, about 1,200 people are under evacuation orders and there are more evacuation warnings, so they're telling people just be careful. the wind is strong and it can the change at any moment, and it can move that fire closer to where people are. so people in this area are being told just to be careful, boris debbie, love it out alive for it. thank you so much. stay safe out there any minute now, president biden is set to host nato secretary general at the white house, the oval office meeting coming after renewal agreement would give the alliance greater control over military aid to ukraine. we're going to discuss after this quick break then in your man watch all new episode of in practical jokers
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>> each summer. this year rushing tin is playing host city for that summit. it's expected to take place in mid july. and so the secretary general and the president are going to be discussing how to reach agreement on a series of deliverables and specific language relating to the ongoing war in ukraine. the need to defend every inch of nato territory and an attack some two future proof, the alliances with a far-right movement in europe as well as a looming election here in the us of threatening the existence, or at least much of the the support of nato earlier today in a speech at the wilson center's the secretary general called on nato to play a bigger role in delivering aid to ukraine to avoid delays, he announced that 20 of 32 allies are now meeting the 2% defense spending benchmark that was set in 2014. that's more than double doubled and he also called on the alliance to impose more costs on china, which he says is fueling the largest armed conflict in
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europe since world war ii. earlier today, i asked nsc spokesman john kirby whether the president shared that view. here's what he said i have no doubt that they'll discuss a range of issues important to the nato alliance. >> and clearly that means supporting ukraine and clearly that means trying to make it harder for russia to be able to murder and slaughter innocent ukrainians and destroy ukrainian infrastructure. and the chinese because of the support that they're providing to the russian defense industrial base. certainly bare hand and helping mr. putin do that this is just one of the many meetings that stoltenberg is holding with allies. >> he travels personally to each country to meet face-to-face with the head of state that will the representing that country at the summit. so certainly meeting with president biden is a critical ally to reach consensus, but stoltenberg still has more work to do. do before mid-july, guys all right. >> kayla tausche. thank you for the report from the white house for us let's discuss this important meeting joining us
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now is seeing a national dirty analysts, beth sandi, she's a former deputy director of national intelligence. >> beth, thanks so much for sharing part of your afternoon with us this new nato agreement meant to increase coordination and oversight of aid to ukraine what's different now compared to what nato was doing before well, before the united states led the entire effort. >> now, 50 countries. so that's the 32 nato countries plus lot of other countries like japan and south korea and argentina. now, just joined part of this kind of contact group called the ranch nine ranch time group. and that was led by secretary of defense austin and i actually think that this is a really good move. regardless of politics, it is about nato and it means that the europeans also are saying, yeah, we have skin in this game and we're going to run then the united states. but
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the united states was absolutely key in the beginning in setting this all up. it was really that led the way but how much of this sort of new deal has to do with the potential for donald trump to win the election because he's given clear signals that he's not exactly enthusiastic about nato to say the least he said this saturday at a rally that he was going to solve the ukraine situation, the war with ukraine, with russia, and including he implied that he was going to cut off assistance to ukraine as president elect even before he was inaugurated. so definitely there is an issue there. >> but i think absolutely this the brainstorming for this idea was a trump driven idea. >> i think it's important for all, for all of us to recognize
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that there are positives and negatives about that i think that it's very interesting how many countries are ramping up. in addition to the countries who have already met that 2%, we're seeing a lot lot more of the other countries make concrete plans. so, yes, it's about trump proofing, but it's now a lot about a lot more yeah. >> beth, what about china? i found that comment from stoltenberg. interesting that beijing can have it both ways at some point, unless trying to change his course he says, allies need to impose a cost. what do you think that cost looks like well, it looks very much like what the united states just put in place last week, which is pretty amazing. >> i mean, it's another huge step up in the penalties that we are putting on anybody doing
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business with russia. and this includes chinese semiconductor companies who are exporting to russia and includes any, any company we've russian banks. and that's aimed squarely at china so we will see how that will be imposed and whether the other allies will pick up on these sanctions over time, they tend to double down on what, what the united states is doing. but we control the financial system in the world. so what we do matters a lot more. >> that center, i appreciate the insight, thanks for joining us thanks, boris. >> of course. >> when we come back, a school commute, you have to see it is more treacherous than what any kids should face. how getting to campus involves crawling under freight trains for some students. and houston, stay with us this. election season stay with cnn with more
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heard how many such daily show tonight evan loving family central. >> next day on paramount plus closed captioning brought to you by meso book.com her firm only represents mesothelioma victims and their families. if you or a loved one who has been diagnosed with ms ophelie kalisa. now middle school can be tough enough without having to dodge moving trains on your way to class. but that is just what's the students at mcdonald's middle school in houston deal with all the time hi forgiving man forgiven, nothing. >> they they got hurt. you school officials there say one-third of the students who walked to school have to cross
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this. and incredibly busy union pacific railroad railyard to get there. and after several close calls, students and administrators jurors are asking the real company to build a footbridge over the tracks. so far, no dice. let's talk about this now with lisa falcon berg, who is the opinion editor at the houston chronicle. elisa, thanks for being with us. your newspaper actually shot that video we just saw, which is pretty frightening and shows what is clearly these middle schoolers in a way too dangerous situation trying to get to class. can you tell us about the kinds of close calls that you've heard about as well one of the middle schoolers we interviewed actually was starting to go under the train at a certain point because she thought it was stopped and then it started moving another child's that we had. >> film who's actually went to another school, was also we
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actually caught him in the moment where he's about to climb up on the train to get over. and the train started moving. there have been cases in the past years ago a were children actually had an amputations. they were riding the trains, which is something kids do because their kids, but also because it's really frustrating when the train is stopped in your path and you're just a little tempted if it's going really slow to jump on. and we haven't had than got any those situations in the past several years. >> yeah, but they're trying to prevent it because it seems like a disaster waiting to happen, right? i know dispatchers have been trying to stop the train traffic during critical times like the beginning of school and the end of school. but it's certainly not perfect. and you've seen trains that are stopped on the tracks is kids need to get to her from school i wonder though, is these children themselves are asking this real company to build a footbridge over the tracks. why there
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hasn't been progress on that? >> well, as they will say, it's complicated, and this is a problem that's existed for generations. and the houston chronicle editorial board, our videographer, sharon stein men and she was the first person to really capture on video the extent of this problem. so now there's their images they've got hundreds of thousands of people online looking at this and demanding change. but the problem is the jurisdictions at federal government tends to oversee trains mayors in the past have tried to deal with it. they even ticketed some of the conductors but they've those efforts have been stymied by jurisdiction issues houston to estonians daily lives are impacted by these trains, but none. as much as the people who live and work near the trains. and it is a problem that union pacific says it's very difficult to address for them
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because they have a major railyard. one of the biggest in the country near make reynolds and they have no interest as far as we can tell in building a bridge that those are complex projects, houston floods, you can do an underpass in some areas. the bridge has to be in the right location. it's a long process. you have to get the grant to help fund fund it. >> we wish union pacific would step up once and for all and work with wherever they have to work with locally congresswoman sylvia garcia, whoever it is, and find a solution the problem predominantly affects kids who live in this fifth ward area. i heard one students say that they weren't hopeful because they are coming from quote, a lower class neighborhood. that is what this girl said. how much is socioeconomic status? the fact that this is almost entirely black and hispanic kids how much is that playing
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into what really seems to be a failure to address this problem? >> right those are heartbreaking words from ruby, the young woman who, i mean, she was so brave. she and her classmates called union pacific officials to their school, gave them a tour, gave them a presentation and said, we want help. but in the end, this is an area with lower yeah. socio-economic, lower opportunities. it is in the east end. the city did grow up around these tracks. so people who live in this area, that's what they can afford and i, think historically the idea was, well, you live over there, you knew what you were getting into it's just it's just something you have to deal with, but that's an antiquated mentality. and these children need help and it's not like they're cities los angeles, chicago that have found a way to deal with some of these issues. and they built the bridge as they got it done and that's what these kids me,
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they need that kind of respect and attention. they need to be able to get to school and back home without risking their lives yeah, it's pretty glaringly obvious that is the case. lisa falcon berg. thank you so much for talking to us about this. we appreciate it thank, you for your attention on it ahead, scientists released new data that shows a catastrophic earthquake and tsunami are inevitable in the pacific northwest and they warn no one is ready for it. well, i'm more on that when we come back they are unpredictable sleeping giants. >> everyone okay. kano has its own personality, or if we don't understand them, they are windows into part of our planet. >> lives will be lost. violent earth with liev schreiber sunday at nine on cnn. >> oh, carney isolde, it's gotten me. i saw them. that's what i said. god-man, saada got me juicy gardeners that they
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natural events so powerful, it will remake the pacific northwest coast line and make it unrecognizable. researchers have new imagery of what's known as the cascadia subduction zone this is a 700 mile fault running running along the coast of northern california to washington state. and this new data suggests that if, not, if, but when this fault ruptures, it could trigger a 9.0 magnitude earthquake followed by a massive tsunami for contests, context, this is precisely what happened off the coast of japan in 2011 that earthquake was a magnitude 9.1, causing significant damage, including a meltdown at the fukushima nuclear power plant so what could all of this mean for the pacific northwest? let's discuss with seismologists jeffrey park. so jeffrey walk us through this new research and what it means well, this research is the combination of a long all right study of the
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geology of the north, the northwest pacific area there have always been indian legends of big earthquakes occurred before the europeans arrived in the area. >> and what had happened in the late 20th century, a japanese seismologist notice that there had been measurements of two meters tsunami in japan in the year 1,700 without any earthquake associated with it what he did is he figured out, well, if this had occurred at the same time as those indian legends that we would have had a magnitude diner earthquake off the coast of washington. and oregon. and so this is the this is the basis for what we think is happening all the study we've had since has kind of confirm this picture that this extremely large earthquake is a characteristic of this portion of the united states.
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and that will probably happen again so the last one happened roughly 300 325 years ago. >> does the science point to when we might see this happen again? >> well, of course, short-term prediction of earthquake activity is not possible now, but we do know that the fault is active. there are moderate earthquakes, there's also a number of types of tremors that occur that tell us that the fault zone under for neith a coastal oregon and coastal washington is indeed moving. so there's stuff going on. we've been measuring sort of geodetic cli with gp, a long-term gps measurements. these type of movements for a couple of decades now so what does this mean for people living in the pacific northwest well, if you're in one of the major cities, it means that at the time this happens and it could
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occur anytime in the next century or even two centuries, that there'll be quite a bit of shaking going on but specifically along the coastline, you can expect a massive tsunami, many meters high that would come crashing in from offshore. >> most of the motion that occurs in this type of earthquake actually occurs offshore. and so what will occur physically is that during the earthquake the seafloor will drop by maybe a meter or so. and when it does the waterfalls in after it and then sets up a wave that heads towards the shore. you can set, you can have a wave, this whale, well offshore in a kilometer of water that might be only a meter high, but when all that energy gets constant i'm traded into the surf zone. maybe ten meters or 100 meters depth water then it becomes a much larger wave so jeffrey, you mentioned the science around predicting earthquakes being difficult in the short term is there anything that
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might change that a new technological advancement moving into the future? well, for some cases we are monitoring fault zones around the world to try to detect subtle changes that may occur in areas where earthquakes might occur and become quite large in the case of an earthquake system that's quite as large as this, that encompasses like 700 kilometers of length along the coastline we don't have quite enough of these two understand what the predictions might be like. many of them, when we look back at previous earthquakes before magnitude nine earthquakes is not a lot that tells us that magnitude nine was coming. >> jeffrey park, thanks so much for the analysis. we hope that the big one is still a long way off. >> thank you. >> thanks you've got to wear a helmet that's the message from
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celebrity chef gordon ramsay after suffering what he calls a really bad bicycle act. >> exhibit. the details on that. in just a few minutes two presidents, the former under our leadership, the forgotten man and woman, will be forgotten. >> he no longer the current mockers. he is still a sacred car. >> there's no country in the world, better position to lead the world and who will be the next, the most anticipated moment of this? selection, the weight only cnn can bring it to you, moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debates thursday, june 27 and none live on scene in an and streaming on max from roger two. >> we there yet so many ways to save life, ready, while it happy. that's 365 by whole foods market why choose asleep numbers, smart bad? can it keep me warm when i'm cold weight,
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>> hertz but with care you can keep chasing it that's tylenol that's care without limits. good on which you're bad cells zone week govern heard of how many such daily show tonight her uncle's unhappy. i'm sensing an underlying issue. it's t-mobile. it started when we tried to get him under a new plan. but they they unexpectedly unraveled their “price lock” guarantee. which has made him, a bit...
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unruly. you called yourself the “un-carrier”. you sing about “price lock” on those commercials. “the price lock, the price lock...” so, if you could change the price, change the name! it's not a lock, i know a lock. so how can we undo the damage? we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for. >> jake tapper. next on cnn celebrity chef gordon ramsay has a new message on bike safety that may just stop you in your tracks. >> maybe it could save you. ramsay sent out a heartfelt father there's day message on instagram saying he is quote lucky to be alive after a really bad accident that shook him. the we should warn you, you might wince when you see what he has to say. >> let's listen policy. >> you've got to wear helmets. i don't care how short the journey is. i don't care. you.
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the fact that these helmets cost money but that crucial even with the kids. a short journey, they've got to wear a helmet. now, i'm lucky to be standing here. i'm in pain. it's been a brutal week and i'm sort of getting through it but i cannot tell you the importance of wearing a helmet oh, wow it was kind of gross. he showed a post accident pictures of his beat-up bike helmet, his shirt with a huge rip in it he says the accident happened while riding his bike in connecticut and he thanked medical staff for helping treat his injuries. we were just sharing notes on bike accidents in a couple ugly spills and i was a kid and not wearing a helmet, probably should have been. >> i had a concussion from a bike accident, not wearing a helmet. definitely should have been might've saved my head a little more yeah, my face took the front of it though. >> you did find in pretty good shape. i still have some scars on my knees. i don't want my hand through off, wear a helmet
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