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climb but the data shows the plane country can you into the sand at a rate of 4,000 feet a minute until the dissent was arrested at 400 feet above ground level, very low. the question here will be the pause and the memo reported by other allen says the first officer was flying the plane at the time and may have inadvertently pushed forward on the control column now southwest has are released a statement saying nothing is more more important to southwest than safety through our robust safety management system, the event was addressed appropriately as we always strive for continuous improvement, this is similar. you may remember two an incident on a united airlines flight back in december of 2022, also, a landing in the island of hawaii in bad weather, the ntsb found significant miscommunication in the cockpit. the ntsb says it will not investigate this latest incident. both. 19 reporting for us, pete. thanks very much. i will let you in this situation room. thanks very much. thanks for watching the news continues next on cnn
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>> welcome to all view as joining us in the united states and all around the world. but max foster just ahead, us president joe biden slams donald trump is a convicted criminal as tensions ramp up ahead of the highly anticipated presidential debate, millions across the us are suffering under record heat. so only gonna get worse throughout the week of vladimir putin is making a landmark trip to north korea, deepening ties with kim jong-un live from london this is cnn newsroom with max foster we are now just nine days away from the first presidential debate of the 2024 us election season. and tensions are already ramping up ahead of that showdown between president joe biden and former president donald trump on
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monday, the biden campaign debuted a new ad that will air in battleground states austin trump as a felon who only cares about himself and the courtroom, we see donald trump for who he is. >> he's been convicted of 34 felonies found liable for sexual assault and he committed financial fraud. this election is between a convicted criminal who's only out for him so and a president who's fighting for your family will trump's campaign was quick to respond, calling the hush money trial, election interference and pointing to polls showing the former president's strength in swing states trump's still maintains a close connection to his former advisor and longtime ally steve bannon, who answered his call during a live broadcast the carry hanger four once i got i got a call from somebody got to take just to hang on. okay. hey, mr. president, i'm live on tv back
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i'll call you back, sir. thank you. >> carrie continue on. your favorite person and at a conservative gathering over the weekend, bannon wout, that trump's political opponents would face blowback. >> if trump wins a second term as president november 5 is judgment de january 20, 2025 is accountability day. gonna get every single receipt? >> and to the fullest extension of the law, you're going to be investigated prosecuted in incarcerated. ladies and gentlemen, it's very simple. >> victory. or death what trump is also finding support from house speaker mike johnson and chairman of the national republican congressional committee richard hudson, who met with the former president at mar-a-lago on monday, cnn's alayna treene has more details from washington former
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president donald trump on monday, met with house speaker mike johnson, as well as richard hudson, the chairman of the house gop's campaign arm. and i'm told that they walked donald trump through some of the critical house races that they think he could be helpful and come november. now remember, donald trump last week traveled to washington dc where he met with house and senate republicans and he promised them that he would do more more tele town halls more messages of support to try and get these people not only re-elected, but to also try to expand their majority is both in the house and the senate. and that's really important not just to lawmakers and calm hunger's, but also to donald trump. because if he were to reclaim the white house in november, he's going to need a lot of republicans to pass his legislative priorities. and so that was the key focus. i'm said that they wanted to talk about a unified message about how they can all be on the same page. in the next stretch, looking forward to election day now, i also think it's
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important to note that donald trump has been far more hands off this election cycle than he has been in the past. and that's because in 2022, he endorsed several candidates that went on to win their primaries only to lose on the de that it counted, which was election day in the midterms. and so according to my conversations with donald trump's, can campaign, they they tell me that they don't want to get involved in races where they don't think they candidate can actually win. and so they're going to be mapping out where donald trump can be lending his support and which races it will really matter. alayna treene, cnn, washington be sure to watch a cnn host, the us presidential debate next week and is on thursday, june 27th, 9:00 p.m. eastern in the us. that is 9:00 a.m. on friday in hong kong please in california are looking for an armed robber. he talked is someone on president biden security detail. the president was in los angeles for a star-studded campaign fundraiser on saturday night the us secret services, one of their members was robbed at
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gunpoint after leaving work and how their bag stolen, the victim fired their service weapon during that instant, but it's unclear if the suspect was hit please say they did find some of the secret services service members missing a belongings now. long-lasting heat wave is bringing miserable weather to some 270 million americans. the midwest and the northeast could see record-breaking temperatures last for days heat alerts are in place for 19 states from the great lakes to new england's in chad myers has more we are in the path of extreme heat, bringing along potential health risks in the forthcoming days summer officially arrives in the northern hemisphere this week. and with it, a heat wave not seen in decades from the midwest and great lakes to the northeast, more than 200 million americans are roughly 80 he two 2% of the us population could she temperatures above 90 degrees
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nearly 200 daily high temperature records could be tied, or broken in major cities, including boston, dc chicago, st. louis, detroit, philadelphia, pittsburgh, and new york city. little relief as expected even at night with low temperatures not dropping below the middle 70s, extreme heat is the most dangerous weather phenomenon we have in new york city. >> we lose over 350 new yorkers a year on average to heat caribou main, which prides itself as the most northeastern city in the us, could hit their hottest temperature ever, wednesday. >> but if forecast of 99, that's three degrees higher than their all-time hottest high temperature on record. boston is forecast to be nearly 100 degrees on thursday, which would be their earliest 100 degree day. hey in 99 years. and it's not just the high temperatures causing concern, but how long they're expected to stick around pittsburgh, which hasn't seen a single deigo over 95 degrees in more than a decade is forecast to
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see six consecutive days above 95 degrees and philadelphia is expected to see five straight days at or above 95 if it seems like these scorching heat waves are happening more and more each year. it's not your imagination a while, very hot days are of course normal. the number and the duration of these hot days we are seeing each and every year is not the risk to our planet present risks to our health. and heat is of course, the deadliest of all extreme weather events here in new york city and across the united states. >> chad myers, cnn atlanta, is the atlantic hurricane season kicks off to potential tropical systems that threatening parts of the us and mexico this week one potential tropical cyclone is brewing in the gulf of mexico. >> and the tropical storm watch has been issued for parts of texas mexico, if it picks up steam, the system will be called tropical storm alberto the other potential storm system is staring at the
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atlantic if it develops it will produce thunderstorms near the bahamas before moving towards the south, southeast united states now, thousands have been ordered to evacuate from the village of released in new mexico due to the fast moving wildfire. it started on monday as it burned at least 3,000 acres are 1,200 hectares fueled in part by high temperatures and low humidity. a fire warning is in place for lincoln county where the village is located, an air quality alerts have also been issued for some areas wildfires also raging across california. a fast moving fine as sacramento known as the arrow fire, has burned more than 5,000 acres or 2000 hectares since monday, it prompted evacuations and there's no containment thus far another fire in northern california called the sites fire. also burning out of control. similar scenes in los angeles county where crews are battling the so-called post
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fire is burning more than 15,000 acres and is about 20% contained after breaking out on saturday. soon as camila been, bernal has been following the post fire, and she has more firefighters are describing this fire as creeping underground moving slowly and they say that at any moment things can change and that's why they're so concerned burned about the wind and they expect these wins to remain high root tuesday. so firefighters are saying that they have been able to keep the fire lines, but that it is still very challenging work because of the high speeds of the wind gusts in this area, you're seeing some of the crew's here on the ground attempting to put out any hotspots so that you don't get those new fires because of the wind in this area, you're also seeing some of the crew's in the sky using these helicopters to do water drops. so it is a joint effort between the
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different crews in this area to try to gain some containment tier is what officials are saying about this fire. >> it means we're going to be tested, especially tonight, ridge top winds are going to decline for 50 mile an hour. winds on ridge tops. and during the day, valley wins 20 five plus. so where were argued in and we're making a stand and climate change also greatly impacting the way these fires are spreading. >> firefighters telling me that because of the rain that we got here in california over the last couple of days you have a lot of vegetation and in particular, you have a lot of grass. and that is what firefighters call fuel to this fire. in particular, they say that it spreads quickly and so you add in the wind the low humidity, the high temperatures. and that's what makes this fire just so dangerous and so tough. for these firefighters that are working around the clock, camila burnout, cnn lubeck,
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california. >> let's get back to our story. not president joe biden, fully president donald trump, trading barbs ahead to cnn's presidential debate, joining me from oxford, england is rigid johnson nectar in us politics at queen mary university in london. thank you so much for joining us i just wanted to ask you about steve bannon because he's obviously been speak obviously got close contacts with president trump's still very much coming into the fore again. >> and speaking of how there'll be blowback for anyone that opposes president trump right now. it's quite a threatening message. but do you think it'll be effective well, it'd be effective with a subsection of trump voters, and i guess what we have to think about is when the different campaigns are putting out the surrogates, the surrogates are not talking necessarily to the same people so steve bannon is not someone at the trump campaign, is is putting been out to talk to swing voters or people who voted. >> joe biden at the last
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election bannon has tried to talk to those people who have stuck with trump from 2016 to 2022 now incense bannon's message is one of trying to raise the stakes of the election to mobilize the for maga base of trump voters. with this latest add from the biden campaign, we've got a sense of his strategy as well, going ahead, which is very focused on donald trump's criminal record here's that going to appeal to because there's been lots of polling to suggest that none of these trials have affected his base i guess we're talking about people that may be swinging in either direction, right now but i look at this ad, i see classic example of what we call them political science, negative partisanship so what we have in the selections, we have two candidates who both have high unfavorable ratings, joe biden's unfavorable rating historically speaking, would not be the kind of rating that would see you get reelected,
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except that donald trump also has extremely high unfavorable ratings. >> i think what this ad is trying to do in effect is for biden campaign state voters, okay. you may not love joe biden but you really don't like donald trump. this, this is not in an election where it's both are equally bad. one might be bad, but one is even worse and negative partisanship is when you vote to stop another candidate from winning and in effect, that's the message the same if you want to stop donald trump from being reelected? you're going to have to hold your nose and vote for joe biden. don't stay at home, don't vote for a third-party candidate, come out and vote for joe biden. and they realized that those voters, ultimately i think will decide the election. >> and i guess they're the ones that will go into the voting booth. and even if they've decided to vote for donald trump, there might be some hesitancy and actually ticking a box next to someone that they feel may not have
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faith in the legal system the two criminal convictions of the past weeks have been very interesting how the campaigns have had handled trump's message has been that the system is rigged. >> the system is illegitimate. this is a witch hunt but it's the familiar line from trump. joe biden with his son's hunters criminal conviction. with regard to drug and gun use this biden's taking a very different line. biden as effectively said i love my silence, personal tragedy for me, but i respect the system and i will abide by the system trump says he'll pardon the people who stormed the capital and six of january, biden says he won't even pardon his own son i think what biden is trying to do in in thinking of the politics of this is to say that he is someone who will uphold the rules for some people who vote for trump they vote for trump because he's a
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rule breaker. but those aren't the people that biden's really trying to speak to. he's trying to speak to the people who might not like him. joe biden, but don't like the chaos that they might have associated with certain elements of the trump presidency. >> richard johnson, as ever, appreciate your time. thank you. >> thank you russian president vladimir putin on his way to north korea, what the visit says to western allies about the fighting in ukraine after the break. >> plus y neto secretary general says it might be time to start putting more pressure from china. >> that's just who are you i'm in a child less horsepower the going towards get you going dodge order or to totally torqued out crossover by iphone 12 with the super fast five g and a dual camera system, then get real unlimited data on the silver unlimited plan for just $20 a month for a whole year?
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praising pyongyang for its unwavering support on ukraine the white house accused is north korea of sending weapons to moscow but we are concerned about trevor is the deepening relationship between these two countries not just because of the impacts is going to have cranium people because we know north korean ballistic missiles are still being used to hit ukrainian in target. >> but because there could be some reciprocity here that could affect security on the korean peninsula plus sebastian, with me here in london. >> but first let's go to ivan watson in hong kong, just ahead of that, he said he's not concerned about the actual visit it's what it means for ukraine can just explain what's happening here sure. >> i mean what i think is important to seek from the point of view of context is that vladimir putin has not been to north korea since 2000, right? so that's nearly a quarter century. and so much has changed since then. he had
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only just become a appointed president then the ruler of north korea at that time was kim jong un, father, kim jong il. >> and north korea was still at that time, one of the most isolated places in the world. >> russia does, not well, fast-forward 24 years, russia is now very, very isolated, certainly from the west. and there is a need for vladimir putin to reach out to north korea. he's been accused of acquiring conventional weapons from the north koreans to use on the ukrainian battlefield and look at one of the top lines of his open letter to north korea he says, quote, we highly appreciate the dprk's unwavering support for russia's special military operation in ukraine, special military operation, max, not a war more than two-and-a-half years into this war. and then putin goes on to write ping yang was and remains are staunch, like-minded ally and
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supporter, ready to resolutely resist the desire the collective west to prevent the formation of a multipolar world order based on justice. at this point moscow was very much and antagonist and rival of the us and its western allies. and it is aligning itself very much alongside again, what it most isolated dictatorships in the world? north korea, which has a proven track record of creating trouble for, for example, the closer us allies, south korea, and other countries in the region in japan. and now what we see is that the kremlin is saying that is planning to sign a new strategic partnership with north korea. so there'll be watching closely to see how could there be more weapons transfers, more technology transfers, but between these two countries that appear to be growing closer together and claire, this increases the
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sphere of influence for both countries, doesn't it oh, absolutely. emacs and i think there's another line from that open letter that president putin right to north korean people that really reinforces that. he says that north korea is committed, a committed and like-minded, supportive, ready to confront the ambition of the collective west. look, yes. this is a visit. i think that will be in part about the war in ukraine, but also motivated by something well, the same impulses that provoked that war in the first place, which is putin's desire for this so-called multipolar world. these new spheres of influence and to counter western dominance, i think also the kremlin likes symmetry and yes, although there's visit was sort of pre-planned and quite heavily trailed there is a sense to which that coming off the back of that major western diplomatic spree last week with the reconstruction conference for ukraine, the g7. and finally, the ukrainian peace summit in switzerland, that this is a chance, even though to the rest of us, north korea
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looks like one of the most isolated countries on earth. this is a chance for russia to show that putin is not isolated by the war in ukraine, that he does have other options and those optics of seeing his photo lining the streets of pyongyang will help push that message across to the russian people. i think in terms of the war in ukraine, this also reinforces the strategy that we are seeing play out in real time on the front line it's that attrition is key. it putin wants to exhaust and destroy ukraine into surrender and obtaining, as the us and south korea have suggested, artillery shells, ballistic missiles from north korea will help prolong that effort. so that certainly is the context i think in which to view this meeting. although of course, north korea he has denied weapons transfers to russia clear ivan, thank you both. >> so much ahead of that trip. now in central ukraine, at least 20 to civilians, including three children. but wounded by a russian missile attack on monday, local officials said a russian cruise missile struck the poltava
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region damaging apartment buildings and a kindergarten and knocking out power for several hours president volodymyr zelenskyy says it's important for ukraine to strengthen its air defenses systems to respond to russian attacks. me while nato celebrating what it calls good news for the alliance, for the us the europe. but it's certainly won't make moscow herbie later secretary general, jens stoltenberg met with president biden at the white house on monday. he announced that more nato member countries than ever have reached target defense span pending across your bank, canada, nato allies are this year increasing defense spending by 18% that's the biggest increase in decades and 23 allies are going to spend 2% of gdp or more on defense this year that's more than twice as many as four
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years ago and demonstrates that european allies and canada are really stepping up and taking their share of the common responsibility to protect all of us in the name alliance was talking burger president biden also spoke about beijing's support for moscow that they to chiefs saying china is fueling the largest armed conflict in europe since world war ii. whilst trying to maintain good relations with the west stoltenberg says ukraine's allies may need to quote, impose a cost on china to show jiajing ping that he can't play both sides are still to come a water war is brewing between the us and mexico we'll see how it's taking a toll on farmers and texas details ahead plus, now that benjamin netanyahu has dissolved his war cabinet a look at who heal, consult on israel's war with hamas. coming up russia, her trying to spy on us. we were
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>> did 369369 juneteenth celebrating freedom and legacy wednesday at 100 and cnn welcome back. >> sit on usury. my max foster checking today's top stories and us president joe biden and former president donald trump's campaigns are ramping up to buy ads as the two gear up for the first presidential debate taking place next week here on cnn. mr. barton is already running an ad in every swing state calling trump a convicted criminal, and trump's campaign is reserving tv ad time around the cnn debate another official start to the northern summer is days away, but much of the us is already baking under a brutal heatwave and it's expected to increase as the week progresses, moving 260 million people could see record high temperatures as the heat sweeps from the midwest into the
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northeast ahead of boeing plans to apologize for the company's recent safety issues and us senate testimony later today, according to prepared remarks released by boeing ceo dave calhoun will say the company's culture has been far from perfect, but it passed the push back on claims. the plane manufacturer has retaliated against whistleblowers tensions rising between the us and mexico over decades. old agreement to share water from the colorado river and the rio grande, mexico has fallen behind in sending water to the us because a severe drought is gripping the country. cnn's rosa flores has more on how it's impacting farmers in texas district 71 and growing citrus. that's always been my passion. who says silver citrus growers and the rio grande valley of south texas takes us to a grove. he has an irrigated since january well, this grove is about 25-years-old to show us how his life's work could
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be imperil due to lack of water. >> as you can see, the leaves folding and the fruit how, how small it is, because we haven't been able to irrigate like we should the culprits he says are both natural and man-made. there's a years-long drought that has reservoirs along the rio grande at all time lows according to the texas water authorities and a dispute between the us and mexico over an 80-year-old water treaty that has silver and many texas farmers blaming mexico for their misfortunes if we had water from mexico, this war, there's grow would be here irrigating right now i'm in south texas under the 1944 treaty, mexico, which you see over my shoulder across the rio grande, owes the us about 390,000 olympic-sized swimming pools of water. so far this five-year cycle, which ends october 2025 when mexico
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released water to the us in 2020, it sparked violent protests for mexican farmers. currently about 90% of the country is enduring its most expansive drought since 2011, we have 1944 mexico's foreign ministry points to that years-long severe drought and says it plans to meet its treaty obligations by the october 2025 deadline but it's too late for some farmers not only have some citrus growers pulled and burned their wilted grows when you see this, it's just heartbreaking it just breaks your heart the entire south texas sugar industry is dead, forcing the state's only sugar mill. they 100 $100,000,000 business that employed more than 500 people to close an april, according to this man, do you blamed mexico? >> yes. i mean, this this is not an act of god. this is a man-made situation. >> tutor, you'll horn is the chairman of the rio grande
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valley sugar growers. so is this equipment going to be sold? >> yes. and says a group of 90 farmers went from harvesting 35,000 acres of sugar cane and churning giant piles of sugar like this one to produce we've seen less than 10,000 acres in february. >> do you impart blame the state department for not forcing mexico to provide the water it's definitely the fault of the state department because this is occurred under republican administration chins and it's recurring right now under a democratic administration, you start to feel like maybe the state department doesn't care about you very much. the state department tells cnn that the agency continues to urge mexico to make water deliveries and continues to work with congress to resolve the issue we have to check with the water districts. we are in a crisis. >> it said meetings likely that will say seen by advocates for the water he needs to save his wilting groves is there
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something that maybe you guys can do that? but after much discussion, and i'm sorry, we couldn't come up with a better selection where you but the outcome was there's no water could this meaning that some of your groves die? >> there's there's a good chance, yes it's really heartbreaking it really hurts i really does at this point, texas farmers are praying for rain. they are praying for a miracle. they are praying for hurricane anything that will save the citrus industry right now, they're keeping their eye on the weather system. that's in the golf no. i checked according to the national weather service, the rio grande valley of south texas could get between four to six inches of rain. so this could help the citrus farmers but the citrus farmers are also hoping that it rains in mexico. why? because they're hoping that the reservoirs in mexico fill up so that mexico can pay up its water debt rosa flores, cnn,
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houston we have new details on the israel-hamas war and a massive anti-government protests in jerusalem. >> israeli police say they've arrested at least nine people of 2000 gathered outside the knesset and then march to prime minister benjamin netanyahu's home calling for new elections. authority. say those detained were arrested on suspicion of attacking police and trying to set a fire. meanwhile, that appears to be deepening, political rifts within the israeli government benjamin netanyahu disbanded his war cabinet announcing the security cabinet will now decide matters regarding the conflict. this comes more than a week after opposition leader benny gantz with ju, from the war cabinet, since it's got mcclain joins us live in istanbul with more on all of this is looking pretty shaky at the top, isn't it right now? >> yeah. so max, look, the dissolution of the war cabinet, it was always going to mean that prime minister benjamin netanyahu was certainly more
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beholden to the far-right, more extremist elements of his own coalition government. but rather than allowing those elements like the finance minister, the national security minister, into that war cabinet. he is simply dissolve the body altogether. and what is important to note is that benny gantz that sparked all of this by leaving the war cabinet is one of netanyahu's most formidable opposition figures. and so his exit and the dissolution of this body really also, in some ways dissolve some of what was left of this show of national unity that has been on display since the outset of the war. gantz has now called for an election. he is accused the prime minister of putting his own political interests ahead of the country and a plan for gaza post-war. and in polls, at least one published on friday, it showed that more israelis would prefer gantz to lead the country right now, then netanyahu, netanyahu will undoubtedly find a difficult max to agree to anything resembling an end to the war without toppling his own government alright, has
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already threatened to do exactly that. and so he's in this very awkward position right now when it comes to the peace deal, that's on the table, hamas coming back with changes to that deal are proposed changes to that deal seems to have kicked down the road to some extent. but also this tactical pause that we've been talking about the last few days. also perhaps demonstrates the odd position in the contortions that the prime minister's having to put himself through in order to satisfy all of the pressures he's under, not only at home, but of course from the international community as well, that wants to see more aid get in. either way, unicef made very clear yesterday that this pause that's been announced for 11 hours a day so far hasn't shown any signs of actually working. >> listen any decision to drop less bombs and have less five and so on the ground effected killing, injury children on a daily basis across the gaza strip it's welcomed by unicef. we need to be very aware that there's no evidence yet that these processes work.
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>> and from what we're hearing on hearing on the ground, nothing has really changed, so we're welcoming it. it's a small step, but it certainly won't be the full solution to the problem now max, remember that nina, he was not the one to sign off on this tactical pause and his reaction to it was quite odd saying that he was unhappy with it, asking who approved this yesterday, we got some answers from the israeli government as to how this all unfolded. >> cogat, the agency that approves what's going into gaza in terms of aid ultimately requested this. it was run up the chain all the way to the defense minister yoav gallant. but the idf says that this was not a decision that needed to be approved by the prime minister or by the cabinet. >> max scott. thank you us trying to prevent an escalation in the fighting between israel and hezbollah along israel's border with lebanon. us special envoy almost hosting, met with president over other benjamin netanyahu and other israeli
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leaders on monday. the fighting has driven many people from their homes along that border or lieberman has more the main drag in the city of kiryat shmona in northern israel mazzi at the hurry works alone taking orders from customers who won't come in person. there is no people here in the city. my my customer, don't come to my gallery and i feel alone here. >> the stores and restaurants near his frame shop are closed city is nearly empty under constant threat of rocket attack from his bola in neighboring lebanon. but the hari shows up to work here every day. >> i think it's wrong to leave clutch wanna i think everybody had to be here the first
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launches fell in this city soon after october 7. this was the safety room and security room and the mortar tore right through it the city was evacuated two weeks later. the charred remnants of a life hastily abandon, visible inside. then my asleep michele mayor avichai stern says less than 10% of the people here have stayed and the local associations, assuming the null since 8 october, we've been attacked every day. >> stern says, i don't think there's any nation in the world that would be prepared for its citizens to be fired upon every day at a nearby location. the mayor shows us a much larger rocket that hit the street. it's shrapnel tearing into nearby homes also, this stern says this is shrapnel. look and here you'll find them in every place along israel's northern border. once thriving villages have become ghost towns. in shlomi, the spirit of the country may be strong but its people have left approximately 60,000 people
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have been evacuated from the north to hotels across the country according to israel, has bola has fired more than 5,000 rockets and drones since the start of the war, israel has carried out strikes against his bullet targets and commanders. a amid fear of a simmering conflict boiling over into a war. >> i now have no mit colvin. >> we are approaching the point where decision will have to be made, says chief of staff herzi levy, and the idf is prepared and very ready for this decision. in recent weeks, the north isn't just under fire, but on fire sparked by hezbollah attacks and missile intersects locals caught this video, but interceptor explosion, drain, burning, shrapnel on the area firefighters are still coping with smoldering embers that re-ignite in the dry conditions, fire that keeps burning on a border that threatens to do the same oren liebermann, cnn in northern israel an ivy league university set up a task force to tackle
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antisemitism campus coming up well, the way it was, findings have since revealed about the tensions students say they're facing the most anticipated moment of this lecture and the stakes couldn't be higher. the president and the former president one stage to vary different visions for america's future. this cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27th, denied my life. i'd cnn and streaming unmasked as a gynecologist, i'm embarrassed to say this. we use deodorant on our armpits and we kinda make women feel bad about body odor that they get on other parts of our body. that's why i created lumi whole body deodorant for pits, privates and beyond and it's clinically proven to block odor all day controls odor for 72 hours. soap can't do that. >> and since your pits and privates go everywhere you go, keep them competently fresher with lumi, that reassurance is priceless to learn more, go to lumi do.com we're you stationed working or living at campbell zhun between 1953 and
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science, better results well, for these have cleared out a protest encampment at california state university, los angeles officials say, seven people were in income and on monday when law enforcement cleared it out, but no one was arrested, the encampment was in place for more than 40 days it was taken down off the protesters moved to occupy several floors of a campus building last week, the university is present, so the occupation, but staff and students inside the building at risk now it task force at columbia university, one of america's most prestigious schools, as real disturbing instances of antisemitism and are hostile environment for jewish students and faculty on campus. the task force was created months before the pro-palestinian protests that rocked the campus earlier this year. cnn's omar jimenez reports on the group's findings
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many things are broken at columbia deeply. >> broken. >> professor esther fuchs is among the co-chairs of columbia university's taskforce on antisemitism the task force was formed in november 2023 to quote foster a community as columbia university president minouche shafik put it where debates and disagreements are rooted in academic rigor and civil discourse. >> where are you right now in the process? >> questions of harassment, intimidation hey, i'm just paying isolation discrimination. every word you could think of came out from students since experiences jewish students experiences at columbia making it very clear to us that a lot i've systems in place, are not working for jewish students. >> what we found in the listening sessions were
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essentially students who felt like the burden was on them to resolve it. professor fuchs says, they found that one professor came across what may have been a jewish sounding name before an exam and ask that student to explain their views on the israeli government's actions in gaza also, that another professor told their class to avoid reading mainstream media to clearing quote, it is owned by the jews to ask the student to defend the policies of our government in israel because they're jewish i don't even have words to say how ridiculous that is, but also how intimidating that is for weeks, columbia university was that the focal point of nationwide protests on college campuses over the israel-hamas war. some of those nationwide protests got violent in and around columbia's campus. there were similar dynamics, especially just outside campus. but at the very least, there was palpable tension some jewish students felt unsafe to
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the point they chose to leave campus. in the leadup to graduation. we also heard from jewish students who did not feel that way, who said they didn't feel safe on campus. and we also heard from from muslim and arab students who also felt unsafe. i know this is anti-semite. one task force, but play appropriate question, but how do you deal with that dynamic? >> so we are hoping that our recommendations will be relevant and be used to deal with all students who are feeling unsafe or discriminated against we were asked to be the antisemitism task to do the work around that. the president tried to constitute an islamophobia taskforce and could not find fine. faculty to be on it. we would have preferred to have it islamophobia to ask what's right next to us doing the work with us? because this is a
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broader issue or a university official told cnn they didn't get enough professor buy-in that for the administration. there was a will, but no willingness from those who are calling for it. >> the university has to do better. you know, if we're, if we're about educating, which is our primary mission, edge patient and research are our primary missions. we have to do better omar jimenez cnn, new york, the us surgeon general sounds the alarm about children's mental health and the threat posed by social media how he wants congress to address the issue just ahead i'm nfl hall of famer dan marino. >> you know, i used to be afraid of things like the fence of leinz losing games. but what's insane is that years later, by biggest fear became trying to fall asleep, but the insanity stop. ryan learned about relaxing them sleep. i started sleeping again the first night while i might not be worried about winning games
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for our kids last year, i issued an advisory on social media and youth mental health, where i call for a series of measures that congress can put in place to actually establish safety standards and require data transparency to make social media safer. there's actually a lot that congress can do. >> congress can put in place the kind of safety standards that will protect our kids from harmful content like violence and sexual content, and protect their privacy and protect them from bullying and harassment. online. congress can also protect kids from the kind of features that would seek to manipulate their developing brains into excess of use and these are all things that congress can do right now. i've been encouraged by the fact that there's bipartisan interest in making social media safer and in taking action. but the bottom line is that until congress actually does act and implement those solutions, life has not changed. four kids and life has not changed for their parents now, the boston celtics, i've written another page in the nba record book where they're 18th league
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championship, maybe the dallas mavericks. hundred and six to 88 to win the series in five games. jayson tatum led all scorers with 31 points. jaylen brown added 21 points. he was named the most valuable player in the finals. the celtics finished the regular season with the best record in the, in the nba. they lost only three games throughout the entire playoffs thanks for joining me on this our imac source. i'll be back though with another our newsroom i'm thinking, i'm going to die and i thought that was fine with earth, with we have schreiber sunday at nine on cnn one simple but brilliant trick to get 100 milligram
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