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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  July 20, 2024 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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and a riverside working in milwaukee i want to thank larry wilmore, byron donalds thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen elcome to all you watching us here in the united
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states, canada, and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber we're live in atlanta. this is cnn newsroom leadership, chaos and golf's the democratic party has donald trump and republicans do a victory lap on the campaign trail? the latest on the race for the white house escalating tensions in the middle east it's really airstrikes target a yemeni port in response to houthi attack on television and our days are getting longer details of nasa aos latest study on the earth's changing rotation live from atlanta. this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber we are now just 107 days away. >> if from the u.s. presidential election and the race looks very different for the two leading parties. uncertainty hangs over the democrats as pressure builds on president biden to drop his reelection bid, it's a stark contrast with the republican party, where the trump vans campaign is in full swing,
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something former president held his first rally on saturday surviving an assassination attempt a week earlier bigger guys stand before you only by the grace of almighty god. >> that's true shouldn't be maybe jd or somebody else who would be here, but i shouldn't be here right now. >> but something very, something very special happens. let's face it, something happened then together we will fight, fight, fight, right and we will win, win, win it was also trump's first campaign rally with the running mate j.d. vance, who told the crowd in michigan, it's still a little bit weird to see his name on signs alongside trump's. in contrast, biden spent another day in isolation recovering from covid in delaware, at least 35 democratic lawmakers and are now publicly urging him to drop out out of the race. but more
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than three weeks after his disastrous debate performance, the presence campaign says, he's standing firm so as time grows short to replace biden many democrats believe the party would back vice president kamala harris as their nominee she headlined a fundraiser in massachusetts on saturday, getting one of her most enthusiastic reception options in year's event organizers say she raised more than $2 million how sources say bill and hillary clinton are privately encouraging big democratic donor owners to continue supporting joe biden's campaign as long as he is the presumptive nominee but as priscilla alvarez reports, signs of democratic disarray continue to grow president biden is facing a fresh wave of democratic lawmakers who say that he should step aside and allow someone else to be the democratic candidate and nominee. >> they remain unconvinced that the president is up to the task of taking on former president donald trump. this election year and continue to pour out
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letters asking for him to drop out of the race. but over the course of all of this happening, the president is behind in closed doors as he is trying to recover from covid and has been self-isolating at his residence in delaware. sources telling cnn that the president remains in touch with his close advisers as they grapple with what has become an increasingly challenging moment for this campaign. not only hearing from democratic lawmakers donors, allies, and in a letter obtained by cnn, former national security officials, and high ranking foreign policy experts, who say that it's too whiskey for the president to stay in the race particularly because it could allow former president donald trump to take a second term and in turn potentially have a toll on national security the campaign, however, is remaining firm. they say that the president is going to stay in the race and that there are no plans for that to change. they also say that once the president recovers from covid,
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that he will hit the campaign trail again. now the vice president was on the trail. she had a fundraiser in massachusetts where she raised more than $2 million. aides. tell me that the vice president and the president remained close, that there's no daylight between the two, despite some lawmakers floor voting her name as a replacement for to lead the party's ticket. but the campaign saying that this is the biden-harris ticket, that they remain on course even as it he becomes even more challenging for them to stay afloat as democratic lawmakers continue to ask the president to withdraw from the race, priscilla alvarez, cnn traveling with the president and michael genovese is a political analyst and the author of the book, the modern presidency. >> and he joins us now from los angeles well, it's good to see you again, so nancy pelosi was headlining a unity fundraiser in north carolina. she was putting a bit more pressure on on joe biden, who's isolating from covid. do you get the sense that he's isolated in
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more ways than one well, he's hanging on by their skin he's he's desperate to hang onto the presidency. >> he is under assault from his own party, but it's decision time for the democrats and there's blood in the water and the sharks are circling biden may not be able to hang on because it started as persuasion to try to get him to leave, then it became push this coming week. >> it'll be shove and ken biden. hang on. with each passing minute biden's withdrawal becomes both more difficult, but more necessary because the republicans are energized and united the democrats are demoralized and divided. so i think this week is the week that they have to make some kind of a decision. >> you think push is going to turn to shove. i wonder who's going to be actually doing the shoving? so far. very few senior democrats of have dare to do that. but if, if biden
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needed more persuasion, i want to point to a poll that was done a few days ago that suggests that trump is doing better than ever. he is up five points nationally now in three across the key battleground states. but you studied the presidency. so put this into context for us. i mean, it, it's been, i understand 20 years since a republican presidential candidate has won the national popular vote. i mean this, this could be a trouncing here with the democrats do very well with the popular vote. electoral college has a more conservative bias and that's why in 2010 2015 candidate with the lesser votes got to be the president. but for the democrats, time is running out. they're losing ground. they're losing money and they're losing opportunity. and it's been a huge distraction for them. and they appear to be in disarray and the optic of that is just it's devastating for the democrats if the democrats don't pull their act together,
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donald trump could win in what we will call a landslide and we will claim and probably have a mandate to govern that same poll i run for referenced has donald trump winning against kamala harris, though she does slightly better in the head to head is she in a no win situation here? i mean, trying to back an unpopular president while also trying to promote herself as a viable alternative. i mean, it seems most impossible logistically to do both at the same time effectively you're not think she's been doing it a very credible job because she's in a no-win situation in that she must support her president. >> i think she really does genuinely support him, but she also has to know that just around the corner, it could tap her on the shoulder and say it's yours. so she has to be prepared for that. that's the most likely alternative. biden. >> other people are talking about having some kind of a condensed primary. we reboot the whole ticket. i think that option is pregnant with menace
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it. would it would cause chaos. it would be it looked like a food fight. >> and i think the democratic party has already split. >> this could leave a lot of disgruntled losers to cause real trouble during the election. >> yeah, in the meantime, donald trump held another rally last night with his vice presidential pick. what with debris? democrats turning on each other, as you said, i mean, there are actual opponent here seems to be getting a free pass we know all eyes and all guns are pointed at jill biden right now. >> and so yes, donald trump has a free pass. if you saw his very long speech today that he gave in michigan, it was the same old donald trump it was a wild speech with a lot of long it was it was on rambling, it was disjointed full of lies and no one is watching it, or at least very few people watch to get to complain about it or
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took to report on it because the real story is joe biden. donald trump has thus far a free pass once the democrats sort this out, if they do the free pass has gone, and that's when the rambling donald trump is going to be against whomever the democrats putting on the ticket. >> yeah, that is still a big if though michael genovese in los angeles. thanks so much for joining us. really appreciate it thank you israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu heads to washington dc today and is expected to meet with us president joe biden early in the week. now the visit comes as officials say, israel well struck yemen for the first time saturday after an attack on tel aviv by houthi rebels on friday, israel's military says that it was successfully intercepted a missile fired from yemen early sunday with a projectile didn't enter israeli territory. meanwhile, the who the army is vowing to retaliate after those israeli strikes on saturday in warning, they're prepared for a quote, long on war. yemen's houthi run ministry of health says at
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least three people are dead. another 87 wounded in the attack here's cnn's jeremy diamond for months. >> now houthi militants have carried out attacks against israel as well as those shipping lanes in the red sea. >> but this is the first time that the israeli military has actually struck houthi targets in yemen. and the reason for that is that drone attack that struck central tel aviv on friday, killing one israeli citizen and changing the calculus for the israeli government. i'm told that these strikes were carried out against dual use targets in the area of the yemeni port of al hudaydah energy infrastructure targets in particular, here's admiral daniel hagari talking about those strikes on saturday the houthis attacks are acts of aggression. >> have violation of international law and a threat to the international peace and security today. israel stepped
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up its actions in self-defense against these attacks. these israeli air force conducted a precise strikes on houthi military targets in yemen the military target was the al hudaydah port used by the houthis as a main supply route for the transfer of iranian weapons from yet from iran to yemen like the uav itself that was used in that attack on friday morning israeli prime minister also saying that these strikes make clear that there is no place that israel cannot and will not reach. >> also, focusing on the link between these houthi militants and iran, which according to the israeli government provided houthi militants with a very same type of drone that was used in friday's attack. these really military says that was a sammad three drone. i'm also told that this was a 100% israeli strike carried out by the israeli military, not in conjunction with the united
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states or the united kingdom and that's notable in particular because over the last several months, israel has really let the united states and the uk take the lead in carrying out strikes against houthi militants in yemen. but because this drone strike on friday actually resulted in israeli casualties i changed the calculus here, and israel carrying out this strike alone, i am told however, by an israeli defense official that the israeli defense minister, yoav galant's got on the phone with his american counterpart, the u.s. defense secretary, lloyd austin, to give him a heads-up on the strike ahead of time. jeremy diamond, cnn, tel aviv middle east experts are growing increasingly concerned about a potentially bigger war in the region not just between israel and houthis in yemen, but also between israel and iran-backed hezbollah in lebanon. there have been many exchanges of fire since the war between israel and hamas us erupted last october. and the cross-border skirmishes are escalating israel's military
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recently targeted, as well as elite radwan forces saying it killed us senior field commander at the groups headquarters in southern lebanon last thursday on friday of hezbollah launched attacks on 16 different locations in northern israel the idf said no injuries or damage were reported from dozens of projectiles fired from lebanon dahlia scheindlin is a political analyst and fellow at the century foundation of progressive think tank focused on reducing inequality. and she joins me now via skype from tel aviv. thank you so much for being here with us. so i just want to start with you first ever attack from israel in yemen, the houthis responding saying they're preparing for a long war with israel. it seems as though this this war is
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taking a dangerous new turn here well, certainly i mean, israel is facing numerous fronts. >> israel's position since the beginning has been this facing multiple fronts depending on how you count it can be up to seven and up until now the houthi strikes on israel have not drawn casualties as we talked about. and, you know, the fact that it hit the center of the country certainly made israel feel decisive that it has to respond directly think this was anticipated right now, everybody is in a bit of a holding pattern, but, you know, throughout this whole time there's been a concern about escalation on multiple fronts. this is of course the problem that israel has been facing in the north. in the north with hezbollah. and it is somewhat more likely this morning as well. we see that there is a possible but there will there will the houthis are threatening a response? and there's a preparation for it. but right now, the army is still saying that the instructions to israelis have been changed in terms of civilian preparations. so it's not guaranteed that this will spin out into a full scale war
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as the houthis are threatening. >> but as you mentioned, the attacks from and against hezbollah in lebanon. i mean, clearly the concern about a growing regional conflicts, which could include an open war in the north. i mean, do you think that is likely given the path that we're seeing right now? >> now that there's a spin, a strange holding pattern, almost since the beginning when hezbollah decided to join the attack on the night of in-between october 7 and eighth and attack israel as adding to the escalation and joining the war, that began, began on 7 october and ever since then, there has been a very strong feeling in israel that there needs to be a preemptive strike what some people call it granted. strike to destroy hezbollah capacity, which is far greater than hamas. however, there have been divisions in the government about that over time, there's been divisions with the americans and even israelis are actually sort of divided about it. often you hear voices that
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are i'm calling for it as for precisely that kind of escalation, especially because they're about close to 100,000 people who have been evacuated from the northern regions of israel, including also lebanese civilians have been evacuated from the southern parts of lebanon for same reason those many people in the northern regions and parts of the government are calling for this kind of escalation full-scale war, destroy. hezbollah is capacity. many people speak of the fact that his bellows arsenal is so much bigger than hamas in the sense that it has 150, 160,000 different kinds of rockets are projectiles and, you know, many feel that there can be no security in the north of israel until those capacities are destroyed. but again, the fact that this can so easily escalate has led to some, i would say, mutual holding pattern. you see that both hassan nasrallah, the leader of hezbollah and israeli leaders in the government have been essentially indicating that if diplomacy can resolve this, that is an option. if
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diplomacy fails, there, the military option is still on the table. and that's been, that's been where the situation has been for the last many months. each time there is a serious escalation, there is an increased likelihood of that you know, full out war. but it's still a holding pattern and i think that hezbollah is the one that has certainly tie this to the war in gaza, saying if there is a ceasefire and gaza is below, will cease its attacks from the north but from israel's perspective, there is no ceasefire in the running just yet. and so we remain in this very precarious situation. >> yeah, for curious indeed, we only have about a minute left, but i just wanted to get a sense from a civilian perspective, from an ordinary israelis perspective, how are they feeling about this war which seems to be now? spending instead of winding down will depend on which way you're talking about. but i mean, certainly in the very beginning, in october, public opinion was very, very strongly
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behind the war and was very confident that israel would be able to achieve all its goals. what we've seen is that there has been a decline and erosion in the sense of confidence, which is largely driven by distrust in the prime minister and his decision-making majority of israelis now no longer feel that it can achieve all of its goals or a full-out victory as the prime minister has promised with relation to gaza. but that's separate from attitudes towards the north and the possibility of war with hezbollah, where israelis are divided depending on the kind of questions sometimes you have a majority or a plurality who support an escalation but depending certainly when the consequences are discussed. and i think that particularly after what we saw on friday, the early hours of friday morning with the houthi strike right in the center of the country israelis are internalizing what it would mean to have the kind of war that would involve you know, certainly the damage and strikes on all parts of israel, possibly on civilian infrastructure and it's a little bit hard for them to
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internalize that. but that's certainly what war with hezbollah would mean if it became a full-scale war. i think israelis are starting beginning to internalize that more after friday morning. it's not something people are happy about, but again, i think this is a significant dilemma because many think that that is the only way to actually push back the threat from hezbollah, which, you know, i hear people in the north certainly regional council leaders saying things like our people will never come back to the north as long as that threat is not pushed back beyond the litani he river. and if it doesn't happen now, it will happen at a later time. soon enough. and so i don't think anybody has clear answers, not nor does anybody feel comfortable about the full-scale war that will certainly carry an enormous civilian toll on infrastructure and possibly lives. >> yeah we'll have to leave it there. really appreciate your analysis. dahlia scheindlin in tel aviv. thank you so much. >> thank you for having me at worst may be over after a massive tech outage that affected computer systems
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right. >> turning now to bangladesh, where the military enforced curfew brought the capital of delhi saka, home to 20 million people to a near standstill on saturday. recent clashes between student protesters and police have reportedly killed dozens and injured thousands dozens more, according to data from hospitals across the country. now the unrest is seeing international spillover as well on saturday, people from bangladesh could be seen crossing border into india to escape violence. and in the uae, which has a sizable bangladeshi population, a number of bangladeshi nationals were arrested and charged with writing against their home country according to the uae attorney general computer systems around the world are coming back to life two days after a massive tech outage began, officials say the situation is largely back to normal what british and french airports as well as the uk train service and the international air carriers say their systems are back or are being restored, including
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turkish jetstar japan, and hong kong express airlines. but it's a different story here in the u.s. where more than 2000 flights were canceled saturday and more than 8,000 delayed of course off now says less than 1% of windows machines have been affected but experts say getting systems back online. takes time all the luva the dock say the pompeii do just a few of the legendary museums that drove visitors from all over the world to paris. >> but a new museum is giving the others run for their hock far, the music you for minors or the museum of cheese is now open just in time for the paris olympics. >> visitors will be able to learn about regional varieties and how the different types of cheeses are made of course snow exhibit would be complete without a tasting of these delicious samples i'm kim brunhuber in atlanta for those of you watching us here in the u.s. and canada, i'll be back in just a moment with more news
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here in the united states and canada. >> i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom across the board. >> people want change and id gotten to the point where it was pretty clear what folks, at least back here one and that's somebody knew at the top of the ticket because they don't want to see another trump presidency and worse, they don't want trump and vance and folks on the far, far right to be in charge of each branch of the federal government. >> my feeling is that there will continue to be more democrats, more security experts saying, not that we want to get joe biden, but we want to be sure donald trump doesn't get the country. we'd like to see more focus on trump's lies and less on biden's limitations. and that involves him stepping aside and helping us with a wholehearted effort to elect another person that was democratic congressman lloyd doggett, the first us lawmaker to call on president joe biden to step aside.
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>> he told cnn earlier time is running out for democrats so in the u.s president should step aside for the good of the party and the country. now the pressure on biden comes as speculation about the viability of a kamala harris lead ticket is spreading. even mckend has this report harris spending part of the weekend on cape cod headlining a fundraiser which reportedly raised more than 2 million for the biden-harris team. >> now this comes as both democrats and republicans are trying to wrap their heads around what a potential harris run could look like. if. she could beat former president donald trump, the fundraiser also happening as some big dollar donors have held back from writing checks for the campaign amid growing concerns about biden's candidacy, raising doubts about how long the campaign can continue. operating in full force if circumstances don't change. meanwhile, in pivotal battleground states, democratic voters telling us the stakes are too high, this election for
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the infighting to continue. >> i don't think he should step aside i mean, regardless here's a little parents i think as far as his administration and his policies and things that he's putting forth, bangs america, it's what it's all about. >> if they if he does step aside, ai absolutely believe it should be kamala harris she is the vice president. she is the next in line she has been running log side him this whole time to bring in someone else, the governor or somebody i feel like that's someone to new too late and i don't think that's appropriate. it's frankly rude to calm law both publicly and privately. harris has remained loyal to biden, assuring donors and voters alike. they can win reelection in 2024, even though it won't be easy. she continues to be supportive of the president, saying she is a first pan witness to his decision-making process, and that he's always thinking
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about every day working americans eva mckend, cnn, washington donald trump and his new vp pick wooed their supporters in michigan on saturday in their first campaign rally together, j.d vance spoke before the former president taking i'm shots at vice president harris the vice president kamala harris. she doesn't like me kamala harris, said something to the affect that then i have no loyalty to this this country well, i don't know camila. >> i did serve in the u.s. right. it's states marine corps and build a business. what the hell have you done other than collect a check the choice of jd vance's trump's running mate is putting the spotlight on his wife, usha
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vance, mike kamala harris, she is a daughter of indian immigrants and was once a registered democrat and had a top not law career. >> as brian todd reports, she is a firm supporter of her husband when 38-year-old, usha vance walked onto the convention floor with her husband on monday for life. >> may well have changed forever now, she's really going to be under the media microscope and we're really getting to know who she is what she believes in, and more importantly, why she married j.d. vance and in an interview with fox news last month, usha vance said this about the prospect of her husband becoming donald trump's running mate. >> i'm not rare and to change anything about our lives right now but i really believe in jd and i really love him. and so we'll just see what happens with our lives she described their victory for yes, 2022 campaign for the senate seat from ohio, jd vance's first ever attempt to public office
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as a shock to so different from anything we'd ever done before. >> but it was an adventure. our family's story isn't ohio story. my husband, jd grew up in middletown and things weren't easy and usha vance seemed as eager to win the race as her husband taken in the lead role in a campaign he's an incredible father and he's my best friend that proclivity to be able to comfortably appear with her husband in public contrast with melania trump, who is rarely seen with the former president at public events. we don't see melania trump humanizing her husband. that's really not the role that these ever played. >> and so perhaps usha could be a really big advantage to this campaign, just like her husband is. >> she's young, she's well-spoken, she's successful, born usha chilukuri in 1986. >> she was raised in a san diego suburb by indian immigrant parents and met j.d. vance when they both attended yale law school they married in 2014 and have three young children, which usha vance has balanced with some impressive
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professional accomplishments. she clerked for two supreme court justices, chief justice john roberts, and brett kavanaugh, when he served on the us court of appeals she just resigned from a high-powered law firm in a 2020 podcast, j.d. vance joked about how tough it is to argue with her at home. >> oh, my god, it's terrible. terrible. >> as she uses so much facts and logic in fact, when fox asked j.d. >> vance how he would debate vice president kamala harris. he motion toward usha and said, well, i have to debate this litigate. are all the time so i think i do. okay. there. brian todd, cnn, washington members of the u.s. house committee on homeland security will visit the site of the trump rally in pencil slovenia on monday. the committee chairman says, it's part of their investigation into security lapses leading up to the assassination attempt. investigators continue to trace their movements and seek the motive of would-be assassin thomas crooks. they believe he flew a drone over the site the scope, the layout, and brought
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a ladder on the morning of the rally. he also had to remote explosive devices in his car, his cell phone contained images of both trump and biden as well well as other prominent politicians, both democratic and republican still to come. if you feel the days are getting longer, you're not alone according to nasa, you're right. >> how the climate crisis plays a role in longer days, just ahead states with us what, you want. this is what you need. >> that's a good day at the office for me that cole colonoscopy for getting screens while i'm delaying, i heard i had a choice. >> i know the name. that's what i'm saying. >> well, the guard cologuard cologuard screened for colon cancer at home like you want, you actually, he's about
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died after a small plane crashed in northern new york state near niagara falls. >> police say the single engine cessna was being used for skydiving and was heading back to land after releasing all the skydivers. the pilot was the only one on board at the time of the crash? ntsb has opened an investigation excessive heat continues to scorch the u.s. from coast to coast as millions remain under heat alerts and facebook potentially record-breaking temperatures. yemen meteorologist elisa rafah has the details drought
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conditions have been plaguing much of the east coast from the mid-atlantic, places like dc and virginia down through the southeast, through the carolinas and even into north georgia atlanta's seeing some of these moderates, even in some places, severe impacts from drought. >> well, we've had a stationary front, literally just parked across what's the southeast? a lot of this week that's continuing with the rounds of showers and storms and you could see the storms continue to ignite on sunday as this front kind of stays put, we'll have those storms ignite again, especially with the daytime heat and humidity later on in the day, most of these storms look like they drop somewhere on one to two inches of rain. if you get a real juicy storm, you could see some three or four inch totals that could cause some minor flash flooding if you're over an area that's already saturated from the week things are again, kind of parked and stalled across the southeast and it's because they're also kind of parked, installed across the west with this dome of heat and humidity that just continues to sit and bring above average
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temperatures from the pacific northwest down the california coast. but again, without heat kind of shoved that way. that's what's giving you that stalled front and the clouds, the storms, and some cooler than normal temperatures across the southeast. triple-digit temperatures continue for a place like palm springs as we start out the workweek near one-twelfth on tuesday, vegas continues a stretch above one hundred and ten degrees. so does phoenix were even looking at temperatures from 105 to 110 degrees for places like spokane and boise, these places don't typically see heat. this hot, it doesn't get that extreme this far north. these temperatures are much more typical and much more average for a place like phoenix or desert city. so something to watch very closely, especially considering where you're seeing a lot of this major and extreme heat risk. is that risk for heat sickness? this is an area again, doesn't have too much access to air conditioning. this is the pacific northwest. it doesn't usually get this hot even in summer. so something to watch pretty closely. you see the
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moderate and major risk for heat sickness does continue to stay out west through monday and tuesday as that heat also just stays kind of parked holds obviously, climate change is having major implications on planet earth and humanity from record, heat waves and droughts to more extreme storms and cataclysmic flooding. but a new study by nasa scientists shows melting ice, rising seas dwindling groundwaters are impacting the planet spin, slowing down and shifting the rotation in access and ultimately making our days slightly longer. >> all right. joining me now is surendra adhikari, a geophysicist? it nasa jet propulsion laboratory in southern california, and one of the authors of the study, great to have you on so explain this link for me then. why would climate change make the days longer? >> yeah, thanks for having me there's climate change. >> what it does is it melts the
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global glaciers and ice. is that are located virtually in both powers have our palette and their mating of eyes does into the ocean, say in essence the mask is being transported from the poles to the equator, making the equatorial region a little bulky. ai, which would mean that it causes the earth's spin to slow down and hence they led to, in case it could think of a classical analogy of a figure skater if they had to slow down, there's been laid. >> they tried to keeps their arms lower and extend those outwards that's a that's a great analogy. so if the planet is thicker around the middle, it moves slower. something i can personally relate to so is this a new phenomenon? laura, as the earth rotated faster and slower throughout its history that's, that's a good point. i mean it's picking from physics
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point of view. >> this is so fundamental that it's been known for many centuries now this dispensable, to principle is called the dependency of the angular momentum balance. >> but in practice, we need to factor in different processes that comes into play to deter mean they have the planet spins and so one of the, one factor that has been operating for virtually billions of years is the fact that the earth is always interacting with the gravitational pull of the moon. and the moon. most that doesn't causes they tides. and this title while says are slightly offset or misaligned, the electric to the gravitational alignment of earth and moon system. and it causes a systematic increasing length of day on a really, really long time scale. >> but let me, let me jump let me jump in because we're
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talking about sort of a longer day i mean, really we're talking milliseconds here, right? so it's not like you and i will be yawning, waiting for a never-ending day to end. but i mean, this still has effects on the way that we humans experienced the world, right? especially in terms of our technology accident that yeah, this is good. but again, we are talking about milliseconds of change in kitchenette up there over 100 year time scale it is a very small number that is not applied that we do not directly feel our daily life. but are technologies do. and hence it has direct implication for ten slide precise timekeeping for tele communications, navigation, for earth and space exploration absolutely so if this keeps going, what effect might it have on the earth including the earth's core well in our paper, we look at what might happen because of
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climate change for the essentially, basically by the end of the century and the number we find is that, but ended the sensory climate alone causes length of day to increase by. >> asma says about 2.5 millisecond per century level much more than this geological timescale phenomenon that has been happening for billions of years and in that sense, it's a really profound finding because it speaks the volume about the, ongoing climate change. but by itself, again, as we discussed before, on our day-to-day life, it melt impacts so much, but this is, this is something you may consider as another testament of the gravity of ongoing climate change. >> yeah, obviously, when we're talking sea level rise, a change in milliseconds over a century or whatever is it's pretty low on our priority list. i mean, there are much more serious things to worry about, right? >> yeah again, so we rely on
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technology ever more than before the precise time timekeeping and the navigation system that we have, the global positioning system. everybody has cell phone, everybody has cars and they are equipped with this kind of technologies and they must be in sync with, are ascertain. say that that sense that is implication. there is in pad specifically for this exploration it a tiny bit of error that we'll have in our timekeeping. my below as a really big if we want to hit a particular target, like a long, long distance away from here so in that respect, again, it has huge implications and not so much on our day to day life for sure if we needed yet one more reason to do something about climate change. there it is not says surendra adhikari in california. thank you so much for joining us. i really appreciate thanks back and now
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says curiosity rover made a discovery on mars that scientists are calling mind-blowing rocks made of pure elemental sulfur one ton craft cracked open iraq, revealing yellowish-green crystals, never before seen on the red planet, scientists are now on a mission to explain the presence of the element. and what it says but the history of mars new competition is breaking its way to the summer games just ahead, we'll show you how a bit of street culture will make its debut. at the paris olympics erin burnett, outfront weeknights at seven months yana in response to the trade rumors, we keep hearing about a we talk about little bit, not that's right not it's right. we talked about moving no. thank you. au you could use open-door sell your house directly to them. >> it's easy i guess we're moving time depress rewind with neutrogena rapid wrinkle
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the countdown is on for the start of the olympics and has excitement builds for the games to begin street counterculture will be making its way onto the competition for the first time. cnn's melissa bell introduces us to a group of break dancers hoping to pop and lock their way hey, two olympic gold from the sidewalks and subways of the south bronx to the paris sunlen picks. >> take see, breakdancing is about to take center stage that's lot like the olympics picked us up from the street and be like, hey what those guys doing on the streets? >> knights legs grabbed this, you know, we we already really set also our community on a huge platform ourselves a huge platform that's already global from the u.s to france, pakistan john india, libya, and yemen for a dance that is highly competitive, judged along specific criteria. originally, due execution musicality technique, and
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vocabulary so you need to be the most complete and you're dance show, you master all path from begging and to mix or an to make the best position and agreements with the music. >> now, breakdown thing is coming to the plaza concorde, where battles will be held at the very end of the paris games francis team is working on its moves and its confidence. >> you just have to be the most connected to the moment possible. i think that's the key for me during a battle. forget everything, and just face the opponents and be their hear the music, look at the crowd, look at the judges and enjoyed the moments a far cry from its early beginnings and an opportunity for the world to discover just how far breakdancing has come melissa bell, cnn, paris, actually can't wait to see that. that wraps this hour of cnn newsroom. i'm kim brunhuber in atlanta. i'll be back in just a moment with more news, please
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welcome to the now way to network... they switched to juniper's ai-native network. and now everyone's so productive, they're operating at a higher gear... that's the now way to network at work—with real ai—putting you in the fast lane. dra w to 369369. >> today >> hello and welcome to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada, and all around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom pressure is mounting on us president joe biden to step

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