tv Fareed Zakaria GPS CNN July 28, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT
7:00 am
with bio free and keep with so much entertainment out there wouldn't it be great... ...if you could find what you want, all in one place? show me paris. xfinity internet customers can enjoy the ultimate entertainment experience and save on some of the biggest names in streaming, all for just $15 a month. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity.
7:01 am
slash tv cnn this morning with kasie kasie hunt, weekdays at five eastern this is gps, the global public square. welcome to all of you in the united states and around the world. i'm fareed zakaria today on the program after last sunday's political earth the quake, stunning decision was biden abruptly ended his candidacy, the democratic party has a new presumptive nominee for president and today marks just 100 days until the election the new york times, ezra klein will join me to talk about the camila candidacy and what we know and don't know about vice president harris also too, great historian's. >> first neil ferguson on donald trump's republican party and the state of the
7:02 am
conservative movement worldwide then and applebaum an autocracy on the rise all over the world. why does the world seems so vulnerable to it today but first, here's my take it's too early to write up the legacy of joe biden he has six more months in his presidency and in these volatile times, much could happen but it seems worth looking back at what we now know will be a one-term presidency and asking, what will define it in history to me, the signature aspect of biden's presidency has been his big break from decades of economic policy for almost half a century. the federal government has refrained from any transformative, long-term investments in the american economy. even the large covid payments were for consumption, not for investment. in fact,
7:03 am
that defining fiscal policies of our times have been tax cuts president reagan, bush and trump all enacted large tax cuts that broadly benefited the rich. the result has been in america that can be characterized by private opulence and public decay. $100,000,000 homes in a country where the roads are scarred by potholes and children die at higher rates than any other country in the industrialized world these tax cuts, by the way, along with spending on wars in afghanistan and iraq, are responsible for much of america's enormous federal debt biden change this narrative. he used the resources of the federal government to make large investments in infrastructure, childcare, manufacturing, and energy these investments will not pay off anytime soon. many of them have just begun but the u.s. is now undergoing the largest upgrade of its
7:04 am
transportation infrastructure since the 1950s, with more than 56,000 projects already launched it is seeing a boom in manufacturing investment and employment that reverses a decades long trend. green energy is booming and for the year that it was in effect biden's expanded child tax credit helped reduce child poverty in america by 46%. moving a staggering three 3.4 million children out of poverty in one year. the credit expired after a year, and congressional republicans refused to renew it biden's measures helped trigger the strongest post covid, recovery of any major economy the us has produced over 15 million jobs. the most ever for any precedent in one term the unemployment rate stayed under 4% for over two years. that's the longest since the 1960s black labor force participation rates are
7:05 am
now higher than of whites for the first time ever on us sustained basis and so on. it's true that inflation surged and while the pandemic played a role so did an excessive infusion of cash into the economy for which biden must be held responsible there are aspects of his policies that i disagree with. but overall is former treasury secretary larry summers told bloomberg tv the record is remarkable. summer's added, i don't think any administration has so outperformed the economic forecasts on the day that it came into office. biden gets almost no credit for this economic revival some of that is the lingering effects of inflation. and the persisting crisis of affordability in areas like health care, housing, and higher education but much of it, as i have long argued, is that we live in an age of cultural politics the issue on which republicans have been attacking him mostly is
7:06 am
not the economy, but the border on that biden was vulnerable because he had pandered too long to his left-wing allowing the system to collapse under the weight of millions of migrants arriving at the border and demanding the protections that come from seeking asylum. he finally adjusted. but by then, donald trump had forbidden any republican cooperation to alleviate the crisis the other area where biden has made his mark as foreign policy. he is address the challenges presented by the return of russia and a rising china but done it not through solo actions are one shot deals the administration has strengthened america's alliance system, bolstering nato and adding two new members to its sweden and finland. similarly, in the indo-pacific, it has built new structures of cooperation and deterrence with japan, south korea, india, australia yeah, and others. all in all, it has handled the world well enough that surveys suggest that most countries
7:07 am
rate the united states and joe biden much more favorably than they did under donald trump. the final legacy of biden is that he has returned the presidency to an office of sanity decency, and dignity, i think are showing out the dangerous demagoguery and anti-democratic rhetoric and behavior that preceded him but for that legacy to endure and for biden's term not to simply be a moment in time. he needed to ensure that the united states actually closes the chapter on donald trump and to help make this more likely, he made the painful decision, not to run for the presidency, which will also earn him a special place in the history books. joe biden has felt that he has been underestimated all his life judging by his tenure in the white house. he's right go to cnn.com slash fareed for
7:08 am
a link to my washington post column this week and let's get started has there been a crazy a month in american politics? >> a month ago, jokey, preston biden's disastrous debate was two weekends ago. and attempt on former president trump's life last sunday and announcement by president biden that he is leaving the presidential race then literally overnight, the wilmington, delaware offices of his reelection campaign or transformed into kamala harris headquarters within days, the vice president had rallied staff and supporters, raised record funds and handily won the commitment of enough delegates to secure the nomination. but subbing in harris for biden is a risky proposition. with just 100 days left until the election. can
7:09 am
she pull it off? joining me now is the new york times opinion columnist, ezra klein. he has been riding with uncommon acuity about the campaign for months, and in february was one of the earliest voices calling for biden to step aside welcome ezra. >> thank you. good to be here so you did ask in february for biden to step aside, but you also called for very specific thing which was an open drum democratic primary that would are kind of mini primary that would lead to an open convention at which may the best person become the nominee that second part hasn't happened how important do you think that was? >> and what do you think about the very rapid coronation of kamala harris? >> well, in february, there was a lot of time and there's not a lot of time now, when i said then two, was it you were thinking if you wanted to argue as i did, then that the risk of
7:10 am
running biden was too high that you had to be comfortable with harris becoming the nominee because she was always overwhelmingly the most likely alternative nominee. she is the sitting vice president by the time biden did step aside, you were looking at weeks between there and the convention and a couple of things that happened in between those periods. one, was it the truth is, for all of the agita in the party about kamala harris said behind closed doors that there was a whole lot before we could go. >> she was flawless functionally since the debate. >> she had i'd been in a very tricky position of both backing biden absolutely. while showing that she could do the job, but she had to step into his shoes and she was an extremely good surrogate and she's just very good at holding the party together and it making people feel comfortable by her. so by the time biden did step aside and endorsed her opinions inside the party had changed, which led to a very rapid byd coalescing around her so what do you think of the there is going to be a republican line of attack that this was a kind of you an inside job democratic
7:11 am
elites didn't allow democratic primary voters views to be heard. >> do you think that'll stick? will that be effective? >> i think that line of attack is very funny i think republicans are flailing pretty badly right now. i was surprised they were not more ready for this. i think that you could see this coming as of a couple of weeks ago at the convention, there should have been if they were a party that was hedging bets a lot more talk about kamala harris should have probably been ready with ads. this is not hard blocking and tackling to see what was coming down the pike here. the idea that the democratic party is not respecting the will of its voters. it's voters in july of 2023, a plurality do not want joe biden to run again. i mean, that was one of the things i was talking about in those initial essays, democratic primary voters, like all voters felt, joe biden was too old to be an effective president. in a second term and have that that repeatedly for a very long time, it was democratic elites who are very slow to coming to this conclusion. they supported biden in running unopposed in not doing interviews and not doing debates. that's not a cover up.
7:12 am
>> his team thought he was stronger than he was. >> it's why they accepted and negotiated for the early june debate. but i mean, if you are looking at democratic polling right now, if you are falling democrats and social media, the outpouring of like actual passion and enthusiasm for harris is far beyond what the top levels of the democratic party were expecting. i mean, i can tell you for a fact that really a week ago, i mean, the sunday morning biden end up dropping out later that day on. democrats are still very worried about kamala harris, still very worried if he she could step into his shoes, still very worried about how she played in the midwest. that last one is still an open question for them. but in terms of how the party is feeling, because that's an attack aimed at the democratic party's base. the party has a kind of enthusiasm and verb, and a vibe shift that i don't don't think i've ever seen the structure of political sentiment change with this rapidity, within 48 hours in my entire career as a journalist what do you make of the race right now? >> because it's still very
7:13 am
close and you know, surprising to me is even after the debate, it really moved a point-to-point and a half, which it tells you that at the end of the day there's i don't know, 45% on each side and a little bit of play in the middle there. so do you do for reading the tea leaves, do you see anything that's changed look the polling when we talk about 45, 45, this is not a national race, right? >> i mean, as you know, better than anyone, this is race is going to be i did in michigan and wisconsin, and pennsylvania, potentially, she might expand the map some to arizona to georgia, to north carolina, right? that's where this race is going to happen. and so far biden has been a little bit further down in the battleground states than he is nationally that has looked very similar in polling of harris. again, like i want to see how that looks which i'm the next two weeks. but harrison now going to have a series of opportunities to introduce herself to the public as a function of timing or a strategic question of timing. the fact that the shift in the democratic party happened after the republican convention,
7:14 am
after they had sort of taken that opportunity and used what they had on joe biden and not her. it puts democrats in a very advantageous position. they're going to be people to have this whole convention introducing her and where they want to go to the entire country with the entire lineup of national democrats behind her, obama, biden, clinton, et cetera and that's going to be significant. the question is, what foot she puts forward, who does she want to be? what is the version of kamala harris? she wants people to know? and where does she break with what has been coming before her in terms of what it's going to reshape the race, i think that's really the core set of questions. >> was stay with us because next on gps, we're going to ask ezra klein exactly that question just who is kamala harris? and what kind of president would she be, right after this fareed zakaria gps brought to you by fisher investments? >> clearly different money management at fisher
7:15 am
investments, we may look like other money managers, but we're different. >> how so we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client's best interest. so we don't sell any commission-base d products, then how do you make money? >> we have a simple management fee structured, so we do better when our clients do, the clients really come from first, then yes, we make them a top priority by getting to know their finances, family health, lifestyle, and more wow, maybe we are different at fisher investments were clearly different start your day with nature me. the number one pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand if you have moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's disease put it in check with rent folk a once-daily pill. >> when symptoms tried to take control, i got rapid relief and fatigue with brynn vote when flares kept trying to slow me
7:16 am
down, i got lasting steroid free remission with brynn book jack when my doctor saw damage, rinvoq helped visibly reduced damage of the intestinal lining, check for both uc and crohn's rapid symptom relief blasting steroid free remission, and visibly reduced damage. check check and check, re-invoking lower your ability to fight infections including tv series infections and blood clots, some fatal cancers, including confirm and skin heart attacks, stroke and gi tears occurred. people 50 and older with a heart disease risk factor have an increased risk of death serious allergic reactions can occur tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant with uc and crohn's in check and keep them there with rinpoche asked her gastroenterologist about rinvoq and learn how avi can help you save who don't let that ship foil your train does that that happens a lot, but safely could have helped chip repair is
7:17 am
faster, cheaper, and easier than a new windshield. >> and with your insurance, it's usually free i'll let that chips spoil your trip booked today in case, you know, you only get one body it might be the perfect size to do this body may take up a lot of space or have to speak with its hands but no matter what body are born with you only get one let's fight like hell i'll for him the darkness of bipolar depression make me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. >> then i found a chance to let in the light, discover catalina unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar one, capital ada
7:18 am
is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar one and two depression. and in clinical trials movement disorders and weight gain were not common cap lighter can cause serious side effects. >> call your doctor about sudden mood changes. behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away antidepressants may increase these risks young adults, elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke and capitalize has not approved for dementia related psychosis report fever, confusion, or stiff muscles which may be life-threatening, were unclear controlled muscle movements which may be permanent, common side effects include sleepiness, dizziness, nausea, and try mouth. these aren't all the side effects in the darkness of bipolar one and two depression can kept belated can help you let in the light ask your doctor about capitalize, find savings and support a capitalist a.com. why did we do this last year for your fermenting migraine and kaitlan and look at me now, you'll never truly forget migraine, but zero migraine days don't take if allergic to be looked at most common side effects are nausea, constipation, and sleepiness. >> she liptak there, forget you
7:19 am
get migraine medicine closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have nice ophelia's will send you a free book to answer questions you may have called now and we'll come to you 800 a31, 3,700 kamala harris hadn't entire high-profile high-stakes career before she became joe biden's running mate and then vice president she was the district attorney of san francisco then the attorney general of california, than a us senator from that state? but there is nevertheless a sense of mystery surrounding some of her policy positions back with me now is ezra klein of the new york times. ezra klein show azra, when i say there's a mystery, there's a sense in which people, some people think, well, look, she's a california senator. she is san francisco liberal on the other hand, she made her name as a very tough
7:20 am
prosecutor, tough on crime, all that kind of thing do you have a sense as to who who is the real kamala harris i never know exactly who the real of any of us are, right? we change over time, but i'm a california and i've lived but good about my life at san francisco to i know the politics of that place, that the profile she had in california was moderate black law and order democrat she gets international politics and there are huge expectations on her, probably more than she could bear at that exact moment. she runs in 2020. there's real push to have her run. but she's running think at a time when the democratic party absolutely does not want a law in order. democrat, this is post ferguson, post black lives matter. there is a huge amount of movement behind criminal justice reform. a huge amount movement behind attacking. and i think correctly right on a policy level, lot of this the ways in which the justice system has been discriminated so she sort of abandons out persona, but runs anyway, but never quite finds another one. she's big
7:21 am
moments in the campaign, but they don't. again, speak to who she is at the core issue slices into joe biden on busing but doesn't really have a different position on busing. she kind of gets in trouble endorsing medicare for all and triangulating around it it the thing is now, i think one thing is that she simply matured as a national political figure, being in the spotlight for that long will change un, she is spent a lot of time at munich security conferences. she'd been part of the biden administration but also she now speaks on behalf of the democratic party, the work she was doing in the 2020 democratic primary two fractionally differentiate herself from bernie sanders, from joe biden, from pete buttigieg, from amy klobuchar, from cory booker. she doesn't have to do that work. she is now the standard bearer. the content of the democratic party can be shaped and altered by her, but she also doesn't have to sort of weave around it. you can simply pick what she likes best, and emphasize that. >> except that the republicans are going to use the clips from that primary campaign, right? she embraced bernie sanders
7:22 am
medicare for all. >> will that stick you think that to the extent that she has an ideological problem, it's not the chase to it's not that she has to find a new answer to who she is but the biden ministrations record and democrats don't always like to admit this is not popular. >> so she needs answers. i think on both how to sell the biden mutations record better than biden himself has been able to do. i think some of that will be there in her communication skills, but there are actual difficulties there, particularly, i think around inflation and immigration. and then she's going to need the question of well what would she do first? my suspicion from how she's running right now is the first since it's going to be roe and abortion. if she had a trifecta that she will restore the protections of roe, the place where she really found her footing in the administration was around that and as much as donald trump tried to make this election about immigration, she's going to try to make it about dobbs. but there's also the question of her as an economic message juror and people do vote heavily on the economy on their own personal situation route affordability. and that i think
7:23 am
is the biggest weakness for her. the biden ministration has really suffered from inflation, from an affordability crisis that has been building for a long time behind inflation and housing and elder care and childcare. and she's going to need an answer and a policy set for white people. well, should believe that a future with harris is going to be more affordable than the past has been in there, in their experience with joe biden i will always had the view that there is a majority of americans who will vote against trump. >> if you think about it, 2016, he loses the ball popular vote wins narrowly gets the electoral college in 2018, he loses the house in 2020, he loses both the popular vote and the electoral college in 2022, his candidates do terribly in the party does badly is that it's a very small majority. that's anti-trump and that's why there is this vulnerability. do you think that that's right or because
7:24 am
his poll numbers now seem better than the story i just told i do not take a lot of comfort from the theory that gets called like the anti-marquee majority theory. >> it's not that it's not there, but it's just a majority is don't matter that much. so donald trump does lose by 7 million votes in 2020, he has gotten more popular since then. i mean, there's no doubt about it. we have never seen donald trump running ahead in national polls. now, maybe we've gotten better at polling his supporters because he has often had polling errors that were made him look weaker than he really was. but we've never seen a polling this strong he is sort always has gotten worse and improved as a candidate i will say i think the big mistake donald trump made was picking j.d. vance. >> i think that there has been an opportunity for him to reboot some of his image, whether i think he has changed notwithstanding, and picking some like doug burgum for more inflation focus campaign even more rubio, i think would've been helpful for him. but in picking j.d. vance, he has somebody who both in terms of
7:25 am
policy, but much more importantly, i think here in terms of style, aesthetics, demeanor, the things he's actually said doubles down for people on the part of donald trump that scares them. write j.d. vance said he would have backed an important way donald trump's lies, an effort to challenge the 2020 election. he's called for a national abortion ban, and he just radiates a sort of rage and contempt for liberals and people outside the donald trump tent that i think turns a lot of people off so that i think has made trump a little bit more vulnerable than he would have been if he if he ran a different race. i don't think democrats is you should underestimate trump they've lost to donald trump before they need to take seriously the possibility it could happen again. and i think the fact that they take it so seriously is why the party did such an extraordinary thing in mobilizing internally to convince joe biden to step aside as always, a pleasure to talk to you. thank you thank you, my friend next on gps, a deeper look at the gop and its popular shift under donald
7:26 am
trump what will the likes of ronald reagan think of today's republican party will explore with neil ferguson tonight the whole story digs deeper into a historic week in presidential politics. >> first, the rise of kamala harris followed by the story of joe biden's withdrawal from the race. the whole story with anderson cooper starts tonight at 8:00 on cnn what works? i'm just telling everyone by one pair, get one free for back-to-school vision works. see the difference, lactate is 100% real melt just without the lactose delicious to just ask my old friend kevin. now than like enjoying a cold one while watching the game who's willing we are my friend. >> we are our biggest challenge uncertainty hidden fees surcharges. who knows what to
7:27 am
expect? >> turned shipping to york but vantage, keep it simple with clear upfront pricing with usps ground advantage namely it's kind of amazing. wow, my go-to is lima by eyedrops, luma fire dramatically reduces redness in one minute and look at the difference. >> my eyes look brighter and wider for up to eight hours, limit i really works. >> see for yourself. >> when i was diagnosed with hiv, i didn't know who i would be, but here i am being me. >> keep being you and ask your health care provider about the number one prescribed hiv treatment big tare, the garvey is a complete one pill once a day treatment used for hiv and many people, whether you're 18 or any with one small pill victor be fights hiv to help you get to undetectable and stay there. whether you're just starting or replacing your current treatment research shows that taking hiv treatment as prescribed, getting to and staying undetectable prevents transmitting hiv. their sex, serious side effects can occur, including kidney problems and kidney failure, rare
7:28 am
life-threatening side effects include a buildup of lactic acid and liverpool do not take battarbee. if you take dofetilide or rifampin, tell your health care provider about all the medicines and supplements you take. if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, or if you have kidney or liver problems, including hepatitis, if you had hepatitis b and that stuff, taking victory without talking to your healthcare provider, common side effects like diarrhea, nausea, and heading no matter where life takes you, big tar, we can go with you, talk to your healthcare provider today. >> most deodorants just do armpits, dove does more meat del, the whole body do for thighs shoulders, knees, and those dry new dub whole body deodorant means pause on the things you love but breen means go cool the pain with bio free and keep on going bio freeze. green means go would be a smarter way to mom for this swiffer power mom. >> and all in one cleaning tool
7:29 am
with a 360 degree swivel ed that goes places a regular mop just can't mop smarter with the swiffer palm up okay. everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition or strengthened energy insured 27 vitamins and minerals nutrients for immune health and ensure comp when we're young, we're told anything is possible... ...but only a few of us go out and prove it. witness the greatness of anna hall on a connection worthy of gold: xfinity mobile. only xfinity gives you the most powerful mobile wifi network, with speeds up to a gig in millions of locations. and right now, xfinity internet customers can buy one unlimited line and get one free for a year. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity.
7:30 am
always free. >> go to deal dash.com right now and see how much you can save. >> i've hanako montgomery in tokyo and this is cnn in the 1980s, ronald reagan built a republican party base, largely on values of free trade, small government, and an interventionist foreign policy as i watched the republican national convention in milwaukee earlier this month i wondered what happened to that party. now, led by donald trump to discuss what has changed and what's next. >> i spoke with neil ferguson. he is a historian and senior
7:31 am
fellow at stanford university's hoover institution. this june he was knighted by king charles certain neil ferguson, pleasure to have you on lourdes, a carrier has you shouldn't be what happened to the party of reagan, free trade, free markets, very nine attitude towards immigration is that gone? i think it goes back to its roots. amman has to remember that the republican party was a protection as party for most of its history. >> in the 19th century. >> that was one of the differentiating things compared with the democrats in the south who were for free trade republicans only really reconciled themselves to free trade after world war ii, and they only became full believers in globalization as in free trade, free capital movements and free population movements. after the cold war was ended.
7:32 am
>> and you can see that extraordinary convergence that happens between democrats and republicans, at least the elites of those parties in favor of globalization in the 1990s and the early 2000s. >> but that's over and it's over for very good political reason so in a sense, the republican party is now a kind of reaction against all these conservative movement in a way, i think so. >> i mean, to me, the puzzling thing when i first started working in the united states, which was back in 2002, was that wasn't already a protection as party. i can remember going around asking it at the time of the midterms, where are the protections candidates? because there ought to be some, given what's happening since china drawing joined the world trade organization, which was 2001, it was after that that you had this tremendous decline in manufacturing jobs in the american heartland. >> plus you had the population rising, rising with foreign born share of the population rapidly rising towards its
7:33 am
previous peak, which was back in the late 19th century and i kept asking myself, why is there no backlash against globalization on the right, on the left. >> and it finally came much later than i expected. and in the unlikely for form of donald j. trump donald trump in an interesting moment in that bloomberg interview, talks about william mckinley and mackinlay, of course, is a return to that republican tradition of protectionism. >> high tariffs, all that kind of thing everybody who wants to dismiss donald trump as all ego, no substance should read that interview that he gave. >> that was published just a couple of days after the assassination attempt against him because he sets out quite clearly his political theory. it's a protectionist one. he argues that tariffs are a good thing as a source of revenue and as a negotiating tool with
7:34 am
a trading partners. he's very clear that he sees currency wars as the way in which asian countries, not only china, but before that, japan and have been able to compete successfully against american manufacturing and so it's quite sophisticated argument and it shows that trump is more connected than people realize to that 19th century tradition. he explicitly says, i see myself as being like president william mckinley findlay. and i think the tariff of 18, 80-90 is what i'm all about this is definitely not the donald trump of social media. this is a quite serious attempt to recast republicanism in its 19th century form. so nobody should underestimate the donald trump has a serious ideological vision of a conservatism republicanism rooted in the 19th century tradition and i think it's quite an appealing kind of republicanism for a
7:35 am
substantial number of voters, particularly in the heartland state and in picking j.d. vance, it seems that trump has consolidated the transformation of the republican party into a populist party. >> i think that happened because vance was so obviously not the establishment pick the republican establishment, which still clings on to some influence over the party wanted him to pick doug burgum the governor of north dakota, and trump effectively said no, no, no. you guys really don't call the shots anymore. i'm going to go with the person who converted to maga to trumpism. and that's true because vance the man who wrote hillbilly elegy, was not a trump as he became one. and that's the significance of his appointment, that the significance may also be that it makes it easier for kamala harris to win this election because jd vance's views on a whole range of issues present a much better target donald trump
7:36 am
because trump is not really a social conservative. >> whereas j.d. vance has become a quite militant one on issues, particularly abortion, but also on women's rights more generally, that our great issues for democrats to mobilize their base on male ferguson, always a pleasure. >> thank you very much for reading next on gps democracies are staring down a new kind of autocrat and losing ground that's what anne applebaum themselves, when we come back back, there's no war, so hateful war 12 between qin bloody war between trackers house of the dragon, streaming exclusively on mac right now,
7:37 am
get america's most trusted pink brand and an everyday low price may be air starting at 29, 98 when migraine strikes, you're faced with a choice, except a trade-off it's a treating or push through the pain and symptoms. >> we've you rally. >> there is another option. one, dose quickly stops migraine in its tracks. treated any time anywhere without worrying where you are or if it's too late, do not take with strong cyp 3a4 inhibitors, allergic reactions to draw that can happen. most common side effects are nausea and sleepiness migraine pain relief starts with you ask about you rarely learn how abby could help you save imagine a future where plastic is not wasted. but instead remade over and over into the things that keep our food fresher our families safer and our planet cleaner to help us get there america's plastic makers are investing billions of dollars to create innovative products and new recycling technologies for
7:38 am
sustainable change. >> because when you push for smarter solutions things and happened well, i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. thanks to sky rosie, i'm on my way with clearer skin. three out of four people that she 90% that clearly skin at four months and sky resy is just four doses a year after two starter doses, serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them okay. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms had a vaccine or plan to thing on my skin. >> right thing you're going metella just about sky crazy learn how api can help you save only from simply safe 24/7 lifeguard protection. >> this exclusive technology allows simply safe agents to help stop crime in real time. >> stop police are on their way for instant intruder deterrence and faster police response. there's no safe like simply safe not every decision you
7:39 am
make we'll be as good as getting a volkswagen at the savvy vw summer sales event 2024 bolts back in models cost less to maintain the honda yeah, 0.9% apr financing or $3,500 customer bonus on a new 2024 atlas or atlas cross sport right now, pet dander skin cells, mold spores, paulon and dirt are being sucked into your air ducts, get cleaner air in system efficiency. >> now, with stanley steamer, your air ducts are clean until their stanley steamer clean and the same life diabetes, there is no slowing down each day is a unique blend of people to see and things to do that's why you choose lucerne to help manage blood sugar response uniquely designed with carbs steady glue, sirna, bring on the day going hold as part of the journey even when you have heart failure but when he had shortness of breath, carpel tunnel syndrome and lower back
7:40 am
pain, we wondered, could these be warning signs of something bigger thank goodness. >> we called his currently out because these were signs of attr a rare and serious disease that gets worse over time. if you see any of the warning signs, don't wait that's good cardiologist about at trc today than he was comes gummy bites and loved back these bills are crazy she's no idea. she is sitting on a goldmine. >> she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more, she can sell all were part of it to coventry for cash, even a term policy even a term policy find out if you're sitting on a
7:41 am
goldmine call coventry direct today at 800 for six won 180800 or visit coventry direct.com this source with kaitlan collins weeknights at nih 91 message the democrats are pushing in this election is that their party stands between democracy and autocracy wherever you stand on that claim, autocracy is gaining ground around the world. but our democracy is a reckoning fully with this new breed of autocrats and applebaum is a pulitzer prize winning author and a staff writer at the atlantic. her important new book is autocracy, inc. the dictators who want to run the world welcome. and in this fascinating book, you point out that the dictators of today look very different from the ones we used to think of. the tin part single military ruler who runs this country with an
7:42 am
iron fist and kind of bankruptcy describe the new autocrats well, the new autocrats are not tin-pot. >> they are mostly billionaires. and they rarely rule alone. they, they, they've created networks so that the state state-owned companies and one dictatorship do business but the state owned companies in the next, the military's cooperate. they sell one another surveillance technology they share other kinds of technology. they share tactics for defeating their political oppositions. they operate much more like it's not exactly an alliance because they aren't aligned ideologically but as i said, it's a network a community of interest they're not ideologically similar because you're talking about chinese communist bouton, the iranian boulez, right what do they have in common? >> no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, they're not there's no there's no ideological links,
7:43 am
so don't think of it as an alliance and i would argue that this is very much not the new cold war. they're linked by rather ties of interests. sometimes financial interests. they share interests in carrying out the same kinds of repression. and of course, the other thing that links them is their interest in us. and by us, i mean you and me and a lot of the people watching the show, their very interested in the language of liberalism, the language of the rule of law, the language of rights, the language of freedom as they see that language, they hear it coming from their own oppositions. they hear it coming from us, and they're trying now very hard to push back on it to discredit it, whether it's through their own actions jones, whether it's through avoiding sanctions, or whether it's through whether it's through new kind of information warfare. they, had, they have that in common. >> you said that an alliance, but they do they have been cooperating more recently. and
7:44 am
if you look at this race of recent report of fascinating reporting important report of two russian bombers and two chinese bombers that were acting in concert near alaska. this was picked up by norad first time the russian and chinese militaries have actually cooperated. it does, it is beginning to feel like they are inching towards some kind of an alliance. >> yeah, as i said, i doubt it will be a formal alliance and i doubt there'll be aligned in everything. but it doesn't surprise me at all you know, increasingly russia and china cooperate in the economic realm. russia's now very dependent on china in a way that it wasn't a decade ago. the chinese have been supplying components and parts to the russian defense industry going around sanctions. and i know the united states is now looking at secondary sanctions that it weighs of pushing back against that, but they see themselves as, as i said, not maybe having the same goals but
7:45 am
having the same enemies. and one of those enemies is the u.s. but as i said, i think i think it's better described more broadly as this set of ideas and rules that they feel hamper them and constrain their power. >> so that's about the autocrats abroad. but you talk about autocrats at home as equally dangerous and you're thinking of people like viktor orban, the polish, right? and donald trump what's the common thread there will the common thread is shared tactics what do they have in common? >> they have a common belief that they shouldn't be hampered by the rule of law i would argue yes, that donald trump, who's somebody who, whose whole business career was tied in with and moved in and out of his relationships with foreign autocrats, foreign business people that they bought, they bought apartments, they plot condominiums in his in his properties that he also sees himself as someone who would like to rule without
7:46 am
constraint, without rules. and he's said as much himself. he describes his admiration for xi jinping, who he thinks is very strong. he's talked repeatedly about his admiration for putin he sees those kinds of leaders as people he admires. >> now, you know, they're going to be people who say, look, trump is a narcissist, but you're exaggerating their all these businessman in america who have come out in recently supporting him, everyone from elon musk to many of their finance billionaires anyone, what would you say to them? >> as any? what are they missing i would say that even just the name elon musk. >> i mean, i think there is a there is a group of business people in the united states who also hope to draw to create a system closer to that of the autocratic world. they would also like to operate with fewer constraints and they would also like to have the kind of relationship to power that business people have in russia
7:47 am
or china, or elsewhere in the autocratic world, whereby people who are close to the leader or to the ruling party have special deals and special arrangements and are taken into consideration in special ways and sometimes make their money off of those arrangements and you can begin to see in the united states that there are people there, there, companies who are looking in that direction and seeing things that they like about it. so i'm not surprised at all, fascinating book. >> thank you, anna applebaum, as always thank you tonight the whole story digs deeper into historic weekend presidential politics. >> first, the rise of kamala harris, followed by the story of joe biden's withdrawal from the race. the whole story with anderson cooper starts tonight at 8:00 on cnn at simply safe, we designed the number one rated home security system, powered by 24/7 professional monitoring for half the cost of traditional home security so you stay safe for less than $1
7:48 am
a day. >> there's no safe like simply save life diabetes. there is no slowing down. each day is a unique blend of people to see and things to do that's why you choose lucerne to help manage blood sugar response uniquely designed with carb steady glue, sirna, bring on the day why always the couch doesn't need to get a puppy school, get his little puppy diploma much ever been spending all this little guy when your questions about life turned into questions about money there's erica, the virtual financial assistance to help you spend save and plan smarter. >> only from bank of america. what would you like the power to do? >> it's just your mother and i went different thing which is why we got sling tv so we can watch live and free tv on one app that's right thing is really keeping this family
7:49 am
together. >> you have no idea who had no idea some. >> days you can feel like a spectator or in your own life with chronic migraine 15 or more headache days a month each lasting four hours or more. botox prevents headaches and adults with chronic migraine before they start and treatment is four times a year in a survey, 91% of users, which they'd started sooner so why wait, talk to your doctor effects of botox may spread hours two weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. >> alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, i problems or muscle weakness can be signs life-threatening condition, side effects may include allergic reactions, neck and injection site pain, fatigue, and headache. don't receive botox if there's a skin infection, tell your doctor your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions and medications including botched blind. i'm toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects, chronic migraine, we still keep you from being there. >> why wait talk to your doctor
7:50 am
about botox and get in the picture? learn how ad they can help you save but this is carbonic and this is how you can sell us. >> your car visit karwan, answer a few questions, will give you a real offer, then set a time for us to pick it up and hey, you on the side, they'll york are the easy way with carmona nature boy, was that birth get some mail, finch it gives seats females are bonding gives seats females are bonding mitchelour local news keeps us d when others won't,
7:51 am
but it's under siege from big out-of-state media companies and hedge funds. now, california legislators are considering a bill that could make things even worse by subsidizing national and global media corporations while reducing the web traffic local papers rely on. so tell lawmakers, support local journalism, not well connected media companies. oppose ab 886. paid for by ccia. now and see how much you can save i'm pete muntean at reagan national airport. this is cnn closed captioning brought to you by meso mesobook.com if you or a loved
7:52 am
one have mesothelial, will send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 800 a31 3,700 and now for the last look, it seems every day and other tech company rolls out some new ai feature. >> in june, apple announced it was embedding ai into max ipads and iphones. this will enable users to create custom emojis find a photo by describing it and communicate with siri more easily google recently introduced the ai overviews to produce a concise answer to a search query rather than just a list of links they really are endless ways ai could make our lives easier. but the massive expansion of ai has a hidden cost. it uses massive amounts of energy everyone knows that when machines do task for humans, they use energy. if you write an elevator instead of walking up the stairs, that
7:53 am
takes electricity a farmer who uses a combine harvester instead of picking crops by hand, has to burn fuel but people seem to forget this obvious fact when it comes to labor saving devices of a less tangible kind, consider a.i.-generated image generation tools. you type a prompt and it produces an image something that would take much more time and effort for human artist but off at some data-center computer chips are chugging away to create that image, consuming electricity in the process. one study found that generating four of the images you just saw takes as much electricity as fully charging your smartphone producing texts like chatgpt takes less energy than producing images, but consider the scale. last year, researchers say chatgpt was receiving hundreds of millions of queries daily, feeling all those requests consumed enough electricity to power 20 to 30
7:54 am
thousand us households for an entire day. google's new ai summaries are thought to use ten to 30 times the energy of a normal search ai drinks up energy because it's essentially an electronic brain you may be surprised to learn that the human brain, despite its small size, consumes 20% of a person's energy load tech companies, voracious appetite for more energy is already putting strain on the grid one utility reported bidding wars over data center sites with ready access to power wells fargo estimates that ai will use less than 1% of all us far this year. but projects that could grow by more than tenfold by 2030 earlier this year, sam altman, the ceo of openai, which makes chat gpt, said this to bloomberg we still don't appreciate the energy needs of this technology. he went on to
7:55 am
say, we need a breakthrough in clean energy because ai is appetite, is at a scale that no one is really planning for for indeed, altman is so concerned that he has gotten heavily involved in several clean energy startups attempting to make just such a breakthrough on. the, bright side ai can actually be a useful tool for cutting greenhouse gas emissions i can quickly digest and analyze reams of data. so it is already designing more efficient transportation routes greener manufacturing processes more sustainable farming practices, even reducing the carbon footprint of data datacenters. a 2021 study by the boston consulting group argued that if companies deployed existing ai technologies across the board, they could slash their emissions by an eye-popping five to 10% easier said than done. but there's certainly a big opportunity even more enticing of the technological
7:56 am
breakthroughs that ai could unlock scientists are using ai to try to develop better solar panels, longer-lasting batteries, new ways to capture carbon. and perhaps bring nuclear fusion closer to reality. >> in fact, the most pressing challenge that artificial intelligence could help with is figuring out how to generate enough clean energy to allow for its own expansion into all other spheres of human life. >> thanks to all of you for being part of my program this week, i will see you next week russia for trying to spy on us we were spying on them. i'm sorry, frank this is a war, but secret wars, secrets and spies, a nuclear game now streaming on max why didn't we do this last year for your preventing migraines and kaitlan and look at me now, you'll never truly forget my dream, but zero
7:57 am
migraine days don't take if allergic to be lifted. most common side effects are nausea, constipation, and stickiness you liptak there, forget you get migraine medicine at fisher investments. >> we may look like other money managers, but we're different you can't be that different. we are we have a team of specialists, not only in investing, but also in financial and estate planning and more your clients rely on and you for all that? yes. and as a fiduciary, we always put their interests first but you still saw commission-based products, right? know, we have a simple management fees structured, so we do better when our clients do better, we're more different than i thought at fisher investments work clearly different so don't let that ship soil your trade that happens a lot, but safely could have helped a trip repair is faster, cheaper, and easier than a new windshield. >> and with your insurance,
7:58 am
it's usually free i'll let the chips fall. your trip booked today in place when you're the leader was asked to clean up and restoration. how do you make like him every what happened happened but whatever comes your way? there's a pro for that serve broke. like never even happened okay. >> everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition or strength and energy ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals transfer immune health, and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein the darkness of bipolar depression make me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love then i found a chance to let in
7:59 am
the light discover, capitalize unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar one, capital ada is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar one and two depression. and in clinical trials movement disorders and weight gain were not common capital. >> it can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes. behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away antidepressants may increase these the risks and young adults, elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. capitalize has not approved for dementia related psychosis report fever confusion, or stiff muscles which may be life-threatening or uncontrolled muscle movements which may be permanent, common side effects include sleepiness, dizziness, nausea, and try mouth. these aren't all the side effects in the darkness of bipolar the one and two depression capsulated can help you let in the light ask your doctor about cap later, find savings and support a capitalist a.com greeting sabbath yeah that's not good happened huge things happen
113 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
CNN (San Francisco) Television Archive Television Archive News Search Service The Chin Grimes TV News ArchiveUploaded by TV Archive on