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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  August 26, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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aggressive as you think. i'm keeping the best i had no idea. i was still paying for a flight wi-fi until i finally checked my credit card statement 14 months at $600 later. that's why i created rocket money, an app that shows you all your subscriptions in one place. see something you no longer want. you can cancel it straight from the app. download rocket money today. >> i'm jessica schneider at the federal courthouse in washington, and this is cnn to mute or not to mute. >> that is the question as the president financial campaigns argue over the rules for the september debate. pudding, that showdown in jeopardy, both candidates are on the trail this week as donald trump focuses on the midwest, and kamala harris gets on the bus for a trip down south and mosquito threat, a deadly virus has towns in one state telling people stay inside as one of
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america's most famous health care officials is hospitalized with another infection. the danger from those insects is front of mine. top of mind, as americans get ready for a holiday weekend of cookouts and time outside there's no starliner, no problem. the two astronauts stranded on the space station are going to have to wait until february to head home. but that return journey is not going to be on the scene. capsule that took them to space. they're getting a so'e following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here. >> the cnn news central shifting into high gear any moment, former president trump is expected to speak at a campaign event in the critical swing state of michigan, the first stop of what? >> his team is promising to be an aggressively ramped up campaign schedule all the way until election day. but as the former president prepares to take the stage in detroit,
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there's another stage that he's now suggesting he may not step foot on for his september 10 debate with vice president kamala harris on abc, cnn, national correspondent kristen holmes who's is live for us in detroit. kristen, let's start with trump's campaign stop there. what are we expecting speaking to the national guard here in michigan. >> i do want to be a little bit quieter because he has taken the stage was actually early this time. he's done really unheard of for politicians over as presidential race, but he took the stage beijing was invited to talk about his future with the national guard if he were to be re-elected, we are told he would talk about the military. you're talking about the three-year anniversary of the withdrawal from afghanistan. obviously today, earlier he was at arlington smith family members of the fallen soldiers from that event, it's to come one of his main talking points against the biden ministration. we will be listening closely to see if he actually stays on message, but we're also told and just a few moments, tulsi gabbard, who was once a democratic presidential
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candidate. she's now an independent and she's actually helping him prepare for the debate against kamala harris when she shared the stage with harris, she's going to come out and officially in boris donald trump. no, that might not seem that surprising given the background, their but clearly they are trying to capitalize off of what we saw last week with rfk jr. coming out and endorsing donald trump kind of the mindset of two democrats, former democrat, coming out to support donald trump, something they want to shine a light on, as he said, is just the beginning of many stops this week, he's going to be back in michigan later in the week in pennsylvania was caused in a series of these various battleground states. they say they are really ramping up this can be seen not the last two weeks back continues but this is something we have heard before, but we also know they want to make some changes to the campaign, particularly now that kamala harris is at the top of the ticket, this change in enthusiasm, a boost on democratic side as well as a boost in the polls for harris it didn't kristen trump seems to be at odds with what his own team is saying they want when
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it comes to these rules for his upcoming debate with harris, tell us what's happening this is what we often see with donald trump and his team. >> it seems as one thing donald trump comes out and seems to undercut what they're saying. essentially this is all about whether or not the mics should be muted at that debate, the way they were when donald trump was on stage with president joe biden solid trump's team says, we agreed to biden's at the top of ticket to this debate and news. the same rules of the cnn debate. we want the mics muted. on the other side, harris says, well, it's a different time now, i'm now in office i mean, i'm now at the top of the ticket. so those rules remember agreed upon. we want those mics open then we hear donald trump to come out and say this when asked about it. >> we're thinking about it with a good or bad. they also want to change the rules. you know, the deal was we keep the same rules. now what they want to make a change in the rules, we agreed to the same rules. >> doesn't matter to me. i'd rather have it probably on but the agreement was that it would be the same does it was last
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time is that case? >> it was muted i didn't like it the last time, but it worked out fine ask biden now i'd worked out or was fine? >> donald trump, clearly they're not wanting to hear that he can't do the debate if the mics are muted. so going out there against what his campaign had said, but i would imagine briana going to see a couple of more rate iterations here of what this debate is going to look like before they both end up on the stage on september 10, sides here, jockeying to get what they believe is best for their candidate. >> all right. we'll be looking for that, kristen. thank you. we have cnn's priscilla alvarez with us now with more on the harris campaign. what's the latest? >> well, they say at least in terms of the debate that the matter is resolved. now, of course, she is going to be hitting the campaign trail this week. she's going to georgia that's an important state for democrats, that's one that president biden only won by less than 12,000 votes in 2020. and so they want to replicate that and more this time around,
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which means a lot of visits to the state. what's going to look like this time is a bus tour and a concluding with a rally with the vice president on thursday. now, this it's pace of travel may seem like a little less than it was over the last several weeks where the vice president was blitzing all the battleground states. the reason for that i'm told is because they want to put a lot of focus on the debate preparations. of course, there has been this behind the scenes viewed about the issue over the mics and now that former president donald trump has said ed that he is open to it, that by the harris campaign feels as though the matter is now put to rest. what she is doing behind the scenes, however, is familiarizing herself with the former president's record, with his statements, doing practice sessions, and essentially just doubling down on these preparations, not leaving it until the week prior to go into depth on these issues and policies so this is another moment, essentially, were they see an opportunity to have a large audience. and
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especially bringing those grassroots donations which have really come in and they've capitalize on on these key moments. >> donald trump characteristica lly sort of de-emphasize this is how much prep he's doing even if he's doing some, but she's clearly doing quite a lot. brazil. thank you. boris. >> let's talk about the race for the white house with larry sabato. he's the director of the center for politics at the university of virginia. larry great to see you as always, i want to ask you about something at to trump pollsters mentioned including tony fabrizio, a veteran of previous trump campaigns. they were talking about kamala harris is lead in certain national polls. and they were saying that they were not focused on that especially as they're showing harris pulling ahead, they want to keep their eye on the ball. so what do you see as far as the seven swing states and we're pulling, is there what does polling indicate to you about where they stand well, boris, it usually a cop-out to say
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everything's really, really close and everything's a toss up. >> but you know, sometimes it's true and in the case of the seven swing states this year i think it honestly is very, very close nationally right now, at least harris has a lead. >> you can argue about what it is a point or two or three but of course, as we learned over and over, certainly in the year 2000 and then in the year 2016 in the popular vote doesn't matter, except in individual states. >> it's the electoral college that matters. so if that's what they mean by the big picture, then i get it. although i have to say all politicians and certainly trump fits into this, they will cite the polls endlessly while they are leading and if they stop bleeding or it's a close case and they had been leading, you won't hear them mentioned it or they'll disk the polls and called them inaccurate. lyndon johnson used to carry the polls. the newspaper clips of the poll results and his
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pockets, and still he started to fall in the polls and then his pockets got close. plane larry, we noted a moment ago on a on a graphic that crystal ball urinalysis switch, north carolina from leaning republican to toss up. >> tell us more about that. >> sure. well, there are a number of reasons for it, including the fact that harris has restored the enthusiasm and energy to the democratic party, and it has affected north carolina, which is a very closely divided state. you wouldn't believe it from the election results because the republicans almost always win but obama was the exception. he barely won in 2008. but democrats have won the governorship frequently. they're now what is happening right now is that you're seeing an even up the pieces of north carolina that are more liberal, that are white white-collar college educated, centered
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around major cities, they have become more democratic even in the last four years and so that's balancing the rural areas. the rural areas are more important north carolina than they are even in a number of the other southern states so again, it's close. what i think is the critical actor, at least so far, is the fact that you have an extreme republican candidate running for governor. and even the republicans privately described him as extreme. >> he says all kinds of outrageous things. one point he denied the existence of the holocaust and that's just one example he's caught causing so much distress for the republicans that he is discouraging some of them who may not show up to vote or might even vote democratic. >> these things matter little things matter whenever a state is really close in north carolina is in that category now i really interesting to hear that the lower part of a
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ticket has the potential impact for the top of the ticket. usually we hear the inverse right i was curious about another bit of your analysis about the popularity of an incumbent president determining the outcome of an election. obviously, harris it doesn't technically count as the incumbent president, even though she's running to stay in the white house how is incumbency factoring into this election, given that donald trump is a former occupant of the white house to now this is very scrambled no question about it. >> it's very scrambled. there is no real incumbent, but there are two quasi-incumbent. maybe it cancels one another out. donald trump, the former president. >> i've often wondered if grover cleveland, at some of these same problems when he ran after losing for it term and kamala harris. >> so while she lives in the naval observatory, she doesn't live in the white house. she does have an office right near there and so she is a
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quasi-incumbent. but one thing that we've discovered that i think most people have forgotten is that people really don't associate the vice president with number of the president's policies. i think that's true in most administrations why? >> because logically people say a vice president doesn't make the decisions. >> he or she is there to chile cheerlead for the president when the president makes the decisions so they're listening to her to see where she's different. >> what she might do differently, what her approaches and that's been helping her an unprecedented election in more ways than one, larry sabato appreciate the analysis. >> thanks so much thank you boris. >> i have this hour on cnn news central, a bipartisan group of lawmakers is in butler, pennsylvania right now trying to learn more about the security failures that led to the failed assassination attempt on former president trump plus, today marks three years since the terror attack that killed 13 u.s. service
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happening right now the congressional task force that is investigating the assassination attempt against former president trump is in pennsylvania. they are visiting the scene where the shooting happened. lawmakers are also meeting with local officials as they're trying to piece together the events that led up to that shooting last month now this is the first major investigative step for the task force since it was formed. and we expect to hear from lawmakers in roughly an hour when they will hold a press conference. let's get some perspective now with cnn, senior law enforcement analyst and former deputy director of the fbi, andrew mccabe. andrew great to have you as always what kinds of things do you think these? lawmakers should really zero in on during the visit today? >> we know it's really important this trip that they're making up there. i know some folks are commenting that it's performative or whatever, but when you're conducting an investigation into event into an event that happened in the past especially one like this, where the perspective and the depth and the kind of spatial
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relations of that site are so important and really integral to the recommendations that they were likely make there's no substitute for actually going on site and seeing that for yourself, understanding where was the roof of the her building where we know the shooter took his position relative to where the stage was set understanding where the foliage might have been blocking those lines of sight for the snipers. so there's a lot of really important issues that i think they're only going to understand fully if they go see it for themselves. >> why wasn't the perimeter wider? what kind of challenges might that have provided? these are all questions they can ask sort of in real time cnn has learned that the day before the shooting, local police had actually set aside radios so that secret service could grab them and then be in direct communication with them. and secret service didn't pick them up. how big of a failure? that one of the biggest negative facts that we have learned about since this incident massive failure. >> it tells you a couple of
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things. one, the infrastructure set up for communication and coordination was not very good, not very direct. we now know that the they were supposed to listen to those rates videos and communicate over them. and if that was not possible, they would communicate through a state police representative over to the local police. this is far too attenuated. we learned after september 11 the benefits of what we call joint incident command, having everybody together in the same room on the same wavelength so they're, they were working with a tough situation to begin with by failing to even collect the radios and clearly not using them. they really set their own course to this mess. >> so we got what appears to be the first step toward accountability. it may be the only as far as we know at this point, but some of the secret service staff was i'm not sure of reassigned is the right word, but they were essentially told to work from home, right? what did you make of that decision so it appears i've seen it reported a few different ways, but it appears
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most consistently. >> it's been referred to as administrative leave, which is what government agencies call it when they tell an employee because of an investigation or an outstanding issue, they're trying to resolve to go home, don't don't come into work we don't want to prejudge these folks. it was a few folks at the pittsburgh field office and one person from the detail. but the fact that they're not allowed to participate in investigations are not allowed to go out into the field and they're supposed to stay home, leads you to believe that they are caught up in this investigation in some substantive way and that we might ultimately see a negative finding about their performance. but we're not there quite yet. >> what questions do you still have? what, what questions are still outstanding? >> oh my gosh, there are so many questions about this thing, but there are those fundamental ones that we all saw easy for us to ask these questions that the tougher part is to answer them. but what determined the breadth of that security perimeter? why was it in affirmative decision to leave the ag our buildings outside the perimeter or was it
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just a failure to really adequately understand what sort of a vulnerability that would that would pose. i think that's the most important question. and then there's many others. why, why not counter-drone? around techniques? why did they allow this person to disappear for 90 minutes and then come back and present a lethal threat. >> yeah. so many questions. andrew. thank you. we appreciate your insights coming up. russia unleashes a huge attack across ukraine 15 region struck that includes the capital of kyiv and one of the largest aerial attacks yet, we are live with the latest on the ground and three years after the deadly attack at abbey gate, the families of the soldier and marines killed in the bombing. there at the kabul airport grieve is there frustration grows over the lack of answers from the white house. i'll be speaking with the mother of one of the service members who was killed next news night with abby phillip. tonight at ten eastern
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barrage sent people scrambling into underground subway stations for safety. cnn's fred pleitgen is monitoring the situation for us. fred, what's the latest either boris, you actually, as we were going to air, we got another update from the ukrainian emergency services and they say that the death toll is actually now at seven with 47 people wounded in these massive airstrikes as the ukrainian say, that really targeted areas throughout the entire country, including, as you mentioned, the capital of kyiv as well. >> and if we look at some of the missiles that were used, the ukrainians means are saying that 127 missiles were fired by the russians and 100 109 drones. some of those missiles are absolutely huge. there's some that are actually designed to destroy whole carrier strike groups. others are hypersonic missile. so certainly the ukrainian air defenses very busy in the overnight hours they say they actually managed to shoot about to well hundred of these missiles and drones down. but of course some of them did go get through doing massive damage to ukraine's critical infrastructure, especially the energy
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infrastructure and what are the other things that the ukrainians told us just a couple of minutes ago, boris, is that there are going to be rolling blackouts in ukraine starting tomorrow because the damage is so substantial now the russians have come out and they've actually confirmed that they were behind these strikes. they say they were targeting the energy infrastructure to deplete ukraine's so possibilities of manufacturing weapons, which of course are used by the ukrainians to defend themselves against the russian invasion. but also of course, for ukraine's incursion into russia in territory that ukrainians obviously completely angry about what happened. in fact, ukraine's president volodymyr zelenskyy, after given an update on the situation of ukraine's incursion into kursk saying that was still moving forward. also said that there will be an answer by the ukrainians for this massive missile attack. and of course, one of the things that we know, it's getting dark and key of right now, of course, people very much bracing for what could be another night of possibly more missile attacks, boar's fred pleitgen.
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>> thank you so much for the update, brianna today marks three years since the deadly abbey gate terror attack that killed 13 american service members in afghanistan, the u.s. military was securing cobbles airport perimeter shortly after the taliban regained control of the capital, helping americans and eligible afghans flee during the chaotic withdrawal of all american i can forces when an i.s.i.s. k. suicide bomber detonated a bomb. the blast also killed about 170 afghans today, president biden released a written statement calling the service members who lost their lives, patriots in the highest sense and former president trump laid wreaths at arlington national cemetery to honor the abbey-gate 13. he also laid flowers at the grave of staff sergeant ryan christian canals, who is the only member of the army killed during the attack. and trump also spoke on the phone with my next guest, as he did that, ryan's mom pollack now self paula. thank you so
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much for joining us today as you are remembering, your son and i do want to talk with you about your search for accountability over the bombing. first though, i do want to just talk to you about your son because you've spoken so beautifully about the kind of person and soldier that ryan was. and i was just hoping that you could tell us a little bit about him first of all, i just want you to know that i miss him so much. in it's smile was contagious his ability to think through situations was remarkable it was truly gifted at what he was doing. and we're so proud of him for what he was willing to do for our country yeah. you noted that he volunteered for that mission. he didn't have to go on it. and i do want to note, you're speaking to us from fort liberty in north carolina because the base held its annual memorial workout in
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honor of ryan today so that's why you were not at arlington cemetery? you spoke with president trump on the phone. do you mind telling us what he said to you when he called you this morning? >> i was with the troops in fort liberty i'm making my way right now to dc to spend some time with roy in tomorrow in what trump said to me was, is that he was sorry. it was so sorry that all this happened and that it should have never happened and he's right it should have never happened and paul, i know for you and many of the other family members of these 13 men and women family members, you've become very close to that. >> you want accountability. what would that look like to you? >> olivia be great. if the administration would start out by saying we made a mistake. we
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made several mistakes we did not make the best decisions instead this administration is tried to sweep it under the rug. and that's absolutely not going to work for this nation nor this world who watched this live on television you can't deny what we all knew and saw vice president harris is now running to be commander in chief. i wonder, do you have a message for her you are with the hold administration in all of this you hold the same accountability as president biden doesn't you right beside of him and making these decisions. >> and if you say you're not in what kind of leader are you going to be in the future if you didn't have the same decision-making with him on this you know, paula, i wanted
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to ask you because i've seen now many presidents who struggled to engage with gold-star families who are angry with them and yet, these are men and women, these service members who died in the service of their country on orders from their commander in chief how do, you think that a president should engage with an honor, the sacrifice of families like yours, even when especially when they don't see eye-to-eye with you well, when i was either i with president biden in the white house oval office at his imitation, it would have been great if he would lean in and gave me a hug at the moment, i was weeping in front of him but he didn't that marks a character issue. and that's what i really am looking for, is better character in the office for our president i want to ask you
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because there's been a new development when it comes to this congressional investigation into the withdrawal jury dan levy, who was a senior investigator for republicans on the house committee resigned in protest. >> he said the committee has failed to interview a number of witnesses from the military and state department from the biden administration and has helped a number of witnesses avoid accountability i know that this is a committee that has listened to family like yours. you were able to testify before them but this is a critic of the biden withdrawal, who is saying that republicans are not doing enough. do you think that the committee is doing everything it should well, short of having our president walk away from the office prior to his soonish of these four years. >> i think that we have done quite a job of at least making
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americans aware of what they already actually knew and that is the failure of this administration you want policy changes. that's one of the three things that you talked about wanting before congress what kind of policies are you looking to change? whether this is this incoming administration is republican or democrat? >> well, how about we shut down the border around the united states of america? >> how about we vet those who are coming in illegally or being welcomed in by this administration, that are illegal immigrants that we have no idea. >> they have not been vetted. and we are now at a crisis in our country from crime, from things that are happening that makes people fearful in our own nation's borders. how about we start with our nation first? giving our nation's safety
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before we run off and do any other foreign policies right now. how about we protect the united states of america? >> paula canal self, thank you so much for being with us. we do really appreciate your time today and we're thinking of you were thinking of your family, and we're thinking of ryan. thank you. >> yes, ma'am over right back this election season, cnn has you covered, no matter the question from more about the candidates to rules in your state took casting your ballot. the cnn voter handbook has your answers visit cnn.com slash vote for your what's the greatest invention of all time, new hands-free skechers, slip-ins. you just slipped in and they're on it's like they have an invisible built-in shoehorn. your foot? slides into place without bending down
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called now and will come to you 808 to 14000 right now for civilly in space, travelers are getting ready for a daring mission. and if all goes according to plan, the spacex crew members will reach a higher orbit than any human has gone since the apollo program. and they become the first civilians to conduct a spacewalk it's pretty cool. >> their rocket is set to blast off from nasa is kennedy space center early tomorrow on a mission known as polaris dawn, don't want to be on that one a great movie. that's amazing cnn is going to be broadcasting it. were hoping this is super cool to watch. let's bring in former nasa astronaut garrett reisman, who now serves a spacex consultant. we should note he helped lead the development of crew dragon, the first spacex civilian mission to space. okay. garrett, two of the crew members they are venturing out on a space walk. this is crazy. what is this going to look like yeah,
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that's a little crazy, but but it's very exciting. >> and i really want to start by giving praise to jared isaac, man who put this mission together and is the commander of the mission is really his idea to push spacex to expand their capability and that includes doing spacewalks, something spacex has never done before. and it's going to be really exciting anytime you do something like this for the first time, it's really exciting to watch. >> it's also about who is doing it, right? these are civilians doing a spacewalk. so it's going to be historic for a number of reasons but there's risk involved, right? walk us through those yeah. and to the civilians on this flight are people i worked with its spacex and know very well. so it's a little bit of a nail-biter for me to be honest with you, it is risky anytime you do something like this for the first time is it risky but it's, but it is super exciting and i'm so happy for them. i know how excited they are to be a part of this it's really
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important because it's a step that spacex eventually needs to take if we are going to have people living on the moon and on mars in a sustainable fashion going forward so it's great to see him taking this step we get so excited, but this is serious business and it's always important to remember that this is the frontier, right i do garret want to ask you about these two astronauts who were stuck in space we covered it at the beginning. >> there were supposed to be there for a little over for week. it's now been more than two months going on three and nasa says that they're going to be stuck on the space station until february when a spacex rocket will bring them home what do you think led nasa to make this decision? >> well, it's just that the uncertainty in the results. they don't know exactly what is the root cause of the problem up there. i look, i would put really good money. i would bet good money that when
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starliner undocked two boeing capsule, it will come home and everything will be fine. by not really willing to bet my life on it unless i had to. and that's the thing they don't they don't have to, right. they can wait. they have another vehicle coming up to the spacex dragon and they can just wait and take that home. and yes, it's going to they're going to have to stay up there another six months and that's a long time. they weren't anticipating that. that's not easy. it's not easy on the families but, you know, a sunny, sunny very well. she's got very cheerful and very positive disposition she'll be she'll be just fine up there. i'm not so sure about butch though you essentially said that this isn't really a referendum on the starliner that you think it would come back in pretty good shape. >> i'm wondering what impact this sort of snafu might have on boeing space program long term well they've got to fix this technical problems so they don't want to go through this
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again, they have to, by doing a lot of testing on the ground and when the capsule comes back and they review all the data for the mission, they have to look very carefully to see what are the missing pieces of information that need him, that they need to be confident to do this again, with people people what additional testing they might have to do before they're willing to do that. >> but there will be a path forward. this is a technical problem that engineers can solve. and i'm confident that boeing will be there along with spacex in the future, because nasa really needs to have to actually this whole incident shows exactly why it's important for nasa to happen two different options to get people up and down to the space station carrot, thanks so much for sharing your expertise with us. >> polaris dawn premieres tomorrow right here on cnn with florida watching it. thanks, kara thanks, boris. >> thanks, brianna, always been of course still ahead. a growing mosquito borne thread causing problems across parts of the northeast health official sounding the alarm over for a pair of potentially
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deadly viruses one of them hitting one of the nation's top health officials. what you need to know when we come back next monday, about two-hour whole story special, the candidates and their record on the key issues of the election season. >> what does their path? tell us about how they will meet the whole story with anderson cooper next monday starting at 8:00 on cnn i just found out. >> i've been paying for 27 subscriptions it's like find out you add 27 kids. you didn't know rocker money? yes, it was rocking you have to netflix accounts. i had to fubo counts how much ryan did it save you 700 bucks, i guess if
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customer peril and from a products all back by our guarantee, accustoming dhaka tv on the edge premieres sunday, september 22, nine on cnn right now, dr. anthony fauci is recovering at home after being hospitalized with a case of west nile virus, the former director of the national institutes of allergy and infectious diseases, is expected to make a full recovery his infection highlights though the growing concern about mosquito-borne illness well, this says, which have been reported across dozens of states. >> cnn's jacqueline howard is with us now to talk about this. jacqueline, exactly how common is the west nile virus in the
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u.s. right now? >> well, brianna, we know that around this time of year, august and september is when we see the highest levels of this viral activity. and it's estimated that there are about a few thousand cases reported each year so far this year, there have been more than 200 cases reported across 33 states as you see on this map. and west nile now virus is the most common mosquito borne disease here in the united states. symptoms can include headache, fever, body aches. we know that dr. fouchier reportedly has said that he felt very fatigued when he was hospitalized with this virus. and while there is no specific antiviral treatment or vaccine for this, we do know that the symptoms can be alleviated with rest fluids and pain medications. in most cases, brianna. >> okay. and then there's another mosquito borne disease which i had to rehearse the name and the commercial break. it's called eastern equine encephalitis this is actually
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deliver some firstly, i know that's hard to say, but it's led to some park closures and massachusetts tell us about this one and how worried folks should be that's right, brianna, this is in the town of plymouth, massachusetts where they have seen an increased risk of this. now, tripoli is not as common as the west nile virus and estimated 11 human cases are reported each year here in the united states and while many people don't develop symptoms when they do, that, this virus can cause fever, body aches, joint pain, and in some cases, neurologic disease. you may have inflammation of the brain. in some cases. so that's why this is something that health officials are watching closely, particularly in massachusetts. but when it comes to triple e or west nile virus, brianna these are all good reminders that mosquitoes, they are some of the deadliest animals in the world because they spread diseases like this through mosqsquito bites. and that's why
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it's so important to try to avoid mosquito bites by wearing repellants, wearing loose fitting clothing. make sure your window screens are in place so mosquitoes do not fly it indoors. and if you do have a mosquito bite and if a few days later, you develop a fever or other symptoms, definitely talk to your doctor because you just want to make sure you're staying on top of things, especially around this time of year, brianna yeah. >> a good reminder, waiting for that first freeze, i'll tell you that jacqueline howard. thanks. you for the report and coming up new drama surrounding the next presidential debate with both sides arguing about the rules, including whether microphones will be muted. cnn new central continues in a moment the polls for have i got news for you are pretty okay. >> yeah. >> but what are the kinds we could run on the news before
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