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debate, the september showdown between donald trump and kamala harris is only two weeks away, a potentially make or break moment for these two presidential candidates, as long as they find a way to agree on the rule let's first and a daring raid leads to the rescue of a father of 11 held by hamas, marking the first time the idf has helped a hostage escape alive from the tunnels under gaza. but a deal to bring home the hundred plus hostages still in captivity remains elusive. >> and a troubling new studies suggests the average person has more and more plastic in their brain about twice as much as just eight years ago. what could that mean for our health can't be good, right we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here. the cnn news central we are 70
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days away from the election and there are just two weeks until vice president harris and former president trump face off in the presidential debate. >> and as the race for the white house sprints ahead, trump is beefing up his political coalition. cnn is learning that former democratic congresswoman tulsi gabbard and robert f. kennedy pretty junior have now joined trump's transition team, both have offered their endorsements here in recent days right now, both campaigns are laser-focused on battleground states. of course, trump's vp pick senator j.d. vance is in michigan today ahead of trump's visit to the state later this week. and while harris and her running mate, governor tim walz will set off tomorrow on bus tour of georgia. cnn's kristen holmes is with us live. kristen, what are you hearing from the trump campaign about the new additions to his transition team well, brianna, trump's team has long said that they want to expand the electorate, and that means casting a wide net, trying to get more voters
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than what traditionally vote for just donald trump or would trigger israeli vote republican in part of that clearly is trying to court these rfk supporters as one of the things we've talked about when rfk endorsed donald trump was what the actual polling looked like and what this could mean for the general election in some states, he had 6% or 5%. >> well, the thing you have to remember about these rfk supporters, and it's also the same likely please supporters of tulsi gabbard. it's kind of independent mix summer democrats, some are republicans. there's some crossover is that there is a belief, or at least an uncertainty that they show up at the polls in november, particularly if they're candidate is not on the ballot. so what you're seeing here in some extent is taking this endorsement and trying to use it that in a way that will drive people to the polls. it's one thing to say that you were endorsed by rfk junior by tulsi gabbard. it's quite another to say, they will have an impact on personnel and potentially even policy. if i am elected. so clearly a way to
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drive people who support them to the polls. and here's what we have in statement from the campaign. they say, we are proud that robert f. kennedy jr. and tulsi gabbard have been added to the trump-vance transition team. we look forward to having their powerful voices on the team as we work to restore america's greatness. again, these are two politicians who at some point have been very progressive and democrats who have now come out for donald trump, they are clearly trying to ride these endorsements and turn it into votes at the polls all right, kristen, thank you for that update. >> cnn's eva mckend is joining us now. so eva harris, pitching her plan for the economy. this isn't a new campaign ad. what is happening here with her message? >> brianna, they're leaning into this economy first message, we see that with particular emphasis on lowering housing costs the vice president says the country's housing shortage can be addressed in part by building 3 million new homes and rentals. let's listen to how she's making this argument in that new ad. and on the campaign trail as president, i will be
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laser-focused on creating opportunities for the middle-class that advanced their economic security stability and dignity and brianna, this of course comes at a time when the campaign is trying to thwart persistent criticism from all corners regarding the lack of a sit-down interview and the absence of answering aggressive questions from the press. though a senior adviser tells us harris will schedule a city down interview by the end of the month and pointed to her engagements with the press while on the trail, harris and minnesota governor tim walz, her running mate, launch that bus tour across south georgia tomorrow, concluding with a thursday night rally in savannah, georgia, of course, remains a critical battleground state. and while there's tremendous focus on voters yana in urban centers, they're also focused on capturing voters key to democratic coalitions in rural parts of the state as well. brianna.
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>> all right. eva. thank you for that. we appreciate it. boris let's expand the discussion now with jamal simmons, who's the former communications director for vice president harris, and a cnn political commentator. we're also joined by alex thompson, a national political correspondent for axios and cnn political analyst. thank you both for being with us. jamal, you were on the vice president's press team? why is her campaign waited so long to schedule a sit-down interview with boris, you would be shocked to understand that perhaps people aren't press politicians are running to do media interviews just for the sake of doing them usually when a politician does a media interview u.s. because they've got something to say. they're going out there to quote, advance something, right? to push out a piece of policy, they're talking about, to talk about maybe she's going to talk with tim walz about his join the ticket, which we are understanding that perhaps he's going to be in that first interview there's a reason for
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a politician to grounds speak to the media. so the vice presidents had a lot to do. do over the last few weeks, right? she had to pick a vp nominee. she had to get ready for a convention completely reoriented convention during convention speech preparing for debates. there's a lot happening, so they're fixing to do a media interview in the middle of a lot of other things that the campaign has been trying to get done and sometimes media gets pushed to the side, despite but our best intentions and best designers alexander, i'm curious what you're hearing about what this interview may wind up looking like in terms of a platform and in terms of whether she does it with her vp nominee or solo these are the internal debates and conversations going on. >> is it going to be live? how long is it? is it on tv? is it print it with someone that is a little bit softer, a little bit friendlier, and ideologically aligned person, and that she does something that's more partisan or more liberal leaning, does the press give her credit for doing that
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interview? now, jamal is right and there's two different things going on. there's basically should she answer questions. and i think he as a reporter, i would be biased and saying yes, she should. but is it politically smart thing to do? and that's the debate also going on within democratic party circles. the fact is that some of her worst moments as vice president were when she did interviews on camera that she got a little flustered. she did these roundabouts in answers about immigration or about covid-19 and so that's the other thing that democrats are thinking. can you basically only do a few interviews? is it strategically sounded? just do a few interviews before then in november i have heard from folks on the other side, republicans who have pointed to this and said, this is an example of why she's not ready for prime time if her team has district how did you guys who to sit down with him when then it shows that there's
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something that she's insecure about or is looking to sort of soften her message on what do you make of that line of attack? >> well, coral with that a little bit vice presents been talking to reporters, i think just about every time he travels, he's going over to the polls to taking questions. she's going back on the plane and talking to people on the plane off the record so i think they're talking to reporters quite a lot the question is, are you going to pick up a bunch of time to sit down and do a 30 or 40 minute interview with a reporter or maybe you going to do not just one report and maybe you got to do two or three of them. are you going to do them every couple of days? the question is, when do you do that? and i think as a campaign or as a political office, what they're trying to decide is, what are we going to say and how is this media interview? help us communicate with the american public? because despite however much they may love cnn or one of the other networks are outlets you're really not talking to the outlet. you're talking to the public and talking to the voter. and is the voter
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watching or listening to that outlet when you make a decision to talk to them? >> alix, another line of attack from republicans is aiming to characterize harris as a flip flopper, as someone who has changed positions on several issues and you have some new reporting about her stance on the border wall does this constitute a flip-flop or is this sort of a shift a slight shift perhaps in the semantics of what she supports no i mean this is a significant policy shift in how she views immigration. the fact is that when she was a senator and running for president, she called the idea of a border wall on american. she said that she would block funding for it. and by full-throatedly endorsing the bipartisan border bill that was negotiated earlier this year with senator lankford, senator chris murphy, sinema, and senator murphy. that bill includes hundreds of millions of dollars to continue building the border wall. so
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the bill that she that she now says that she will sign includes building more border wall. now, you can say that circumstances have shifted. you could also say that, you know, that you actually don't support the border wall, but it was necessary in order to get a compromise them. but the fact is that her campaign didn't tell us those things for that story. and again, as part of the reason why it's important for her probably to do interviews to answer these questions could be explanations for not supporting medicare for all anymore, not supporting banning fracking. but the fact is that we have not heard anything on the record from her or her campaign about those changes and so that point, jamal, how would you advise the vice president to approach that kind of conversation where she has to answer for what are different positions, then she used to hold on certain issues here's the real truth about this. >> boris is vice president, was part of a government that joe
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biden led for a long time that was really a coalition government, right? this coalition of people who believed in democracy, who believed in, they didn't believe in maga, they didn't want trump to be in office anymore. and that coalition sort of goes all the way from aoc and bernie sanders on the left, all the way to liz cheney on the right and so the vice president and the president looked to pass bipartisan legislation. they passed a lot of it when they were in office. and now you're seeing the vice president come out of kamala harris and say that she is going to also support more bipartisan legislation, even though it may contain things that she doesn't necessarily agree with. so my understanding of the border bill is not that she's allocating new money for the border and said, here's money that was already present from the trump administration and it hadn't been spent yet. and they're going to lengthen the amount of time that they have to spend that money for the border and so on the border wall and so that's a little bit different, but still, if you're running a bipartisan and kind of coalition way of a political movement. you're going to have to sometimes compromise and cooperate with republicans on
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things that aren't necessarily your core values. >> i mean you just gave sort of a reason thought through response as to why they're there might be a difference wouldn't it be easy enough for her to do that to reporter that we're asking that question when that tamp down the ability for republicans to point and say, well, look, she's flip-flopping, isn't it a good defense oh, republicans are going to say whatever they're going to say, regardless of what she does. >> but it's actually incumbent though upon the vice president's talked directly to the american public, including through big media. and so i've think you're going to tier, do an interview. she said she is now the mixed between that, whether it's local or national as a printer on television or radio, there may be a variety of thing they've got to figure that out in the office. i wouldn't try to second guess them here on tv. i hate it if somebody tried to do that to me when i was the vice presents communications director, but they do have to talk to the american public, i think are going to get to it pretty quickly. >> and they have an open
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invitation to do it right here on cnn news central monday through friday one to 4:00 p.m. eastern were more than happy to accommodate them. jamal simmons, alex thompson. thank you both for the time. second that motion thank you. >> jomana. appreciate that. still ahead this hour on news central after nearly 11 months in hamas captivity and israeli hostage is back with his loved ones today. what we're learning about the special operation that rescued him plus meta ceo mark zuckerberg, laying out some big regrets. how he says that he faced censorship pressure during covid. and wishes he had responded differently and fighting back ukraine's president deploying f-16s to combat russia's largest air assaults of the war thus far, will it be enough to hold off further attacks? >> cnn news central brought to you by stanley steamer from carpet upholstery, air ducts and more. >> it's not clean until it's stanley steamer murray clean
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israeli military officials that israeli special forces were combing a network of tunnels in southern gaza. they were acting on intelligence that there may be hostages in the area. and that is when they came across this man said farhan al kotey, a 52-year-old hostage who had been held hostage by hamas for 326 days, an israeli military official telling me that he was alone when he was found without his case captors who may have fled the area before those israeli troops arrived on the scene. but they were able to rescue him, take him to awaiting israeli military helicopter, and then out of gaza to a hospital in southern israel where he was finally able to be reunited with his very large family he is a father of 11 children, yet several brothers who were at the hospital and who were overjoyed to see him there. they had started to lose hope that he would even emerge from gaza alive. and that is when
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they got the call early this morning that he was indeed alive, that he had been rescued by israeli forces then he was on his way to this hospital in southern israel. he is the eighth israeli hostage to actually be rescued in an israeli military operation. but as you said, he is the first to be rescued from an underground tunnel. the others were all being held above ground. however, the hostage and families forum calling this rescue operation miraculous has also pointing to the fact that they know that the remaining 100 hostages who were taken captive on october 7 and are still in gaza. they will not all be rescued in israeli military operations and they are pointing to the fact that it is they ceasefire deal and a hostage release deal that will lead to the rescue and to the release of the remaining hostages. those negotiations, as we know, are still ongoing in cairo as well as in doha, qatar. and tonight that rescued hostage speaking with the israeli prime minister for
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thanking him for getting him out of gaza, but also reminding him that there are more hostages that still need to be rescued or jeremy diamond live for us in tel aviv. brianna there were also watching the war in ukraine because overnight russia launched a punishing aerial barrage on the country. they killed at least five people as ukrainian forces continue their slow advance into russian territory, we have cnn military analyst, retired air force colonel cedric leighton here to break all of this down for us. this was quite a doozy that russia unleashed here. and this is the second night in a row that they have been bombarding ukraine with missiles. tell us what russia is trying to target here so basically brianna, what we see here is several major things that the russians are trying to do. >> so what are they actually targeting? they are going after places like kryvyi rhi, which happens to be zelenskyy's hometown. dnipro, kyiv and some of the other areas right here. now, they're doing this from an aerial perspective but when
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it comes to the ground perspective this town right here, pokrovsk is a major facet of russian operations. this is their main goal right here. the other things are designed to basically destroy the infrastructure, the ukrainian infrastructure in terms of electors trinity, in terms of communications. and of course, in terms of heating because winter is coming and the russians want to destroy as much of this as possible. >> and when we look at what ukraine is using to repel these attacks, they're using f-16s which are provided by the us. i know. i'm speaking your language now. >> talk to us a little bit about this. how capable well, these airplanes are. >> so the f f-16s are very, very capable especially when their electronic warfare equipment is reprogrammed to handle the russian threat. so what happened was the u.s. air force provided the ukrainians with data that they could use to program their electronic warfare gear. and that allowed them to go after the shaheed
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drones, as well as incoming missiles that the russians were using. so this impacted a lot of what the russians were trying to do and rendered it far less effective. so the f-16s have made their debut in the ukraine, russia war, and have been very helpful, very interesting there. you have ukrainian forces slowly advancing into russia's kursk region and russia is actually claiming today that ukrainian forces tried to break through the border in russia's neighboring belgorod region, which is, i mean, it's right next door there could ukraine continued to seize territory here? >> it's possible theoretically. so what you have here is, of course this area is the kursk area that we've been focused on. so this is about little less than 500 square miles of territory that the ukrainians have occupied. this is the belgorod region, right? in this area, and this is a major logistic because hub for the russian military. so what the russians are doing is they've actually started to move troops from here into
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these areas right here, probably with the idea of basically providing a buffer for their forces so that they are not impacted by the kind of thing that happening of course but it is still theoretically possible if they don't move quickly enough, that the ukrainians could occupies some territory, even in the belgorod region, ukraine's army chief said what i think a lot of people suspected, which is that this kursk offensive has been trying to draw some of russia's assets away from the front where ukraine is not having as good of a luck in the east house that strategy working. >> so it's working fairly well. but i think one of the key things that we have to look at is what is happening right here in pokrovsk, which is what i mentioned earlier. this area is basically the center of the russian effort, right now. so at the moment, there is no diminution know lessening of russian activity in the for crops region. what the russians want to do is they wanted to capture this entire region for russia, the donbass region
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right here. th's been putin's goal really since the beginning of this conflict. but what can also happen is the more the ukrainians do things us here in the kursk area, the less likely it will be for the russians to sustain this offensive especially if the ukrainians move in other areas potentially around here and protect this area. so that is that is what they can do. that we can also move into parts of russia here if they do that, that's going to tax the russians more. but the ukrainians also have a challenge because they have limited resources and they can't really do this. all the time yeah. >> they can't. i mean, can they hold this is really i have a question. >> so that is a really good question. so let's go back to the more detailed map here. they have some very vulnerable areas, right? when you look at this area right in here for example, just take this as an example. the russians could theoretically cut this off if they wanted to they could also potentially force the ukrainians out of suture or, and possibly out of oleshnya. but what the ukrainians are doing is they're actually creating defensive perimeters
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in this area. and those defensive perimeters can lessen the effect of the russians can make it much harder for the russians to move back in and it could potentially be what general sersky mentioned. which is make this a bargaining chip for future negotiations. they have a bit less territory than what the russians occupied in ukraine. but it could still be effective terms of a bargaining chip. and in terms of military tactics, could be very motivating. all right, colonel leighton, thank you so much for taking us through that. >> we appreciate it. coming up. facebook ceo mark zuckerberg is now speaking out why he says he regrets blocking some information about covid during the pandemic, saying that he was facing pressure from the white house and depending on where you live, the cost of purchasing a home, just got higher as the affordability crisis deepens, we'll americans see relief anytime soon the pros for have i got news for you are pretty odd yeah. what are the kinds we could run on
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poll you already know brow i'm jessica. schneider, at the federal courthouse in washington. and this is cnn made him chairman and ceo mark zuckerberg is accusing the biden administration of pressuring his social media company to censor covid-19 information we should on facebook during the pandemic. and he expressed regret for not being able to be more outspoken against it. he wrote a letter monday to the house judiciary committee that states in part quote, in 2021, senior officials from the biden administration including the white house repeatedly pressured our teams for months the censor certain covid-19
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content, including humor and satire and expressed a lot of tration with our teams when we didn't agree, cnn reached out to the white house for comment about the letter and was told by a spokesperson that at the time the administration was encouraging responsible actions to protect public health and safety the spokesperson went on to say, our position has been clear and consistent. we believe tech companies and other private actors should take into account the effects their actions have on the american people will make an independent choices about the information they present let's bring in sara fischer. she's a cnn media analyst and senior media correspondent at axios zuckerberg said that he's ready to push back if this happens again, notably, sara, what did you make of this letter? >> it's huge bianna, because at the time when this was going through the courts, meta said absolutely nothing. so we didn't know how they felt. did they feel bullied? did they feel pressure. did they agree? now we know that meta did in fact, you very pressured by the government, and that's a big
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deal because when they're making content moderation decisions, they want to make sure that they're doing that absent of what the government says. if you are to allow the government to intervene a one time, it can become a slippery slope his comments also come, brianna, as the ceo of the major social media platform, telegram is being held by french investigators over what they say are content moderation decisions. and so mark zuckerberg coming out now sort of adds fuel to the fire of big tech pushing back globally, it gets any government intervention on free speech we should note though, sarah, that in june the supreme court ruled six to three that the white house and federal agencies could keep urging social media platforms like meta to take down content. >> the government views as misinformation. so how should this letter be taken knowing that scotus sided with the federal government? >> so scotus basically said that they can continue to communicate. but what you're describing as a really fine
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line in one sense, you want to make sure that big tech platforms do have open communication with the government. so that if the government were to spot something really dangerous, let's say, a child pornography ring or big terrorist group, they can alert the tech companies so they could take action. the problem that we've seen in the past though boris is sometimes the government can get it wrong, or the government can have bias. the best example of that was in october 2020, meta and x, which was formerly twitter both censor the hunter biden laptop story because of warnings that they got from the fbi. now, both platforms say we regret that decision. what i think you're seeing here is that you don't want to set a precedent where the government can push platforms to do something, but it is healthy to have open communication between the two because that's hopefully what's going to make the world safer for everybody. >> no doubt. i mean, zuckerberg is specific about that incident in this letter. i wonder how you you see this though, the timing also the context of the fact that there is a bit of a feud between trump and zucker.
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zuckerberg. how do you see this? >> they're definitely trying to get ahead of any allegations of bias before the 2024 election. there's no question about that meta and other social media platforms like youtube had been rolling back some of their policies which they say were an overreach during the 2020 election. and the pandemic era in part because they want to make sure that they are for appealing to conservatives and that they are appealing to all of their users ahead of the election. but let's say there is 11th hour call that they have to make around content moderation. what you don't want is for someone to point fingers at mark zuckerberg and say, well, you only did that because your biased. you let the government push you around before and you're doing it again. what marx work is doing now is he's clearing the air so that if something were to happen, no one can say meta acted retroactively in response to government pressure. they instead feel like they did it independently that it was his decision that they themselves can own. that's a free speech position.
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>> and sara, as we saw in the video, it was only a few months ago that zuckerberg and these other tech ceos were testifying before congress i wonder if you think he and some of these other companies would welcome congressional, say in some of this that would provide guidance on how they should moderate content they do want some of that. >> i think what they're all on the same page about is more transparency measures, not necessarily saying, hey, this is how you have to make your algorithms work, but rather hold us accountable to our algorithms by making us submit transparency reports about what we take down and what we leave up that way we're all in the same you page about how this stuff works. but the big thing i want to stress here, boris, is that there is two different types of content moderation, right? there's one of political speech, speech that people might not like. >> then there's others that's truly illegal content. >> we're talking about drug trafficking, child sexual exploitation material,
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terrorism. when we talk about the government working with social platforms, the idea, the hope is that they're working with social platforms to address the legal stuff, the really harmful stuff, what you don't want to do is have the government address anything for a political perspective, because that's where bias kicks in. and i think that all the tech platforms, generally speaking, are aligned in that vision sara fischer, appreciate the analysis. thanks for joining us thank you of course still had imagined paying $43,000 a year in rent that for many new yorkers, is reality and they're not alone. >> a new report revealing housing and rent prices continuing to rise across the country. >> and researcher they say quote, our brains today are 99% and a half percent brain. and the rest is plastic for shocking amount of plastic that's now inside our heads and that may make you read a script incorrectly. say when as what it is, it's the plastids
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practical jokers, all new thursday's at ten on tbs, set your dvrs it's scratch, must not stop the insanity with cortisone ten for bug bites, poison ivy, and other riches. >> cortisone ten is number one. doctor recommended. it works fast and last for hours. cortisone ten yeah. >> that looks totally safe brief first-timer hot for the facts. sure. >> it looks safe, but like nearly half of all u.s. cars, it's been an accident with car facts.com. you see how accidents impact price. see you don't have to overpay on pause accidents based you're going to need it twins. know. >> oh, that was too long of a pot shot with the facts at the
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for how are there still people paying two or three times that much? >> so i shouldn't be victim-blaming here still $15 a month. so whenever you're ready i know that production value close captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law meso three yom a victims call now $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> you may be entitled to a portion of that money all when 8085920400. that's when 808, five-nine, 2,400 a just released housing index reveals just how rough the market is, especially for first-time homebuyers. >> it showed home prices for the nation it's top 20 metro areas rose 5.4% from june of last year to june of this year, a record jump for that month and renters not just homebuyers are feeling a serious squeeze, especially in new york moody's found new yorkers dedicated a whopping 58% of their income toward rent compared to 27%
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sent nationwide. let's talk about this with cnn business editor at large and anchor richard quest. i mean, 58% richard, that's wild, but let's start with home prices because year over year, they're so high, but month over month, there were actually some encouraging signs yes. >> because they all starting to come down a bit, at least the rate at which they're going up it is starting to come down and those were the worst of course. i mean, new york san diego, las vegas. why are we not surprised when we see that the inflation is inflation is model all right, and we aren't, and we know it is. and so that is feeding through to house prices, which aren't going up as fast, but they are still going up. and that i think plays into the political season. you've got, of course, vice president harris's economic plan to give a tax credit to first-time home son as or house buyers of $25,000.
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when you see the numbers that first-time buyers are having to pay, you can understand that that will be an attractive policy, assuming she ever works out how she's going to pay for it. but that's a policy, per say, is one of those things that will be attractive and when it comes to renting, location is obviously so key here. what are folks facing again, it's our old favorites, isn't it? >> it's our own favorite for where renters are having to pay them most. not surprisingly, it's all the major metropolitan areas and the sunbelt, miami, fort lauderdale, l.a. we've also got vegas involved as well, new york and northern new jersey, which of course goes into the metropolitan area, but it's this issue of 58%. now, i was always taught the rough rule of thumb is your accommodation should be about 30% of of what you've, what you've got left. now, if you're 58%, you can
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see in new york it's just becoming affordable. people just cannot afford to live here. it's pushing out certain members of the community. it is bringing in people who can just basically pay the rents and it's very difficult to change that dynamic. brianna, because if you try to gerrymander the housing market, it usually goes wrong, which again is a problem with vice president harris price gouging policy. it's great on paper, but price gouging is very difficult to do. in practice, the reality, the economy is getting better overall, and you're seeing it reflected in the housing market. now, just pay over 58%. come on, come on, write your check. >> that is crazy. and wild, really 58%, richard. thank you so much. we do appreciate it. and coming up a new study says, tiny shards of plastic are increasingly infiltrating our
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direct the defining insurance erin burnett, outfront tonight at seven on cnn so this one's a bit alarming. there's a new study that finds that our brains are increasingly filled with microplastics here's what the study found when researchers compared brain autopsies from this year to those then eight years ago, they found the amount of microplastics increased by roughly 50%. >> okay, that sounds fairly worrying. but what exactly does it mean for the health of our brains and for her entire selves? we have cnn medical analyst, dr. jonathan reiner
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here dr. reiner, how big of a deal is this this is a very small study published this spring as a preprint, so meaning not yet, peer reviewed. >> but i think it's a wake-up call. and basically what this study did was they looked at autopsy specimens analyzed in 2016 and then a new set analyzed this year and they looked at three different organs. the liver, the kidneys, and the brain. >> and found alarmingly, as you said a significant amount of deposition of microplastics or nano plastics, even much smaller particles, of plastic in all three of these oregon's. >> with much higher concentration in the brain. >> now what the clinical consequences are of having plastic, these tiny amounts of plastic deposited in human organs is not clear.
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>> we know that we think that plastic deposition on this scale might increase inflammation and inflammation in oregon's is not a good thing but it's a wakeup call every year about 12 million metric tons of plastics are being dumped into our oceans you know, we already have about 200 million tons of circulating plastics and these plastics degrade and they get into the fish and we eat those fish. and we're seeing plastic in, in all kinds of human organs doctor, you mentioned us getting plastic and we're bodies through diet. >> but it seemingly everywhere around us, right? the bags that we put food in bottles that we drink water from the stuff that we throw it in the microwave to heat up. it is diet the most direct way that we're ingesting
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plastic or other other avenues that yet we're consuming it. >> yeah yeah. it's just it's just one of the ways boris we think the three principal ways that the human body accumulates these tiny amounts of plastic are, as we said, through ingestion also through inhalation. this plastic in the air. this plastic in the dust outside. another reason to take your shoes off when you walk into the house as i am often reminding, and it's often can be any can also be absorbed via the skin via things like cosmetics so again, i don't put a lot of worry in this one particular study, but i do think that increasingly a lot of people are starting to focus on the toxic or the toxic effects of plastic. because as you said, they are all around
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us. people are accustomed to thinking about the toxic effects of, for instance, lead and thinking back to 2015 when about 100,000 people in flint, michigan were exposed to toxic levels of lead when the city's water supply was changed and pipes leached out lead but but plastic is all around us. it's how we carry it. it's how we carry our food. it's how we administer our drugs in the hospital. >> if you think about trying to live without plastic, it's very difficult to think how to do that. on the other hand, maybe it's not such a bad idea to not drink water every day from a big plastic jug maybe to use a stainless steel container, maybe not to microwave foods inside a plastic container. >> instead, put it on a plate. you know, maybe this is time for each of us to start to think about ways that we can decrease our plastic exposure until we have better understanding of what the long-term effects of accumulating these micro or nano amounts of plastic in our
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bodies really, really means yes, something tells me that will someday find that it's not a positive effect, that it's having on our organisms, right? dr. jonathan reiner. thank you so much my, favorite scene and of course they were seeing and we're back in just moments the pros for have i got news for you are pretty yeah. >> what are the kinds we could run on the news before then would never happen if i got news for you. the mere saturday, september 14th at night hi, on cnn and streaming next day on mac. >> the case really knows how to put the heart and your local community. >> see what i did there jackie evan, my guy. you have alone was david's right my, leg will not start my just gathered for his debit card as crimo, you that goes unanswered we hold on. >> don't you owe me money
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you're money is a party, a community, so your bank should be to light chase before limited time. >> so we just drop the price of every foot longer than that up to 6-19. subway did what? 699 foot long says right ear, 699 for any foot-long get this deal in the subway up now i'll before it's too late so biased helping me get my money right to achieve my ambitions. want to see my earning more money on my money as a headshot, ready
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