tv PBS News Hour PBS January 10, 2024 3:00pm-4:01pm PST
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houthi rebels largest attack yet. israeli and palestinian mental health experts work together to address the lasting impact the conflict is likely to have on children. >> when children suffer from extreme trauma as they are, intellectual abilities are damaged. their ability to create, imagine. >> it was a day of political wrangling on capitol hill with house republicans holding dual hearings originating the secretary of homeland security and hunter biden. ♪ >> major funding has been provided by -- >> a proud supporter of public television. the world awaits. a world of flavor, diverse
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this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. >> welcome. the biden administration has spent this day pressing the palestinian authority to reform itself and show it is ready to govern gaza after the war. secretary of state blinken. secretary of state blinken carried that message to the authorities present in the west bank. >> the meeting between blinken and the boss was ostensibly about what happens in gaza once the war is over. behind the scenes, there was also talk of how the elderly president can regain the legitimacy his government needs to lead a possible unified palestinian state. right now, the palestinian authority covers parts of the west bank. but it is widely distrusted and
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seen as ineffective by many palestinians. one sign of that distrust is these clashes with police in ramallah condemning the boss for even welcoming the visit. >> it is a shame to receive him. he is one of the organizers of the genocide in gaza. he should leave immediately. >> secretary blinken of a stop in bahrian was optimistic that the palestinian authority could reform. >> i want to speak for president abbas but i think he is committed to that. and is very much prepared to move forward. >> today, agyeman netanyahu explicitly said once hamas is defeated, israel wants out of gaza. >> israel has no intention of permanently occupying gaza or displacing the civilization -- civilians. >> in gaza, this was once the main highway connecting the
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central part of the strip to the south. residents say this was a trail of devastation. this building produced eggs that fed people. now it is rubble. thousands of people are believed to have been killed in the blast and even more trapped under the debris. >> some people were calling out for help and telling us, we are still here, come get us. here they are. the bodies are still here. we cannot get them out. >> he is still looking for his loved ones. he hopes to find any remnant of them so he can bury them with dignity. >> we took out five martyrs who were just a limbs and body parts. only half of my uncle came out. his other half is still under the rubble. >> in the south, which israel
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indicated would be the safest place for people to evacuate to, families pick up the pieces after another night of bombardment. one of the latest airstrikes pounded this residential building on the outskirts. they count just how many loved ones died in the attack. he said there was no advanced warning. this is a pain all too common. >> this is a massacre. a building of five floors, 14 houses full of children and women, full of men and newborns. who should we complain to? where is the cease-fire? they are lying. they are criminals. >> as international negotiations continue elsewhere, here in gaza each day brings more tears,
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grief, death. ♪ >> in other headlines, nearly all corners of the country face the fallout from winter storms that brought floods, blizzards, and tornadoes. tuesday's destructive weather lasted into today and claimed five lives. we have a report. >> waves crashing into the streets of towns in coastal maine and parts of connecticut submerged. unrelenting wind and rain pummeling. areas of the mid atlantic were still underwater as the same storm walloped the region yesterday. dumped three inches of rain in some places. water leaked into new york city train stations. turning this railway into a river.
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in maryland, emergency responders had to rescue people from submerged cars. yesterday's storms knocked out power to hundreds of thousands. farther south, the storms were deadly. suspected tornadoes in carolina and alabama killed two women. in northern florida, expected tornadoes left trails of distraction. >> is like a war zone. >> an entire house was knocked over in panama city. twisters flipped boats and tory marina to shreds. >> i started hearing a pickup really strong. >> he said a tornado blasted his home in florida. >> i made sure i had my deadbolts set on the first floor. the next thing i knew the front window of my house blew out. i have all the stuff blowing around me. >> people in the midwest and upper planes are p --lains are digging out from a foot of snow. and there is more to come.
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and i would, temperatures will plummet below zero next week, stoking fears of low turnout for the republican presidential caucus. frigid temperatures may be no match for the midwestern spirit. >> if you're in iowa, you should not be afraid of the cold. [laughter] >> this means frigid football weather for saturday night's playoff game in kansas city. it is acted to be -2 at takeoff. the chiefs will host the miami dolphins who practiced at home today in 76 degree weather. former new jersey governor chris christie has dropped out of the republican presidential race. he announced this late today in new hampshire. he was the strongest critic of donald trump in the field. but he failed to make headway. >> it is clear to me tonight that there is not a path for me to win the nomination. which is why i am suspending my
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campaign tonight president of the united states. >> supporters of nikki haley had pressed chris christie to stop. just before his announcement, he was heard on the live microphone saying she is going to get smoked. she is not up to this. donald trump will not make his own closing arguments at his civil fraud trial in new york. the judge with true permission for him to speak tomorrow. the judge awardshe former president must not comment on irrelevant matters or deliver a campaign speech or criticize the court. lawyers objected to the restrictions set the judge rescinded his ruling. alexei navalny occurred -- appeared in court today for the first time since he vanished from view last month. supporters had lost contact with him for weeks while he was transferred to a penal colony in the arctic. today he smiled and waved to
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journalists and joked about his jailers. he is serving a 19 year sentence after being convicted of extremism. volodymyr zelenskyy headed to the baltic states today hunting for help to shore up ukrainian air defenses. this came as russia identified -- identified drone attacks. he met the president of lithuania. he said ukraine has shown that russia can be stopped and he insisted that kyiv still has strong support. >> there is no pressure for our partners to stop our defense. i would not say stopping of hostilities. it is defense. 2 -- fair defense, our struggle, there is no pressure to freeze the can't -- conflict. >> nato said the flow of military supplies to ukraine will continue. a new round of usaid remains stalled in congress. the death toll from the new year earthquake in japan has reached
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206. eight habit from injuries or sickness at evacuation centers. close to 26,000 people remain in shelters. rescue teams continue to search for bodies during cold weather and rain. more than 50 people are still listed as missing. back in this country, legendary alabama football coach nick sabin is retiring. it is reported tonight that he will call it quits after winning six national chapin chips at alabama and one at lsu. he has coached alabama for 17 seasons. on wall street, stocks advanced. the dow jones industrial average gained 170 points. the nasdaq rose 112 points. in missouri, a kansas city teen has made the all-state band nine
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months after being shot in the head. he was shot after he went to the wrong address to pick up his younger brothers and the elderly white homeowner opened fire. he is now 17 and he plays bass clarinet. still to come, the defense secretary's cancer diagnosis highlights the importance of early detection. an alarming discovery of unmarked graves leads to an investigation. and an unlikely collaboration, art and quantum computing. >> this is the pbs newshour, in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university. >> for the first time in nearly 150 years, the house of representatives is poised to impeach a member of the cabinet. while conservative lawmakers are accusing the homeland security of losing control of the border, they are struggling to control
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their own chamber. our congressional correspondent sees it all firsthand. she joins me now. what a house republicans arguing here? do they all agreed amongst themselves? >> we know the impeachment standard in the constitution's high crimes and misdemeanors. they are saying that he failed in his duty to protect. he lied to congress is what they are saying. >> on this committee we have carried out our investigation. we are going to impeach him. he should be. he is the executive in charge of the border policy for president biden. >> they say it is a dereliction
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of duty that is causing a security problem for the country. he has said that he is doing the job as well as he can. house republicans do seem to agree on this. >> i don't think anybody sees this going on. he is working for the president. >> he is saying let's focus on the border. he said you do not impeach someone for failure to do their job. they could start voting on it. >> help us understand how this
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impeachment process impacted what is going on on capitol hill right now. >> it is the keystone to all of these major issues. members are just coming back from their holiday break. one member of congress says he has been the 55 -- 55 fentanyl funerals planed on problems of the border. there are members in new york who say their districts are now being affected directly.
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conservatives are saying they will not pass any government spending until there are changes in border policy. as we have talked about, we have a couple of government funding deadlines coming up. one in just three days. >> you have been reporting on the likelihood of a partial shutdown in just over a week. >> i am afraid i have to say that it is much more likely today that we will see a partial government shutdown. this is very fluid. he could easily change a week from now. they don't like that top line spending deal. they want bigger spending cuts. meanwhile, speaker johnson and leader schumer are trying to pass these bills. they has to pass 12 of them by the 19th.
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all of this is very confusing. it takes a week for the senate to type some shoes. we probably need some temporary spending bill to get through this. speaker johnson said in the past he will not do that. here's what he said today. >> i am not ruling out anything or committing to anything other than getting these appropriations done. i think we can. we are pushing everybody hard. >> house conservatives are pushing back and putting his job on the line. they say if you accept a temporary spending bill, we may try to oust you. we want a shutdown. >> where are you on whether a short-term plan is something you could stomach or if good rather risque shutdown? >> shutdown is something you have to be really -- willing to risk. we have talked about the border. not just his new calendar year. it is still not being addressed.
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>> what we should take away from this is conservatives are digging in toward a shutdown. they think there are advantages to it. they have the ability to potentially forest speaker johnson into that position. >> there was more news today on the hill. a surprise appearance by hunter biden about a hearing on holding him in contempt. >> he has refused to give in an interview behind closed doors. he said he will speak publicly to the committee investigating him and his family ties. he showed up with a hearing today that was moving forward on contempt charges. he did not speak. he would like to do that. this is what the disagreement is about. he was trying to say i am willing to talk. house republicans say we need to speak to you for longer and at more depth that a public hearing. this was essentially a big piece of drama over something ongoing. i think house republicans will keep moving forward. this just adds to the drama and confusion. >> a busy day.
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more busy days ahead. thank you very much. ♪ >> today, the un security council demanded that houthi rebels stop attacking ships in the red sea. the u.s. military has said there have been more than 2000 attacks in the last seven weeks. the most serious was yesterday. drones and the missiles were fired at allied warships. we look at the escalation and options. >> in the middle of the red sea, british sailors shoot down drones and missiles. this was the largest and most complex attack. >> if these attacks continue as they did yesterday, there will be consequences. >> the british defense minister -- >> we cannot have a
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situation where major sea route is being cut off by terrorists. we therefore must act. >> since mid-november, houthi rebels have targeted and sees international vessels and kidnapped foreign sailors. they have said they target ships linked to israel. but today a spokesman said the target was an american warship, retribution for the u.s. navy last month sinking houthi boats and killington fighters -- killing 10 fighters. >> we will not hesitate to deal appropriately with all hospital threats within the legitimate right to defend our country, people, and nation. >> some 15% of world shipping goes through the suez canal promotes links the red sea with the mediterranean. houthi attacks of upended international commerce, forcing shippers to reroute vessels and
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increasing shipping costs. last month, the u.s. launched a multinational coalition to protect commercial shipping. last week, the u.s. and 13 other countries issued what an official called a final warning. they will bear the responsibility and consequences should they continue to threaten lives, the global economy, and the free flow of commerce. so far, the u.s. is not followed through with that threat. >> the best solution to this situation not escalating is for the houthis to stop these attacks. >> they are group backed by iran that in 2014 seized the capital of yemen. they have fought saudi arabia in a brutal war. for 20 months, there has been a shaky cease-fire. houthi missiles are based on iranian technology. iran is coordinating the current attacks and helping provide targets. >> the draft resolution is
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adopted. >> the un security council passed a resolution demanding that they cease these attacks and release the hostages. >> we will not stand by and allow the houthis to threaten civilian vessels and hold global food and energy supplies hostage. >> what is motivating them to launch these tax? what should the u.s. to? -- do? we turn the director of a middle east security council. thank you so much. what are they gaining by launching these attacks? >> thank you so much for having me. i think the houthis have very little to lose by launching these attacks. they do not have access to yemen's energy resources. they are trying to negotiate a final resolution in terms of the long-running conflict with saudi arabia.
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this provides the greater leverage in those negotiations. i think they see this as a realistic policy option to try to better their position for the long run. >> do they also risked something by continuing these attacks, especially after they came out today and said explicitly that the target was a u.s. navy ship? certainly they could. the u.s. has put together a new coalition for the red sea. multiple countries have joined. not some of the golf countries like saudi arabia. they have long been in conflict. it is possible that the u.s. will respond. we saw some discussion today in reference to allies considering that. the houthis have been having a war for years now. i am skeptical that a response, especially a one-time response, is going to deter them if they think it will better their
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situation in the >> >> months to come. the u.s. last week gave what they called a final warning. you heard earlier today john kirby from the national security council sending the message that they still hope the houthis stop these attacks. using the u.s. should launch a military strike? >> i think a military strike will likely be necessary at this point to try to restore deterrence. i don't think a military strike is likely to stop the houthis from continuing their attacks. not having that deterrence signals to other actors in the region that they may have a level of freedom to attack. or that hezbollah might be able to push the boundaries in lebanon and israel.
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the u.s. has said very clearly it is their goal to avoided international conflict. and bringing out about the end of the conflict. >> the other argument i hear is a military strike would open up another front. the weapons are capabilities they have would quickly be refilled by iran. what is your response to that? >> it is probably true. it assumes that another front has not already opened. we have seen these attacks sense the 19th of november. we are seeing 50% of all maritime commerce going through the red sea. we are starting to see huge amounts go allow -- around that.
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i think we are on the precipice of being there already. this is clearly been a strategy that has not worked. this increases the chance that we are in a regional conflict. >> could saudi arabia actually wants the u.s. to launch this military strike to degrade houthi capabilities. >> i think they are certainly supportive of military strikes if the u.s. is successful in that. and having some level of deterrence. if the u.s. says we will do a strike but not keep the pressure on, i think the saudi's will be pretty annoyed. and think that it didn't do
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much. because he did not stay involved in the conflict. >> the national security council spokeswoman declassified intelligence saying that iran is deeply involved in planning the operations against commercial vessels. and was providing tactical intelligence on that vessel. how does that work? >> there's a long history of iran providing help to partners throughout the region. that includes the houthis. they may have identified targets that they passed on. to validate them and say this makes sense. there are a variety of ways that can work.
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they are helping them take the strikes successfully. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. >> it is clear that the fallout from the war is far-reaching and the damage from the conflict will be felt for years to come. attacks that left thousands dead and caused immense physical destruction. it is also left an indelible mark on the region. especially the children. we have the story of a program try to address that problem. >> they train postgraduate students to care for traumatized children. this in an area with seemingly endless conflict. the trainees are a mix of israel's citizens. all learning together.
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>> this time in the war we are counting a number of people who are dead or injured. i am very afraid. i think the palestinian people in gaza will be really suffering from that trauma. >> as the war grinds on, they have continued the program. both israeli and palestinian students have camped working in their communities, even though some have lost loved ones themselves.
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there were trainees living in gaza. they had only sporadic contact. >> in the beginning, they were stepping into this. >> physical, immediate needs. >> our students are well trained. they have a different language when they talk to people. their language is different. >> the number of people who are exposed to trauma or experience immediate threats is so large. we do not have the ability to have meaningful, one-on-one therapy. mostly it is group intervention, parent guidance, some one-on-one
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crisis intervention. it is not actual therapy. even those small interactions are meaningful because they are aimed at strengthening the child or adolescent. to support family and give them hope and understanding that there is a process and hopefully they will come out on the other side. you are not alone. we are trying to listen to you and do the best we can. the situation is like this. i don't know how they do it with communities. we hope that better days will come. and we will be able to offer therapy. >> most people talking about this war and the palestinian
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conflict, they are talking about historical terms. very few talk in psychological terms. they are acting from the position of feeling threatened all of the time. that their existence is endangered. this is exactly what happens to an individual who is suffering from trauma. we will be able to help them. it is more difficult. >> they also believe they are bringing israeli and palestinian practitioners together to help traumatized communities start to heal. >> we believe that by strengthening the empathic ability to the other is our only hope to ever bridge something together.
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the importance of being empathic is part of that process. i must say that it is almost physically painful to sit and realize how hard it is for the other. being worried and being ashamed and being angry. all of this merits feelings that we have to deal with as students and supervisors. right now the emphasis is on relating to the others. realizing we will share the same feeling. relating to the other is our future. >> our students have to cope
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with resistance in their communities. they live on a very small piece of land. they live with a lot of boundaries. physical boundaries of meeting each other. and psychological boundaries. they really do not know each other as human beings. there is a lot of dehumanization . they are the enemy and i cannot talk to the other person. this is the feeling of the vast majority. in this case, we created a place in the last 20 years that there is no such a place where they equally go through the same program and meet each other. which helps them to process their own relationships. we need to create more places like this. >> thank you both so >> much for
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talking with us. thank you for having us. ♪ >> the diagnosis of the defense secretary and his initial decision not to disclose it has put prostate cancer back at the center of attention. it is one of the most treatable cancers. but for many men, there is still a stigma around it. >> he was one of the estimated 288,000 men diagnosed with prostate cancer last year. the five-year survival rate in the u.s. is 99%. about one of eight in all men will develop the disease in
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their lifetime. for black men, it is one in six. we have often heard prostate cancer being described as slow-growing. help us understand where it is and how often it spreads. >> it really represents a spectrum of disease. there are certain types of prostate cancer that are slow rowing. -- growing. but there are other types that are more aggressive. these require surgery, radiation, therapy, or some combination. let's quickly remind people what the prostate is. >> it is a small organ about the size of a walnut. it is deep in the pelvis. it is a reproductive organ. it helps with men having
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secretions that give nutrition to these firm and allow them to have children. later in life it can cause cancer. we are talking about developing prostate cancer in the organ. >> they say his cancer was detected early as part of a routine health screening. are there lessons in that? >> screening is absolutely critical. it really involves identifying problems such as cancer in an early stage and an early phase where it is not just treatable but highly curable. for prostate cancer we are really talking about a blood test. as well as an examination to feel it for lumps and bumps. an abnormality in either these could suggest cancer. >> how soon should screening begin and how often should be
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done? >> for a patient at average risk, an average man in the u.s., we are looking between 45 and 50 years of age to have that initial blood test as well as initial examination. certain patients are at higher risk. african-americans, those with a first male relative with prostate cancer or genetic or hereditary mutations. they need to be screened at an earlier age. because they are to higher risk of developing the disease. >> is there a stigma around prostate cancer? that it leads to impotence or incontinence? >> unit breast cancer in women, it occurs at approximately the same rate as prostate cancer in men. women are excellent advocates for their health. you hear a lot about some
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examinations and getting checked and getting screen. men's health problems create more of a stigma. if they feel fine, that might not be a problem. the reality is that diagnosing and showed -- checking these conditions early allows people to identify a point at which the side effects being talked about light impotence and incontinence can be mitigated or minimized. >> we hear women talk about about breast cancer. men, not so much about prostate cancer. is that a hurtle to more screening and detection? >> absolutely. it is nascent somatic cancer until you reach a late stage. once men start having symptoms, the wheels are starting to come off the wagon in the ability to treat and cure the disease. i really believe that high-profile cases like this
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underscored the importance that anybody can get prostate cancer. those in your community or who have a higher profile. the importance is getting the word out and having those discussions. understanding that one in eight men developed this disease. >> >> >> thank you very much. thank you. ♪ >> the gruesome discovery of 215 bodies in unmarked graves behind a jail in jackson, mississippi, has left the community in disbelief. families are angry that their loved ones were buried in poppers graves. -- pauper's graves. this came after a mother filed a missing persons report last
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march. it was not until august that she learned her son had been hit by a police car and killed and buried in that same cemetery. for more on this case and the disturbing beetles that have emerged, i enjoyed by a civil rights attorney who is representing her and other families. we are very sorry for your loss. thank you for joining us. i understand you contacted the police department after reporting that your son was missing several times even after he had been very without your knowledge. give us a sense of what they told you over those months and what they were like for you not knowing where your son was? >> i didn't know where he was. i was calling them. they had no information.
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all the details that i gave them. they never came back to me to say we have something you can work with. i believed he had disappeared. nobody knew where he was at. it was horrible for me. everyday i woke up looking for him. that is heartbreaking for a mother. i cannot say hello. i do not know how to get in touch with him. that is a horrible thing for a mother. >> after it was discovered that he had been killed and varied in this grave, his body was exhumed in november. i understand a ball it was found in his front pocket with his home id.
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what is the exhalation that officials give for why no one was notified he had been killed and buried? >> there is no explanation they have offered. they claimed they tried to reach out to her. she is a plaintiff in a lawsuit against the jackson police department. they killed her brother three years earlier. there were several press conferences. when they called her house, if they did that like they claimed, they knew where she lived. they knew how to get in contact with her. it is very suspicious that they would just bury him in a poppers grave -- pauper's grave. we do not accept that.
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these loved ones were dropped in a whole -- hole >> >> behind mississippi jail. the jackson mayor said there were mistakes. there was a tragic accident. there was no malicious intent in failing to notify the family. what recourse are you seeking right now were these families? >> we are seeking to have the department of justice, in and do it investigation to make sure each and every one of these citizens will be identified. and their families notified. and given a proper funeral. >> i mentioned families because you are not alone.
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there has been the discovery of other men who were also killed and buried. from your perspective, what do want to see happen now? >> i feel like the city needs to give me an explanation. give me some kind of closure. explained to me what actually happened to my son on that freeway that night. how did it actually occur? what went down? i want to suggest this. it is wrong. to take someone's child and buried them in the field. i did not even get a last chance to say anything to my child. to say i love you. to look down on him and say i
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love you. they have not came and called me and said 10 you come down and we will explain to you what happened. i have not gotten a word. that makes you feel like they are guilty. they are guilty of a crime. >> they cannot tell you what happened. do i understand correctly that the mayor or no one from the police department has reached out to you to explain what happened to your son? >> no one has reached out to me to explain it. i did at least have the city supervisor to say they hated what happened to me. no one from the jacksonville -- jackson police department has come to me and acknowledged me. >> this story gets even more disturbing with the discovery of more bodies in the cemetery. what do we know about them?
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>> we know based on the records from the coroner's office that since 2016, we can identify over 200 individuals who were buried behind the jail. and their families have not been notified. he was number 672. that means there were 671 other people buried behind that jail marked with only a number. >> i thank you so much for joining us tonight. i have a feeling we will be following up on the story in the weeks and months ahead. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. ♪
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>> advanced technology labs are not places you're likely to find much creative artistic expression, let alone color. but a scientist and artist have joined forces to help inspire the development of the next generation of computing. our special correspondent reports from california. >> your typical sterile technology building. until a scientist and an artist collaborated to turn this lab for building the next generation of computing. to help inspire innovation. >> we have created a space with no edits between the hardware and architecture in the scientists. and nature itself through the windows. >> a google artist in residence and a engineer charged with developing his first quantum ai
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computer have a mutual fascination with art and science. >> a lot of the work i have done was to capture beautiful things we make. >> an accomplished photographer as well as a scientist, he offered the other a artist in residency. after seeing his work imprinted on satellites in space. >> making the largest art exhibit in space put on the lightbulb of let's put artwork on technological things. i asked him, what is, that's quantum computing? he sends me his gorgeous portfolio of photographs of the quantum computers. >> this next generation of computing relies more on the nature of physics than mathematic computation.
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the connection with nature became the priority. >> it looked like a beer keg. [laughter] we starting with yosemite. it is lovely to experience flat. then it is different when you see it adorning a quantum computer. >> that is the operative term here. the guts of the computer need to be kept running at 400 police -- degrees below zero. >> we have 16 artists internationally. some of them are traditional oil painters. some are digital artists. we have sculptors who work in
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3d. >> is also an accomplished jewelry maker. they discovered him and his work while in the southwest exploring national parks for the art project. >> he does his work in metal craft. silver and copper. we take this piece and it goes from these materials all the way to being wrapped around this scientific endeavor. >> i had the opportunity to paint his mural behind us. to finish my day working in the lab. changed my pain close, grab a brush, >> and finish this. we are creating an experience in here. where people have an inspiration to show up and be great. >> the color in here helps. it keeps the lab in a creative
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space. it can really close off your mind if it is in black-and-white. >> would you hang this up in your living room? >> yes. >> we asked for if we could have one for our copies. >> it is important to note that there are real humans working on these projects. we care deeply about the places we live, where we come from. i believe these research tools will help us stay here. >> the intersection of art and technology is as old and rich as leonardo da vinci and as american as former american painters. sometimes there's a perception of a love-hate relationship between science and technology. do you think that is misinterpreted? >> i would challenge that it
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exists. i see so much about the way they are one in the same. when you have the opportunity to do great science. you can look at it with print to sick -- specific perspective. that takes art to bring it back to right here. >> there is always much more online, including a look at republican lawmakers efforts in oklahoma to defund diversity, equity, and inclusion program. that is at our website. that is it for tonight. on behalf of our team, thank you for joining us. >> major funding has been provided by the ongoing support
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of these individuals and institutions. and friends including these individuals. >> consumer cellular, how may i help you? this is a pocket dial. i thought i would let you know that with consumer cellular, you get nationwide coverage with no contract. that is kind of our thing. have a nice day. ♪ >> the ford foundation, working with visionaries on the frontlines lines of social change worldwide. and with the ongoing support of these individuals and institutions. ♪
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