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tv   News  Al Jazeera  June 26, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm EDT

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♪ live from new york city, with a look at today's top stories. the supreme court rules that president obama did overstep his bounds making several recess appointments. new questions about how the u.s. uses target drone strikes some say it risks a perpetual state of war, and germany defeats the ice world cup team, but the americans still advance in the round.
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the court rebuked president obama today. the justices ruled that he exceeded his constitutional authority when he made three recess appointments. mike joins us hive now from the white house, mike. >> tony, it is a tool enshrined in the constitution, put this by the founding fathers at a time when congress would be gone from washington four months at a time. of course it is much different now. but ngeth the less, modern presidents continue to use recess appointments. that the supreme court did today was sharply restrict the ability of any president to do so to get around partisan grid lock. >> the question and this really a senate session. >> the senate will come to order. >> once every three days when most are out of town, the senate meets pro form ma, also the party that doesn't hold the white house say they are working and block the president.
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this session in february lasted exactly 29 seconds. the senate stands adjourned. president obama ignores those sessions, and with senate confirmation nor many of his nominees blocked by republicans he made several recess appointments including in 2012, to the national labor relations board. when a decision by the board weans went with guest a soft drink company, the company wasn't to court, disputing the rules because it was made by recess appoint tees. because is net was in session, the president made the recess appoint innocents before us during a break too short to count as recess. concluding and for that reason, the appointments are invalid. >> the republican lead over the senate mitch mcconnell welcomed the ruling. >> the supreme court unanimously rejected the president's completely
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unprecedented assertion of a unilateral appointment power. >> none of it matter whose last year changed the rules to allow confirmation of nominees by a similar majority of 50. instead of a filibuster 60 votes. their leader writing more than anything, today's supreme court ruling underscores the importance of the rules reform senate democrats enacted last november. now, the majority on the court, tony, said that appointments can still go forward, they even set a date, a time line, if they happen -- if the senate is out of session for at least ten days. now conservative justices railed against that, said it was a completely arbitrary time that was set by the majority, they say recess appointments should go forward, when the senate is truly in are recess. >> for us at the white house, thank you. another rules from the supreme today handed a victimty to antiabortion protestors.
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plans parenthood condemned the decision, says it show as troubling level for disregard of american women. iraq's parliament is leading tuesday to begin setting off new government the hope is that a more unified government will be able to stop the advance of the islamic state of iraq. many blame nori maliki's policies. the influential shiite leader, is adding his voice calling for new leadership to contain the crisis. live for us in the capitol of baghdad, and jane, what more is happening today. >> well, certainly there's a lot mapping on the ground, tony. iraqi security forces say they have taken on the i.s.i.l., and in a very dramatic fashion, now, it
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was seized by the i.s.i.l. last week, iraky forks today showed video and said that they landed helicopters in a stadium at the university that resulted in clashes with the fighters there, and that battle was continuing. as are all sorts of other battles in the territory north and west of the country. after i.s.i.l. swept through there. now, they are taking cities and towns, they have tried to take an oil refinery, they are heading toward as dam, but their goal is baghdad. around baghdad there's a looming threat. but in the city, it's almost an ordinaryishing. there are fewer visitors at baghdad's biggest shrine, but the square is full of iraqis. here it is always part religious fervor, part celebration. and these days a call to arms.
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a rallying call in shiite islam. where is is i.s.i.l., they are nothing that -- the ruling neats that if 10,000 people will be killed we will send 20,000, if 100,000 are killed we will send 1 million. >> mohammed is from a shia minority. he thought his family was safe, but then kurdish forces protecting the village got drawn into the fight. >> defies everything for our country, even ourselves. now, that the man or the young people they stay in the villages. is the families. >> a lot of the families here would have nowhere to go. >> the borders, the oil refineries the army bases they are all strategic
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importance. but the prize in this is baghdad, and nowhere more so than here. it is one of the holiest sites in the world. people are willing to fight and die for it. >> in baghdad tens of thousands of young men have join add new version of the army. the militia hollywood that fought u.s. soldiers in 2004. >> we have seen through this current situation, because of the portrayal of the politicians and commanders what is happening to our country, especially, made us realize we are capable of handling the responsibility and responding to strength. leaving for jordan, and even syria, say it is now much more difficult to heave the country. >> yeah, there are only a few people traveling to georgia, and no one is coming back. the traffic has almost
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stopped. >> there has been a flood of iraqis since 2003. but this time, with threats both outside and inside the city, there are fewer and fewer places left to go. >> tony, it's hard to believe how much has changed in the past three weeks. the border between syria and iraq has essentially been erased as those border posts have fallen. key cities have fallen as well, and people here are very very worried. tony. >> so jane, clearly the situation in iraq is getting worse, and a lot of hopes are pinned on this new more unified government, but realistically, how likely is it that a more unified government would be able to achieve something significant quickly. >> well, there are certainly not going to achieve anything militarily, what they are going to do is basically stabilize a very shaky foundation.
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to try to get this country secured again. everything here is at risk iraqs borders it's political system, it's very government, all at risk by this i.s.i.l. onslaught. they have more nan a month to form a government. >> jane, thank you. president obama is asking congress to approve $500 million to train and equip syrian opposition fighters it is part of a $58.6 billion request for overseas operations. the administration says the money would be partlied used to stabilize under controlling, and help defend syrian. it would prescreen which fighters would receive the money. more now from washington.
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>> the obama administration describes this aid as ramping up assistance. so that the u.s. military can drain and equip opposition fighters, is it really a ramping up? we don't ealey know. we doe know the c.i.a. has been doing it's own training but they don't have to tell us how much they have spent to do that, now that the military is going to take over that information becomes public, it is much more likely, we will find out what sort of equipment is being given to the opposition. but again, the president has to get permission from congress, they will try to do that in the coming weeks. >> a report release questions the use of drone strikes. that is a nonpartisan think tank, says the use of drones over the past decade puts the quite at risk of being in a perpetual state of war. lisa stark joins us live now from washington, d.c. tell us more about the reports. >> well, tony, this report was a year long
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effort, and it involved former military and intelligence officials. the report raises serious questions about the u.s. policy of targeted killings with these drone strikes, asking whether they are truly legal, or effective. >> the new report says armed drone strikes such as this one, may be doing more harm than good, the report from the global security think tank questioned whether the drone strikes are truly reducing terrorism. and making the u.s. safer. >> the existence of this technology enables and creates a temptation to use that approach to terrorism. where you fuel the fantasy that you can just kill your way out of a very complex problem. one bad guy at a time. >> rosa brooks is one of the co authors of the 81 with page report, she says these targeted strikes can increase antiamerican sentiments. and the successful recruiting tool for groups that want to attack. >> anyone who you kill.
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etch if they are a bad guy, they have friends they have family members. they have neighbors, they are people who will be upset if you do kill any civilians all the more so. >> another key concern outlined in the report, the secrecy surrounding the program. making it difficult to judge if the streaks are legal. based on secret remarkals. >> we don't see how many we have carried out, we don't sew who they have been against, we don't say their locations. until quite recently, the administration has said we can neither confirm nor deny. so you have what amounts to a war, which has killed three to 4,000 people. >> promise new guidance
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and more transparency in the program. >> i also believe we with should be more transparent about both the basis of our counter terrorism actions and the manner in which they were carried out. >> a statement, the administration said it would review the new report, but pointed out the president has repeatedly emphasized the extraordinary care. taken to ensure counter terrorism actions meet all laws and are consistent with u.s. values and policies. the white house says it is confident it can can be more open, and still retain the ability to continue the drone strikes. now the report authors are also worried that the u.s. navy is setting a dangerous precedent, they say imagine if russia decided to use drone strikes in the ukraine against individuals that russia camed were terrorists. could the u.s. really
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condemn that. >> it has always been a slippery slope. thank you. hurt, so today was a bad day. but it was also a really good day for the u.s. soccer team. at world cup in brazil. first the bad news. germany beat the a., the good news is that u.s. will advance to the next round. a look at the game, and what lies ahead, michael. >> sometimes when you lose you actually win, right. despite that draw sunday, in the final seconds the odds are still in team u.s.a. favor to advance out of group plato the round of 16. and the story before the game was with the weather. it soaked the field, but thankny it didn't seem to real hi effect play in this match up.
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now a tie would send them both to the next round. germany controlled the game throughout both halfs and a goal by german the fifty-fifth minute would prove to be the only goal of the game, as germany hands the only loss in group play. now, with the 1-nil loss, team u.s.a. would need help from porch gal, a win or a tie would also move the u.s. to the next round, ghana plays the game short handed after two players were twoed from the team. allegedly over money. porch gal was withn't able to take advantage. so here is another hook at the final result in group two, a group that many had called the group of death, and didn't they they could advance, but two wins and a draw gives them the top snot. team u.s.a. both fin wish with 4 points but the u.s. advances thanks to get differential. portugal is really hurt by the 4-nil loss in the
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first game. no matter how they got there it is on to the fist round. >> that is something we have to improve on, but overall, tremendous energy. tremendous effort, we took that chance, and we move on, and now we with want to prove a point. to give you an idea how well they have played this is the first time they have advanced in back to back world cups. first time ever, so u.s. sockser getting much bigger. >> well they have a good game coming up, they beat south carolina again today, lit be a tough match up because they have been playing so
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well, regardless, if they are able to win with that match. >> let's do that. >> and they can do that, that would be the first time they have reached the quarter final round since 2000. that's been a long time. >> right. >> of course their best finish was way back in 1930. it's been a long road for the u.s. to get this to competition. >> will it get it's best player back. >> that is the juan with question that the fans would want to know going into that game on tuesday, they are hopeful. the odds are less than 50% based on the injury that he suffered and those are always iffy, you can't quite tell how much it has healed or hurt. but if they plan to advance, they are probably going to need him. >> i had a hamstring injury once. >> it nagged you forever. >> 20 years later, still.
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the president watched some of the match, while flying to minnesota, he said the team has earned it's spot in the next round. >> we with were with in what is called the group of death. we were with in the toughest grouping and we got through. thousands bath tore watch the game. soccer fans were also out in force today for much of the afternoon, watch party under the manhattan bridge. the mood didn't change until they pulled ahead of ghana, and a win with is a win, even when it is connected to a loss. why hillary clinton says you have to be a little
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crazy to run for president. also, census numbers show more older people of the united states, and fewer younger people to support them. and that trend can be a drag on the economy.
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not giving up, the tea party candidate and there he is, is infour rated that his incumbent reached out to democrats down the stretch, particularly in african-american districts. well, we haven't conceded we are not going to concede, we are going to investigate. naturally it is difficult the to we do know that 35,000 democrats crossed over, and we with know many of them did vote,
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and the democratic primary, just three weeks ago, which makes it illegal. >> so how does he know they voted three weeks ago? he wouldn't say. senator cochrane is not talking about voting irregularities but his spokesman says we are moving forward, the election is over. former florida governor jeb bush -- some political i.o.u.s in the potential campaign. bush has agreed to headline a huge republican fund raiser in tampa later this year, for at least four republican candidates. win of those is iowa's joni earns. of course, hosts the iowa caucuses. the first voting in the primary cycle. hawaii may be one of the few states left in the country where an endorsement from president obama, is something worth advertising. nationally the president's approval rating is around 41%, but in his home state, television viewers are now seeing this.
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as our island sun we trust his leadership. president obama endorsed brian schatz for senate, as they work together on issues that matter to hawaii. >> in that senate race, brian shoots is favored. finally, to hillary clinton she will be the democratic presidential front runner if she chooses to run. in 2016, but listen to what she just told pbs. >> you have to be a little bit crazy to run for president. let me just put it like that. because you have to be so totally immersed and so convinced that you can bring something to that office. >> so what would clinton bring to that office, she didn't say. instead, she phone about her own sense of self. >> my life of service is the biggest reason why i would consider doing this because i would want to continue serving. >> because i want to continue serving.
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as for the office of the presidency itself, clinton added this. >> it's a very hard job, and it is a job that you have to be totally consumed by, and that's kind of a definition of being a little bit crazy, i think. >> perhaps, but more than a few democratic separate gists said today that clinton is a more than a little crazy if she thinks wanting to serve a winning explanation for a white house candidacy. she want withs to reform education or boost the economy, that's fine, but the strategists were a bit bewildered on her focus on herself. that's today's power politics. appreciate it. thank you. >> the u.s. census bureau released updated population estimates the new data shows that americas population is growing. and getting grayer. jen rogers is in, good to see you, if you would, take a moment and break down these numbers. >> a lot of numbers.
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the zeb u.s. soccer coming out show the population rose by 7.4 million, the u.s. counted more than 360 million residents as of july 2014. what's more the median age of the population picked up sightly to 37.6 years old, now that means half of all-americans were younger and half were older. the biggest driver of that rise belches it was the aging baby boom generation, that wave of americans born between 1946 and 1964. they now number more than 76 million people. and the youngest are now entering the 50's. but you know all of this this shall these are the national figures when you drill down into the data, you see the ages fluctuate, depending on where you live. >> hang on here, maybe you just mentioned this year, you mentioned that america's population is also getting older, and just how old are we getting? >> i know, so let's talk
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about some of the details. at 66 years well, madison idaho would you have guessed it, they have if you think yoest age of just 23 years. but williams county north dakota that's the center of the shale energy boom, they head the nation with the biggest average age decline, the median age there is now 33 years. and that is down from 39 years recorded in the 2010 census. the nation as a whole grew older, the oldest bay boomers become seniors. the 60ty five and old surged, up 3.6% from 2012. and by comparison the p political processlation younger than 65, grew by only .3 of 1%. >> whoa, one more for you, what are else are you, whoing on? >> an interesting story coming up on bank overdraft fees. banks earns tens of
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billions of dollars charging people for spending more than they have in their account. they say overdraft protection can do more harm than good, and the rules governing that need to be improved so we will be looking at that. >> terrific. jen rogers looking forward to the program tonight, on real money, 7:00 p.m. on al jazeera america. go pros first day on wall street, picture perfect. shares of the camera company rose more than 30%, after it made it's public debut on the nasdaq today. a lot of happy people there, go pro raised nearly 430 million-dollars from today's i.p.o., the company says the none will be used to pay down debt. now that the supreme court has knocked down some of the president's recess appointments, what will be the effect? we will find out what the ruling means for the president's policies and it looks like legal marijuana is not, is not the tax wind fall that colorado had hoped for. we will explain why the numbers are falling short
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of expectations. a ae
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presidents can make temporary appointments when the senate is not in session, and earlier today i spoke to legal contributor, and i asked her about the significance of the supreme court ruling. >> it's really important to understand that it is a very big case but the reason it is big is because unanimously the court has that president obama you should haven't made those appointments
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but presidents in general will have the power to make appointments in the recess. >> okay. >> and then the court gets into the nit fifa disciplinary gritty of what is a recess. is it one day, three days. >> here is where it gets -- here is where it gets casey. and that meant it counts as a day. and this was cheerily a situation, where the president was putting forth nominees say i can't getting a hear, and then we get to recess, and get this opportunity to do it now and now we keep the doors open so you can't reblock. >> the scouter can is frustrated with that in it's business, it's not business, it is monoquestion business. look, we have been doing this appointment
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procedure under the guidance set down by the constitution, and making government work, with we are in are recess or not, for 200 years. >> yes. >> and now all of a sudden we have dysfunction, so get organized and get it together. >> but they didn't take the power to appoint recess away from this president or any other president, they did say, that a few appointments he made during a three day recess, that technically was ant recess, because they decided to hang around, those won't count. those don't count. >> here is something that does count, now there were at least what, two appointments to the national labor relations board, what was it a couple of years ago. >> january 2012. >> what happened to those. >> those folks are -- that's right. that is a mess for that -- for the national labor relation board, that's who brought this case that's why we are here in the u.s. supreme court, now there are real questions about the matters before, what happens -- those positions now need to be filled is those people made decisions and
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appointments and what effects -- what effected 24 case have on those decisions those appointments. >> and that was al jazeera legal contributor jamie floyd, and one years ago today, the u.s. struck down a section of the defensive marriage act that denied federal benefits to same sex couples. that ruling opened up a nod of challenges to same sex bans throughout the country. us now yesterday ed indiana -- seven states have legalized since last june. today officials and st. louis, and powder county colorado, defy their state's bans by issues marriage licenses to same sex couples. the president of rights equal rights and i asked
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him to reflect on the last year. this two cases that the street court heard, and the same day released two good decisions on the prop eight, which returned marriage to my home state of california, and then taking out section 3 of doma, which was government sanction discrimination. we have won all 22, we are on the move, and it will be a year or two before marriage equality will be the haw of the land. >> how do you see same-sex marriage as an issue playing out? what we are going through the midterm cycle now? and then in the presidential psych until 2016. you is to believe it is going to be an issue. >> oh, absolutely. and depending on what the supreme court does in the next year or two, but if they do it prior to the 2016 campaign, i think we will see more republicans
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moving over to support marriage equality. >> how many? is it four now that support same-sex marriage? >> i think four -- >> recently, maybe it's as recently as today or yesterday, how long before you think you get more republicans onboard with what is happening? clearly in the country? >> you even have senator orrin hatch admitting that the time is coming. and like barack obama his two kids were the one that pressures him, and iny a lot of republicans members of the house will get that same kind of pressure from their kids and grandkid cans to do the right thing, and be on the right side of history. >> that was with fred of rights equal rights. 50,000 government workers in gaza are on strike, they came they haven't been paid in three months, hamas hired them in 27, but the new unity government says it is not ready to pay up.
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locked out, public buildings are empty. these people are angry and unpaid and they are blaming the palestinian president. >> everyone is responsible for our problems. the president of all the palestinian people, and he is the father of all of us. he represents all palestinians all over the world, therefore, he must solve this as soon as possible. they want to be paid but the new government says they don't have the money. hamas hires them in 27 when it took control. but that can take months. is that's the angers the strikers who want to be zone as state employees. >> this strike is a protest on depriving 50,000 palestinian
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families from their daily bread, their suffer a lot as a result, therefore we started this step as a warning. the general strike is paralyzing gaza. we demand the unity government solve our problems and consider us legitimate employees like the west bank ones. >> the new government is also under pressure over the disappearance of three teenagers in the west bank. israel plames hamas, hamas and the palestinian authority sign add reconciliation agreement in april. the new unity government has promised to hold a national election within six months. but the rising pressure is theftenning the prospect of that ever happening. bay have noun on auto pilot before crashing. the new theory means search crews will sift through and shift their focus south, experts are basing the change on data
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exchanges between the plane and the satellite. australia's safety bureau says the crew may have lost consciousness from oxygen deprivation. in sudan, police have agreed tory lease mirrian ibriham. she was convicted and supposed to be executed for converts to christianity. police say they will release her if someone guarantees she will show up to face forgery charges. her lawyers say her documents are genuine. and in guatemala, more than 13% of children are skipping school to hold down a job. the u.n. says 58 million children worldwide are forced to work while guatemala has been one of the worst performing countrieses it has made small improvements. every day 12-year-old madeline hernandez sells
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second hand clothes in the central market. she only earned a few cents from every sale, but the small contribution comes at a big price. until recently, she had never been to school. then a few months ago, madeline discovered a clam tucked into a corner of the market, and the joys of learning. i like coming here, because it is really fun, and our teacher danny likes to help us learn, how to read and write, how to add and substract, we learn a lot of things. >> a local nonprofit group runed ten classrooms around guatemala city, all are located in markets where children work, all lessons are finished by noon, all classes are free. with around 600 students they hope to expand their coverage. but then disaster struck. >> at the end of march, a
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fire swept through guatemala city, reducing thousands of stalls to ashes, and it's here where i am standing that they had their best equipped education center with dozens of computers all of it, wiped out. >> but the group refused to give up, thanks to a private public partnership, it is inaugurate add new classroom in the center of the market, yet with around 1.5 million workers not attending school, much more needs tock done. >> if we only work with a fraction of these boys and girls it means there are many that are not receiving an education, we think it is essential there are more that don't fitted with the official school system. >> the government is doing little to address the problem.
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for these young people to increase the coverage of our schools with have to increase our budget. the government here says every child has the right to an education, now the challenge is to make that a priority, otherwise the most vulnerable will continue to be left behind. david merse iraqi, al jazeera, guatemala city. >> a closing arguments in the trial of a baseball fan suing the l.a. dodgers. tenny, the lawyer for the man, says the team has failed to keep fans safe. suffers severe brain damage in an attack by two fans three years ago, the lawsuit is seeking $50 million for stone's lifetime medical care. the defense claimed only the attackers are responsible for the beating minute they have already been sentenced to prison. in detroit, a missing boy was found alive and well with in the basement of his home. he was with missing for a week and a half.
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the father says he, his wife, and the fbi serged the basement. >> they went all over the house. they searched and searched. >> we are not certain that charley was here during those visits we aren't certain at all, because the question i have is how could we miss him. >> police say the boy was nervous but excited when they found him, he said he was hungry but appeared okay. new york city lost it's final appeal to ban the sale of big sodas today, the state hirest court ruled the city overstepped it's bounds when it restricted the size of sodas. a lower court overturned the ban. in boston, the final bid for a piece of frank sinatra memorabilia are in. issued be i the state of new jersey. the last bid on the auction website was at almost $8,000. the license is sold by
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the 19-year-old sins that that. if you look closely you can see his last name is misspelled. it was issue add year before he got his first big break in the music industry, he probably didn't need it after that. >> so the bids are in. >> bids are. >> all right, see you later, thank you. you know, it has been six months since colorado began selling marijuana. now economists predict add huge cash flow for the state. but the reality is telling a different story. >> i'll drink this and get a little buzz. >> it depends on your metabolism. >> and new ways to make money. >> we license this product out for a bear proof bag. that is i can smell. >> people are here from all around the country, taking in this showcase for the budding young marijuana industry. >> about 50% of our sales
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are raw can bass. >> we had a three hour wait for the first two weeks just to get in the door. >> seven months later business has slowed and so has the tax revenue coming into the state. >> prior to approving legal pot, voters in colorado were told they would see plenty of green coming from the new industry, the state estimated taxes would bring in $67 million in the first year. in march, they dropped that to $54 million. now they are saying it's just over $30 million less than half the original forecast. >> when people were making those projections they had to make about a dozen assumptions as to what is the price of marijuana going to be, what is the supply going to be. and they may have everylooked medical marijuana, it is taxed way below, 2.9% compared to a total of 28%, and 113,000 people in the state have medical marijuana cards. >> can you believe the
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numbers would be this off? >> dianne carlson is with smart colorado. >> we were promised that marijuana would be tightly regulated, that the state in our schools would receive it would be a boom revenue wise, and that we with would keep it fought of the hands of our kids. >> up to $40 million annually was supposed to go to schools and drug education. in the meantime, marijuana advocates hold out colorado as the marian business model. >> i think this' probably about 800 people that would tell you that they are coming to colorado because they want with to be a part of history. >> a history that may change, after state economists take a full assessment of a year's worth of numbers and see how green this new industry really is. office coming up, an oyster company may lose it's home. also, the united nations weighs in on the decision to shut off the water for
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80,000 people in detroit.
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♪ the united nations says detroit may be violating human rights for shutting off watt tore nearly 80,000 residents. now, the spokesman for detroit water and sewage told thaws the city cannot afford to keep the water running for free. residents who are more than two months behind and owe more than $150 have their water shut off. so earlier, i spoke with the u.n.'s katrina and she explains the u.n.'s position. >> water was recognized by the u.n. general assembly as a human right in 2010, and this recognition was then reaformed subsequent hi in different -- in many different years with the
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support of the u.s. government. it is a human right, it is a dispensable for survival, and it is connected with many other human rights is the right to life. the right to be free from degraded treatments and is con sis crated in several instruments. what the right to water means is that not you and i should get our water for free, it is written nowhere that water should be given for free to anyone, what the human right says is that you cannot be deprived of access to this right for reasons beyond your control. one of the reasons beyond your control, can be your in80 to pay. >> detroit water and sewer told us on monday that they have called for a residential water assistance program to help people pay their bills. in california, drive just about an hour and a half north of san francisco and you will find drake's bay oyster company. it is a million dollars business, working on land
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owned by national park service, but when it is lease expired moved to have themts evicted. >> small, medium, large, white table chott half shell oysters for nearly a century oysters have been harvested here. susanne hays is one of many fans, she says the farm is a tip of this pristine coastal land is intertwined with her community. >> it is who we are, it is what we make, and what we send out in the world, and what is people come here to see. >> seven years ago, kevin bout the farm here, and turned it into a 1.5 million dollars annual business. producing 8 million oyster as year. but some environmentalists say he has outstayed his welcome, and it is time for the farm to stop production. >> it is fundamentally incompatible with the national park wilderness area to have a commercial
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private oyster operation. it just doesn't fit. >> when lenny bought the farm, he knew he was nearing the end of a 40 year lease, but he was hopeful the park service would let him stay, when his lease expired it was not renewed. >> this is a perfect example of cooperative conservation. it's been working beautifully for 50 years, and now besee the park service and interior turning those agreements on their head. >> he insists he is a responsible steward of the land, and exemplified sustainability. >> to grow an oyster, we don't use any feeds no fertilizers, there's no cultivation, no chemical use whatsoever. at 100% of our product stays he call. this is exactly what we want to support, and should support if we want to make good nod choices. >> in nearby san francisco, richard sander agrees. he serves drakes bay oysters. >> to have a commodity
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hike this, 30 miles away from a large urban area, is just offset what the park system is trying to do in this situation. >> the controversy has divided this community, signs in favor are posted on every block, those who want the farm to go, are afraid to speak up. >> one friend of mine said she could don't to a birthday party because of this issue. dividing people at the party. >> the 50,000 people that visit this farm every year, the families that come here, the school tours that come here, to learn about where their food comes from. to get a feel of what farming is. >> he says it is a lower court rules against him stands the community may gain a quiet estuary, but some of their culture history will be lost. >> the united states as you know is in the group of 16, moving on at the world cup, up next, we
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will go live to brazil for the other big matches who decided who advanced to the next round.
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states are through to the round of 16, and may did not have to wait honk to see who they will play, belgium will take on the united states after beating south korea today, the germans will go head to head, the algerians are moving on, wow that will make for an interesting match up. lee wellings is back with us, from rio. hey, lee, i want to talk about these match ups in a second, can we spend a little bit or time talking about louise swarez here, and the people came down pretty hard, huh? is. >> they did, and that surprise as few people, but in this instance, you have to say they acted swiftly, and they needed to because in banning the world cup people wanted to see, because they have
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a big game against columbia coming up and people didn't want with to see him playing in that gailen p this is the third time he has bitten someone, he needed to be punished. that was acting in a kind of fast manner we have seen before. if you look at the level of the punishment, copper america next year, the south american champion, so he will be missing a lot of uruguay action, when you look at the reaction around the globe, here in brazil, it is only the uruguayans that are saying it is unfair, everyone else is saying that they got this one right. >> yeah, let's talk about a little history, the round of 16, we get the u.s. and belgium, you can talk about that, but algeria is moving forward, and that's latele history here, isn't it another shock 367 that algeria becomes
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the first north african side to reach the knock out. may lost their first game but managed to come back from that. but they scored the goal that manned to take them through, earlier in the tournament, they become the first african side to ever score four. and now they have this match up against germany, and it is going to be an incredible chance for revenge. but then west germany co lewded and got am jeer yeah knocked out, and they have waited all this time for revenge. and actually, that led to a world change, they are going to be so much looking forward to this game on monday what do you think of the chances of united states in that belgium match up? >> i was really impressed again with the united states. in the match against germany, sometimes score lines can be deceptive, the fact that germany won, you can say well
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that was with more disappointing performance. this was some great play from the united states, and belgium is a really good team, they will be favorite, but i am not 100% they can go to the final stages. they have nothing to fair. >> this man knows his soccer/football, so when you hear that assessment, you can say good. lee appreciate it, good to see you again. so a lot of reaction only social media. the browned of 16, innecessary is back with with that. >> clint dempsey put up this picture, the athletes inside the locker room. thanking the fans with the #one nation, one team. and athletes also congratulated the u.s. for advancing to the next round, like oscar della hoya saying we did it. and andreing a city's home, he writes along with stef fifa disciplinary graph, there you go, happy home. she is german, he is
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american, beth advance. and aaron rogers writing well done, moving on with the country behind you, you also have president obama on his way to minneapolis on air force one, sitting back and taking a look at the game, and this was the tackle in the most popular tackle of this game. >> tell me about this. >> taking down jermaine jones. >> yes. >> accidentally, of course. but prompting one person to say the referee should get a red card for this. so fans were relieved, making it all the more likely that the u.s. would advance, so suddenly, renaldo became a hero. and i'm con can vinceed that somebody is is sitting at home with photo shop when these are going on, just waiting for these moments. >> because they turn it around so quickly. >> yeah, but the real hero the u.s. goalie prompting one user to put up this. >> mr. howard. >> there you go. >> terrific stuff. >> thank you.
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>> oh, we-you now. >> that is all of our time, tony harris in new york, real money is next, jen rogers is sitting in for ali velshi that's coming up in minutes. blatche they are two booms that are having a big impact on america, we'll tell you how the energy boom and the bay boom are shaping the economy and much more. also the truth about overdraft fees, why the banks love them and you should watch out for them. plus growing america's next big restaurant chain. we'll tell you to where the seeds are being mra-- planted rt now. i'm jen rogers in f