tv CNN Newsroom CNN September 15, 2013 11:00am-12:01pm PDT
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we thought the visit was not technically in russia. it was under the control of russia. all of it inside the soviet union. so if you said fdr was the first sitting u.s. president to visit, you were right. nixon's trip was the first state visit. thanks for being part of my program this week. i will see you next week. hello. i hundreds of people are trapped by raging flood waters in colorado. rescues are going on right now. >> i think what we have going on here in the last 24 hours is the greatest number of americans rescued by helicopter since hurricane katrina. >> some desperate people can't be reached just yet and the rain shows no sign of letting up
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anytime soon. live coverage seconds away. and president obama responds to critics who accuse him of bungling the syria crisis. and his reaction to the controversial op-ed piece by russian president vladimir putin. the massive search and rescue mission going on in northern colorado. as you heard a national guard official says the number of flood victims being rescued by helicopter may be the largest since hurricane katrina. the military is helping to air lift people who are completely surrounded by water and fema rescue crews joined the effort today. national guard helicopter helped evacuate people stranded in a field. we just learned an 80-year-old woman is believed to be the
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sixth person presumed killed due to the floods. 482 others are unaccounted for but authorities point out many of the people may be safe but just unable to call in. crews air dropped food and water supplies to people who are trapped in some areas where rescueers haven't been able to reach. the disaster is being described as a once in a thousand year event. it is taking an emotional toll even on officials who are used to seeing tragedy. >> i felt a lot of hope and real energy yesterday because the question i had was how can we recover from this. i know exactly inch by inch, mile by mile, community by community they are taking this stuff. people are getting those things done out there. >> entire towns are completely cut off by flood waters so
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destructive wiping out mountain sides, homes and hundreds of miles of roads. colorado's governor appeared on cnn's state of the union and said the focus right now is getting people to safety. >> we are still bracing. there are many, many homes that have been destroyed. a number of them collapsed. we are still dealing with that, how do we save lives first. >> george howell live for us in boulder, colorado. i understand national gauard rescues are on hold. why is that? >> reporter: we are getting a lot of rain. with that rain the creeks and rivers are rising again. you see the four mile creek that typically does not go over this road now in danger of cutting off this community. you see people doing their best to build mud levees to keep the water out of this neighborhood as best as they can. we are seeing this play out all
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over these areas that were hard hit. that means communities can be cut off again. as far as the national guard their helicopters are grounded at least until the weather gets better. keep in mind this is a rescue effort that we have not seen since hurricane katrina. at least 1,000 people rescued. i spoke to the national guard about this effort, what they are doing just a few minutes ago. i want you to listen to what they say. >> as far as the operation side, the reason that we are able to do it is that we have prepared for this through different training scenarios and also through different exercises that we have had over the last couple of years. so this isn't something that we can just show up and be ready to do. this is years and years of training and doing the exercises so that we're ready when something like this does happen. >> reporter: back to a live
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picture here in boulder, colorado. i want you to see what people are doing. you do what you can. you are up against mother nature. all over you see in many different neighborhoods people picking up shovels, picking up branches, building the levees and trying to keep the water out of their neighborhoods. that is going to continue happening as the rain event continues here over this area. also i want to talk about the 482 unaccounted for. basically that means that there are people who may have dead cell phones or phone lines may be down. there is a continuous effort underway to try to get in touch with people. again, that is a very high number at this point. 482 unaccounted for at this particular point. the hope is that that number will go down. t that operation continues. for now the helicopter operations pulling people to safety, that has been halted for the moment. >> so, george, hold on for a moment because i have with us
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now liz with the boulder office of emergency management. liz, give me an idea, what is the biggest obstacle right now? you heard our reporter, george, talk about the national guard rescues on hold because of the weather. what are the challenges for you and your crews? >> at this point it is a big concern with the weather. we don't have much visibility so the national guard held caicohe are grounded for now. >> how do you reach those who need assistance right away? >> we have been unable to reach jamestown through land at all. they were able to breakthrough the western towns to help rescue people. >> what about in terms of being
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unable to communicate with people? there are no phone lines working. people can't reach folks via cell. how do you try to communicate? >> you know, we are doing our best to get communications out there to people. we have people on the ground with radios. we have people -- we are doing -- if they don't have cell service or electricity it is difficult for us to get to them. we are trying to spread the word as best as possible. >> what is your question to liz with the office of emergency management? >> reporter: we are looking at the a live picture in boulder. you see families doing the best they can to keep water out of the neighborhood. what do you tell people if they feel water is rising? are there shelters to go to feel safe and wait this out until the water subsides? >> absolutely. we are trying to get people to stay off the road as best as possible. if they feel that the waters are
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rising and they don't feel safe staying there are shelters available. we have a list on our website which is boulderoem.com. >> reporter: one other question if possible. one question that a lot of families have out here comes the sand bags. you see this effort but they always ask for the sand bags. through a process in place to get the sand bags? >> at this point the last i heard we are saving sand bags trying to get them to places such as hospitals, nursing homes, anything like that that people are not able to be moved. >> i know you have to run because of the area in which you are located right now. liz, i have one more question for you before you go. what about resources? are you hoping to get assistance
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from out of state in other capacities that you haven't already? >> at this point fema has come in and is assisting us. we have a website, helpcoloradonow.org. people can go to that and donate money and get information about volunteering. >> very good. thanks so much. the office of emergency management there at colorado. all the best to you. i know this is a colossal effort especially as we look at pictures that continue to come in. so a bad situation in colorado. really an under statement, made even worse now by the continued rain as you heard george talking about. let's turn to alexandra steele in the weather center. still more rain in the forecast. >> it was really ilustrative that the helicopters have been
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grounded because they can't see. the low clouds, visibility and the rain. let me show you more video. boulder where the big university, cu is. 100,000 people live there, it is at the base of the foothills. in addition to the rain we have seen we have hail coming down. that really tells a lot of the story, as well, because what happened are the big powerful thunderstorms with the uplift thus bringing down the hail. look at the ferosity of this. places like boulder, nine inches of rain in one day. this is really quite historic. why is it happening and when is it going to end? in essence we have a traffic jam in the atmosphere. we have this area of low pressure that is cut off. we have the jet stream to the north. usually the jet stream kind of
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kicks the area of low pressure. so we had the scenario of the area over and over. the forecast for today as you saw raining now, still maybe one to two inches of rain today. tomorrow a little less moisture in the air tomorrow. that's the good news, isolated storms but still a half an inch possible. tuesday to friday the system finally gets out and we begin a return to drier skies. i want to talk about how dramatic this is. almost a year's worth of rain for these people in just five days. here is boulder. 17 inches. their yearly average is 20. so roughly three-quarters of the yearly rain in just five days. that is like atlanta, georgia getting 35 inches of rain. >> unbelievable. the ground has been so saturated this water doesn't have any place to go. >> chicago seeing 26 inches.
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it is pretty dramatic. the problem is the areas of elevation -- let me show you this google map to give you a perspective. here is boulder, colorado at the foothills of the rockies. what we are seeing here from boulder, boulder is an elevation farther west into the rockies. then we talked about the teeny town that is trapped at 7,000 feet. >> jamestown. >> and also the mountain area at 13,000 feet. jamestown, 200 people live there, this teeny town. this is 13,000 feet around it. the rain comes down but then this elevation -- it goes from 13,000 feet, runs down and exacerbates the rain still. here is boulder at about 5,000 feet. as we move eastward the topography is flatter in place s
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like greeley. it is all rolling down and draining here in a different rain. >> when you talk about the topography i think people who spend any time in colorado you see the signs about falling rock. expectt that particularly when you have heavy snowfall. something like this, mountain sides being washed away by a whole lot of rain, nothing that anyone can really prepare for. >> no. because it weakens them. we call this lifting because air when it rises it cools it is like taking a sponge. you can squeeze it a little bit and a little water will come out or you can go and it all dumps out. that is what happens when the air gets lifted. every available amount of moisture comes out. >> so more rain in the forecast. >> today, tomorrow. by tuesday that will be the end of it. >> thanks so much. alexandra steele, appreciate that. of course, i'm sure you at
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home want to do something to help out the victims. visit the impact your world page at cnn.com for a lot of guidance there. a surprising comment from president obama. he says he welcomes russia's involvement in the syrian crisis. i'll tell you why next. tourists in new york city's times square find themselves in the middle of a police shootout. and this programming note. anthony bordain in an all new season. watch right here on cnn. [ male announcer ] when you have sinus pressure and pain,
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national guard rescues in colorado are on hold right now because of bad weather. hundreds of people have been trapped as this massive flood sweeps through mountain towns and rescue helicopters cannot get to them because of all of the rain. a sixth person is presumed dead in the floods. we are keeping a close eye on this story. we'll continue to bring you updates throughout the day as we get them. president obama said today the u.s. is moving closer to its
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goal of getting chemical weapons out of syria. he praised a deal reached with russia to hand those weapons over to international control. and he told abc this week the rest of u.s. military action made a big difference. >> as a consequence of the pressure that we have applied over the last couple of weeks we have syria acknowledging that it has chemical weapons, agreeing to join the convention that prohibits the use of chemical weapons. and the russians, their primary sponsor, saying that they will push syria to get all of their chemical weapons out. the distance that we have travelled over these couple of weeks is remarkable. >> at the united nations chemical weapons inspectors are one day away from giving their critical report. they are expected to present their findings tomorrow morning. nick paton walsh is live for us in new york. is it expected that there will
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be blame placed in these reports? >> reporter: that is not part of the u.n. inspector's job. they were sent there to figure out if chemical weapons were used. most people are talk to say there is going to be enough detail in this report. it is going to be a pretty chunky document. there will be enough detail that if you do a little math you can work out who was behind it although the u.n. won't specifically say that. that is why it is so contentious and why at 11:00 tomorrow we will have a closed door meeting of the u.n. security council. they will go through it and digest it and see the next steps here. the report as i understand it has been complete for over 24 hours. we got a bit of the sneak preview perhaps accidently saying they will overwhelmingly confirm that chemical weapons were used. people want to know the details, what was used and a bit more of
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the story as to how they came to launch such a massive attack. >> they will receive the report and have to go through it. is there any estimation how long it will take to go through it. >> it could be a matter of minutes. we are trying to work out if the report becomes public. the real question is do we see a resolution on the same day? we have been talking about the need for somebody to back up the agreement of how weapons can be handed over by syria. the question is does that get moved forward tomorrow? the wording of that and what we have to say or will we see more dead lock or more horse training here at the united nations again. >> nick paton walsh keep us posted. u.s. secretary of state john kerry is in jerusalem today
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meeting with benjamin netanyahu. kerry stressed it is not a final agreement but it could push things in the right direction he says. >> is it a framework that must be put into effect by the united nations now but it is a framework that with the russian and u.s. agreement it has the full ability to be able to, as the prime minister said, strip all of the chemical weapons from syria. >> the world needs to ensure that radical regimes don't have weapons of mass destruction. we learned if regimes have weapons of mass destruction they will use them. >> jerusalem is just 135 miles from damascus, closer than the
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distance between new york and washington. a chaotic scene near times square in new york, please shoot at a man they thought was going to pull out a gun. two women end up in the hospital with gun shot wounds. we take you live to the scene when we come back. [ male announcer ] this is pam. her busy saturday begins with back pain, when... hey pam, you should take advil. why? you can take four advil for all day relief. so i should give up my two aleve for more pills with advil? you're joking right? for my back pain, i want my aleve. you're joking right? we've been bringing people together. today, we'd like people to come together on something that concerns all of us. obesity. and as the nation's leading beverage company, we can play an important role.
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panic in the scene. >> what happened? >> crowds panicked in this area near times square. all the action took place on the corner right there behind me. police fired three shots. they missed their target and they hit two women instead. you can see what is happening there in the video. and the witnesses say that police were chasing a man that was wandering through the streets. here is how they described the scene. >> two officers were running down. that's when the shots came. it was two shots first and then a pause and then a third shot. >> reporter: police say it looked like the man was trying to get hit. he was wandering through traffic. they also say that he pretended to pull out a weapon. >> so this man allegedly was
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trying to get hit by a vehicle and the next thing you know police weret shooting at him? what was he suspected of doing beyond trying to hurt himself? >> reporter: he was wandering through traffic. they think that he wanted to get hit. i think it was and we don't have the confirmation on this but when he put his hand in his pocket and was pretending to draw a weapon the police were already chasing him and that is when the shots were fired. >> lots of chaos and too much excitement in times square. appreciate that. families stranded for days a flood waters trap them in their colorado homes. others look out their windows and doors to see. cut off from the rest of the world. [ male announcer ] pepcid® presents: the burns family bbq.
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fema, search and rescue teams are on the ground. all national guard air rescues are on hold because of more stormy weather in the area. president obama told abc today he believes a deal reached with russia is a step towards the goal of getting chemical weapons out of syria. yesterday secretary of state john kerry and russia's foreign minister announced a framework. obama said that means the u.s. is in a better position than it was several weeks ago. tomorrow engineers will try to pull the ship wrecked concordia upright. and number four, celebrity chef paula deen is back on stage. she made her first public appearance in three months. the crowd of 1,500 fans giving
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her a standing ovation for 15 minut minutes. a judge later tossed out the suit. number five, good news for those of you who play the powerball lotto. the jackpot is at a whopping $400 million right now. no one matched all six numbers in last night's drawing. just five weeks ago seven new jersey workers split a part of a $448 million jackpot. so best of luck. got to play to win. back to our top story. colorado floods have left hundreds of people unaccounted for just north of boulder. there is still so much rain. rescue helicopters in the county are grounded. for the latest i am joined on the phone by county sheriff
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justin smith. we heard from you earlier at a press conference where this is taking an emotional toll on you and other rescueers as it is those being rescued. >> it is personal with us. these are friends and family. we are a large county. this is our home and these are our friends. it does wear on you but everybody is up to the task. >> weather is standing in the way of a lot of the aerial rescues. how do you go about trying to get to those in need right now? >> air assets are hugely important. even when they are grounded we have people that have gotten in areas on foot or by vehicle. we still have people going back doing rope line rescues. they are watching minute by minute for the chance for things to clear up.
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we did not anticipate having clear skies yesterday. we have assets waiting to come in. >> tell me about the drops of food and water, how those efforts have been going before the weather stood in the way and tell me about the rope line rescues. it seems very dangerous for those being rescued and for those doing the rescuing. >> absolutely. starting with the air operations, you know, we know the area has been reflected. we knew where people were trapped. and those can take up food and water and can land drop them into area where if you had a few hundred people you can leave that. most people have homes there and may have lost power and water. we have those things going on. they did a tremendous job.
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i was in a small unincorporated area yesterday. inspiring stories from the volunteer firefighters i spend a few hours with. they are taking whatever they have between what is in the firehouse, what citizens have. they are stringing up lines where there is a river between them and the people. they are figuring it out. these are hearty people. these are determined people. they go through tough times and they are working together. even the people that lost their homes they said i am fine. my house is gone. i'm fine. we are getting out of here. >> as we are talking we are looking at some of the video of some of the rescues by chopper when the choppers were able to land. you have seen folks taking babies and infant seats in the choppers. we have seen extraordinary images of rope line rescues with people holding on to their dogs, their pets while they are trying
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to carefully navigate these rope lines. tell me what you tell people, what can they take? what decisions do they have to make at the very last minute? >> getting on to those copters is the air guard's decision. you have to take medications. most people consider their pets to be family. the guard has done tremendous. i know at times they said they felt like they flew as many pets as citizens. it has been a challenge but amazing flying. when i saw them come in, it is places a helicopter can barely fit in, to see it drop into a canyon and do it successfully and back out, they are angels up there. >> you are all angels helping out so many people in desperate need. all the best and be safe to you and your colleagues doing
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tremendous work. >> thank you. president obama revealing more about what he thinks of his russian counter part, vladimir putin. he told abc that in these diplomatic efforts mr. putin is more a partner than an enemy of the u.s. and works with russia. what else did the president say about trying to address the syrian crisis? >> it is very interesting. obama's position on putin is very reagan-esc. he is taking a trust but verify address which has been the theme of republicans when they talk about syria. >> i don't think mr. putin has the same values that we do. and i think obviously by protecting mr. assad he has a different attitude about the assad regime.
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but what i have also said to him directly is that we both have an interest in preventing chaos. we have an interest in preventing terrorism. the situation in syria right now is untenable. as long as mr. assad is in power there is going to be some sort of conflict there and that we should work together. >> it's important to say the president was interviewed on friday before the geneva framework was actually announced so he wasn't reacting specifically to news of a deal at that time. >> and then you know last week i think people can forer get the interviewt that our congressional correspondent conducted with senator from tennessee. in his view the president looked like he was uncomfortable. the president was asked about that. what did he say? >> the take away on senator c k corker is that the president
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sees the criticism on the way of approaching the problem as opposed to the substance of the solution. >> folks here in washington like to grade on style. and so had we rolled out something that was very smooth and disciplined and linear they would have graded it well with even if it was a disastrous policy. i'm less concerned about style points. i'm much more concerned about getting the policy right. what i have said consistently throughout is that the chemical
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weapons is a prab. >> a framework isn't a solution unless it works and i think everybody knows that. >> i think everybody agrees we have a long way to go. thanks so much. u.s. secretary of state john kerry is in israel today meeting with prime minister benjamin netanyahu. i asked about israel's role. >> it is difficult to tell the israelis naturally have a concern. this is fantastic news for the israelis. israel is now the regional superpower. one has to think about the fact that over the last ten years israel has gone from being surrounded by very powerful enemies to each of those enemies being disowned, in chaos and being contained. >> and fareed joins us for more on who is in charge in this road
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come monday floyd mayweather will cash in on one of the largest pay days in sports history. his fight last night earned him a guaranteed $41 million. that's before the pay per view receipts. joe carter has more in this bleacher report. >> like a fine wine floyd mayweather gets better with age. the consensus pound for pound
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champ beat alvarez in a majority decision. it wouldn't be boxing if there wasn't controversy. one of the judges scored this fight as a draw. mayweather has made according to rough figures more than $73 million in his last two fights. the former rutgers football player who was paralyzed during a game three years ago, he is the first player to have his jersey retired and was given a sword with the number 52 and the word believe on it. and the broncos take on the giants. we are talking about two of the biggest named quarterbacks in the nfl who happen to be brothers. peyton had a series of neck surgeries and there were doubts he would play again. here he is playing some of the best football he has in his
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career. >> very fun stuff. appreciate that. for the latest in sports go to bleacherreport.com. humanitarian, new father, future king, all of that. cnn royal correspondent max foster sat down with prince william for an exclusive interview. it airs tonight 10:00 eastern here on cnn. don't miss it. nadal is grateful every time he steps on the court. >> when you go back the little moments are more special.
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i always learn that that is not forever. so just trying to enjoy every moment as much as i can because in a few years i will not have the chance to play again. >> with 13 career grand slam trophies nadal is third of the all-time list trailing only pete sampras and roger federer. [ female announcer ] we lowered her fever.
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anthony bourdain is back with new episodes of "parts unknown". in tonight's premiere he heads to jerusalem. >> there is a muslim quarter, a jewish quarter. there is a christian quarter. and there is an armenian quarter. each one functions independently but people that live in a certain area are all from that religion. >> right. >> now, we are walking in the steps of jesus christ, right? so this is the last trip jesus did before he was crucified so people feel very emotional. they come here and feel like i am walking in the steps of mohammed, david or jesus.
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it is like jesus was here. i feel like i should be a little more biassed. >> it's too late for me. >> you can catch the season two premiere of" parts unknown" tonight. 36 years after it was launched the voyager space craft becomes the first man made object to go outside the solar system. wait until you hear how long it will take voyager to get to the closest star. that's next. [ male announcer ] the parking lot helps by letting us know who's coming. the carts keep everyone on the right track. the power tools introduce themselves. all the bits and bulbs keep themselves stocked. and the doors even handle the checkout so we can work on that thing that's stuck in the thing. [ female announcer ] today, cisco is connecting the internet of everything. so everyone goes home happy.
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people stranded. the sheriff told me they are ready to drop food and water as soon as they can. we are following the story closely and will continue to bring you updates from colorado. it's what we call "the science behind". today we look at the achievement of the space craft voyager 1. it has left the solar system. the first man made object to do so. john zarrella has more. >> reporter: voyager has entered inter stellar space. basically voyager has left the building. the first space craft or anything built by humans to enter interstellar space. there has been great debate has when it took place.
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the scientists announced voyager entered inter stellar space one year ago. right now it is traveling in the area between the stars in the dark, dark cold region of outer space. and it will reach the next closest object to it, a star in about 40,000 years. the voyager project was only supposed to last about five years after touring both the planet saturn and jupiter but it kept on going. now 36 years later it has left the solar system. one interesting thing about it, it is a very, very simple space craft. in fact, your iphone has 240,000 times more memory than voyager but it is still going and it's a long way out there. john zarrella, cnn, miami. [ male announcer ] when you have sinus pressure and pain,
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president obama has been focused on syria. what about his domestic agenda? >> gun reforms and comprehensive immigration reform. >> creating middle class jobs. "your money" with christine romans starts right now. a war half way around the world redefining president obama's second term. i'm christine romans. this is "your money." in a moment i will be join by john king and nick christophe for the "new york times." first candidate obama campaigned on getting the u.s. out of wars in the middle east. he argued it was vital to focus on a domestic agenda. president obama is making the case for military action in syria. a person accused for apologizing america
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