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tv   New Day  CNN  June 5, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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data ever. who did it? the u.s. is pointing directly at china. >> china, already rejecting those allegations they are responsible for the massive attack this as new information reveals the nsa has been hunting hackers by expanding spying on americans. we have both stories covered at every angle. let's begin with mrs. jones. >> even the irs, and now this. as the investigation continues, we know president obama has been briefed on what could be the biggest government breach in history. this morning the u.s. government is struggling to assess the damage. officials revealing the biggest cyber attack on the u.s. government ever reaching their networks.
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sophisticated and undetectable for months all the while stealing data information from the data bases of every government agency sensitive information for current and former employees, including the employees at the social security administration and even president obama. >> these networks are so vast and they very very difficult to be able to protect and the reality is you can't prevent these attacks. >> the suspect according to authorities, a super power, the peoples republic of china. according to officials evidence points to hackers working for the which i needs military and now federal employees being cautioned to check their bank statements and get updated credit reports. >> we continue to update our security but it's a significant
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challenge. >> hackers targeted the government before and russia attacks the irs and made 100,000 tax returns vulnerable to criminals. this is made alarming not just because it happened before but because these attacks are getting worse, and it's pushing for swift legislation that would bolster that kind that crime. >> right now you have the u.s. looking at china and saying you just hacked 4 million of our workers, and they are not saying no, and that's something that is making this odder. let's bring in dave mckenzie. up in beijing, dave they are not saying no way, not us. >> you are right, chris, they are not denying the accusations and they are tap into an old
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chinese proverb. we ask the united states not to be so skeptical and chasing the wind but instead add more trust and cooperation in the field. so they are saying let's work together and we are not going to say we didn't do it and there have been accusations against the chinese before in multiple hacking attacks on the u.s. government and on just private companies that even led to five people's army. and they say they are the victim of u.s. attacks on a constant bases. the nsa secretly spying on the internet activities of americans to target hackers. barbara starr has the latest on this story. what do we know? >> the new york times apparently
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got access to documents from guess who? edward snowden. and this is revealing the nsa in 2012 got two memos in the justice department which opened the door to allow them to look for computer intrusions from abroad but it was limited to computer intrusions they thought they could tie to foreign governments. this opens the big controversy. if you can tie that intrusion to the government many computer intrusions may be from criminal activity overseas and that is law enforcement, the nsa not allowed to do that. the director of national intelligence issuing a statement responding to all of this saying -- let's take a look at it. the director of national intelligence saying it should come as no surprise that the
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u.s. government gathers intelligence on foreign powers that attempt to penetrate u.s. networks and steal the private information of u.s. citizens and companies. these operations play a critical role in protecting u.s. networks from disruptive and even destructive cyber threats. of course this week congress passing legislation limited some of the cyber activity but the activity without a warrant pretty much untouched by what congress did. we are at a point where it looks like everybody spies on everybody else. what a surprise. chris? >> that does seem to be a demeanor. there is an odd nonshaw hraupbs here. it sounds like this could be a real problem for people going forward. shouldn't we stop it and is our government doing it to us? let's bring in somebody for answers. cyber security czar mr. howard
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sch wrfplt it. is the u.s. chasing the shadow and clutching the wind or did china do this? >> well nobody knows, but it's a good opportunity to be able to prove once again that it is the chinese, and the data that was taken was normally important to an intelligence agency and the methodology was similar to what they see out there and there's a good likelihood and once again there are ways to cover their tracks to make it looks like somebody else. this is difficult and troubling given the data of the personnel management retains on all their employees. >> and tom, this is what i don't
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get about this if somebody broke into a federal building and stole the paper files and it got traced back to a government it would be like a war would be about to start, and when it's a hacking, 4 million people yeah we think we know who is it and why the nonshaw hraupbs? >> well individual hackers and individual hacker clubs wanting to show they can get into the systems and penetrate the security but in the case of foreign governments they are specifically looking for information that is going to help them with their trade craft and spying on america, and opm is the repause tory of all personnel records and all retirees so once a person retires from an agency their records are transferred to opm, and from that point on they take over the pension payments and
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all of that. by another government having those records they can determine who is a high ranking owefficial in the agencies and who is somebody they could target on the ground for espionage or cooperation or to turn into an agent on behalf of them and everybody knows what everybody does and what they get paid to do it and where they are working. since they are retired, what they used to do. >> seems like there is not enough sensitivity. tom is explaining here is why they would go to opm, and how much of it is about how much data they can hack and how much about how they can do this? >> it's like a giant vacuum cleaner, government agencies and private sectors and everything else. but the interesting piece like we have seen recently with the
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irs, it does that the look like irs was hacked and it looked like information was collected from other hacks and places to expose this and they could sit on this data for a long time come back in undermine everything financial records, you know talk about the ability to collect information, and it doesn't have to be on you, and yok their data and tn who they are connected, and you can pretty much build a profile of everybody that you want to target and more importantly, they are friends and they don't even know it. >> this story brought into focus what the government is doing to stop it which starts to look a lot like what wethought wejust fixed with section 215 of the patriot act. comes out people are doing a victory lap, and snowden is writing his op ed for the new york times, see, i was right all along and you changed it and
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turns out you didn't completely change because the government without warrants can still look at your online activity the way they were looking at your telephone activity and even more so is that accurate? >> yeah it is. and that is the conversation we have had for years now where nsa has the best technology to be able to do this in intelligence collection. the other agency's homeland security fbi, customs, fbi does a great job on the criminal and counter intelligence part and neither of them had the technology ability that nsa has, and nsa is saying nobody else can do it as good so we will do it for you, and it has caused issues and it is maintained in their closet so nobody can see what is going on. >> if you take the statement
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about why they are doing this and you replace cyber with terror in front of threat it's the same thing with section 215 about how they are getting metadata and did people just forget about online activity when they were caught up in the privacy fury about section 215? >> the issue on this particular privacy in 1996 president clinton issued a directive saying organized crime and international drug traffickers are a threat to united states security and therefore the agencies can also work with law enforcement to address the issue, so when barbara starr mentioned they have to determine if it's a criminal group or a foreign power attacking us, es spae espionage or crime, they passed
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a statute to amend the national security act to say we don't know and therefore we will treat any such attack whether it's organized crime or another government as a threat to national security, and therefore that enabled nsa going back to 1996 to look at traffic coming in from around the world into the u.s. >> tom fuentes, howard schmit thank you very much for what seems to be a very big deal. new details in the boston terror plot. officials say at least one of the men linked to the attack was encouraged by isis this as the suspect's family gets to see the surveillance video shooting usaama rahim dead. what is the latest alexandra. >> reporter: good morning, alisyn. in the aftermath of the shooting the brother of usaama rahim bought on facebook claiming his brother had been
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shot three times in the back by police officers. he and his family members have now watched the surveillance video of the shooting at the district attorney's office and he has acknowledged those are not the facts of the case and his brother was not shot in the back but they are calling for and expecting a thorough investigation into both rahim's death and the plot that authorities say they uncovered. family members of rahim say they are shocked by the allegations he was inspired by isis and they say they saw no evidence he was plotting any kind of attack and his brother came on to cnn asking people to reserve judgment as the case is investigated investigated. >> we are a muslim american community, and you know i think really you got to start speaking more about the muslims of america and not the muslims in syria who are doing bad things who don't like america. speak about the muslims that live here and love america, and that's me and that's the rahim
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family. >> at the time of rahim's death he was under 24 surveillance and authorities say on the morning of his death he called his father to say good-bye, and they acknowledge there was a phone call to his father but the family is not aware of the context or content of the conversation. the capsized cruise ship in china's river has been righted, and officials recovered a total of 97 bodies and that means hundreds are still missing. rescuers are losing any hope of finding anybody alive, and they are preparing to drain the water in the ship to have it float on its own. a developing story, about 160 climbers including americans are trapped on one of the tallest mountains in southeast asia. a earthquake rocked the island
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and the spepepicenter is close to that mountain. four americans are unaccounted for at this hour and rescuers are trying to climb the mountain by foot to rescue those stranded. and then a pair of tornados ripped through colorado and several homes destroyed and thankfully no injuries reported. take a look at the twister baring down on a storm chaser stirring up these intense winds and tossing debris and he thought he was out of the storm's path. here it is. this guy, storm chasers, this is what they do and he thought he was clear of it and he was wrong. take a look. hundreds of mourners in delaware paying respect to beau biden. he died last week at the age of 46 after a battle with brain cancer, and president obama set to deliver a eulogy tomorrow.
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>> reporter: such a painful time for the biden family and there are three days of ceremonies to mourn beau biden's death. tomorrow there will be a public viewing of the church the srur much where the biden family has been huddling this week as they grieve. his casket cloaked in red, white and blue. he was a selfless husband, father and son. surrounding by his wife and grieving grandchildren and widowed daughter-in-law, president biden was overcome with emotion. inside the delaware hall there was a delaware conspicuous cross for his achievements. >> beau had an extraordinary
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heart, and he lived as a model for us all. natalie and hunter should know even when you were not around your dad beamed with pride and love for you, and his attachment to his parents is part a history and never has a son's love been so genuine and so deep. >> a touching moment biden wiping away a tear from his granddaughter's cheek, comforting the two small children and wife his son leaves behind. the biden family graciously greeting one after another. beau biden was also a member of the delaware army national guard for more than a decade. >> reporter: vice president biden told the visitors quote,
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you guys are holding me up. >> thank you, and we poignant pictures. >> there is no good way to put something like this when it happens. so devastating for so many reasons, and what is motivating people this guy was so good and dealt with so much so early on in his life and then at such a young age, 46 and that word genuine, that stands out about this guy. i am telling you, alisyn when people would talk to you about him, they would be like this guy is something special. >> yeah we all hear his titles military man and devoted family man and public servant, and you have brought him to life for me and i am sorry i didn't know him. >> it's going to be hard and take a long time. new details emerging about the boston terror plot and the family of usaama rahim, the suspect changing their tune about what happened. hillary clinton, voting rights crusader.
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the democratic frontrunner calling out republican rivals. help hurt is this the issue that makes the difference? we will discuss. what he can do? let's see if he's ready. he can swim with the sharks! book your next stay at lq.com! you probably know xerox as the company that's all about printing. but did you know we also support hospitals using electronic health records for more than 30 million patients? or that our software helps over 20 million smartphone users remotely configure e-mail every month? or how about processing nearly $5 billion in electronic toll payments a year? in fact, today's xerox is working in surprising ways to help companies simplify the way work gets done and life gets lived. with xerox, you're ready for real business.
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about the boston suspect. juliette, good morning. >> good morning. >> so the suspect's brother says he does not believe usaama rahim had any connection to isis but, of course law enforcement sources are saying he does. what is the evidence that he was connected to isis? >> so there is a pretty strong affidavit out there filed in connection to write the coconspirator in this case, and it shows a wiretap on rahim, and purchases about the weaponry and what they were going to be used for, and the facts are the facts, and they have to challenge what the wiretap actually shows rahim was doing, and then obviously that he was in possession of the weapon and went after the police.
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>> is the segtion that he was in e-mail communication with isis operatives and they told him to go and buy a knife and kill police? >> that suggestion is only out in the atmospherics of what law enforcement are leaking or what is coming out in the media, and the affidavit does not mention isis or al qaeda. what it does mention, i will say, though and the link that seems pretty clear to me in the language of the affidavit is they discuss -- wright and rahim discuss a beheading so similar to the isis videos that we have seen that they are at least motivated by what isis has done but there is no specific evidence yet that has come out in the court or any of the proceedings that there was somebody in isis telling them what to do. so there is just two different issues. one is rahim, what did rahim actually do and there is a pretty strong case, and then who told rahim to do it that is
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going to come out or is coming out in sort of leaks and dribbles right now. >> isn't that second part where the plot falls apart? why would isis tell rahim to go and buy a knife to kill police? on what planet is that a good plot? >> well it's a good plot in terms of isis. the people -- i mean to understand isis is that they are not asking people to act on their behalf with specific kwreubgz. they have a number of outlets in which they are saying kill cops kill these people, and support the caliphate and come here women, and be our wives. they have so much going on in terms of media out reach that that is essentially what their recruitment effort is and
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different than al qaeda which is a one-on-one specific recruit recruitment with training and people went to afghanistan, and that would explain, well the connection between isis and rahim, even if you don't find a certain guy in isis saying to rahim do this. >> i guess my point is -- it's reminiscent of the attack the incomplete attack in garland, texas, where the two guys show up and they are out manned and out gunned by security guards and these are two amateurish plots directed by isis. >> i guess isis likes amateurishness too, so if any success they can have the beheading of a police officer or a hatchet against a police officer, all of those go to their success because they show they can an amate otherwise
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lawful people which rahim appears to have been to do something egregious. that's the success in their mind. al qaeda, we are going to plan 3,000 civilian deaths it's a different model for isis which is we are going to freak everybody out, essentially, by having these small things going on throughout the united states. it's just a different kind of psychological warfare on their part. >> that helps to understand it. in other words, they are trying to sell chaos than body count. that explains the difference. thank you so much for the expertise. let's get over to chris. a mile and a half from history. american pharoah, not since king tut's tomb has anybody captured our attention. details ahead. and fires up free wi-fi, with a
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this is worth a listen. a massive data breach with a super power. it could be the biggest breach of government computer records ever. investigators believe china is to blame. chinese officials don't deny it exactly. they object to what they call the u.s. chasing the shadow and clutching the wind. new details this morning in the boston terror plot. officials say at least one of the men linked to the attack was encouraged by isis, and this as we learned usaama rahim called his father to say good-bye before the attack. rahim's family also getting a first look at the surveillance
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video of police killing him. baltimore's top cop said drugs looted flooding the streets. and the dea going after the looters, some 70 alleged looters that ransacked two pharmacies and methadone clinics. remember baltimore's commission the police commissioner says the violent crime spike is because of drug wars involved in the looting. and then an actor apologizing for comments he made to howard stern about his wife susan, and the cast did not like her and could not get the timing right with the actress.
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alexander said he feels awful for saying anything that diminishes her. >> i think he feels genuinely bad about this but it is funny because he was sort of -- >> a little off. >> but you thought that was great acting and it was her part but turns out they felt it was the actress. >> who knew? curry and the warriors out lasting the king. >> it was definitely -- >> don't go china on us. >> i did not have any money on 7 game, and it was a great game nonetheless, and the team that wins game one goes on to win the series 70% of the time.
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lebron trying to bring them a championship in more than 50 years. he hit a huge three late in the fourth quarter to tie the game up and then with under 30 seconds to go curry had a chance to give them the lead. and then lebron had a chance to win the game in the closing seconds, but his shot would be no good as was shupl pert's. and then bad news for the cavs. irving goes down and looks like he reinjured his tphaepl on the play. the cavs, they lose the game and they may have lost irving for the rest of the series, and he will have an mri on his knee. and we will break down the series with grant hill and steve smith at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon
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here on cnn. meanwhile, out here at the belmont. more than 90,000 fans hoping to see history home and hoping american pharoah will be the first hoarse since 1978. since '7813 horses have come to the belmont after winning the first two legs of the triple crown, and they failed to win the belmont, and none of the horses in the field tomorrow have run this distance and american pharoah is the only horse in the field that competed in all three legs of the triple crown. and he famously called it the coward's way out. american pharoah is the overwhelming pick in the race. the experts still think american
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pharoah has a great chance to win this race tomorrow. he is expected to be practicing out here on the track about 8:45 eastern, and we are looking forward to that and we have not seen a triple crown winner in 34 years, we have not seen one in my lifetime. >> don't chase the shadow or clutch the wind. hillary clinton taking direct aim and calling out her republican what has her so outraged. plus rick perry's sweaty start to the 2016 campaign.
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traveling for work or fun? step into america and canadas best value inns for free internet continental breakfast and instant rewards! at most of our 1,000 hotels. i call on republicans at all levels of government to stop
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fear mongering about a phantom epidemic of election fraud and start explaining why they are so scared of letting citizens have their say. >> you heard it. hillary clinton says republicans don't want you to vote deliberately trying to prevent millions of americans from voting whenever they want to. why is clinton making such a key issue out of voter access? is this the real launch? let's discuss. >> lynn sweet and jeff zeleny. this is an issue that hillary can fully get her arms around not terribly risky, saying all americans should vote. >> it's a safe issue and it rallies the democratic base particularly african-americans and it's an issue where
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republicans -- it's easy to make it a wedge issue among republicans and in a sense safely attack her opponents, the rivals that she mentioned by name. this is an issue where democrats are united and republicans are divided on and also it plays to her domestic strengths without bringing up anything having to do with her tenure in the state department. >> the current hack by allegedly china, 4 million employees aside, we do everything online, right? our lives are online and everything is there, and voting that has been kept off-line. do you think the american people are ready for this to be a no-brainer? >> yeah why can't voting be the same instance. the problem with the proposal yesterday, it's aspirational. we checked in with voting rights experts that said it sounds
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great, but it's a state by state by state thing. it's not something where you can pass a law. one thing i was struck by as lynn said republicans have been using hillary clinton as an attack vehicle for months and she is going to use them as an attack vehicle as well, and it's music to democrats' ears because they feel she has not been fighting back enough. it's the most engaged we have seen her. >> let's hear that moment where she for the first time calls them out by name. >> governor perry is hard alone in his crusade against voting rights. in wisconsin, governor scott walker cut back early voting and signed legislation that would make it harder for college students to vote. in new jersey governor chris christie vetoed legislation to extend early voting and in florida, when jeb bush was
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governor state authorities conducted a deeply flawed purge of voters. >> lynn why doesn't she just say my republican rivals? why did she make a point of calling them out by name? >> these are the rivals who are better known, the top tier in this 18 men and one woman field of people who are declared and undeclared and it also, i think, is the building block to eroding what they will say and what they are running on is their record as governor. she is going to try and set the stage for a narrative that is countered to what they are going to be saying saying when they were governor it's not as great as they are or will be saying. >> this is a thumbs up and thumbs down and she is calling them out by name and it's something she can't deliver on in all likelihood so do you give her a thumbs up or down? >> thumbs up because it's
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something democrats want to hear and what she is really trying to do is build the obama coalition of voters. everything she has done is trying to appeal to them and yesterday she was targeted at african-american voters. i think we are going to hear from her a lot. >> let's pivot to rick perry. he made his big announcement he was getting into the race former texas governor and it was a very hot day in texas and the location that he chose was swelteringly hot, and everybody was wilting behind him, as you can see, and by the end of it reporters were saying that his shirt was soaked through, you could see all the sweat above his brow there, and people likened it to nixon's debate against kennedy, and you can see
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the sweat forming above his lip there. what do you think, lynn were the optics bad or did he overcome them? >> since i was sitting in washington wearing a fleece yesterday watching this i think it doesn't matter. you know this was midday on a thursday, and very few people will watch it, and the people that were there and the scheme of things won't account in terms of optics, and i don't think for the moment it will be that iconic picture of him right now, and it's not as obvious as you think. i think that photo, for people that don't know what they are looking for, and he had a lot of errors when he ran for president the first time, and i don't know if this will foreshadow bad planning by his campaign and in this one, it's not determinative. >> people thought the substance of what he said yesterday was impressive and he did get off on
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the right foot. thank you. >> the key is the people behind him were sweating and to me it's not an issue. >> do you want to look at the clock. 521 -- >> 521 days and 18 hours, 11 minutes and 58 seconds. that's making me sweat. first it was the little blue bill and now we are one step closer to the little pink pill. viagra for women. is it safe? i hope so. out of 42 vehicles based on 6 different criteria, why did a panel of 11 automotive experts name the volkswagen golf
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a new drug to help women rev up their sex drive just clear add key hurdle from the food and drug at minute administration. >> this drug i know some people are calling it the female viagra and kind of sort of and this is for women who don't have a lot of sexual desire and some of them had no sexual
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desire. this drug works on the brain to basically make you feel more sexual desire and the difference here is that the women that took a placebo in the study, 37% of them had increased desire, and 53% who took the drug had a increase in desire. not a huge difference but it's something. >> what is interesting, the pleasure center off run for women is the brain, you know. it's different than men. women need to be sort of emotionally stimulated in a different way, so how does this pill affect that? >> i was at the fda hearings the first time around when they were trying to get approval for the drug and you could sense the frustration the fda scientists found, because for men you take a pill and do you get an erection or don't you, and for women it's different. did you have a satisfying event,
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and that could be anything from an or a satisfying -- >> that's a you'venism. >> one of the of the side effects is dizziness, and they feel they will take it and feel dizzy, and you don't take it once when you are having sex, and you take it on an ongoing basis, and so the company did more studies and they got less concerned, but there is concern especially if women drink alcohol, and if they are drinking alcohol and taking the drug you need to make sure you don't faint or feel dizzy, and
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the company studies satisfied the fda to the extent the committee approved it. >> who is this drug designed for? how big of a demand is there for female viagra? >> i think there is a big demand demand. there is an unmet need. what will be interesting to see if this will get women where they want to be because when you see a placebo increased desire by 37%, this increased desire by 53%. are women going to feel a difference on this drug in numbers large enough to pay for it? that we will have to see. >> is this for women of all ages or a particular subset? >> the issue is not the age but the issue is supposed to be if a
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woman has low desire. if a woman doesn't have any interest in sex, that's different. some women have sexual issues not because they lack desire but because things are not going well with their partner, and that's two different situations. >> i think one of the big burning questions will we see more awkward and embarrassing ads during breakfast and dinner. we will have you back on the show in a couple hours to talk about this development. thank you so much and we will see you soon. chris and i look forward to reading your comments. following a lot of news this morning. let's get right to it. 4 million americans at risk possibly the biggest hack we have seen. >> it's the second time this
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year you have had a large data breach of the federal system by china. >> he was in possession of the weapon and went after the police. >> one of the three men allegedly involved had been communicating online with known isis members. >> speak about the muslims that live here that love america, and that is me and that's hue saupla and the rahim family. >> we uncovered evidence that links the two shootings together. >> i am mad there is somebody running around on the streets of our town that just took somebody's life. >> announcer: this is "new day," with crisco mowhrissriscohris crow and alisyn camerota. >> hackers stealing personal information of at least 4 million current and former
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federal employees. officials say this could be the biggest theft of government data ever. >> china is disputing the allegations with one of the most artful nondenials we have ever heard, and the u.s. is chasing the shadow and clutching the wind. wow. this story brought to light a secret the way the nsa deals with this is an internet spying operation of its own that targets americans without warrants. let's start with athena jones at the white house. >> reporter: good morning, chris. we all remember that data breach at target a couple years ago and the list keeps getting longer sony home depot, and even the irs, and what could be the biggest government breach in history suggests the troubling trend is only getting worse. >> this morning, the u.s. government is struggling to assess the damage. officials revealing possibly the
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biggest cyber attack on the u.s. government ever reached their critical networks. sophisticated and undetectable for months and all the while stealing information from the data bases of virtually ever government agency sensitive information up to 4 million current and retired employees. even potentially president obama. officials say there could be millions more. >> these networks are so vast they are geographically dispersed and very difficult to be able to protect and the reality is you can't prevent these attacks. >> the suspects according to authorities, the peoples' republic of china. they could be compiling a massive database for critical information on americans.
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>> we continue to update our security but it's a pretty significant challenge ppb. >> hackers targeted the american government before and just this week russia attacked the irs and made 100,000 tax returns vulnerable to criminals. >> president obama has been briefed on the latest breach as the investigation continues and the news is prompting lawmakers on capitol hill to call for swift completion of legislation already in the pipeline aimed at bolstering cyber security nationwide. alisyn alisyn? >> thank you for that. and officials in china say they are being unfairly targeted by the hacking accusations and warning officials not to jump to conclusions. we are joined live in beijing, and what are they saying? >> they are not giving a denial. they are saying china resolutely tackled cyber attack activities
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in all forms. pulling out a chinese proverb there to say start cooperating and stop accusing. there have been accusations over the years that china hacked into all sorts of assets including private enterprise and edward snowden's leaks showed the nsa attempted to hack into chinese corporations and the government here. right now a lot of finger-pointing. it does seem china could have been involved in the huge hack in the u.s. >> another expression when you point a finger at somebody there are four pointing back at you. now the story of hacking and how the u.s. found out about it it has them in the spotlight as well.
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this comes days after the showdown after the nsa's bulk collection of america's phone records. what is this about? does this need to be addressed? barbara starr, what do we know? >> everybody spies, what a surprise. apparently these documents now revealed from edward snowden first reported in the "new york times" and other organizations that the nsa went to the justice department in 2012 and got permission to begin tapping, and they would be looking through this chain, this flow of information into the united states for foreign government hacking or suspicious malware, of course. the justice department said it had to be tied to potential activities from foreign government, and there is two problems, and you never know from overseas it could be criminal hacking and that is law enforcement and not intelligence
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gathering, and the nsa can't do that and they pick up a good deal of information about americans as they gather up all of this. but the nsa, the obama administration is sticking to the program, and the director of national intelligence putting out a statement about all of this and saying in part these operations play a critical role in protecting networks from disruptive and even destructive threats, so the bottom line is everybody is going to continue to do this. one of the big concerns as athena and david point out about china, these attacks are growing in size and scope on everybody's part and the problem is nobody can see right now where it all ends. >> that is a problem, barbara. thank you so much for that. for more now on the nsa's secret spy activities and the massive government data breach that could have been carried out by
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china. let's bring in our guest. edward snowden strikes again and we know the information about the nsa spying through him, courtesy of the "new york times," and the nsa has been surveying americans' internet traffic looking for evidence of computer hacking. you were at the intelligence committee while this was going on. what are your thoughts? >> we have seen this story before this movie before. talking about it in the terms of the nsa spying on americans is inaccurate and not an accurate portrayal of the program. >> it does look on u.s. soil at americans' internet activity. >> the description, and i have to be careful because much is classified and remember, for the chinese to get into the government systems, it comes
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from overseas. that traffic comes into the united states. what the nsa was trying to do and inconsistent with the statement by director clapper, we could get a better handle on this if we look at it coming into the united states and the department of justice according to the documents, they said it's great but you can't look at americans specifically it has to be tied to a foreign government. this notion they were widely looking at americans' data and information was inconsistent with the way the program was designed and i believe it was working at the time. >> so in other words you are not looking at my online shopping or my e-mails to my friends, however, if i am an american receiving some sort of information from a foreign government you are looking at that e-mail traffic? or that internet traffic? >> if it's a foreign government of interests, you would hope they would try to figure out what that communication is all about. in the old days spies used to
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get the code clerk in the embassies because that's where the secret information would go in the embassy, and you could get that and you could crack the code and you could get the spying and the activity and all that changed with the internet, and that is come into the united states in a volume staggering. candidly they are not interested in what you are shopping for online and they are interested in catching and weaning down the information we know will have a negative impact, including the chinese stealing and building a database of americans that is unprecedented. they will use it for intelligence purposes. that's what they are trying to stop. >> it's fascinating, the timing of this. so this is called the largest breach of federal personnel data. it's people's government security clearances supposedly
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hacked into and federal employee records, and does this mean somebody got 4 million social security numbers? >> may or may not. probably not all 4 million, but depends on the depth of the breach. likely they got some of the personal information. we have seen this before from the chinese. they did it in health care systems and the federal government and other places. this is why the chinese cyber program is so dangerous. they will use it for government purposes meaning i want to discern who are your intelligence agents so we can keep an eye on them or arrest them, and that's a bad idea, and they will also try to get into private systems to steal intellectual property, and we have seen them do this to a tune of $1 trillion, and then artificially compete against the u.s. company costing us trillions of dollars and jobs
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and this is a massive problem and the chinese are getting more aggressive and they use all of this in the same way. this is not traditional government to government spying. this is a combination of economic espionage that the world has never seen, and understanding they are trying to disrupt government operations around the world as well. >> you heard our correspondents reporting on this chinese, they say we need to stop clutching at the wind. how certain are you that china is in fact behind this massive breach? >> when i first got my first briefing about cyber security problems in 2004 it was this is a bad thing but we can handle it, and every year it's exspa deny khauly worse. the good news is our attribution, can you attribute accurately who was the perpetrator of this. probably nobody better to do this than the national security
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agency. still hard and difficult, but if the government feels confident enough to say this is the chinese, there will be multiple layers of proof to say that and if they are saying it they are accurate on it and they didn't just wait and this happened months and months ago, and it will take a forensic study for months to try and figure it out. the chinese are good at get into the country, so you have to work through all of the walls of secrecy. >> what is the bigger threat in your mind this level of hacking or isis? >> well they are very different. one can come to a mall and shoot people and the other steals your economic prosperity going forward, and the loss to organized enterprise stealing our finances and future is significant. it's a big strategic threat and
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a local physical threat, and both are equally as bad. >> intelligence officers have their hands full. thank you so much and nice to talk to you. we have new details this morning in the boston terror plot. u.s. officials tell cnn at least one of the men linked to the attack was encouraged by isis. this as the suspect's family gets to see the surveillance video showing his alleged attack and the officers' deadly response. let's get to alexandra field in boston. >> reporter: for the first time the family of rahimusaama rahim has seen the video where rahim's brother posted on facebook that he believed his brother had been shot three times in the back and the police maintain he was shot in the torso and chest, and now that the family has seen the video the brother is saying they will let the facts play out, and they have two investigations going on one into the death of
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usaama rahim, and two in the plot alleged by police he had plans to attack a law enforcement officer. a spokesman is talking family's response to the allegations. >> everything they knew about their brother is inconsist unthe with what they knew about their brother, and the family is keeping an open mind and they are going to go wherever the evidence leads them. >> they are asking others to keep an open mind as well, and they have plans to bury usaama rahim today. the family had no indication of any plotting or any indication he had been inspired by isis and they had no indication he was under surveillance. we are learning officials had been watching him 24 hours a day for at least ten days before his
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death, and we are learning authorities decided to move in on him in that cvs parking lot after listening to a phone call after they say he said good-byes to his father. the fbi investigating a possible serial shooter on the loose in colorado. the latest victim a 65-year-old man fatally shot blocks away from his home. this is scary, dan. >> reporter: alisyn we are at the police department and this is where the inner agency task force. william kau knoll was shot dead on the sidewalk. he was shot in the chest. there are likenesses in tums of what happened with his shooting and the other two. in late april you had a
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20-year-old woman in her car, shot in the neck. she survived. she was going on an interstate on-ramp. and then a 48-year-old man shot dead along a country road. those two shootings had been positively linked in some fashion, and with the third shooting there are likenesses and of course this uncurbed this community, alisyn, and the question is is this linked? the key is to be extra vigilant and report anything that might pb be suspicious. a south korean airmen on a u.s. base tested positive for mers and the outbreak is likely to spread. 35 people have been diagnosed with mers since may 20th and symptoms include fever and shortness of breath, but there
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are more serious complications like pneumonia and kidney failure failure. this is a shoot-out. sparks flying in chicago after a roman candle fight. that's a kind of fire work by the way. witnesses say this was a friendly battle among long-time neighbors. police had to break it up and nobody was hurt. are board games out? can you not play board games anymore? you need a roman candle. >> they had such trouble with gun violence but this is a step in the right direction, but you could get hurt. it's an explosive device. if you shot me with a roman candle from close range, you would hurt me and burn me. >> don't tempt me.
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nobody was hurt in that battle. fighting words, and hillary clinton insisting her rivals are afraid to let citizens have their democratic say. does she have another motive? rick perry entering the race for president, and there is more talk about the sweat on his brow than the words coming out of his mouth. is that fair? inside politics takes it on ahead.
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automatic voter registration. every citizen in every state in the union, every young man or young woman should be automatically registered to vote when they turn 18. >> hillary clinton calling for sweeping changes to the nation's voter access law. sounds good right? but is it all that it's worth? correct the record, mr. brad
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woodhouse. good to have you on the show. it sounds good but this is done state by state, so even the president could not wave a hand and make it happen. it is more show than go? >> "the new york times" said it's bold but it's common sense. the idea that we should make it easier for people to vote and make it more convenient for people to vote i have a hard time believing that people would oppose -- >> she cannot deliver on it. >> i wouldn't say that. president obama called for an increase in the minimum wage that had not happened in the congress but that type of galvanizing power the president can play it has happened all over the country, and if a presidential candidate gets behind this type of effort you can see sweeping change in states. states are part of the problem,
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and that's why she called out states like wisconsin and texas and north carolina where there are republican governors or legislators tried to put in-laws to make it so fewer people vote because they don't like the people voting. >> not just a coincidence she went after records of everybody because she can't be criticized the same way because she never has been in charge of the same thing. >> well she has not been in charge of voting but she had a proposal called the gold standard and it included the possibility of a federal holiday for election day, so she is not johnny come lately to the issue. >> your organization is called correct the record. let's look at other issues where hillary's critics say she flipped flopped, and you correct if need be.
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she opposed driver's license for undocumented immigrants and now she supports them. >> i don't know if that's a flip-flop. i don't know that is accurate what her 2008 record was in total, and you are talking about an issue in the state of new york. but, again she is -- she is in support of immigration reform in a way republicans are not in terms of bringing these people out of the shadows. it's common sense like the voting issue, and it's common sense we want to do something to have immigration reform in the country. >> things that seem like common sense now are things that politicians like she didn't believe were common sense previously. let's move on to gay marriage. in 2007 she said she supported civil unions and not gay marriage, but today she says same-sex marriage is a constitutional right.
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>> i think everybody acknowledges president obama acknowledged there has been an evolution on peoples' attitudes about the issue of gay marriage. i think it would be what do we want? do we want politicians who their stances are stagnant over time, and 2007 is a long time ago and there has been a lot of change in the country, and back then republicans were putting battle initiatives all over the country trying to restrict people from marrying or restrict civil run kwraoupb unions, and that is a reaction to something worst. >> no matter what the supreme court says that fight is long from over. but these are the softballs for you, and the tough things for you, they go to the e-mail scandal and the clinton global
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initiative, and we had rudy guiliani on the show he said if i was a prosecutor she would be before the grand skwraour right now. >> as it relates to the e-mail issue, hillary clinton followed federal guidelines. she did at the state department what jeb bush did in florida, she had a server -- >> but jeb bush was not under the same restrictions and she knew it had optical pressure on it and the easy thing to do would turn over the server and she didn't do it. >> she turned over what was work related. every federal employer has to consider what is personal, and she did what previous secretary of states did. look nobody has found -- you know "the new york times," they
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wrote a story like some type of law had been broken and they had to back off that and it's totally not true. >> thank you for being on "new day." now we have rick perry, and he is ready to go. will the media give him a fair shake? john king takes it on in "inside politics" coming up.
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china denying it's -- you should have told me i was on camera. >> that's you. >> the personal information of at least 4 million current and former government employees stolen by hackers. investigators say it's possible millions more people could be affected, and chinese officials dispute the allegation saying they made a great effort to combat attacks. despite being molested by their josh they are defending them. the sisters say they are horrified by the way the story has been portrayed in the media.
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both say he is not a molester or rapist. josh said he molested as many as five kids one that was not his sister. victory is extra sweet for ar golden state super fan. her name is sweetie and she is 105 years old. she treated this lady in the overtime win. 108-100. sweetie turns 106 next week. >> i like how she was all decked out, too, yet calm. that's a true fan. an overtime game and that's how she made it to 106. nice and good, and calm.
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and john king on inside politics always steady. >> that is that a great arena. i was out there earlier, and she is pretty awesome. i hope i am still going to games at 106. looking forward to that. and let's start with hillary clinton, the big speech in texas yesterday talking about her plan to expand voting rights. what was interesting about this and a lot of times politicians will say the other side or the republicans, and hillary clinton decided she wanted to name names. >> governor perry is hardly alone in his crusade against voting rights. in wisconsin, governor scott walker cut back early voting. in new jersey governor chris christie vetoed legislation to extend early voting, and in florida when jeb bush was
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governor state authorities conducted a deeply flawed purge of voters before the presidential election in 2000. >> those four republicans just happen to be presidential candidates for the nomination in 2016. she said we should have automatic voter registration, and when you are 18 years old you should be automatically registered unless you opt out. i will say for the record pretty common sense. i get verifying identification and all that and i think you can do both, and hillary clinton is pushing the policy but politically what is she trying to do? >> she wants to get them out and excited, and this is aimed straight at them. >> it is strange or just a sign of her confidence she is going
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directly after the republicans by name? >> i was surprised she was as overt in going after walker and perry, and walker is not a second tier candidate, but some of the folks that may not be at the top of the list, and scott walker people seemed giddy that she would legitimize his campaign and she may have helped scott walker in the short term. >> i spent a decade of my life covering bill clinton, and he would say these southernisms i will call them and he would talk about pig squealing under a gate, and yesterday hillary clinton borrowed a line from bill. >> of course i learned it from him. you find a turtle on a fence post and it did not get there on its own. all of these problems with
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voting just didn't happen by accident. >> for me, it's just interesting and fun to watch candidates try to develop on how they want to communicate. what do you make of turtles on the fence post. >> she lacks the tpoel seeness. >> right now hillary clinton is trying to figure out how to connect with voters, and come across relatable. this is her latest effort and unclear if it works, but she will keep trying. >> rick perry, he was the texas governor before, and people thought he was a threat to mitt romney, and he had a bad campaign. he said this time will be different and he said his experience is what matters most. >> leadership is not a speech on the senate floor, and it's not what you say, it's what you have done.
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we will not find the kind of leadership needed to revitalize the country by looking to the political class in washington. i have been tested. >> hillary clinton served in washington as first lady of the united states senate so he could mean her, but there are five republican senators or former senators in the field right now, and it looks like we could have as many as eight governors and former governors in the republican field. first day officially out of the box for rick perry, what did you think? >> he can't be counted out. he has a tough road to climb here but he is a great retail politician. he could do well in iowa and he could do well in south carolina so i wouldn't count him out and it's definitely tougher. >> if you look at the field, and mike huckabee, a evangelical
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guy, and it's hard to spend anytime with rick perry and not be impressed. i put him in the same category of a chris christie where he can connect one-on-one and that matters in new hampshire and iowa and you can't count rick perry out. >> especially in a field with 15 candidates and no clear frontrunner. and his big announcement day, and the jeb bush folks leak out we are going out on the 15th, and we know jeb bush will be in europe, and they go overseas for their international skills and he comes home on the 15th and announces, and then will do a traditional trip. i think it has been obvious for sometime, and we talked about it when hillary clinton was not quite a candidate, and he is going to be officially in and
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what makes it different? anything? >> the fact that jeb has not gotten in yet, i think it opened up the field, and john kasich the governor of ohio said as much in an interview recently saying jeb has not been able to consolidate anything, and we will see if he is an actual candidate if that changes the narrative. >> and marco rubio likes to say his foreign policy credentials is one of the reasons you should vote for him for president. a lot of people are confused by this. >> the immediate responsible we have is to help them build a functional government and then ultimately from that you would hope -- >> that sounds like nation building? >> it's not nation building. we are assisting them in building their nation. the altonlternative to not doing that is the chaos we have now. >> help me. >> the important thing to remember here is that this is an issue in marco rubio's wheelhouse and he wants to talk
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about foreign policy. i sat down with him recently and he talked about him having more foreign policy experience than the others combined and they don't want to rule out anything in the middle east and they are going after the president and there are no simple solutions over there. >> help them build a functional government. sounds like nation building and it's assisted nation building, i guess. >> he needs to have an answer for this and because he based his brand so much on foreign policy. you saw other republicans getting tripped up on the iraq question. it's a little bit surprising he didn't have an answer for this one. >> and maybe he could say, mr. cuomo, he doesn't think president obama is doing it very well, and if you look at just that answer what he is saying there is essentially what the administration says it's doing right now. >> i am not mr. cuomo, but i am
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mrs. cuomo. >> i was told he would be there. >> i put him in the penalty box. >> don't let him out. >> i won't. watch john king break down the best political news of the week on sunday at 8:00 a.m. american pharoah's trainer joins us next. can a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit?
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sport of kings, horse racing american pharoah attempts to become the first horse racing triple crown winner since affirmed and that's it at belmont park and that's all about going for the gold. >> his legendary trainer joins us now. good morning, bob. >> good morning. >> how are you feeling? >> so far i feel great.
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the horse looks great. as long as he feels good i feel really well. >> the initial plus minus on this, yes, he won the first two, and is it true farrow hasfair none of the other horses have run the races, so is that the plus minus? >> the other ones held out for one race to freshen up for it and it's like throwing a horse throwing eight innings and then you put in somebody fresh. the distance it's different for him and they are all in the same boat. i think he is a very special horse. that's what it's all about. >> you trained lots of horses and what makes american pharoah so special? >> i mean this is my fourth
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time. i probably should have won it a couple times before -- >> or it's the reverse, you show that you can get here because this is your fourth horse that has a shot at the triple crown. i know you are being humble but that's a big deal. >> well he is really special. this is the only one i brought up here where he was a 2-year-old champion and now he has gone undefeated and wins his races with ease. the derby, he had to work at it and didn't bring his best race, and come into the race i think, if it's going to happen for me this is probably my strongest hand i ever had coming here. so i think this is the year you better tune in. i feel good about it. >> we had his jockey on "new day" earlier this week and he said what he thinks is so different about american pharoah, he said his legs move
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as though he is floating and then i heard you say, what you think is so special, he is explosive. explain this come bow the explosive floating. >> he has the most fluid and beautiful stride and it's very efficient. when he gets over the ground he just moves along and skims over the top. he just moves over the ground. he has a long stride. he makes about a stride and a half to every other horse's stride. that's his weapon. he is quick. he can get to a spot without using too much energy and i think that's probably his biggest weapon. >> you are in front of the odds here so people will have to put down money so people like alisyn and i, we are trying to figure out what to do with the college funds. you go all in?
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are you feeling it? >> you buy a ticket, and if he wins you put it in a frame and you say, look i was there. >> it's about the history and not the money? >> no, it's all about the history and not about the money. you guys make so much money, you don't need any. >> bob, thank you so much. best of luck to you. we will certainly be watching. can't wait to see if this is history in the making. >> thank you, and i just hope it happens. it has to happen one of these days and hopefully it's me and pharaoh. he is a very kind and sweet animal so he deserves it. >> he speaks well of you, too. >> thanks, bob. the all-important jobs report for may is coming out in the next hour. it's big. they are saying it's going to be
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it is time for cnn money now, and there is a big headline coming our way so we have chief money correspondent, christine romans. >> you are looking at the jobs added unchanged, and unemployment holding at 5.4% and what we will watch closely, wages have been stagnant. wage growth has been awol in the recovery stuck around 2%. the next story is earth shattering. barbie can wear flat shoes for the first time ever and her permanently pointed toes have been forced into the tall high heels, and now she is wearing something more comfortable. life as we know it, alisyn has
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changed, and barbie will be wearing flats. >> i needed a justable ankles. the u.s. government hacks again. the u.s. pointing a finger at china. we have all the latest for you ahead. and in an all new "parts unknown," anthony bourdain budapest. here is a preview. budapest. >> budapest. i don't know why it took me so long to get here. everybody said it was so great. it is great. the architecture is very deeply satisfying and ranges from the classic to the quirky to the lush and the eccentric. it's just a deeply pleasurable experience walking down the street. i find myself coveting buildings
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here, and i am not one to indulge in architecture and i find myself wanting to own or live in every building i see. i never felt that way before. and the food is indeed rich and deep and deeply satisfying. and it's also spicy. i like spicy. you should come here. i am glad that i did.
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possibly the biggest government hack we have seen. >> the breach could affect every single federal agency in the united states. >> the reality is you can't prevent the attacks, all you can do is learn to detect them.
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one of the three men allegedly involved had been communicating online with known isis members. >> we don't have facts to go on we have allegations. >> move over viagra. >> this is for women that don't have a lot of sexual desire. >> it's very complicated, because really desire is in our brains. >> announcer: this is new day with chris cuomo, and alisyn camerota and michaela pereira. >> we have news of what may be the biggest government computer breach ever in the u.s. is pointing the finger at china. at least 4 million past and present workers' information stolen from government computers. >> new inform operation from edward snowden reveals the nsa has been tracking hackers by spying on americans. we have these stories covered
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from every angle, starting with athena jones. >> you remember the huge data breach at target a few years ago, and the list is growing, and even the irs, and it's a disturbing trend and what could be the biggest government breach in history suggests it's only getting worse. this morning the u.s. government is struggling to assess the damage. officials revealing possibly the biggest cyber attack on the u.s. government ever breached their critical computer networks. two distinct attacks crept into the system and undetectable for months and stealing information from the data bases of every government agency. and information in the hands of hackers, and including the department of defense and the
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social security administration and president obama. >> these networks are so vast and they are geographically dispersed and very difficult to be able to protect and the reality is you can't prevent the attacks. >> the suspects according to authorities, a super power, the peoples republic of china. evidence points to hackers working for the chinese military who may be compiling a massive database of critical information on americans. employees being cautioned to check bank statements and get updated credit reports. >> it's a significant challenge. >> just this week investigators say russia attacked the irs and made 100,000 tax returns vulnerable to criminals. president obama has been briefed on the latest breach and the investigation is continuing meanwhile lawmakers are saying cyber security has to be a top priority. they are calling for swift
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completion of legislation already in the pipeline aimed at bolstering the nation's cybering defenses. >> china for their part is objecting to the allegations coming from washington but they are doing it with one of the most artful nondenials you will ever hear. what are they saying? >> it's a nondenial. they are not saying they didn't do it but they are saying well, let's point the finger back at you. china resolute ly resolutely and is calling for cooperation. there has been many accusations against the chinese of hacking u.s. corporations and the u.s. government including the massive attack but the chinese say revelations from edward snowden showed the nsa is hacking china
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and also china's military assets and so a lot of finger-pointing back and forth, and the chinese say let's talk. alisyn. >> thank you so much for that background. also new this morning, the nsa secretly expanding spy rations on the internet activity of americans in order to target hackers. barbara starr has the story. >> good morning, alisyn. no surprise these documents apparently came from edward snowden shared with "the new york times" and other organizations. what it points to in 2012 the justice department wrote two secret memos authorizing the nsa to begin monitoring internet cables into the united states looking for suspicious activity including malware. they were supposed to be looking and are supposed to be looking for any indications that can tie back to foreign government and that's what the nsa does collect intelligence on activities of
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foreign governments, and one of the big concerns if you are going to start monitoring internet cables you will pick up data about americans, and criminal hacking, and that's law enforcement criminal hacking and that's not what the nsa is supposed to be doing, and the intelligence continuing to push back saying in part these operations play a critical role in protecting u.s. networks from disruptive and even destructive cyber threats. of course the legislation on capitol hill really does not touch the basic issue of collecting this kind of information without a warrant, which is apparently what the program was all about. you know everybody spies on everybody. that's the way it goes. hacking all around but i think one of the growing questions is can the u.s. defend itself against this and is all of this really growing so fast and
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becoming so significant that maybe it's getting out of control? chris? >> barbara, you are asking the right questions. thank you for that. what exactly does a data breach of this magnitude mean for our security. let's bring in our national security analyst and former bush counterterrorism counterterrorism board. why would they want all of this information. what can they do with it? >> a year ago, opm had a massive data breach and that was to the most sensitive information, when i and others like me when we are in government and even when we leave, we continue to have to file form. >> what sensitive information? >> my e-mails and your social media accounts and your financial information, including your bank accounts and social security and passport and all of your foreign travel and all of my family members' foreign travel. >> so what are they doing, they find out your designation and
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use it later? >> a year ago they got into those sorts of files, and this time the federal government is telling us it was not the most sensitive database it with a uz a database run by the department of interior and most people on the outside don't realize the department of interior is responsible for things like accounting and that's even if you are at the justice department. >> how much of this is boughsing, to show they can do it? >> you sweep up more than you need. you get into one of the data bases, and you get secretary and clerks and senior people, and it's a little bragging right to say that you can do it and the chinese view in -- >> you are sure it's the chinese, by the way? >> i think we have to wait and
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see, and we have not heard the government make a direct connection to the chinese government, and they see the procedures and tactics that made the breach it's the which i. >> you are not chasing the shadow and clutching the wind? >> no. >> i feel you, and i am using you as the symbol of the american government now, you don't care enough about these things every time we hear about them if they came in and broke a window and took paper files out of the office building of ten people it would be maybe an act of war, but it seems like there is a nonchalance about this? is it because everybody is doing it? where does the casualness come from? >> after two administrations, more time money and resources and effort has been put against this problem than any other time in the history of the country, and it's not a lack of effort.
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but we have not made enough effort. leon pennetta told the american people he believed the next 9/11 would be a cyber pearl harbor. there is a lot of time and attention. remember congress has tried multiple times to get legislation passed on cyber security and they can't get their act together. >> can you keep it safe? >> it's not a matter of building higher walls and better paw rim reuplrim turs and it's the ability, and the federal government continues to wrestle with that policy question and have not had an answer yet. >> the internet is part of reality reality, and are they dealing is as if it's not as real if they broke a window and stole from the place? >> when you treat it as an act of war, is it only when there is
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physical destruction? or do people have to die, shutting off the lights and faa system before they will treat it as an act of war. those are serious policy questions that have real consequences and geopolitics, and they are working their way through that. >> if you can do this you do those types of things also. what is your read why we don't see those things? >> well we have not seen those sorts of attacks where there is destruction inside the system and they are more about stealing it and collecting the intelligence because as we are trying to work through the policy question where it's an act of war, and the chinese don't want to treugigger a potential physical reaction by the u.s. government and that's what is stopping foreign governments, nobody wants that.
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>> if this had been an actual attack and i am not comfortable with that phrase i think it is an actual attack the chinese would not respond with a proverb. new details of the boston terror plot. the suspect's family watches the surveillance video of police shooting the suspect. let's get to alexandra field live in boston. good morning, alexandra. >> reporter: good morning. the rahim family viewed the video. the aftermath of the shooting rahim's brother posted on facebook he believed his brother was shot three times in the back and after watching the video the brother now says those are in fact not the facts of the
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case and he was not shot in the back. however, the rahim family says they are calling for a thorough and federal investigation rahim's death and allegations he had been planning to attack police, and he had been under 24 hour surveillance before his death. a spokesperson for the rahim family says they are aware of a phone call between father and son the morning of his death but they say the content of that conversation is not clear to them. chris? >> thank you very much. i want to tell you about devastation in northern colorado as a pair of tornados tear through the state. no injuries reported. here is an interesting moment. a twister baring down on a storm chaser. there is the storm. the guy shooting it is a storm chaser obviously. he sits alone on the dirt road. the chaser thought he was out of the storm's path and that was
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not the case. take a look at how close everything gets to this guy. luckily he was not hurt. >> that's hail. >> that's incredible. remembering beau biden. beau biden died last weekend at the age of just 46 losing his battle with brain cancer. president obama set to deliver a eulogy. >> reporter: it's a painful time for the biden family and delaware. there are three days of ceremony to mourn. this is the church where the biden family huddle as they grieve. his casket in red, white and blue and he was honored as an american hero a selfless husband, father and son.
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surrounded by family vice president was overcome with emotion over the loss of his eldest son. >> this is a painful and somber time. >> inside the delaware legislative hall the governor provided a cross for his outstanding achievements. >> beau had an extraordinary heart, and he lived a life that is a model for us all. >> the vice president's heartbreak evidence during the talk of beau's legacy. >> natalie and hunter should know even when you were not around your dad beamed with praoeuf for you. never has a son's love been so genuine and so deep. >> a touching moment biden wiping away a tear from his granddaughter's cheek, and comforting the two children and wife his son leaves behind.
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hundreds of mourners line up to pay respect to the former iraq veteran, and the bidens greeting them one after another. in addition to a tour in iraq biden was also a member of the delaware army national guard for more than a decade. yesterday, the vice president when he was greeting all the mourners hour after hour he said quote, you guys are holding me up. and president obama will deliver the eulogy here tomorrow morning. >> looking at the pictures, they are all so poignant. he is an emotional guy. >> when people mourn, they are at their most real. political and nonpolitical. beau came up big for his father when he gave the speech at the convention. and he grabbed my arm and he
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looked at me, and it was total beau you do what you think is right, that's all. he was one of those guys when he said that he meant it. the reflection of being his father's son, and my pop passed a few months ago, and joe biden left a message for me on my voice mail that said your father was one of the only guys i met that when i looked across the room i thought that guy could take me. they feel deeply and real, and they loved each other so much. the love was so real. this guy was only 46 years old, and a young wife and kids and he had so much promise he could have brought to the country. that's why he is getting so much attention. >> i see it and the pictures tell a story. we will be covering this tomorrow as well. hillary clinton slamming her republican rivals and calling them out by name.
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rick perry jumping into the 2016 race for president. what do you think? does he stand a chance? experts weigh in.
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book! ...at tripadvisor. today republicans are systematically and deliberately trying to stop millions of american citizens from voting. what part of democracy are they afraid of?
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>> that was democratic frontrunner, hillary clinton accusing the gop of launching a crusade against voting rights. >> this is a heavy topic and it needs a simple mind and we have one right now. this sounds good everybody should be registered to vote automatically. is this a little more show than go? >> when i heard her say this i thought to myself if you build it will they come? to give everybody automatic registration at 18 that's not the problem, and the problem is getting people who are registered to get out and vote. >> we do everything with our lives online chinese hacking aside, but we don't vote online. is that something people could get behind like yeah that
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should be easier? >> yeah i think we look third worldish when i reflect from the 2012 cycle, and watching people in florida, and standing in line for hours, and the first thing he said we have to fix that when he came out. >> what she is trying to do is show the difference between herself and what she says her republican opponents are doing, and she says they are trying to block people from voting. for the first time on the campaign trail, she used their names and called out her foes and rivals by name. listen to this. >> governor perry is hardly alone in his crusade against voting rights. in wisconsin, governor scott walker cut back early voting and signed legislation that would make it harder for college students to vote, and chris christie vetoed legislation to
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extend early voting, and in florida, when jeb bush was governor state authorities conducted a deeply flawed purpblg -- >> if i am governor christie or perry, i am elated the frontrunner just mentioned me. >> why would she elevate them to be part of the strategy? >> it's about race. the republicans need a boost of the vote and hillary clinton needs to maintain the share of the minority vote. this is about who comes out to vote. 14 states have new laws for a national election kicking in for the first time in the 2016 cycle, and the democrats are very very concerned their base won't be able to come out given the new impediments.
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>> you want to move on to perry? >> yeah. >> and he has the glasses on -- >> yeah, and the loafers. >> you want to change how i see you, change how i see you, and so he is coming with a look and he gives a big speech. sounds good and everybody is talking about him sweating. is this a sign the media is not going to give this guy a break? >> i am talking about those are the law trel brothers. where is the oxygen in the room for governor perry. >> who are the brothers? >> two navy s.e.a.l. brothers. i nomarknow marcus and i think that's his brother. apart from lindsey graham who served in that enormous field, only two have military service
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in his background, and he wants to be the military candidate and that's how he is approaching this. it's about redemption. he entered the 2012 cycle as a frontrunner, and they thought it was a different incarnation of george w. bush and then he embarrassed himself in the debates, and he wants to re-establish his credentials. >> people said he does bring a lot to the table. he is the candidate reportedly who can bring conservatives and evangelicals and military and people that want a governor, and he has a lot of stuff that people say they want in a candidate. >> all that was said about him in the last cycle, and then he had the oops moment and we fixate on that and that's what we know him best for. probably unfairly to governor perry. >> we believe the intrigue going forward is going to be on the
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gop side, and what about flipping that and saying it's going to be on the democratic side because if hillary clinton trust issue -- >> 57% regarding her as untrustworthy, and in the internals chris, what i took note of she had an 11 point drop in independents in the last three months. among the is, they are up for grabs. if she lost double digits in three months the alarm bells have to be running. you just showed a tragic story about vice president biden, and i wonder if he is not watching the decline of her numbers, and thinking of himself, not today,
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that's not what i am saying going forward, keeping a close eye on her tumbling numbers. >> that would be an upset. >> knowing what we know about joe biden, it's not about numbers. the loss of his son could mean two things i have to stay home and he has a fire in him that could ignite something where it says it's time for me to do something. they are saying it's tougher to read the disconnect in the jobs and whatnot, and it's getting tougher.
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my name is rene guerrero. i'm a senior field technician for pg&e here in san jose. pg&e is using new technology to improve our system, replacing pipelines throughout the city of san jose, to provide safe and reliable services. raising a family here in the city of san jose has been a wonderful experience. my oldest son now works for pg&e. when i do get a chance, an opportunity to work with him it's always a pleasure. i love my job and i care about the work i do. i know how hard our crews work for our customers. i want them to know that they do have a safe and reliable system. together, we're building a better california. know for your "new day." china not denying the government hack exposing the public and
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personal information of at least 4 million current and former employees. and then the controversial surveillance program. the spy agency hunted down hackers by expanding internet spying on americans without warrants. u.s. officials told the boston attacker was in contact with isis. in colorado three unsolved shootings over the past six weeks, and the latest a 65-year-old man fatally shot blocks from his home. and then the cavaliers and warriors. for more go to cnn.com for the latest. the breaking news on the
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jobs front. christine has it for us. >> it's a strong report. the strongest job growth we have seen all year. one thing in this number wages grew 3.2% and still not what we would like but the best we have seen in years now. the unemployment rate ticked up. you get people entering the labor market, and 5.5% there. sectors, all the sectors are strong today. when you look at all of them you have jobs gains across the board. and going back to the jobs added again, it was strong and their revisions, positive revisions for previous months and jobs stronger than we thought in some of those months so broad base job gains, and wages increasing and unemployment rate ticked up
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but closest to the lowest since 2008 and the job rate rose because people are entering the job market. people think the fed is closer to raising interest rates now because of the job strength. >> the stronger the economy gets the more you think the fed is going to stop helping the economy as much. >> that's right. a guy walks into a bar, sounds like the beginning of a joke i know but it's not. a scottish fisherman walked into the war and came out with an idea to help the needy across the globe. here is today's cnn heroes. >> the scottish highlands are his home but he has been changing lives around the globe. every week day his program mary mary's meals provides lunch to
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schoolchildren. >> it brings many children into school and their health improves and then you see amazing results with academic performance. >> the work earned him global recognition as a top 10 cnn hero. >> in terms of raising awareness, it's incredible. at that time we were feeding 400,000 children, and since then we doubled. >> in may he reached a milestone. he provides 5 million meals each week. >> it's a mind-boggling number and it's not mission accomplished and there are still millions hungry, so we go on.
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>> every week we honor a new cnn hero an everyday person going the extra mile to help others and if you recognize somebody go to cnn.com and tell us about them. >> sadly -- >> i was pointing to you about the heroes. move over blue pill a pink one may be on the way. female viagra closer to ever to hitting the market. does such a thing even exist? >> it does now. huh, fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know genies can be really literal? no. what is your wish?
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what's up for the next shift? ah, nothing much. just keeping the lights on. (laugh) nice. doing the big things that move an economy. see you tomorrow, mac. see you tomorrow, sam. just another day at norfolk southern. welcome back to "new day." a drug being called viagra for women moved one step closer to your pharmacy. could the pink pill change women's and men's lives? dr. berman was a paid consultant to the drug's manufacturer early in the process but no longer serves in that capacity. glad to have you here. >> good to be here. >> female viagra how does this work? >> well it doesn't work like
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viagra. viagra facilitates and helps with blood flow. this medication works on the brain with the chemicals that suppresses the chemicals that produces desire and this company and the company before them there is years of data i think 11,000 women have been studied at this point and it's proving to look pretty effective for supporting sexual desire in women. 30% 30%. >> we were talking earlier, elizabeth, about how a woman's sexual organ is often her brain, and so this pill does it operate like an antidepressant?
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>> in some ways it works on some of the same brain chemicals, and those are mood chemicals. it makes a woman sort of more in the mood to have sex. i want to make it clear, it didn't work a whole lot better than placebo in some ways. when you are looking at increasing desire this pill increased it by 53%, and a placebo increases desire by 37%. is it better than placebo? absolutely. >> is it worth it? this drug twice, tried to pass the fda and was denied because of side affect. what are the dangers? >> i think it's arguable that it got denied because of side effects. that may be true and i think it had a lot more to do with politics than anything else. this is not going to be
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nothing -- nothing, quite frankly, will be a pill that women can take that will jump-start every law hraeb yo or fix every sex life, and it will not be as effective as medications for men. this isn't because of emotional and relationship factors, and those women are going to benefit. will it be the same huge pool of the female population to benefit from viagra for men, probably not. this is going to help many women improve their desire and as importantly, improve their relationships and get a
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conversation started about female sexual help. >> do you see a big demand for something like this? huge demand. as i was saying earlier, 30% of women under the age of 59 have struggle with low desire and the most common sexual dysfunction complaint, and there are emotional and relationship reasons for that and medical reasons for that. you have to look at the whole picture puzzle of the woman's life and the doctor is right that our main sexual organ for all of us is between our ears but it's a huge issue that affects a woman's quality of life and for women to have hypo active sexual desire disorder which is the diagnose for which this medication will be indicated, it has to be something that causes her personal distress and that's what they are seeing the significant improvement in when they are treating the woman in the clinical trials but not only in desire but a decrease in
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distress of how the low desire is affecting their lives and relationships. >> i was reading this is designed for premenopausal woman. can women in their later 50s and 60s and 70s not take this? >> they didn't try it fully on post menopausal women, so they don't know. what happens for drugs, they are approved for one age group and once they are out on the market if a 60-year-old woman wants to take it and goes to the doctor my guess is that doctor will prescribe it and see if it works. >> we are starting the conversation and great to talk to you guys this morning. >> thanks. >> thanks for being here. huge story as kaitlyn jenner being introduced to the world. is she the best pick for the author ash for courage. it's a sports award. critics are saying there are more deserving athletes.
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we are going to discuss that. what do you think? weigh in. nobody told us to expect it... intercourse that's painful due to menopausal changes it's not likely to go away on its own. so let's do something about it. premarin vaginal cream can help it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause and moderate-to-severe painful intercourse caused by these changes. don't use it if you've had unusual bleeding breast or uterine cancer blood clots, liver problems, stroke or heart attack, are allergic to any of its ingredients or think you're pregnant. side effects may include headache pelvic pain, breast pain vaginal bleeding and vaginitis. estrogens may increase your chances of getting cancer of the uterus,
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kaitlyn jenner will be
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awarded the arthur ashe courage award in july but there are critics that claim there are other athletes more deserving, for example, iraq veteran noah galloway, and how about lauren hill that died of cancer. is jenner the right pick or did they choose her for attention. christine, let's start with why. why is it the right choice? >> i thought it was the right choice when i first heard about it because i don't spend a lot of time thinking about the sbs, and it's a made for tv event and that's fine and the arthur ashe award has become a big deal
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because of the people that won it nelson mandela and now kaitlyn jenner. when you think about lauren hill what an amazing story, and i hope there is a place for her in that broadcast. >> that takes us to the why not? >> i could articulate the point. >> i am not saying you own it. >> i definitely don't own it. the biggest thing is about ratings, and this is not a charity or funded by a foundation. they want to put an award show and that's fine. it's dumb to get upset about somebody that didn't win the award, and it's dumb to get upset about somebody that doesn't win the nobel prize. it's not a slight when the pope doesn't win it. if you contrast it with lauren hill she died, and indicatekaitlyn
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jenner is not. >> do you think it's an excuse to criticize kaitlyn jenner? >> well you know i think the fact this was announced so quickly after kaitlyn jenner's news broke is interesting. both of us we are not spending time dwelling on the es pia wards and who is winning them and who is not. 19 years old and not reaching her 20th birthday, and she is at the intersection of sports and courage the way nobody else has been this year so i am surprised she was not picked already, and i don't know when espn makes their decision.
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>> and arthur ashe what he was known for, social conference related. he transcended sport in the way of what we went to the dialogue of what we were comfortable talking about and what we were not, significantly there with aids. does jenner fit that category more than anybody. >> it dishonors the memory of lauren hill and she didn't ask for this and it's not a me or her type of situation, and bruce jenner was the most famous athlete in the 1970s, and bruce jenner especially by 1976, he was trance sepb tkupbt. they are taking a stand and making a statement, and when you take a stand and make a statement, you get flack. i am not sure they are upset by
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that and when you are take a stand, you are saying something, and they are saying this is courage and deserves to be honored. >> lauren hill people that forgot they are looking her up online. kaitlyn jenner this is a huge issue, and nobody is going to get too exercised about the awards, and kaitlyn jenner is a deserving winner of the award. >> why did this one get it and not -- >> michael sam was awarded an award, and it was what did he accomplish?
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kaitlyn jenner answers some of that the playing days are over. once you take that off the stage, i think it's lotable. espn definitely wants to say that by extension of american sports they are to some extent american sport, american sport supports the gay community, supports the trance community. it's a little risky. >> there is a lot of animosity towards lgbt in a traditional sense let alone to gender reassignment. you are going to start hearing it more and more. this is not something people are ready to throw their arms around. >> mike huckabee made a joke about it. it's amazing to me that people have this were time to devote to things that they either care about or don't, but to go on
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social media, this is our world so we might as get used to it and it's going to get worse and not better. bruce jenner and not kaitlyn jenner made this decision and part of it is because of the reality tv aspect and that's where people go with this. i never watched the kardashians and don't know what channel it's on. >> what do you watch? >> thank you. >> it's going to be interesting to see what happens next in terms of the dialogue now that she is out there. alisyn. the good stuff, that's next.
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this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. friday, the good stuff and it's a good topic, okay. homeless people you say we care and we don't care enough. you see them on the street and you walk right by them. four years ago, a kid got the giving bug. she is now 9 years old. she asked her mom for permission to help and go down to businesses, first plannedingting a garden, and he hopes to harvest
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vegetables for the homeless, and now she built genius mobile shelters to give the homeless a dry and safe place to sleep. there she is with the nail gun. >> so impressive. i know carol costello will be impressed also on "newsroom." >> i am doublebly and triply impressed. "newsroom" starts now. happening now in the "newsroom," a hat for the record books. chinese hackers may have their hands on the personal information of millions of americans. so what are they going to do with it? >> by collecting all this information, it's having a giant database they may be able to tap into at anytime. >> we are talking about what happens next. also the terror takedown in boston. catching the suspect's family off guard. >> we are not people of destruction or terror. >> what is it like

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