tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN June 9, 2016 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
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as for the democrats, bernie sanders met with president obama, and elizabeth warren lashed out at trump. listen. >> trump tells everyone that will listen that he is a great business man. let's be honest, he is just a guy who inherited a fortune, and kept it alive cheeth people. trump whined he is being treated unfairly, because the judge happens to be mexican. when he got called out. he doubled down, by saying, i am building a wall, it is an inherit conflict of interest. he has personally, personally, directed his army of campaign surrogates to step up their own public attacks on the judge.
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he has condemned judges who are muslim, on the disgusting theory, that trump's bigotry compromises neutrality. he is picking on someoneethically bound not to defend himself. exactly what you would expect from a thin-skinned racist bully. no, don woulda, what you are doing is a disgrace. degrading a judge, who spent years protecting us from drug tractivo traffickers. he is a thin-skinned flaud, who serves no one but himself.
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that is just one of the many reasons he will never be about the of the united states. >> that is the massachusetts senator moments ago. vice president biden will be speaking at the same event. all of this comes at the end of a big day for hillary clinton and her party. more now, how the democrats got to this point. >> i want to congratulate hillary clinton. >> president obama, offering a full endorsement of hillary clinton. >> i don't think there has ever been anyone more qualified for this off. i can't wait to get out there and campaign for hillary. >> i am honored to have you with
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me, i am fired up and ready to go. >> united around the idea of stopping donald trump. >> the president's blessing hours after meeting with bernie sanders today in the oval office. the visit, a walk along the colonnade, usually reserved for heads of state. >> thanking president obama and vice president biden. the impartiality they held throughout this process. they want him back on capitol hill. meeting with harry reed and others. >> i think he is somebody who is interested in changing the direction of the country. >> it was a day long sign of respect and leverage for sanders, winning 22 states and aggressively challenging
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clinton. he did signal he is readies to une uneat -- >> rivals for a year, sanders and clinton will soon come together. >> i look forward to meeting together in the near future. >> clinton wants and needs his help. firing up voters as he did across the country. >> i am looking forward to working with him to achieve our common goal, to defeat donald trump. and senator sanders said he will work every week to see that happen.
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>> about president tweets, sbshl the delete yore account. new york times explains it. it translates, your tweet or opinion is so bad that you should be disqualified from further participation on the flatform. trump came back with this. how long did it take your staff of 823 to think it up. where are you your e-mails that tudeleted? >> former top obama advisor. and the clinton senior advisor. david gregory, joins us. those endorsements, from elizabeth warren.
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>> to say the least. this was a great day for the clinton campaign. it really spoke to consolidation or beginning of consolidation of the democratic base after a long, spirited primary. the president's endorsement was expected but still i'm sure welcome an important. i think the most encouraging thing was senator sanders' rhetoric after he left the white house, the clinton campaign short of endorsement which nobody expected at this moment could not have scripted his remarks better, they sent a strong signal that he will be out there this fall working hard to elect her and defeat donald trump. it was a big day for her. >> maria, donald trump tweeted about the endorsement minutes after it happened, he and secretary clinton have been in a twitter war ever since. clearly they're going to use the endorsement to their benefit, in two different ways. >> yes, absolutely.
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i think what you're seeing is that the whole of the democratic party, what we call the democratic dream team is coming together because they know how serious a threat donald trump is. you have hillary, you have bill clinton, you have today the president of the united states, soon you'll have the vice president, you'll have the first lady, michelle obama, you'll have the second lady as well out there, nancy pelosi endorsed her earlier this week, harry reid will be on her side. you know, these are people who understand how serious it is, the threat of donald trump in the white house. they're coming together to make sure that we underscore how critical it is for americans to defend american values and what democrats represent versus what trump represents. this whole dream team to me is welcome to thunder dome, mr. trump. >> david gregory, do you think it is only a matter of time
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i think by the body language today, the tone he struck today, as david axelrod mentioned, that he is preparing to endorse. this was a picture of a democratic party firing all cylinders with elizabeth warren at the tip of the speer as you played it a couple minutes ago. i think bernie sanders is dealing with first of all, he wants maximum influence, he was given his due, for being head of the progressive wing of the democratic party, and he also has, this is important for hillary clinton, he wants to make sure he doesn't rush this on behalf of all his supporters who may not be as far along as he might be in getting on board. david axelrod said months ago it is important for the clinton campaign to build a bridge that allows sanders supporters to walk over. they need time to do that. and it is going to take more than him saying i met with everybody, i am prepared to do this, he has to respect those supporters. >> kayleigh, interesting none of the former republican presidents or presidential nominees are out there at this point campaigning for donald trump and secretary clinton has the last two sitting democratic presidents, president obama and her husband in her corner. do you think that's a problem for trump or does he prefer not having the support. >> in some ways probably prefers not having the support, he ran against the establishment and republican leadership and against washington. we saw every one of the exit
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polls, a large majority of the republican electorate was angry at their own party. donald trump ran against this idea, it is not surprising you don't see republican leaders rally around him. look at the last six nominees, the last six republican nominees, donald trump has the second highest support among republican voters at this point after clinching the nomination. only person with slightly larger coalition of republican voters at this point was mitt romney. donald trump is on pace where he needs to be with republican voters, that's what matters. you can see the democratic leaders come around hillary clinton at this point, but democratic leaders coming around clinton is different. polls show it is hard for her to coalesce democratic voters. >> david axelrod, do you agree, does it not matter that donald trump doesn't have the other republican candidates out there? >> here's the problem with kayleigh's analysis, mitt romney lost. he lost because the republican base wasn't large enough to win a general election. his challenge now is to go beyond the base and signal to voters who aren't sure that this is a safe place for them to be and the last week has been discouraging to them, he scared off a lot of republicans who originally showed some interest in supporting him, so as good a week as hillary clinton has had, this has been a bad week for donald trump.
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that doesn't mean there won't be twists and turns in the road, there will as sure as we're sitting here, we're going to be talking about ups and downs for both candidates, and this really won't settle in until much later, but as of now in this week, on this day this has been a good run for hillary clinton. >> the flip side of that is george h.w. bush and george w. bush won, and he has voters coalesced around him than both those did a month after clinching the nomination. people talk about the never trump movement, dethroning him at the convention, it is not going to happen. voters coalesced around this candidate. >> the bushes won because they put together a coalition of nonwhite voters and there's no way at this point there's a path for donald trump to do that, especially with the kinds of comments we know he loves to make. >> i think there is a path
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forward. there's double digit unemployment for minorities. >> there is not double digit unemployment. >> yes, there is, there's real unemployment out there. >> we are going to take a break, we are waiting for vice president biden. he is talking to a group of constitutional lawyers. we will bring you that. and next, president obama's endorsement and what a change from their relationship eight years ago. years ago. we will be right back. [ salesman ] congrats on the new car. [ woman ] thanks. the dealership reviews
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breaking news, fiery attack on donald trump from elizabeth warren and beginning of one from vice president biden. we will bring you the best of it in a moment. back with the panel. a toned down bernie sanders after the meeting with the president and we will show you his toughest critic and bitter rival. >> even after our own hard fought campaign in a testament to her character she agreed to serve our country as secretary
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of state. and from the decision we made in "the situation room" to get bin laden to our pursuit of diplomacy in capitals around the world, i have seen her judgment, i have seen her toughness, i have seen her commitment to our values up close. i've seen her determination to give every american a fair shot at opportunity, no matter how tough the fight was. that's what has always driven her and still does. so i want those of you with me from the beginning of this incredible journey to be the first to know that i'm with her. >> back with the panel. david axelrod, you know as much as anyone on this subject how rough and tumble primary season can be, taking senator sanders into account, do you think we will see a unity moment? something we saw in 2008, with clinton and obama? >> i do think you will. i think he is the trustee of a
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>> david, let's listen to joe biden now, the vice president speaking. >> because he says judge ruled against him in light of his anti-mexican proposals. mr. trump is unique in attempting to effect the judiciary. other private citizens tried to pressure the judiciary from time to time. but not private citizens who are placed in close range of the white house by one of our great political parties. it is one thing for a private citizen to attempt to throw his economic or political weight around as an unelected official, to try to influence, help him demolish his adversary, and it
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-- a phrase used by this particular fellow. it is is quite another for the presumptive candidate of a major party to do the same thing. up to now you may say, -- they will say joe, and folks, i have not been out responding to in my capacity as vice president to anything that mr. trump has said, but it is my view that a presidential candidate that publicly attacks a sitting judge that ruled against his own interests cannot be trusted to respect the independence of the judiciary as the president. i'm sure for those saying with good reason i think that's a harsh judgment, but there's no
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real connection here, let's look at what that presumptive nominee said. his own words. after calling the judge presiding over a fraud suit against him a total disgrace, mr. trump said, i quote, these are his act words, but we will come back in november. wouldn't that be wild if i'm president and i come back and do a civil case. he went on to say, i am quoting, wouldn't it be wild as president to come back in november to do a civil case. how can that be interpreted any other way than as a direct
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threat these are words of someone that sees the judiciary as a tool to manipulate to do what he calls deal with the laws of our country. these are words in my view of one who would defy the courts if they ruled against him as president. not just in a business case but a case challenging government abuse of power. raising the specter of, quote, coming back in november, quote, doing a civil case. the oval office is not so veiled a threat, it is a direct threat. to use the office of the presidency, were he to acquire it to intimidate and undermine an independent judiciary would
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be blatant unconstitutional abuse of power. either mr. trump which is possible doesn't understand, i mean that sincerely, he's a bright guy, i'm not saying that, not pretending, but he either doesn't understand because this is a realm in which he has never dealt before or he doesn't care, that it would border on an impeachable offense for a president to use the great powers of the office to attempt to undermine a federal judge by placing pressure on that judge in any case, especially one the president has in this case a personal financial stake. this kind of conduct is
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unprecedented. >> david gregory, we listen to vice president biden there, he is just one person that will be on the stump, elizabeth warren will be out there, i assume senator sanders, president obama, and others, not to mention whoever the vice presidential pick is, what do you think the campaign will look like on donald trump's side? do you think he is going to have -- obviously they have surrogates on television, he will continue to have large events but will there be the equivalent of elizabeth warren, of president obama, vice president biden out speaking for donald trump, doing events to be a force multiplier? >> i presume there will be, it is difficult to see how trump gets from where he is now to that point because even though he has consolidation in the republican party and republican voters who are voting for him and supporting him, the republican establishment is in turmoil over his racist remarks
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against judge curiel for one thing, for his disarray as a campaign, for lack of strategic direction. you heard one congressman today say there are people that might be endorsing donald trump that may not want to wear a t-shirt for him. so he doesn't have his act together. he has done a lot to consolidate the party but he has two full weeks where he wasted a political opportunity to define hillary clinton. and what does hillary clinton have? you saw the clip earlier with president obama. the president who was 50% in the approval ratings, can campaign for her, do a lot to deliver the coalition of young people and women brought him to a second term in 2012 and deliver that to hillary clinton. >> kayleigh, what do you think of that. how do you see the campaign on trump's side, by the convention the vice presidential pick will be out campaigning aggressively. do you think he has other people in his pocket lined up who will be out there? >> i do.
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finance team met today in new york as new talk of convention coup is bubbling up. is there any truth or reality to that idea? more ahead. donald trump met today in new york with dozens of top fund-raisers. it was the first time there was a finance team brought together. typically these happen long before they declare. while he was meeting today with potential donors, some top republicans in washington continued criticism of his remarks about judge gonzalo curiel. there's talk of a coup of sorts at the convention in cleveland. some gop officials and never trump pundits are looking to change the rules on delegates to allow them to vote for whoever they choose. others say it is a total fantasy. a lot to discuss. joining me, mindy carpenter. cnn delegate can analyst, former chief of staff mike shields, and michael gerson, speech writer and back with us trump supporter kayleigh mcenany. mike shields, all of the chatter
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from never trump movement about a coup at the convention, is that even possible to actually change convention rules so bound delegates don't have to vote for trump at the convention? >> possible, yes. it is possible. likely, no. it is possible, the delegates at the convention make their rules up for the convention and make all of the decisions about what will happen at the convention, certainly at the rules meeting at the convention they could unbind delegates and change the threshold for the nomination, they could do a lot of things. it would then have to go to the full convention floor, get 50% of delegates to vote for it. many delegates are not necessarily people that we heard before that are trump supporters, there are a lot of
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cruz delegates but they're looking to leadership and the party what to do for something like this. i think you would have to have people that previously supported trump come out against him, you would have to have 20 governors come out against him, 20 senators, something like that. he had a bad week, some people criticizing him. a lot are people that were already criticizing him. i don't think we are close to critical mass. it would be difficult to pull something like that off. it is in donald trump's hands whether that stays there. he's got to perform as a candidate and lead the party. i think every republican running on the ticket should be encouraged he is listening to reince priebus more, trying to focus more on hillary clinton. barack obama and hillary clinton did republicans a huge favor today by knocking everything else off the news, reminding republicans of one thing that will unify us up and down the ticket, stop a third term of barack obama and stop hillary clinton. as long as that's the message, republicans get unified and as long as the nominee doesn't have a week and two weeks like he had, he won't have to worry about it.
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is it technically possible, yes, but unlikely. >> amanda, no fan of trump's do you agree with the idea of a coup at the convention? it would cause outrage even if it was possible, would cause huge outrage among donald trump supporters. >> sure. but this is the kind of environment where something like this could happen. something significant did happen earlier today. new yorker ryan lizza told wolf blitzer on the air that female senator susan collins said she was open to voting for hillary clinton. that's a major development. when you have sitting u.s. senators saying they may vote for hillary clinton. that's not lost on elizabeth warren. if you saw her speech last hour, she made a point of tying donald trump around the neck of senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. she will sit in the senate, make his life miserable. and they're going to lose the senate they keep going this way. what i would like to see at the convention, i think it would be a fair way of doing this, a vote of no confidence. if more than 50% of delegates are not confident with donald trump as nominee, look at other options.
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you could reasonably limit to people that ran for president this cycle, let it be decided, if we are united as a party behind the nominee or not. donald trump may survive that, but get everyone on record to resolve this once and for all. >> little hard for elizabeth warren to link donald trump to mitch mcconnell who is just even today again been very critical of donald trump in his comments about the judge. >> he has been critical, but where i respect mitch mcconnell, he realizes that he is only in
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the position he is in, only majority leader because republican voters put him there. hat off to him for saying republican voters have spoken, they want donald trump as the nominee. i am going to in a sense bow to voters who put me here, say i am going to give your nominee a chance. that's what every leader should be doing and i respect him and others like bob dole and other leaders, rick perry, list goes on and on that recognize the voters are what make up the party. >> michael, where do you stand on this? obviously donald trump hasn't had a great week or two and the democrats have been able to capture a lot of momentum perhaps or at least the cohesion. but do you actually, it seems like to the point of mike, if donald trump basically starts to follow the rnc a little more, a lot of republicans, if he doesn't give them reason to get farther away, they're going to stick with him. >> if they haven't gagged after so much, i am not sure what it would take under these circumstances. republicans are treating this like it is a normal cycle, like you have to make compromises, hold your nose, get past this difficult period. it's not a normal period. the republican party is determining whether they will run with a nominee that's made as a central part of his message an appeal to racism. that's a defining choice on the
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part of the republican party. and right now republicans are finding that he owns them. they own his prejudice. it is impossible to lay low and escape the taint of trouble. that's not going to happen. so i haven't seen sign of critical mass mike talks about which i think is necessary, it would require, for example, paul ryan to go back on his decision. he would need to lead in this circumstance. i think that's very, very difficult. very unlikely. >> yeah. appreciate everybody. up next, barack obama, hillary clinton seem to really, really like each other now, certainly was not always so. the long and complicated path that led the president to endorsement of hillary clinton today.
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>> reporter: campaign 2008, the gloves officially came off. barack obama was a junior senator from illinois, a fresh face, the party's rising star. then senator hillary clinton was quick to knock his lack of experience, hitting him on foreign policy, using his early years in indonesia. >> with all due respect, i don't think living in a foreign country between the ages of six and ten is foreign policy experience. >> clinton lost iowa, won new hampshire. >> he is very likeable. i agree with that.
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i don't think i'm that bad. >> you're likeable enough, hillary, no doubt about it. >> i appreciate that. >> reporter: as the fight grew even more bitter, clinton accused her rival of plagiarism after he delivered parts of a speech previously given by then massachusetts governor duval patrick. >> lifting whole passages from someone else's speeches is not change you can believe in, it is change you canerox. >> mr. obama admitted it was wrong, called clinton's charges desperate. obama went onto denounce clinton's vote in favor of the iraq war and days before the ohio primary the obama campaign attacked her on health care and nafta. >> shame on you, barack obama. it is time you ran a campaign consistent with your messages in public. that's what i expect from you. meet me in ohio. >> reporter: clinton won the ohio primary in part because of this campaign ad questioning
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obama's readiness. >> it is 3:00 a.m. and your children are safe and asleep, but there's a phone in the white house and it's ringing. >> reporter: on guns, obama poked fun at clinton for suddenly championing the second amendment. >> shame on her, she knows better. she's running around talking about how this is an insult to sports men, how she values the second amendment. >> he slammed her for friendship with bill ayres, accused of setting off bombs in the vietnam war. also went after him over his relationship with jeremiah wright who after 9/11 famously said america's chickens are coming home to roost. then in june, 2008 obama sealed the nomination, after a brief thaw, this show of unity from the former rivals in new hampshire. by the time they reached the convention, clinton was singing obama's praises. >> when barack obama is in the white house, he will revitalize our economy. >> reporter: the partnership continued with president obama making clinton his secretary of state. >> she possesses an extraordinary intelligence and remarkable work ethic.
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>> reporter: when she left that role, the two sat down for this "60 minutes" interview. >> how would you characterize your relationship now. >> i consider hillary a strong friend. >> reporter: a friend counting on the outgoing president's support. randi kaye, cnn, new york. up next, new global plan to fight hiv and aids. we will look at the aids crisis in the 1980s, deadly ignorance from some, raw terror, and deep compassion. a decade that sparks a movement. i will speak with a writer that's been on the frontlines.
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this week, wormd leaders at a u.n. conference adopted a plan to end the aids especially dim i -- epidemic by 2013. # the u.s. estimates 37 million live with hiv and aids around the world. another 2.1 million become inflected each year. # it is caused mostly because of lack of access to drugs, it made it a chronic condition. drugs we take for granted here. that's where we are today. it has been 35 years since first cases of a mysterious disease were reported in the u.s. at the top of the hour, see how far we have come in the cnn series "the eighties." here's a preview.
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>> scientists at the national centers for disease control in atlanta today released results of a study which shows that the life-style of some male homosexuals has triggered an epidemic. >> reporter: bobby cam pell of san francisco and billy walker in new york suffer from a newly discovered disease which effects mostly homosexual men. >> our best guess is that it is somehow related to gay life-style.
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>> i was in the fast lane at one time in terms of the way i lived my life, now i'm not. reporter: researchers know 413 people that contracted this in the past year, one-third died, none of them cured. >> all of us that saw patients in those days shared a sense of desperation as we saw more and more people become effected and there would be no hope once they became ill. >> recently i spoke with andrew sullivan, and author of love and notes and friendship and sex and survival. andrew, how difficult is it you think to explain what happened in the 1980s and also important to point out the 1990s as well
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to people who didn't live through it, who weren't bearing witness to the deaths of friends, lovers, and to fear, vitriol, injustice and uncertainty that defined that decade for so many gay americans and others. >> well, you know, it is hard for us who survived it to remember just how terrifying it was. i remember a time when i was diagnosed talking to my then boyfriend who had also just been diagnosed and telling each other whatever happens, if this does work out, if we do survive this, can we please never forget how terrified we are right now. it was a terrifying time. this was not just a single disease, it was a multiplicity of diseases, all of which were horrifying. a friend of mine woke up one morning, couldn't tie his shoe laces.
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another friend woke up and couldn't hold his food at all, starved in the next year or so. a small parasite in the water most people can tolerate, suddenly sores, can't breathe. anything could come at you. it was like being in the jungle, waiting for something to come out and snare you, and there was no cure, no treatment. so we were all just waiting to die. and it built and built each year, more and more of us were dying. i dated four people that died, my best friend was diagnosed roughly the same time as i was, died two years later, and i am still sitting here 23 years later, so there was also a lot of guilt of survival but also incredible solidarity among gay men and lesbians and our families, some of our families confronting what was an overwhelming, omni present threat. >> i was in high school in '81 to '85 in the early years, had just come out to friends, just sort of accepting myself, and i just remember the fear of not knowing how it is transmitted, the fear that kept one almost isolated physically from other people because you just didn't know what the root of transmission was. >> no, you didn't. you just knew also it was
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the culture was telling us. >> that message was being given out by thinkers of the day, folks on tv. >> patrick buchanon famously said the homosexuals declared war on nature, now nature declared war back on them. >> do you worry, now that it is thankfully a chronic condition but still life altering condition, do you fear people have forgotten, particularly young gay men, those who are most vulnerable in vulnerable communities. >> i have two feelings. one, i am thrilled like anybody that lived through that time would be thrilled that they don't have to worry the way we had to worry. it is not a diagnosis like it was in the '80s and '90s. at the same time, i am kind of staggered how there's almost no memory of this, complete amnesia about it. the younger generation aren't even interested. there are no memorials. >> that's stunning to me. you think about the quilt that was this incredible thing, that hasn't been displayed in decades, and there are no memorials or monuments to those, the generation of people who died. >> i can't tell you how discouraging to talk to young gay men, have them seem bored by the stories, wanting to move on. i understand how wonderful it is to live in an era in which this kind of horrifying disease is no longer the reality, but not to remember the hundreds of thousands of young men who died, not to remember their struggle, not to see them as integral to the current moment, to create the gay culture we live in today, so mainstream, so integrated. it seems to me a crying shame. i think many of us in the gay community want to revive that sense of memory and to do honor to people that died. i think things like this documentary will help bring to people a sense that it was so frightening, so devastating, so tragic for so many people, yet we pulled through. >> andrew sullivan, thank you. >> you bet. >> andrew and i talk more about what it was like and the
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importance of getting tested if you don't know your status and taking medication. if you know your status, watch the entire conversation at ac360.com. the "the eighties" starts at the top of the hour. be right back. sorry, just getting a quote on motorcycle insurance from progressive. yeah? yeah, they have safe rider discounts, and with total loss coverage, i get a new bike if mine's totaled. but how's their customer service? great. 24/7. just like here.
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this is cnn breaking news. it is breaking news. two big endorsements for hillary clinton and a blistering attack on donald trump. this is "cnn tonight", i'm don lemon. hillary clinton gets the endorsement she's been waiting for from the campaigner in chief. >> i want those who have been with you from the beginning of this incredible journey to be the first to know that i'm with her, i am fired up, and i can't wait to get out there and campaign for hillary. >> and senator warren unleashes a blockbuster attack on donald trump. >> we will not allow a small, insecure, thin-skinned, wanna-be tyrant or his allies in the senate to destroy the rule of law in the united states of america. [cheers and applause] we will not. >> meanwhile, b
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