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tv   New Day Sunday  CNN  February 12, 2017 3:00am-4:01am PST

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are you kidding me? >> all right. i don't know where to go with that. so let's tell you there's an awful lot of news to tell you about this morning. >> next hour starts right now. 6:00 on a sunday morning. rise and shine. happy to have you. i am christi paul. >> i am victor blackwell. and north korea testing another ballistic missile, and adding a new policy issue to the trump administration. >> north korea fired a missile early this morning from a
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province, and it traveled 300 miles before it crashed into the sea of japan. >> it happened just as president trump was hosting prime minister abe in florida. they delivered a joint statement. here's a portion of it. >> translator: north korea's most recent missile launch is absolutely intolerable. north korea must fully comply with the u.n. security council resolutions. >> i just want everybody to understand and fully know the united states of america stands behind japan, its great ally, 100%. thank you. >> our team of correspondents are standing by.
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thank you all for being with us. i want to begin with matt rivers tracking information from seoul. >> we are hearing this is the kind of test they have conducted before and it has a range of upwards of 4,000 kau kilometersd it is far enough to hit installations that the united states has on the island of guam. that was something that kim jong-un has said was a top priority of the regime, he said it in a new year's day address on january 1st, he wanted to create this kind of missile in
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order to be able to deliver a nuclear payload at some point down the line. he may not have that capability yet but most experts will tell you that he is getting to that point, and it does appear to be a matter of when rather than if he develops the technology, and that's something that he has said in the past that he really wants to do. one other thing of note here, this type of missile differs slightly in what we saw in being tested last year, and this missile does appear to be upgraded, but this engine would be allow the rocket to be launched faster than previously, and they are working with their american counterparts, but this is the latest provocation from the north koreans and something the trump administration will have to deal with quickly. >> quickly, ryan, to you at the pentagon, is there any
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indication of how close north korea is to testing this intercontinental missile? could it be in months or next year? >> what the pentagon thinks is kim jong-un is working quickly to develop that, and they have been the intermediate range missile before, and it is capable of reaching thousands of troops, but from the pentagon side they are ramping up missile defense and later this month there was a joint missile test, and they are keeping an eye on whether they can get the missile capable of reaching the continent of united states, and they are trying to move forward the missile defense capabilities to insure that their forces there are protected. >> victor, i wanted to ask you
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about the high altitude defense system and there's a debate about putting that on the south korea peninsula to fight things like this, and how does that come into play there? >> i will say the action of the government this time is a violation of the united nations security resolutions and should be condemned by all the countries involved, including china, and china has been enforcing the u.n. security imposed sanctions against dprk, and at this time the which i na -- chinese will come against the launch testing by dprk, and don't forget the whole territory of japan is within the range of this type of missile and it's also creating a threat to
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republic of korea as well as the u.s. troops based in this part of the world. china wants to have greater peace and stability on the korean peninsula, and has been urging no testing, and if they continue to test the launch vehicle it will most likely come into possession with the icbm's, that will hit a larger range and this will further create instability in this part of the world and beyond, and therefore i think china and the united states and japan and russia should be united in condemning the latest action. >> let's talk about the response, and maybe more sanctions, and there are multiple santions levelied over the years, and it has not worked
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as a deterrent. maybe they will take another route. >> as you know, during the election campaign, donald trump talked quite a bit about trying to get beijing about imposing tougher sanctions, and united states is working with china back in 2003, and trying to curve north korea's missile programs, and that has not had a lot of success, and they ramped up sanctions from small arms to the selling of a pricey statue that north korea sells to african countries, and that being said there are still areas that china could put tougher sanctions on, and from the u.s. side you will see in addition to getting china to put on additional sanctions, you will see missile defense deployments, and the system with secretary of
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defense mattis just recently on his first trip abroad went to south korea and they are not too happy with the system being there, but it's something they are looking to push ahead before the end of the year. >> thank you all. we'll continue the conversation throughout the morning. we will give you more context here. north korea has performed a series of nuclear test over the years, and last january it claimed to detonate the country's first hydrogen bomb during an underground nuclear test in 2016, and test fired ballistic missiles and the most successful launch in june where it fired into the sea of japan. >> and then there was a missile launch from a submarine, and then in september it conducted its second test of the year which was the most powerful
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nuclear test to date. and then another round of nasty weather on the way here in the u.s., and we are tracking some of the issues that will be in the way for a lot of people. what you can expect. massive nationwide protest blasting the recent waive of arrests by immigration officials across this nation. dear predictable, there's no other way to say this. it's over. i've found a permanent escape from monotony.
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crackdown on undocumented immigrants. these protesters angry, and this one is outside the white house. take a look at the protest in austin overnight, and people held signs blasting trump's plans for a wall. authorities arrested undocumented immigrants in 12 states from coast-to-coast, the latest being more than 200 arrests in the midwest and 37 immigrants detained in california have been deported to mexico now. >> officials say most of the people they locked up had already been convicted of felonies like child sex crimes or weapons and assault charges, and this is the largest enforcement of the actions during this president's term. and joining us is our guests. good morning, gentlemen.
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>> morning. >> so i first want to play the president in that now well-known speech from phoenix where he talked about immigration. let's go to the anderson cooper interview where he talks about it first. >> my first day in office i am going to notify law enforcement authorities that all of the bad dudes -- and we have a lot of them -- that are here illegally, that are the heads of gang gangs and drug cartels and all sorts of people, and there are probably millions of them, but certainly hundreds of thousands, big numbers, and they are out. >> the question is, is what we are seeing the president just keeping a campaign promise? >> well, not only that, i mean, really, victor, in just three weeks they did not organize all of these raids. this was pursuant to existing
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policy under the obama administration, so-called bad dudes were at the top of the list for deportation, so they went ahead and moved forward with the kinds of people that were always deportable for whom deportation orders had been issued or people who had been convicted of violent felonies, drug selling and so forth, and there was a slight change in implementation that probably rounded up percentage wise less than 10% more than who would have already been subject to arrest and deportation. so to a certain extent, i think the administration is getting a bad wrap. it's not as invented this idea. the obama administration deported 1,000 people in one single year. >> this operation was in the planning stages before the current administration issued its executive order, and we do
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these operations two or three a year, and my understanding is you believe this is different? >> just to be clear and to be fair, of course, the executive has an obligation to enforce the law and what you are seeing under the trump administration is that enforcement and bad dudes are not only bad as to this president but they were bad as to the last president, so it is a continuation of existing policy to some extent, but hold on. the fact is you had mr. kelly in testifying before congress indicate that morale was down among i.c.e. agents because their hands were tied, and he also said it was otherwise skyrocket -- i am paraphrasing, but morale would be better because what you are going to see is that lifted under trump. i think it's clear there's nothing wrong -- it's favorable to this country with regard to border security and national security, and with regard to protecting the public interests to get rid of the bad dudes, the
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felons. i think what you are seeing here, though, are raids that are over inclusive. i think what you are seeing is people who are being caught up in these issues unlike before where it was the administration's policy to protect border security and national interests, and you are seeing people who have minor offenses or no offenses at all who are being brought up in the sweeps. to that extent, the raids, of course, are a continuation, but the scope and the nature and the aggressiveness is far different under this administration, to be clear. >> these are the numbers we received prelim tphaeurly of the i.c.e office. tom, let me come to you, because i wonder from your perspective if this puts the administration in a difficult position. how can the president claim he is keeping his campaign promise,
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if that's the claim that he is going to ramp up on undocumented immigrants in the country, and say this is nothing to see here, keep walking, and this is what the previous administration did? >> it's interesting what earl was saying earlier, and this goes into the politics and the perception of this, and the perception, of course, is reality in politics, at least. when you look at this with the protests going on, and then you look at the alec baldwin sketch we saw earlier about 15 minutes or so ago, where he starts singing bad boys, bad boys, and you put that altogether and you understand the protests. it might not matter this is consistent with what obama was already doing, because you have trump's own words out there and these massive protests out there, and everything is kind of whipped into a frenzy, and that's kind of the veneer of what is happening right now. you know, it's funny, i was sitting at the train station in
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philadelphia back in the republican retreat, and a couple hundred protesters out there, and i was talking with an old republican source, and he mentioned his read on the whole thing was that to him this was a lot like the '60s, and this was like when you would have spontaneous protests almost anything that was going on over lbj and nixon, so this plays right into that. >> there have been protests every weekend now of the trump administration. quickly to you, arrow, the president tweeted about japan and tweeted about the decision from the ninth circuit, and tweeted about many things over the last week or so but not this necessarily. what do you glean from that absence there? >> it didn't arrive on his desk. here, again, this is policy for the united states and it has been for a number of years. this is not something that necessarily comes out of the oval office. joey is right in the sense that people who are sort of
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collaterally involved in these things are getting caught up in them like not before, but if you were a drug lord, and we have had a deportation force in effect for quite a while now. i take this as the president not really sort of ramping this up, and not really driving this, necessarily, although i suspect we will hear from him in the near future. >> thank you. >> thank you. what a mess. i know it probably feels like that in the northeast, at least eight states, and you are getting ready for another round of winter weather. >> we've got the forecast in a moment.
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if you are waking up in the northeast, it could be a tough 24 hours for you. if you thought that last storm was bad, apparently it's about to get a lot worse. >> more than 40 million people under winter weather alerts, and areas like these expected to get another foot. and alison, where are we going to see the worst of it? >> that's the main point of this whole thing, it's the same people that just got hit on thursday of last week. we are talking the northeast. the heavier snow is going to be a little more focused off to the north, so we're not really talking washington, d.c. and new york really being the target point like last week, now we are talking more boston up to portland. all of this region under a
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winter storm warning or a blizzard watch in some spots, and buffalo and eastern long island seeing the change over into snow, and as we go through the day we will start to see cities like manchester into boston and portland, maine, picking up heavy snow. we have two low pressure systems here, and we are going to come together and form one, and it's going to bomb out. what that means is the storm is going to rapidly intensify and as it does it's really going to allow for intense snowfall amounts and strong winds. look at some of these forecast amounts here. we are talking a lot of areas in excess of a foot of snow. one of the regions, by the way, we are talking about boston. in boston, we picked up 30 inches of snow, and for the whole year we average 43. if we pick up an additional 8 to 12, and i went on the low end
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here. this is the low end of what boston could expect, we could exceed what we normally pick up for the entire year by the start of the workweek, and it's only mid february, guys. you have to keep in mind, winter is not done, and we may already in a city like boston have all the snow we would normally see for the entire year, and that and we are talking about hurricane-force winds along the cape. >> oh, my gosh. thank you for the heads up. everybody buckle down and take good cares of yourselves, there. indeed. north korea test firing its first missile during the trump administration. what is next for u.s. relations with north korea? and think about this. 52 overdose calls in just 32 hours. the latest state dealing with the heroin epidemic as it spreads across the country. and reduce symptom severity by 45%.
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miles before it crashed into the sea of japan. >> and last night trump and prime minister abe both issued statements. watch. >> translator: north korea's most recent missile launch is absolutely intolerable. north korea must fully comply with the u.n. security council resolutions. >> i just want everybody to understand and fully know that the united states of america stands behind japan, its great ally, 100%. thank you. >> so the question for a lot of people, is this a direct message to president trump, what is happening in north korea. here's what jim walsh, a senior international researcher at m.i.t. sold cnn a bit ago. >> sort of this is setting the theater, you know, we are going
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to have the japanese prime minister and the south korea temporary president and trump all come out and say this is unacceptable and this is terrible and we will pursue tougher measures and there will probably be a u.n. measure at some point, and if we step back from all of that, which is set theater, as i say, what strikes me about it is, the north korea's test a missile and it's not a test of an intercontinental ballistic missile like they threatened to do, and the strikes may, and based on what i know about friends having conversations with north koreans, as pushing a little bit but not too much and waiting to see what president trump will do, so we have a little bit of tactical play here by the north koreans. >> welcome back and continuing the conversation with cnn political reporter and a
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political calm mommentator. let's talk about this. let's put up the tweet, that donald trump before he ran for office that he tweeted back in 2018 -- 2016. again, here's what the president said as president now about north korea. >> i just want everybody to understand and fully know the united states of america stands behind japan, its great ally, 100%. thank you. >> if you cut the thank you, that could have been a tweet. what do you make of the length and the depth or lack of there of the state from the president. >> i don't want to read too much into so few words, victor, but what i took away is he stand
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behind japan, and that's in keeping about what trump said about the regional partners, south korea and japan in particular, meaning to take the lead when it comes to these things, and united states was not going to be a big regional player and handle all of the relationships, and he went so far to suggests that nuclear weapons could be something that japan could deploy on its own as -- what i took saying the u.s. will be the big brother in the background with all of its devastating potential, but he was not going to jump out front, so we didn't hear from him, even a hint from the broader kind of regional descriptions and doctrines that you would hear from president trump. >> you mentioned the suggestion that japan could add its own nuclear weapons. we have that from the cnn town hall back in march of 2016.
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let's watch. >> wouldn't you rather, in a certain sense, have japan have nuclear weapons when north korea have nuclear weapons? they have them. they have no carrier system yet, but they will soon. wouldn't you rather have japan, they are over there and they are very fearful of north korea, and we are supposed to protect. >> the president has backed away from that saying he never said it late in the campaign and even after his election. >> yeah, right. what is fascinating about that, kind of building on what earl was saying there, look at what he was saying back then, and look at the overall policy, which tends to be -- i don't want to say isolationist, per se, but pulling back from the world stage so far. what this had me thinking about earlier was looking back to last week the problems that we saw with national security adviser, mike flynn, towards the end of
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the week, huge questions about whether he is back channeling with russia, and if you look at stuff like this, and you remember the clinton 3:00 a.m. phone call in 2008, and hints to the key decisions that have to be made on the fly. you need your team in place for stuff like this. this is things where you will have a wildcard like north korea testing to see where you are. it's still kind of rocky. that was an easy call for the trump administration, and i mean, you know, again, not an awful lot there, but there were key hints as earl pointed out. there are going to be other things that come up and that you need a team in place that you trust. >> do you agree the trump administration sees this or the president sees this as a test of his leadership, his administration, when his statement goes only as far to say i stand behind japan?
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>> well, sure. look, there was a kind of a menacing quality to the look on his vase and tface and the tone voice, and i don't get the notion and the leadership, the north korea leadership will be overly impressed by that, but that's how it came across with me. we will have to get into a broader discussion now that we have for this administration a sitting secretary of state of where china plays into all of this, and there was talk on the campaign trail about united states putting pressure on china to bring north korea sort of under control, and that's a complicated dance you have to do, because you have other military and economic situations going on with china at the time, and this is not something where
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simple bravesmanship will get the job done. we have one more limit on what president trump can do. it has to be a little frustrating for him, because what sounded simple on the campaign trail, not so simple when you are sitting in the oval office. >> yeah, just in the beginning of january he tweeted about trying to get china to put pressure on north korea. tom, as we wrap this up, any indication this administration wants to return to the six-party talks to try to get north korea back to the table, or are they going to, as the president hinted before the president and since, try to outsource this exclusively to china? >> it's almost like they don't have a choice here. they kind of have to, to a degree, and not entirely sure what is going to happen. look how executives handle things when they are a candidate versus when they become a
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executive, and when i was coveri covering olmertin, and when he got into office he found out he couldn't stop the rate hikes from going into place. again, that's a small example but this is typical of what you see when you move from politician/candidate into office, the guy tossing the grenades versus the guy catching the grenades. 52 emergency calls for overdoses in 32 hours. louisville, kentucky, the latest city that is dealing with this growing heroin epepidemic. >> emergency spokesmen forces say 52 calls were for heroin overdoses, and there were other calls for alcohol and
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prescription calls. one person died in a cash crash where the driver was using heroin. >> that's the thing. one minute a driver could be going 40 miles per hour, and the next, they are unconscious, and part of the growing heroin epidemic is now what they dubbed drug driving. >> here is natalie martinez. we want to warn you that parts of this story are disturbing. >> on the road driving errands, or going to work, not giving much thought to other drivers. >> you never know what the people around you are doing. >> it's called drugged driving, a frightening problem growing. drivers getting high on heroin and then getting behind the wheel. >> an overdose can happen at anytime at any location. >> a driver crashes while on
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drugs, and this driver already deceased. people overdosing while on the road. >> they get in their car and use it and od and crash, and then we get involved. >> this video from ft. thomas, kentucky, captured a 7-month-old baby thrown from the car. the driver, high on heroin. mothers against drunk driving show how many are killed with drugs in their system. >> somebody can be out there right now, and under the influence of a drug that could cause them to be unconscious. >> heroin use is such a big problem affecting more and more states. we are hearing from the cdc in the past decade, heroin use more
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than doubles. >> from the year 2000 to 2015, more than half a million people died from drug over overdoses. it's affecting more and more states stpwr florida to main, and each of them dealing with a rise in overdose deaths. coming up, we will speak with somebody fighting on the front lines of this epidemic. an emergency room doctor in kentucky. stay with us.
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well, sunday morning means "saturday night live." >> yes, indeed, it does. >> not holding anything back when it comes to taking on president trump. >> alec baldwin returned to host "snl" for a record 17th time, and he reprised his impression of donald trump, and melissa mccarthy was back with her role playing sean spicer. and here to talk about something, host of "reliable sources," brian stelter. mccarthy did not disappoint. >> second peek in a row, and i don't know if donald trump would call them highlights, and he might call them lowlights, but here is mccarthy back as sean spicer, and he's probably the best part of that open. >> next question! yes. >> yes, earlier this week you
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said there was a terrorists attack in atlanta? >> yeah, i said that wrong when i said it, and then you wrote it, which makes you wrong, because when i say something wrong, you guys should know what it is i am meaning, wrong or right, you are wrong, and that's why you are here. obviously i meant orlanta. >> orlando? >> all right, any other questions? >> yeah, just mentally, though, are you okay? >> are you kidding me? are you kidding me? you better run! you don't have a chance. wait until i turn around. and live from new york, it's saturday night! >> that's how the show opened last night. i don't know how they will try
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to top that in a future week, but guys, the reason why this matters in a political sense is because donald trump did not enjoy the spicer impression last week, and according to jim acosta, trump was not amused by mccarthy playing spicer, and there are other reports that the president may have been offended that the show cast a woman to play his male secretary, and the show had fun with that, and look what they did earlier in the sketch. >> there is light terrorism this week when nordstrom's decided to stop selling ivanka trump's line of clothing and accessories, and that's nordstrom's lost, because these are high quality facts, in fact i am wearing one of her bangles right now, and it's beautiful and shimmery and
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elega elegant, at $39.95, and okay, don't even get me started on her shoes, because these babies are a real head-turner. >> close to real life, obviously exaggerated there but we remember kellyanne conway promoting ivanka's line earlier in the week seemed to get her in hot water, so spoking fun at that last night. >> you know, if they just came out and laughed at this it would serve them is what some said? >> i do think that's true. i heard them say -- we have seen other people, including pass press secretaries saying go ahead and have fun with this, and that's easier said than done, and i don't know how i would feel if i was impersonated by mccarthy. this time it was a peoples'
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court sketch. take a look. >> president trump, look, i read the ban, okay. it seemed rush, even to me, and i decide three correct cases in an hour, okay? i see no evidence it will help, so i -- >> i want to settle. >> excuse me. >> i want to settle out of court. >> mr. president -- >> they always settle, pocahontas, and so will you. >> sir, no, i won't, i want one day without a cnn alert that scares the hell out of me. >> i just want to relax and watch the grammys. nobody has ever said that. >> all right. grammys, by the way, tonight, we will see if any of those hollywood celebrities have any comments about the president. for now it's snl really going for broke this season against them. >> brian stelter, thank you so
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much. be sure and catch brian on "reliable sources" today at 11:00 a.m. eastern right here on cnn. we'll be right back. helps ease fibromyalgia pain. he also prescribed lyrica. fibromyalgia is thought to be the result of overactive nerves. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. for some, lyrica can significantly relieve fibromyalgia pain and improve function, so i feel better. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. with less pain, i can be more active. ask your doctor about lyrica.
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kevin durant makes his long-awaited return to oklahoma city, but this time he's on the
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warriors. >> many fans bringing out signs and wearing shirts to voice their displeasure with their former superstar, and they now call durant, cupcake, and in basketball terms, cupcake means you are soft. so along with plenty of boos, fans were chanting cupcake at durant at this game, and durant and westbrook do not speak anymore, and they did have an exchange, i'm coming, as a time-out is called and things getting later in the quarter, and exchanging words. westbrook, he scored 47 points in this one, but durant would get the last laugh as the warriors won easily 130-114. and green and steph curry both wore cupcake shirts in their
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postgame interviews. and then a three. look at shaq knocking it down. in case you were wondering, shaq attempted zero three-pointers in college basketball. here, check out the place going nuts, just priceless, and runs over and gives the cheerleaders hugs, and this is going viral. >> as it should. >> you are right. so cool to see that kind of thing going. >> love it. >> thank you. >> have a good one. thank you so much for starting your morning with us. >> we have more coming up in the next hour of your "new day." a quick break first, and we'll be back.
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as after a dvt blood clot,ital i sure had a lot to think about. what about the people i care about? ...including this little girl. and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i asked my doctor. and he recommended eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. yes, eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. both made me turn around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve
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or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily ...and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis the right treatment for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you.
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welcome to 7:00 on a sunday. we're go grateful to see you. i am christi paul. >> i am victor blackwell. good morning to you. we begin with north korea test firing another ballistic missile. >> south korea official say north korea fired an intermediate range missile and it was launched from a province in the northwestern part of the country, and this is a missile that traveled 300 miles before it crashed into the sea of

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