tv New Day Sunday CNN October 15, 2017 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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room in her office as a shop of sorts. now victims can come in and take what they need at no cost. >> love it.now victims can comee what they need at no cost. >> love it.sorts. now victims can come in and take what they need at no cost. >> love it. breaking news. ranking democrats asking dhc to investigate contaminated drinking water in puerto rico. >> reporter: great deal of concern about how much residents might have to this water. >> some of the fires that have scorched more than 220,000 acres are finally starting to get under containment. >> i got to get people to understand this is a dangerous event. she actually made it through the worst part of the whole fire. her lungs just kind of gave out. movie mogul harvey weinstein has been kicked out of the film industry's most elite group. >> men have to speak up right alongside women. >> i only met harvey when i was old and harvey goes for young. >> fighting words from former white house strategist steve
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bannon. >> right now, it's a season of war against a gop establishment. nobody can run and hide on this one. these folks are coming for you. >> announcer: this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. >> good morning. there is a new wildfire in northern california and now thousands of people are being forced to evacuate. >> 39 people have died already. that makes it the deadliest fire in the state's history. more than 200 people are still reported missing. and thousands of buildings, including 2,800 homes are gone. >> some families, we have seen it for days now, have suffered devastating losses. one woman says her 14-year-old nephew died as he tried to escape with his family. his parents, that boy's parents just couldn't take it. >> i wish i had hugged him a lot more times!
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we had no thought in our minds that they would be hurt by this fire. we thought they were just coming down the mountain. when i got the call about kyle, i couldn't stand. i fell to my knees and i just said, oh, no! oh, no! i can't imagine waking up to worse news that my sister is going to wake up to. >> she says her sister is going to wake up to that news because the mother and father had been sedated. let's go to ryan young now standingrosa, california. the fires have decimated that community, ryan. >> reporter: they have. listening to that sound, it's amazing. it's heartbreaking to hear that. we have talked to so many people who have been upset by this fire because the fact they don't know what happened to their neighbors. we are standing in a neighborhood that, for the most part, is gone. we have been mentioning that over and over that is the scary part.
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200 people are still missing so we know at some point they will take cadaver dogs in the neighborhood to see if they can find some of the missing people so disaster is far from over. step out of the way here. in the distance there, there is a fire near the oakmont neighborhood and we know that some of these fires have combined. what a challenge for firefighters when you're dealing with mother nature in this way. the wind really spreading in through the mountainous terrain. it's hard. you can't go out with a hose and fight this fire. it is moving pretty quickly. sometimes over the trees. coming back down this direction, you can see a house that we are just kind of standing in front of. i can't imagine the views this house used to have but this hasships dozens of time over. we know 20,000 people have evacuated. yesterday they were giving another evacuation order. we met another woman who not only survived the las vegas shooting but then came home and lost the place where she was living to this fire. listen to what she had to say about her survival story.
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>> i'm not familiar with people shooting at me and that -- so that shook me up quite a bit. i was kind of a mess that week. and then this. but then once this happened, it was like, oh, come on. i mean, really? this has got to -- something has got to stop. i can't take much more. let's put it that way. i feel very lucky because i came out of both of them, you know? i made it out of the vegas shooting. i'm still here. i made it out of this. >> clearly not everyone made it out. >> reporter: we are pointing out camera toward this garage and we see this play out over and over. so many cars stuck in that rubble. you have to wonder, did everyone make it out? did they take one car? how did people find out? when you know some of these
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fires were moving more than a football field every three to four seconds so you can understand that you definitely have to go through some of these homes and figure out what happened. the disaster continues and they need a lot of help here. back to you. >> ryan young for us there in santa rosa, california. thank you. former white house chief strategist has now declared war against the president's party. a fiery speech we heard from steve bannon given to conservative activists yesterday. he aimed at republicans in congress who he say are hindering the president's agenda. who is he calling out? >> reporter: good morning. steve ban none wnon was vocal a aggressively going after congressmen who elbow have failed president trump, including the senate majority leader mitch mcconnell, at one point comparing mcconnell to julius cesar saying capitol hill was the ides of march and he
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eluded to finding brutes who stabs julius cesar in the back in the play killing him. bannon is recruiting conservative candidates to run against gop establishment incumbents. he is also building a fund-raising network to go after these congressmen. he sees it as a war. listen to more of what he said. >> this is not my war. this is our war. you didn't start it. the establishment started it. but i will tell you one thing, you all are going to finish it. >> reporter: that vow that steve bannon made shortly after leaving the white house that he was going to go full force after all of the president's opponents even within his own party is certainly a vow that he is keeping. one last note. he also predicted a landslide victory for president trump in
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2020 saying that trump would take more than 400 electoral votes in his past four years. >> he is saying the president had 30% chance of completing his term. josh rogen is with us now. josh, how solid of a gauge is there bannon's influence? >> well, i think it's less than what bannon would have you believe it is but more than nothing. i mean, this is bannon being bannon. he has been at war with gop establishment for years before he was donald trump's campaign manager while during the campaign, while he was in the white house and now after his white house tenure. so this is a lot of more of the same from ban op. what we look at here is what is the best-case scenario for him? he is not going to take over the republican party. he is going to elect a few more anti-establishment senators who are going to make mitchell mcconnell's life more difficult
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and in the meantime, gain resources from the great republican effort to fight the democrats in the next election. so i think we can't discount what bannon is saying. i think he has got a lot of influence and he has got a lot of money and a lot of organizational skills. but in the end, this is a continuation of an ongoing internal civil war within the republican party that didn't start with him and won't end with him. >> let's listen to more of what he said yesterday. >> up on capitol hill, because i've been getting calls. it's like before the ides of march, right? this is an analogy or metaphor. or whatever you want to call it. they are wanting to find out who is going to be brutes to your julius cesar. yeah, mitch, the donors are not happy. they have all left you. we have gut your oxygen off, mitch, okay? >> fair to pin the blame solely on the majority leader?
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the president is sitting in the president's seat. >> the president is julius cesar, not mitchell mcconnell. i think basically what bannon is pushing here is half true and half not true. it's very true that mitchell mcconnell is unpopular and it's true running against him is a way to get candidates elected. it's not true that donors have cut off mitchell mcconnell. the republican establishment is still a very strong political machine, okay? and that machine will do what it needs to do to make sure that the bannon candidates don't succeed as much as bannon wants them to. they will both pour reresourcso into this fight. both will win some. in the end you're going to have sort of a fight before the fight and then, you know, they will both head no the general election basically where we are now. >> all right. josh rogen, always appreciate your perspective. >> any time. today on "state of the union" with jake tapper, secretary of state rex tillerson and republican senator susan
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collins will be on the show. that is "state of the union" with jake tapper at noon eastern on cnn. harvey weinstein is kicked out of one of the most elite clubs in hollywood and now a-list celebrities and "saturday night live" are taking on this disgraced movie mogul. nfl owners are meeting this week to potentially crack down on players who knoll during the national anthem. the issue -- should protests be left off the field some a former nfl player weighs in on a potential new rules that would force players to stand. more renewable and clean energy resources because there are limits to the amount of fossil fuels that we can burn. since 1925, we have depended on diesel generators, burning approximately a million gallons of diesel fuel a year. our mission is to make off-shore wind one of the principle new sources of energy. not every bank is willing to get involved in a "first of its kind" project. citi saw the promise of clean energy
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even a swing set standoff. and we covered it, july first, twenty-fifteen. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ nfl owners meeting this week and what they want to discuss, obviously, is the policy around the protests we have been seeing. >> this comes after several players began kneeling during the national anthem to protest police brutal toward people of color. president trump is calling for the nfl to force the players to stand. >> frankly, the nfl suspended
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him for one game and he would have never done it again. they could have then suspended him for two games and they could have suspended him if he did it a third time for the season and you would never have had a problem. but i will tell you, you cannot disrespect our country, our flag, our anthem. you cannot do that. >> nfl commissioner roger goodell stresses that the league has no plans to mandate players to stand for the national anthem. the league and players association say that the agenda is on how to make progress on the important social issues the players have been speaking about. >> a german soccer team following in the foot steps of the nfl. players took a knee before their game yesterday in solidarity with colin kaepernick and other nfl players. the team said it did it, quote, for an open-minded team and saying they stand for tolerance and social ability. >> mark lemont hill, thank you for joining us.
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we are trying to get ben hill to join us but technical challenges. the commissioner has said that he is coming to this meeting with a possible solution that is he going to present the team owners and the players association. i wonder, first, what you make of the concept that there is a solution to peaceful protest? he is trying to go to them to get off their knees during the national anthem or them to abandon the issue during games? what do you think of that? >> what he is trying to do is stop this controversy. he is worried that the controversy is causing people to stay away from the games. i, for example, don't watch nfl games until this issue is resolved and hopefully until colin kaepernick is back on the field that many people who feel that way. i don't think he cares so much about protests as he does the bottom line. is there a long tradition of people trying to co-op to protest. american universities are one of the hotbeds of protest and resistance. students all over the country whether you're on the left or right, they protest on campuses
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and oftentimes campuses what they try to do is give students now a protest area. or you can go over to that square and protest or this room and protest because they don't want them taking over the student union or the president's office so they try to co-op the resistance but protest is about disruption. if you give somebody a protest area it doesn't matter. if they tell players where or how to take a knee they give them like a designated knee taking area it defeats the purpose. >> let me read what we got from the cowboys owner jerry jones. if we can put that up on the screen. he says the following. is he right in any way here? >> not at all. if we weren't tag knees, if we
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weren't talking about the national anthem protest we would not talk about police brutal it's. it's this doesn't take away from our substantiveness. if anything is highlights our substance and exactly why we are doing it. now if his argument is if we keep doing this and engaging in the ritual and don't do anything else about it, the means has become the end. yeah, he would be right about that. that what the protest is about. the protest is get the league to make a different choice, to get america to pay attention and for us to come up with concrete material solutions to a very big problem. that is where we need to go next and where the nfl is going to have to do something serious to show it takes this issue seriously and all of america takes this issue seriously. >> ben, what do you make of this idea there is a solution that can be proposed by the commissioner at this meeting this week? >> well, i do think they need a solution. i think the nfl needs to go back
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to doing what specifically they do, which is to play football and entertain their fans. i think that is what causing problems in the nfl now is this about the political protest or is this actually specifically about, you know, going out there and playing football? i think the nfl has basically completely overlooked the negative impact of what this is going to be for their fans. and there is a lot of people that say, look, you have the right to protest. you have the right to protest and your involvement in the community but do you have a right to go out there and go out there and disrespect this country every single weekend and expect the fan base to stay there? i don't think the american people are going to continue to stand by the nfl if they continue to do this week in and week out and instead of doing this outside of a normal day. most people don't have the right to go out there at work and have a political protest at their desk at work. why does the nfl not have the same exact standards the other
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people do when they got work monday through friday? >> except the vice president who last week went to indianapolis and according to what the president said, himself, he sent him to that game and if was there kneeling, he wanted him to get up and leave and the press pool was told that there is no reason to get out of the van. the vice president won't be here very long. the 49ers, colin kaepernick's team will be playing the redskins today. do you expect to see a vice president, a member of the cabinet go and pull what many call a stunt this week during the game? >> here is a similar point with the president of the united states. their job is always to protect this country, honor this country, and honor those that give the ultimate sacrifice for this country. i don't care if you're republican or democrat, black, white, hispanic, any other color, it doesn't matter what. when you're the president of the united states of america, you never go to a private business and allow the united states of
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america and the men and women who fought for it. i don't look for a stunt for the president or vice president saying i'm not going to be a part of a moment in history that is disrespectful to the united states of america and to the men and women in uniform that protect in service. they have a dutedduty, an obligo stand up. if he walks out of the game the rest of the time this is going on, that is never a stunt when you're the president of the united states of america. that is your job. >> ben, this is reframing this entire conversation as it is a stunt to disrespect members of the military. the kneeling was actually individualed by a former military of the military to colin kaepernick. the original question was -- >> he was wrong, though. >> -- can someone go to -- you said these people who are at work should not be protesting. the vice president went in his official capacity on air force two on the taxpayers' time for a
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stunt in protest. >> he went there to honor -- be clear. it's on the books. went there to honor peyton manning who he knew very well. >> how long did he stay for that? >> we have to wrap here. we could have this conversation for the rest of the show. but, unfortunately, we have to wrap. technical difficulties are challenging us. we will have it again. >> thanks. a lawmaker who is demanding answers from the department of health and human services about people found to be drinking water taken from a hazardous waste site in puerto rico. he is calling for a full-blown investigation. your big idea... will people know it means they'll get the lowest price guaranteed on our rooms by booking direct on choicehotels.com? hey! badda book. badda boom! mr. badda book. badda boom! book now at choicehotels.com want in on the secret take the olay 28 day challenge. millions of real women see results starting day 1. "there is not a friend i have, that will not own this product""
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good to be with you. after a cnn exclusive report from puerto rico, a leading house democrat has asked the department of homeland security to investigate the water situation on the island. cnn reported that workers were distributing water taken from a federally designated hazardous waste site. >> yesterday, cnn reached out to the department of homeland security for comment on congressman benny thompson's request. we did not receive a reply. but according to the epa, consuming this water can have serious health effects including the increasing risk of cancer. here is cnn's ed lavandera. >> reporter: some puerto ricans are so celebrate to find water here on the island that they have started tapping into wells on what is described as a super fund site. an official designation issued by the environmental protection agency. super fund sites exist all over the country and considered some of the most toxic sites and ground areas in the united states. here in puerto rico alone, there is 18 of these designated superfund sites.
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the focus is just on one of them in the town of -- around the town of dorado, puerto rico, west of san juan, the capital here of this island. we were with an epa team as they started to take samples and reports started emerging that people were lining up at some of these wells getting drinking water or water being used for cleaning or other purposes in their hopes homes in the toilet system and that sort of thing. so a great deal of concern about just how much exposure some residents here might have had to this water and there is now testing being done on these water wells to determine if, at all, this water is, indeed toxic. just because the superfund site is around there and toxic chemicals in the ground, epa officials say it doesn't necessarily mean those chemicals have reached the water there. nonetheless, over the course of this next week, they will be testing this water to determine whether or not these wells should be turned off or controlled in some sort of way.
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we have seen long lines of people getting into these water wells, using them either for drinking. some people have told us. or for cleaning purposes around their homes. just kind of goes to show you just how desperate the situation for many people still remains here in puerto rico when it comes to water. epa officials say they are really more concerned about long-term exposure to this water and require residents to drink this water for months, if not years, for them to see the effects of the toxic chemicals in that water. nonetheless, it is still very much a dangerous situation and they are trying to spread the word out there. in the meantime, this does show how desperate the situation is for many people and epa officials are urging these residents to stay away from these water wells around the town of dorado, puerto rico, until these test results are coming back. that work will continue and we are told it will take the better part of this week for a full understanding of exactly what is in that water.
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ed lavandera, cnn, san juan, puerto rico. next, a doctor quits her disaster relief team in puerto rico over what she is calling a gross misuse of taxpayer money. the situation that triggered her resignation. you'll hear that ahead. ♪ when you think of saving money, what comes to mind? your next getaway? connecting with family and friends? a big night out? or maybe your everyday shopping. whatever it is, aarp member advantages can help save you time and money along the way. so when you get there, you can enjoy it all the more. for less. surround yourself with savings at aarpadvantages.com
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matching the resources with the needs remains a major area of concern in puerto rico. the number of people killed there now up to 48. 86% of the island still has no power. hospitals are running low on medicine and supplies. but there are urgent attempts to help. the federal government has sent ten disaster teams of doctors and nurses and paramedics to the island. four mobile hospitals have been set up in a hospital parking lot and the comfort there is on the scene. the hhs assistant secretary for
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preparedness and response is saying puerto rico is receiving comparable relief as the disasters in florida and texas. there is a doctor assisting with disaster relief in puerto rico who has quit her team after seeing medical workers treat themselves to as she quotes it a spa day. apparently a nurse on the team arranged for two nail techs and one hairstylist and massage therapist to come in and have services. each person who participated paid out of pocket from their own money but they were paid for a full day's work on a taxpayers' dime as they were supposed to be assist be patients. this department wrote a letter to the health and human services and saying this is a abuse of taxpayer funds and abuse of conditions she calls abhorrent. hhs responded saying this.
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so let's talk to that doctor who quit. dr. mona canna. i want to be very clear about this. disaster medical assistance team is overseen by hhs. this is not fema which is heavily criticized for a lack of preparedness. to be clear this is not fema. doctor, i know you have traveled the world doing this. you were in haiti after the earthquake there. you were one of the first western doctors on the ground in indonesia after the tsunami. you have seen a lot. take us to this day when you saw this. help us understand what happened and what struck you as wrong. >> certainly. i was treating patients as i always do.
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i was the only team physician left in the two tents that were seeing patients. i went to another tent just adjacent to get some food and styrofoam containers that the hospital was providing for my patients since we would keep patients in the tent for hours at a time. i went to get some food and i i walked in and i was surprised to see a manicurist sitting at a table painting the nails of one of my key members and i didn't know what was happening. >> and we are seeing pictures here. you say you discovered manicurists and pedicurists and massage therapies. we are see people in flip-flops. is this an area that should have been sterile or sanitary if you were treat people? >> when i came back to my own treating tent which is where the pictures were taken of the person in flip-flops, i asked around. i said what is going on over there? i was told that this person who was wearing the flip-flops had made the arrangements for these service providers to come in in
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taxpayer-funded medical tents on taxpayer funded time to provide these services to our team members. the reason she was wearing flip-flops she, herself, had just had a pedicure and was air drying her nails. >> did that cause alarm to you? >> it did cause alarm to me. mind you, this isn't an operating theater so not a sterile per se but we have strict mandated dress code and you see a woman wearing black boots and that is part of our dress code. we do it for a reason. what if a gurney fell over on our toes or run over by the wheels of a gurney? this is for protection and so we have a strict dress code. >> i'm going to lull an el woods moment on you. manis and pedis i know they require clean water. we have been watching these stories for weeks of people who can't get drinking water and who
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are drinking contaminated water. do you know what water was i don't do for these services? >> i did not since i didn't procure the services myself and i didn't stick around long enough. i was so enraged. i didn't stick around long enough to observe the techniq techniques. my suspicion if they were worried about using water that was available to bathe in and wash hands, they may have used bottled water but i can't confirm that. >> i want to get back to the hrk -- hhs statement they removed the person responsible and they sent them hole and inquiry going on. what is your reaction to their response? is that enough for you? >> look. i'm tired of people making excuses. i'm tired of excuses about weinstein and i'm tired of excuses about people who hold positions of stewardship and power in this country being
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given passes, free passes. look. these are people in their 40s, 50s, and 60s. we have been empowered to, by the federal government, to have stewardship of taxpayer funds. we have a mission. we have to be mentally prepared when we go out and physically prepared when when we go out. is there absolutely no excuse. what it a lapse in judgment? no it was premeditated and precalculated and prethought out and i might say done in combination with the commander of the team. sent home? that is an impetus response. >> we have run out of time, doctor, and we thank you for sharing your story bus and your time. >> it breaks my heart for having quit a team i was with 20 years. it breaks my heart. >> does this mean you quit altogether or you just quit this puerto rico project? >> my original intention was to
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quit this particular team that made these calls about allowing these services and perhaps transfer to another team. now having come out and done the things i've done and said the things i've said and made these pictures available, i doubt it will be possible for me to go back to the system. however, no fear. there are thousands of nongovernmental organizations with which i could volunteer my free time to provide services to people who have been through disasters. >> thank you for your service for that, certainly. thank you, again, for reaching out. dr. mona canna, we appreciate it. >> thank you. harvey weinstein, the sgrafed hollywood producer has been kicked out of the academy award of motion pictures and sciences. more than a dozen people have accused him of sexual harassment and sexual assault and even rape. the academy released a statement. quote.
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host muof "reliable sources" brn stelter is here. they say this was far exceeding majority of this vote to excel harvey weinstein. >> they had rules for this but never a vote like this until yesterday. i think it's notable that statement talking about the era of willful comrplicit is over. it was that. hollywood doing soul searching and admitting to nightmares mayors in the past. i talked to one of the reporters of the "the new york times" who dug into wweinstein's behavior. it took months to do and proud it was published. >> one thing i was also really happy about was seeing how much
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respect there was for the women stories and the women who chose to come forward. i think any woman coming forward in that situation, you know, if you're unknown, you have set of fears. like i'm this anonymous person dragged into the media spotlight. if you're well known, you are fears i'll be tabloid fodder for days. it seems to me the world has treated the women who have come forward very respectfully and i'm glad for that. >> we will have more of my interview with kantor today on reliable sources. in the past there have been cases of sexual harassment and assault allegations where the accusers have been shamed. in this case, it's harvey weinstein being shamed. here is an example of that from "snl" last night. "weekend update" had a lot to say about weinstein. >> paem happle has announced it add hundreds of emojis to their
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list including this giving emoji fans the ability to describe what it was like to work for harvey weinstein. weinstein has been accused of multiple counts of sexual assault is reportedly going to europe for sex rehab. somehow, i don't think that is going to help anybody. he doesn't need sex rehab. he needs a specialized facility where there are no women, no contact with the outside world, metal bars, and it's a prison. >> you know, this is a tough spot for a comedian because it's so hard to make jokes about sexual assault. but it's so easy to make jokes about a guy that looks like this! >> there you go. "snl," the late night shows were criticized for not saying more about the weinstein allegations this time last week. and now it seems "snl" is trying to make up for lost time and lots of comments about this ongoing scandal. >> watch "reliable sources."
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11:00 a.m. eastern on cnn with brian stelter. this week's "staying well" takes a look why adults who play more, stay healthier. >> when we were born, we came into the world and we now how to play. play is what kids don't have to be taught. creating something that is so engaging and so interesting, losing track of time, that is the adult version of it. >> we all remember playing kick ball from p.e. when we were in grade school. it brings you back to a little bit of your childhood. i'm a mortgage banker and each day has its own deadlines and time lines that can cause for a stressful day or week and kick ball is a good way to relief that. >> work places people have fun working together they do better work. what you get is work is important and more is better so we don't honor the fun factor. play is great stress management
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tool. your blood pressure goes down. you release dopamine. it allows us to connect better with other people. family systems where people have fun together, they play together, they are healthier family systems. >> being outside, playing with your friends, you kind of forget everything else. you're not thinking about, whatever personal things might be going on in your life. >> i get excited i'm going to see my friends. there is just something about that cohesion i don't think you can create it anywhere else. >> good game. good game. good game. patrick woke up with back pain. but he has work to do. so he took aleve. if he'd taken tylenol, he'd be stopping for more pills right now. only aleve has the strength to stop tough pain for up to 12 hours with just one pill. aleve. all day strong. i love you, droolius caesar, but sometimes you stink.
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it's a warm blanket. it's a bottle of clean water. it's a roof and a bed. it's knowing someone cares. it's feeling safe. it's a today that's better than yesterday. every dollar you can spare helps so much more than you can imagine. please donate now to help people affected by hurricane harvey. your help is urgently needed.
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remembered by friends and family today. >> dustin wright will be laid to rest in his hometown of lions, george. >> the last words i said to my brother were, i love you. last words he said to me, i love you. >> reporter: will wright last spoke to his younger brother dustin on september 24th. dustin's 29th birthday. >> we talked about how things were going. the ups and downs and how he was feeling. talked to him about his girlfriend and his plans when he came home. and where he was going. and some potential moves in his future. >> reporter: ten days later, the future the brother discussed was taken away. army staff sergeant dustin wright was serving his third deployment, a second tour in the northwestern afternoon country niger when the pentagon says his green beret unit was ambushed by isis fighters. the first american combat deaths in niger as the u.s.
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counterterrorism mission there continues to expand. >> it's a war zone. fine don't hear about it on tv. >> reporter: the wright family is not unfamiliar with the harsh reality of war as their family record dates back to 1912. >> we had never lost a member until dustin. 205 years, that's a good run. its been -- it's been great to hear that history and share that history and, you know, if once every 205 years this is the price we pay, then that's what it takes. >> reporter: i don't doubt dustin knew what he signed up for, but what was he ultimately fighting for? >> i think he was fighting for his brothers, his family, his country. ups and downs, good and bad, as the politic current i sway, soldiers stand fast and do their jobs. we're blessed to have men like them. >> reporter: the job in niger for the 3rd special forces group
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is to advise, assist and train local forces. a job that suited dustin's personality and passion. >> it didn't matter if he had known you for a day or his whole life. the man was a seven ant and he loved people. he found a way for him to serve others, to sacrifice and to love people. and do it in some of the worst environments in the world. to his final breath, he was doing that. >> reporter: a lifetime of service, celebrated and mourned, when this humble hero returned home to georgia on saturday. >> i knew my brother didn't want accolades. he didn't need praise and awards or anything else. he did the job not for the president to say, you know, good job. he did it because he loved it and that's what he's born to do. >> reporter: cnn, lyon's, georgia. >> our thoughts and prayers with that family today and our thanks to all who serve. thank you, too, for spending
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your mourning with us been always appreciate it. coming up on "inside politics" with john kirngs a top strategist to the president just dewlar declared war. first "parts unknown." ♪ niger, yeah it took us a long time to get here. i don't know why we were here before, but the city of legos, 20 million people live here. >> legos is the melting pot of nigeria. >> everything is happening here but everything is cramped into a small ecosystem. and it works. that's the amazing thing about it. >> people creating things and actually selling them. >> nobody does any one job in this country. >> they say you have to have three husbajobs.
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president trump targets obamacare, including the money that helps low income americans get coverage. >> one by one it's going to come down and we're going to have great health care in our country. plus, a big threat but stopping short of ripping up iran nuclear deal. >> our participation can be canceled by me as president at any time. >> and what chaos? the chief of staff on leaks, frustrations and presidential tweets. >> that was not sent into -- in to
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