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with up to 8 hours of 4g wireless network backup. at&t, no way. we offer 35 voice features and solutions that grow with your business. at&t, not so much. we give you 75 mbps for $59.95. that's more speed than at&t's comparable bundle, for less. call today. in a march for their lives, hundreds of thousands of people, rallied around the world in solidarity, to protect children, not guns. plus, the brexit campaign is accused of breaking campaign rules. and the u.s. commander who has access to nuclear codes
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warns north cray, the u.korea, for anything. we want to welcome our viewers here in the united states and around the world, i'm george howell. >> i'm natalie allen. newsroom starts right now. in thunderous, standing-room-only rally led by teenagers. hundreds of thousands of demonstrators marched for their lives on saturday, a show of force standing with the stoneman douglas high school students in florida who survived a mass shooting on valentine's day, whether a shooter opened fire at their school, killing 17 students and teachers. >> it's not just that moment
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making up about thinking movement, in california, in florida, after state in between, people heard students rallying cries. they participated in their own marches. portland, oregon there, look at the streets filled with people. boston, look at these big crowds that showed up. people gathered in hopes that they, too, can say never again. ryan nobles highlights some of the most powerful marches around the united states. >> reporter: on a day filled with loud cries, powerful songs and energizing speeches. >> we are not here for bread crumbs. we are here for real change. >> reporter: it may have been the sound of silence that best captured the moment. emma gonzalez, a young woman who has become one of the most recognized faces of the movement born out of the massacre that
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took place in the halls of her school, stood stonefaced and silent. >> six minutes and about 20 seconds. and a little over six minutes, 17 of our friends were taken from us. >> reporter: gonzalez and a cadre of her fellow students took their pain and turned it into action that culminated in marches and rallies all over the world, from boston to chicago. >> the violence that they experience every day. >> reporter: denver. to los angeles. and back to parkland, florida, where the shooting took place. while they may have only had each other when those shots rang out, they had the support of hundreds of thousands. including celebrities. >> one of my best friends was killed in gun violence, right around here. so it's important to me. >> reporter: pop stars.
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and even the granddaughter of a civil rights icon. >> i have a dream that enough is enough. [cheers and applause] to make this a gun-free world, period. >> reporter: their hope is to do much more than march. they want action, specifically strict irgun loss, somethi stricter gun laws. and the debate over guns remains divisive. counter rallies were held in boston and salt lake city, but these students are hoping though movement is different, that common ground will be reached. and they are warning their leaders they won't be giving up until they get the change they are marching for. for many, this fall will be the first time they will be able to participate in an election. and many are running to the ballot boxes. many of the parkland students
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said before this tragedy, they never even thought about politics. now it's become one of their most important priorities. ryan noeb ryan nobles, washington. >> he mentioned emma gonzalez, the power of her silence. >> before her four minutes of silence, she described the effects of gun violence and recited the classmates that were killed. >> everyone who's been touched by the cold violence of gun violence understands. for moms, in the afternoon su, u moments were spent not knowing. no one could believe that there were bodies in that building waiting to be identified for over a day. no one knew that the people who are missing had stopped breathing long before any of us had known that a code red had been called.
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none could comprehend the devastating aftermath or how far it would reach or where it would go. for those who still can't kplee hend because they refuse to, i tell you where it went, right into the ground, six figeet dee. fight for your lives before it's someone else's job. >> and gonzalez has been a beacon to this movement. gun violence isn't exclusive to school shootings or mass shootings, but those tragedies are giving students perspective of how much violence other people across the country see. >> the school attack in florida, and here's what was said to van jones. >> when i went to chicago, what kind of hit me was, the feeling i was getting from our perspective, it broke our
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hearts. because this was something that none of us had ever imagined possible to happen to us. and it's been happening to them every single day for their whole lives. and everyone in that city all over the world. and for them, it was kind of like, four them, r them, it was like, oh, my god, this happens other places too, not just us. we got to relate on a certain level, and it brought us together. i look at these guys as my friends now, not just people. >> i have to tell you, having the correspondent for cnn in chicago, we talk about these school sheetinootings when they happen, but to cover these stories day after day after day after day, to see the families, the pain, yes, it is fair to say that, you know, it is something that chicago has been dealing with, fighting for a long time. >> lot of cities have, for
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certain. >> people all around the world marched in solidarity with gun victims, rallies were held in every continent, expect antarctica. people laid out in a moment of silence for the school shooting victims. >> protesters in paris gathered near the eiffel tower. and hong kong held a march sunday where people held signs that said fear have no place in school. and protect kids not guns. >> the u.s. president was not in washington, d.c. in fact, he was at his resort in florida. as the thousands of demonstrators filled the streets steps from the white house, he has been silent about the event. >> the white house did release a statement saying keeping our children safe is a top priority ofpresident's, which is why
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he pushed the fix nics bill. >> a video slammed the event. >> here's part of the message. the nra said this. gun-hating billionaires and hollywood elites are manipulating and exploiting children as part of their plan to destroy the second amendment and strip us of our right to defend ourselves and our loved ones. despite that harsh rhetoric, some nra supporters in congress say curbing gun violence in the oust u.s. is possible. one of them is brian mast from florida. >> he was asked if he would be willing to change gun laws as a member of the nra. here's his response. >> if you say anything about what goes on with the possession of a firearm you're absolutely against the second amendment, and that's not true. we've been on a line since the
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days of al capone. you can't purchase off the shelf a fully automatic shotgun. you can't buy a silencer, suppresser, whatever somebody wants to call it. that's been regulated for a long time of then you see the governor of florida saying hey, we're going to change the age. most people acknowledge that there is a line somewhere, and that's where we have to debate, is where does that line belong? what should you be able to purchase off the rack? what should you not be able to purchase off the rack. having that debate doesn't mean you're against the second amendment. >> let's bring in leslie be bengmurray. one major issue that's been brought to light, raising the minimum age to buy firearms. in florida, the republican governor of that state actually followed through on the promise,
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going against the nra, and it's something that the u.s. president has also tweeted about and talked about as well. let's listen. >> year' goiwe're going to work getting the age up to 21 instead of 18, 19. if you can buy the weapon used in this horrible shooting at 18, it doesn't make sense. >> those are his words. we have seen him back away from those comments, citing a lack of political support. is he caving to the nra? >> we've seen the president at different points in time indicating that i would support a range of gun control measures and then back off because of the pressure coming from the nra, the feeling that he won't get this through congress. and he's vacillated like he has on number of dimensions. but this movement is really
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quite remarkable. across the world, that's quite remarkable. the rest of the world, certainly, the rest of the democratic world does not experience gun violence in the way that the united states does. nonetheless, on every single continent, people took to the streets in response to a mobilization that's been student led. the president backing off these issues will be increasingly difficult not just for the president but for members of congress as we approach the midterm elections. i think the goal of these student-led protests is to really sustain the passion around this issue of gun violence. remember that a majority of americans want more gun control. they just don't tend to vote on this issue. the people who vote on this issue are people who don't want to see increased restrictions. others care, but it tends not to be the number one issue. so the passion, the mobilization, i think, is really
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the mechanism that could change things if this kind of mobilization is sustained, and it's really been very extraordinary to watch. again, as i said, not just in the united states, but across the world. and when the rest of the world looks back at america, they're genuine genuinely puzzled. it's very difficult to understand why there aren't greater restrictions on the access to guns. >> it is important to note that there is some progress to report on the federal level, if we could take a look here. we have a break down of what's happened at the justice department, establishing rules regarding bump stocks. the trump administration establishing a school safety commission, congress passing a spending package to strengthen background checks and the house passing a bill to fund more security at schools. but leslie, given what we have seen on the streets in washington, d.c., atlanta, boston, portland, around the world, is this going to be
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enough for people demanding more? >> i think what the, what people are looking for now, what students are looking for, what the people who are protesting on the streets are looking for is a ban on assault weapons, to close the loopholes on and to have universal background checks, so it's the beginning, but it's not enough. they're looking for a great deal more. and so the question is whether, you know, some of those things, bump stocks are really obvious and much easier to achieve. so the question now is whether there will be the sustained pressure, and when people go to the polls at the midterm elections, whether this will be an issue that leads to congress men thinking i have differently about the measures that they're willing to support. and remember that there were changes, not only federal changes but in the state of florida there were changes. but nonetheless, there was not a vote to ban assault weapons.
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very supporting for the students, but they haven't let it deflate their energy. i think we will see another school walkout on april 20th. and this movement i think is very much likely to continue. remember that youth voters, those youth under 18 who are not yet eligible to voigt, 53% of them would like to sigh moee mo control, as they get to be voters, the movement lo hawill a lot of energy. they are critical to this movement. even the term bump stocks has a heinous ring to it. coming up, we'll show you more of the rallies around the world.
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breaking news in the ball tampering scandal rocking australian cricket. the captain and vice captain of the national team have agreed to step down. steve smith has admitted to knowing about the plan to alter the ball. >> this comes after fielder cameron bancroft was caught with yellow tape. both have apologized. here's bancroft apologizing how it all went down. we don't have that sound bite right now. but we'll continue to follow
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that story. a former volunteer is accusing the official brexit campaign of breaking campaign finance rules ahead of the referendum. the whistle blower tells britain's channel 4 that vote leave use add separate campaign group to deliberately spend more than the authorized campaign limit. >> in effect, they used be-leave by two-thirds of a million pounds they overspent. and the impact of that, the difference between, the difference between leave winning over remain with a few percentage points, you know, and that almost two-thirds of a million pounds makes all the difference, and it wasn't legal. >> following the money, the majority of that money allegedly went to aiq, that firm has been linked to cambridge analytica.
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that group is accused of misusing facebook data to target voters. >> people have been lied to. and that the referendum wasn't legitimate. now we're going on a path to brexit, based on lies. based on cheating. based on what is essentially a scam. and what does that mean for our democratic process? the decision i agree with. leaving the european union i agree with. but i don't agree with losing what it means to be british in that process. >> a lawyer with vote leave says it has twice been cleared on this matter, but the group will investigate the new allegation. and the canadian data firm that george just mentioned, aggregate iq says it has never entered into a contract with cambridge analytica. >> in the meantime, the then national organizer for vote
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leave, steven parkinson denying all the allegations. he is now the political secretary for the prime minister, theresa may. he told channel 4 this. i had no responsibility for digital campaigning or donations on the vote leave campaign. and i'm confident that i stayed within the law and strict spending rules at all times. now parkinson is also being criticized for revealing in his statement that he had a relationship with the whistle blower. >> earlier, our colleague, cyril vanier spoke with a reporter who brought this to light, michael crick. >> reporter: he is in a very senior position in downing street, working with theresa may. and he said he could only defend himself that the man you saw just there, and he, were in a gay relationship for about 18 months during and after the
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referendum campaign. mr. sanni says it's terrible that mr. parkinson has outed him this way. that his family didn't know about him being gay. it's endangered some of his family in pakistan, where he originates from. so you have that argument going on -- >> do you feel mr. parkinson did that on purpose? >> well, mr. parkinson says he can only defend himself by explaining this relationship. but it certainly muddies the water here. it raises the question as to whether mr. sanni was motivated by feelings other than his professed horror at what the vote leave campaign in his opinion did. i mean, it is interesting that mr. sanni and two other whistle blower whose have also come forward last week and given evidence to the electoral commission are all still supporters of britain leaving the european union. >> yeah, and he explains that in the interview that we did, the
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part of the interview we just showed. he says he doesn't, he still thinks the rules need to be followed, and they weren't in this particular instance. can any of this have an impact on the actual result of the referendum? >> i don't think so. there's no way in which the electoral commission, which governs elections in this country can overturn the results on the basis of this. all they can do, really, is fine vote leave. >> are they going to investigate this? >> they have been investigating it for more than a year now. they've now got a whole pile more evidence, lots and lots of documents, the testimony of these whistle blowers. they could refer matters to the police. there could be a prosecution, but it's not going to overturn the referendum result. but what it does do is help the other side say, well, vote leave cheated. the result was close. it was a fraud. and so it gives, it helps the other side claim the moral high ground in the arguments, which, of course, are continuing over
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how britain should leave the european union or whether there should be a second referendum. >> that's interesting, because those voices, there are voices that want a second rid of on leaving the eu or that would even want to cancel the first referendum. and so you're telling us, you feel this would embolden those voices. >> it will. it will help them say the other side cheated and here you have people who worked for the other side who still support the principle on the other side who are coming forward saying there was cheating. i don't think, actually, this is going to stop brexit going ahead in a year's time. >> all right, now, let's talk about the situation with the weather. >> yes, heavy rain, flooding can be a nightmare for the southern united states, derek's on this one for us. >> you know, it's spring season, and the mississippi river often floods, but this particular season has been difficult for louisiana and mississippi. and we're monitoring that for
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the increased flooding threat this week. and it could get nasty out there. look what's happening across the deep south. we're getting an area of high pressure that will shift to the east. what that does with its clockwise flow, it's going to draw in the gulf of mex couldic moisture. we have several rivers that are at major or moderate flood stage right along the mississippi. can you see that shading in green indicating the flood warnings in effect. taking you through the rest of the workweek, we're talking sunday right through friday. and you can see the abundant amount of rainfall that will impact this region from atlanta, nashville, to little rock, houston and new orleans. we could experience upwards of six, eight additional inches of rainfall on top of what's already fallen across this area. on top of that, we have the potential for severe storms today, and once again tomorrow
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to start off the workweek. first we focus in on central texas and southern oklahoma. damaging winds, large hail, isolated tornados. that get extended into oklahoma city for the day monday. open fires are not allowed within that region. so lots of weather to talk about across the u.s. main threat, though, the flooding across the mississippi. >> thank you. still ahead, coming, we la have more from the students, the students who are not staying sigh le silent about gun violence, and they are not mincing words. >> to leaders, skeptics and cynics who told us to sit down and stay silent, wait your turn, welcome to the revolution. olay regenerist shatters the competition. hydrating skin better than prestige creams
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comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. well, coast-to-coast, across the united states and live around the world this hour, you're watching "cnn newsroom." i'm george howell. >> i'm natalie allen. our top story this hour, huge crowds to rally against gun violence in the united states. survivors of last month's gun violence in florida rallied. >> a former volunteer is accusing the brexit campaign of breaking campaign spending
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rules, spending more than authorized in the campaign limit. much of the money allegedly went to a canadian data firm which has been linked to cambridge analytica. in egypt, the director of security in alexandria has survived an assassination attempt. it killed two police office oer officers, wounding several others. it comes ahead of the presidential election. and take a look there in paris, more than 180 countries participated in this year. a new report from the world wildlife fund predicts plastic waste in the uk alone will rise by 20%. >> that's just the united ki
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kingdom. plastic waste is all over our oceans. the scene on saturday looked like this. hundreds of thousands of people marching for their lives, demanding stricter gun laws in the u.s. and vowing to hold lawmakers accountable at the ballot box. survivors of the florida shooting last month are now activists, saying never again. >> today we take to the streets in over 800 marches across the globe and demand common sense gun laws. today is the beginning of a bright new future for this country. >> we cannot keep america great if we cannot keep america safe. [cheers and applause] and 96 deaths by firearms every day is not what i would call great. >> it is time to fight for our lives. and i say there's only one way to do that. we need to rev up society.
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we need to rev up the engines. >> including jennifer hudson, she snoknows first hand about g violence. she delivered a powerful performance. ♪ >> and then there's the florida school shooting survivor, emma gonzalez, she closed the rally out. she was at the podium for some six minutes, six minutes, 20 seconds, for just over four of them, stood there completely silent, measuring the length of time that it took for the gunman to kill 17 people at her school. here's part of the impassioned speech that she had.
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>> everyone who has been touched bit cold grip of gun violence understands. for us, long, tearful, chaotic hours in the scorching afternoon sun were spent not knowing. no one understood the extent of what had happened. no one could believe that there were bodies in that building waiting to be identified for over a day. no one knew that the people who were missing had stopped breathing long before any of us had even meknown that a code re had been called. >> students from other schools took to the stage, including 11-year-old naomi wadler. >> she had a message, that black women are part of the gun violence conversation. >> i am here today to represent cortland harrington, to represent tianna thompson, who at just 16 was shot dead in her home here in washington, d.c.
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i am here today to acknowledge and represent the african-american girls whose stories don't make the front page of every national newspaper. >> for many of the people, too many of the people who spent marching in the streets, this is personal, a fight against gun dangers. >> you heard from that little girl, certainly personal. but those people are coming to the the, together to offer comfort and support. >> reporter: moments known by a single headline brought them together. tucson, orlando, clack mass, virginia tech. these survivors and victims' relatives, they came to embrace the students of park hanland.
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>> i hope at that the signs that we're carrying that we support them, that we're survivors, that they know that there is light at the end of the tunnel. >> reporter: pat may survived a shooting that almost killed gabby giffords. six died that day, 13 wounded. she wrestled away a magazine of bullets at gunman tried to reload. and she listens to the parkland students on stage. she's emboldened to pass the torch to the next generation. >> the kids have done more than we have in years and years. so let's let them take the lead. let's stand back and catch them when they fall or ask them what they need and give them what they need. >> reporter: each year, this group grows. the tragedies haven't stopped. heather guz is new. she survived the las vegas
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ambush. here she's in a crowd, bonded by tragedy. >> you just say oh, i'm from columbine, or orlando? you're sandy hook? it's nice to meet you. like nobody understands what we understand. >> i wish i'd never met any of these people. now that i'm so grad thlad that they're part of my life and my family. >> reporter: jeremy smith, they met this group. her father was an engineering professor, killed in the virginia tech massacre. they had no idea this moment would touch their lives so closely. >> did you guys expect to meet someone like her today? >> since our shooting incident, 11 years now, and we walk by the memorial on the way to class every day of the hokies who died. >> reporter: tragedy turned this
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group into act -- activists. >> you can't not do anything. >> reporter: paul kemp's brother-in-law was killed in the clack mass shooting. he spent years lobbies gun makers and is inspired by the parkland students. >> they have the benefit of youth and being invincible and not listening to people who tell them they can't do that. and they've been doing that, and i love it. >> reporter: it's the children they say who are supposed to learn and find inspiration from their elders. >> the student have gotten the world to kind of stand up and take notice. >> reporter: but here it's the wise and experienced leaning on the young. >> when is this going to stop? this, i'm hoping is going to be
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the beginning, this is going to be the beginning of the end. >> reporter: ed lavandera, washington. >> in 2016, more than 38,000 u.s. citizens died from guns. that's a lot. if north korea launches a nuclear missile, these u.s. troops may be the first to know. an exclusive look inside u.s. strategic command. plus four survivors of school violence, the memories can seem like nightmares. how one object has become a t s talisman of what they face. copd makes it hard to breathe.
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conflicts in the middle east are among the many threats being assessed by the u.s. military. there are also dangers posed by countries like iran and north korea. >> the mission of the command isn't just to track threats but to respond to nuclear threat. our pentagon correspondent, barbara starr has more in this pentagon exclusive. >> reporter: if a nuclear-tipped missile is launched anywhere in the world, the u.s. military instantly responds. four star general john heighten is alerted as soon as any missile threat is detected. he comes out of his office, heads down these stairs deep into ground. general heighten, in charge of the u.s. nuclear arsenal, watches along with his highly-disciplined staff 24/7 for all incoming missiles.
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>> i have six screens, they go off, a verbal alarm goes off. people telling me, there's about ten different ways to make sure that the commander knows that it's time to move. >> reporter: ready to advise president trump on how to deter enemies and, if needed, launch an oust attack. cnn was given exclusive access to the general. we were there when an actual missile alert sounded. >> i'm sore eye, we hary, we hau to life for a minute. >> reporter: every time the alarm sounds, highly classified data detailing the threat is sent instantly to general hyten. in this case, it was assessed as not a threat to the u.s. >> our strategic forces are always ready to respond. they are ready this minute, under the ground, in the sea, in the air. and the adversaries of the
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world, including kim jong un have to know that. >> reporter: hyten watches carefully. your gut tells you he's kept building. >> well, i'm confident that he didn't stop building things when he stopped launching things. now i can't go into the intelligence, but i've worked with rockets a long time. i know how long they take to build. >> reporter: strategic command is also keeping a close eye on vladimir putin's claim of new high-speed russian intercontinental attack weapons. >> we watch very closely. so nothing he said surprised me. >> reporter: in a real-world emergency, there is an urgent scramble. >> secretary of state. >> yes, ma'am. >> reporter: cia director? >> cia director. >> reporter: there's nobody you can't? >> no, ma'am. there's nobody i can't get on the phone.
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>> pictures that we see on the screen tell me exactly where it is, how high it is, how fast it is going, where the impact point is, all those issues happen in a small number of minutes. >> reporter: and if a missile is headed for the u.s., that's when this safe, which sits under a desk gets opened. inside, an exact copy of president trump's nuclear launch checklists. >> in this room, there are only two people who can have access it that safe. that is me and adviser. >> reporter: general hyten would be one of the first to now. but for the general and his team, success is never take being the nuclear code out of the safe. because that means deterrence has worked. >> somebody launches a nuclear weapon against us, we launch one
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back. the key is to stop that behavior before it gets bad. >> thank you barbara starr for that report. a grieving father has a message for america. >> we have to deal with this, this terrible illness that we have. and guns are a part of that. >> he's among the thousands who want to stop massacres like the one that killed his son nearly 20 years ago. his words next. why did i want a crest 3d white smile?
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gillette - the best a man can get. demonstrators coming together for gun reforms with the laws in the united states and tell you about an ornament traveled around the united states two decades now. >> it passed from school-to-school but only those with a distinction of enjoying an american tragedy.
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cnn scotts the path of this dream catcher and with this the school shootings in the united states. tom lost his 15-year-old son daniel. >> i don't know how i got through the first few days' even weeks. >> reporter: his work to close the loopholes his son had ironically pointed out years ago. s >> reporter: no one has found the cure. >> we have to deal with this terrible illness that we have.
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and guns are a part of that. >> even if you fixed all of the gun loopholes you might not solve the school shooting problem? >> no. we have to do a number of things to deal with the gun violence problem. we have to compromise and sit down and talk this out and not scream at each other the way we are right now. >> his work continues to this day still wearing his son's sneakers. >> i would like to think that by stepping into his shoes that i'm cog what he would want me to do. >> reporter: column never asked for its newfound notoriety never seek out a dream catcher to ward off bad dreams after a collective nightmare. in march of 2005 column passed it on. >> i saw evil that day. >> reporter: missy dodds was
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teaching when her school teacher shot through a window to get in his class. >> he just started shooting and just went down the line. and when he got to me, there was nothing left in his gun. >> reporter: but in a culture where huntizing op common, the shooting doesn't start much of a discussion about guns. was it about mental health, was it about school safety? >> it was shut down and forget it never happened. >> reporter: but dodds couldn't forget and tried and failed to gins lawmakers to use shatter proof glass in schools which she thinks would have saved lives. >> i went to another school superintendent where a shooting had happened and i was literally blown off. >> reporter: it seemed the country was content to move on without doing much at all when seven years later red lake passed the in connecticut where sandy hook was. a lone gunman used ar-15 to tell
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26 and 20 of them young children. michelle's daughter was the oldest among them. >> my oldest daughter couldn't accept it. it couldn't be. she was sure it was a misunderstanding. >> reporter: a month affidavits a group of sandy hook parents unsuccessful pushed for sweeping gun control legislation. gay pushes schools to be safer but doesn't push gun control. >> if we go in and start mentioning hot button issues or political arguments, we suddenly divide the room in half. >> reporter: when the president says arming teachers is something to look at you don't dismiss him? >> i don't. we should look at everything. we should put everything on the table. we can't ever count on any one thing. >> reporter: there is most one single magic wand that will solve school shootings? >> i believe if there was, we would have found it and waved it by now. >> reporter: after the sandy
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hook shooting that dream catcher went to washington and in south carolina. last week, it was presented to presented to students at marjory stoneman douglas high school but the students kept it in 17 seconds in honor of the 17 victims and gave it back instead of opting to retire the dream catcher with the hope that no other school has to relive their experience. scott mcclain, cnn, denver. >> thank you for watching. i'm natalie allen. >> i'm george howell. the news continues on cnn. affected by gun violence. honor the ones who have lost.
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today. i can't believe it's head and shoulders. i thought it was just for like dandruff. the new formula intensely moisturizes your hair and scalp and keeps you up to 100% flake free. and now, try new head and shoulders conditioner.
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