tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN April 1, 2018 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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ming is how i got this far. now more businesses in more places can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. black lives matter! black lives matter. >> protests in the state of california. people calling for justice in the police shooting of an unarmed african-american man. also at this hour the united states and south korea joined their annual military military drills like these. facebook battling a massive data misuse scandal. we will ask an industry expert what impact this might all have. live from cnn world headquarters in atlanta, welcome to our viewers from around the world. i'm george howell.
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>> i'm natalie allen. "cnn newsroom" starts right. now. the war games taking place in the korean peninsula. the united states and south korea are kicking off an annual military exercise. the u.s. says it's similar in scope to drills like this one last year, but will be shorter. >> this show of force comes despite thawing tensions on the peninsula. north korean leader kim jong-un is set to meet with south korean president xi jinping and a meeting between donald trump and kim jong-un could be a month after. >> let's bring in paula hancocks live in seoul, south korea. let's talk about the serious matter at hand, these drills. certainly, shorter than last year. is this seen as a concession with so much diplomacy under
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way? >> george, certainly not the way that the pentagon is selling this. they are saying that it's the same size, it's the same scope of what we saw in previous years. clearly, it's half the duration it usually is. it's lasting about a month and usually we see anything up to two months that is legal this field training exercise, which every single spring, when it starts, does annoy pyeongchang. they see it as a dress rehearsal for invasion and see missile launches from north korea in retaliation to these drills. certainly we are not expecting this time around, though. it's a very different situation. the south korean delegation that met with kim jong-un last month said that they had discussed these drills saying they had to go ahead and that kim jong-un understood that they would be going ahead. he also said as well that he wouldn't have any missile or nuclear tests while these
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negotiations were going on, so it is a very different setting that we are seeing these drills, but they are still significant. 11 1/2,000 u.s. troops and 290,000 south korean troops. the interesting part, though, we haven't heard of any media date at this point. it is very likely that the u.s. military is not going to invite the world's media to film them as they usually do to send a message to the north koreans. they are very visual and north koreans see them as provocative but if they don't see them this time around it's easier for fler to ignore. >> the drills on one hand and cultural exchanges on the other. entertain the significance of kpop in north korea. >> you can't imagine too many north koreans would be very well aware of k-pop but significant. the first time since 2005 have this kind of culture exchange
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and the last time a south korean group went to perform in north korea. there is going to be a concert starting shortly. the timing of it has changed a couple times. we haven't been told why but certainly it's going to be an interesting look at whether or not the north korean leader kim jong-un is going to be there. when the north korean came to the south for the olympics xi jinping watch them performed and he hopes it's a return favor hoping kim jong-un is there. we don't know at this point. it's significant this is even taking place at all. it just shows the momentum that is building around these improving intercontrarinterkore we go to sacramento, unarmed african-american man was shot by police. he was just holding a cell phone.
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>> take a look here at the scene in sacramento, california. late saturday night, the protests started peacefully with demonstrators chanting stephon clark's name. >> they grew intense with a crowd of 100 or more facing off with a line of riot police. protesters also blocked traffic and police are investigating after a sheriff's vehicle struck a woman who was a protester in the street. here is video of that. you saw the moment of impact right there. this from the other side of that car. you can see the panicked reaction of the the other protesters. the woman was taken to the hospital with minor injuries. an eyewitness described what he saw. listen. [ bleep ]. >> a woman was walking in between the two vehicles stopped in front of the deputy' vehicle,
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put up her hand and a stop sign and the vehicle accelerated and struck her. accelerated very fast and struck her violently and she fell to the ground and the deputies then sped off. >> she is expected to be okay. for more now on the protests, here is cnn's ryan young in sacramento. >> reporter: the protests for stephon clark in sacramento have been peaceful up until this point. we felt the most intense interaction between police and protests. you can behind me you can see people are donned their riot gear after interaction between a sheriff's deputy and a protester. . it appears a woman was trying to stop a deputy's car from the protesters and then an impact. not sure what happened. look at the sheriff's deputies and police officers from around the area decide to do come down here and cue in case anything
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happens here. of course, this is after a day full of protests where nothing has happened but now that tenseness has bubbled up and there is definitely a tense moment. not only between protesters but between the police officers who are definitely trying to protect and maintain the peace. >> ryan young there on the story. stephon clark's death is touching a raw nerve in the united states. according to a 2016 study, police shootings are three times more likely to kill african-americans than white women. an independent autopsy showed that clark was shot eight times, six of those bullets entering his back. >> that is significant. a lawyer for his family says that autopsy contradicts the police account that clark was charging toward them. stephon clark's loved ones say it doesn't square how they knew him as a loving man and doting father to two young sons. >> love. love. he was full of love. he was always smiling. he was happy.
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he wanted everyone around him to be loved. he wanted them to be happy. >> all he wanted to be was a good father. he read stories to them. he played games. he sang. he danced. he videotaped everything they did. he was so proud. he was the most proud he has ever been when the boys came into the world. >> well continue to cover developments there in sacramento. the european union is calling for a transparent investigation into the deaths of 17 palestinians and clashes with israeli troops friday. hundreds of palestinians were wounded in the unrest. the gaza border according to u.n. diplomats the united states has blocked the u.n. security council from adopting a similar investigation. >> a woman waving a palestinian flag is seen running back and forth. gunfire is heard and she appears to fall. the palestinian media center
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says she was shot by israeli forces during friday's unrest. in the meantime, the israeli defense forces say their own videos like this show its troops confronted with gunshots, with fire bombs and burning tires as alleged terrorists attempted to, quote, infiltrate israeli territory. the israeli military insists its troops fired only when necessary. >> let's talk more about it with nic robertson who is live for us in jerusalem. any sign what might transpire there today? >> reporter: well, we have heard from israeli official about the eu call for an inquiry and about the secretary-general calling for an inquiry. the united nations, that was blocked there. the defense minister here said that the israeli troops, the idea acted appropriately and properly. the israeli task force point to
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cases where you can see men approaching the fence what app to be weapons and explosives being placed on the fence and explosions at the fence, day time videos of people setting fire to the fence. and what the defense minister mr. lieberman is saying is that these calls for an inquiry are hypocritical. he says why is the united nations or the european union calling for this inquiry when in syria 500,000 people have been killed and not the same outcry and rush for an inquiry there is what he is saying. we also heard from the israeli representative at the united nations saying that the emergency meeting that was caused at the united nations about the killings of the gaza fence on friday was called on the first night of passover and sort of an inappropriate use of this sort of emergency protocols
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at the united nations and not the way the u.n. is supposed to be structured, that was his view. he also said that the palestinian representative at the u.n. who said these were unarmed protesters, that he was wrong in saying that. so what the situation at the moment the european union calling for transparent investigation. the u.n. blocked and calling for an independent inquiry. the palestinians saying that people are being killed, you know, and pointing to what they say is evidence of people being shot in the back. and, you know, from the israeli perspective, a real concern about that fence being breached saying the soldiers are doing what they should be doing and turning down any, you know, calls for an inquiry and really the concern going forward here, that nothing in the dynamic has been changed, that the protests will continue. and israeli officials still fear this push that could lead to
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thousands of people trying to cross that border fence in gaza. >> we know that there will be weeks more of these protests. we only hope that they will be peaceful after what has happened. thank you, nic robertson, for bringing us more information about it. some of the russian diplomats expelled by the u.s. have arrived in russia. they took off from saturday. more than 20 countries now have expelled russian diplomats over the poisoning with a nerve agent of a former spy and his daughter in the uk and russia involves any involvement. the kremlin wants the uk to pull out more diplomatic from russia to the diplomatic missions in both countries are equal in size. now there is another occasion that president trump could make a change. he has placed on hold more than 200 million dollars meant to be used for a syria recovery fund.
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it's supposed to be for restoring power and water services. >> on thursday, president trump said the u.s. will withdrawal from syria, quote, very soon. u.s. officials appthat could le to a power vacuum there. we are learning more about the two soldiers killed in a bomb attack in syria on thursday. one of them was british. the other from the u.s. they were taking part in an operation against isis in the northern city of manbij. >> they say the british sergeant was a natural leader. the pentagon says army master sergeant jonathan dunbar died from his injuries on friday. the 36-year-old was from austin, texas. let's bring in a chief diplomatic correspondent from new york city who is following the story live from the belgium capital of brussels. good to have you with us, steven. let's go back to the situation.
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the latest tweet we understand from the envoy for the global coalition to defeat isis. brett said our fight against isis is not over. compare that to what president trump said just a few days ago about syria. listen. >> we are knocking the hell out of isis and coming out of syria i like, very soon. let the other people take care of now. very soon, very soon, we are coming out. >> you'll remember president trump on the campaign trail said he wouldn't announce his plans. he just did there. there is a meeting set for tuesday to discuss syria and he is withholding funds. steven, what do you make of these contradictions or could there be a change truly changing here? >> no one knows with donald trump. i know he criticized president obama viciously for saying american troops would get out of afghanistan but a date certain, right? that there would be a big
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pull-out and he said this was a very bad idea, that it told america's enemies information they didn't need to know, they could just wait and see. he has now done the sim thiame with syria. the big question is he -- he is elg it the truth, as he sees it, but will that, in fact, be carried out when he says soon, what does he mean? there is a debate, obviously, inside the american government and he often does, in the end, listen to his generals and his generals believe that the fight against isis is not over and that american troops shouldn't leave right now. now, the question of reconstruction aid is a really much more complicated one because, in a way, you have a lot of the countries and troops helping bashar al assad, including russia, hezbollah and iran who are hoping that particularly russia and other countries will come in and
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rebuild syria once they have helped assad obtain control and it's a question of whether the united states wants to do that and the european union is having the same debate. russia would like not to have to spend the money so it seems like the poor syrian population is caught in the middle of what has become a very ugly proxy war. >> reporter: it does seem, you know, between the tweet from mcquirk and the president's own words, you know, officials not on the same page with regards to syria from syria. now i want to tell our viewers with the situation about amazon. stand by, steven. the background president trump is accusing amazon of scamming the u.s. postal service. president trump tweeted the following. he accuses the "the washington post" of being a lobbyist for amazon. amazon pays the same as other bulk shippers. the u.s. postal service says
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it's deals with amazon are mutually beneficial, i should say. while both "the washington post" and amazon have the same owner, jeff bezos, they operate independently. amazon does not have a stake in the newspaper. is this an attack on amazon over policy or, rather, is it an attack on the company's ceo jeff bezos? >> well, first, remember, i work for "the new york times," and so i have great respect for "the washington post." "the washington post" is privatelily owned now by jeff bezos who is the owner of amazon and it's clear that donald trump is using this ownership as a way to attack "the washington post." he has been attacking "the new york times," cnn, "the washington post" and in almost everyone he calls the mainstream media, the fake news media, except perhaps for fox news. this is one more effort for him to undermine the credible
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reporting of "the washington post," as he has tried to undermine the incredible reporting of my newspaper and your network. so this, i think, we should just see as, you know, more push from mr. trump towards his base to try, again, to reduce the credibility of the media outlets who are pursuing him and his administration, who are looking into alleged ties with russia, who are getting leaks from inside the white house about confusion or chaos there. i mean, trump, as you know, he loves press. he loves the press. he just wants it to be his press. when he was in new york, he had a great relationship with the tabloids, with the "new york post" and the "daily news." he loved to manipulate his image
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inside those tabloids. i think he thinks it's frustrating as president, which should be so powerful, he has trouble doing the same. so that is how i see it. the attack on amazon is really an attack on "the washington post." >> well, the name calling aside with the media, you know, we soldier on, for sure. steven err linger, thank you for your time. >> all the best. take care. you were just talking about the president's speech touting his infrastructure goals this week, in rural kentucky, they can't even drink the water and that is not the only place with serious water trouble. we will have a report coming up here. plus, facebook under scrutiny for its handling of your data. we discuss how to keep your data safe with a tech expert. stay with us. by l'oréal. rich, radiant color and it cares for my hair. no color protects better or covers grays better. 100% satisfaction guaranteed. so much care in one little box. excellence créme from l'oréal paris.
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donald trump is promising to focus on america's flnks a infrastructure. rebuilding bridges and waterways and ahead of schedule and under a budget. >> one county in kentucky this is more than a speech topic. cnn medical correspondent sanjay gupta take us to inez, kentucky. >> reporter: the hills of kentucky is part of a legacy and people here in kentucky proudly self-sufficient by it's hard to dare of yourself when you don't have the most basic of necessities. >> so we have blue water here.
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>> reporter: it's left workmen with no other choice. twice a week hope and her daughter drive up this dirt path on the side of a mountain. >> this is what we go through to get water. >> reporter: 20 years ago, she placed this 3 1/2 foot long type into this hillside to take a spring. just to collect clean drinking water because, obviously, no one drinks the water here. do you drink it? >> oh, no. no. no way that he drink it. >> reporter: gary ball is the editor of the local paper and water is has been a front page story for most of his career. what is going on here is in the citizens, the people who live here and deal with this every day, where do they put this on their list of concerns? >> in 2018, in the very place where lbj declared a war on
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poverty 54 years ago, water is on our number one issue. that's hard to imagine. >> reporter: you declare war on poverty. 54 years later you come back there and you can't reliably get clean water. what progress have we made? >> like a third world country here as far as water. we have let our water system dilapidated to the point of collapse. >> reporter: you went how long without water? >> at that time, ten days. >> reporter: so manage, that hope has turned her pool into a make-shift reservoir collecting rain water for even the most basic needs. to wash your clothes, in order to get water to bathe in, this is what you have to do? >> yes. i did this in 17-degree weather and we had to take a chain saw to drill through the ice to get to the water. >> reporter: so you used the chain saw to get to the ice and siphoned the water with your mouth out of this? >> reporter: yes. >> reporter: that's when it's come to? >> yes. >> reporter: go east in north
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carolina, water has been contaminated by coal ash. go west, it's nitrates from fertilizers. in fact, the american society of civil engineers gives the united states drinking water infrastructure a grade of a d. >> i think it's somewhat of a systemic representation of what is happening in oa lot of other places that no one is looking like the proverbial canary in the mine. >> reporter: how does the water get so contaminated here in martin county? it's worth looking how we get our water. here, it comes from the tug fork river where it is then pumped into the crumb reservoir and from there it makes its way to this water treatment center. after getting treated, about 2 million gallons per day of fairli fairly clean water leaves this facility throughout the county but problem is the pipes are also old and cracked. more than 50% of the water leaks
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out before it gets to the people who need it. even worse is what is getting into those pipes and into the water. we reviewed the most recent epa data and the martin county water district has violated federal drinking water standards every quarter between october 2014 and september 2017. in fact, until just a few months ago, the district's nearly 10,000 customers received notices that their water had exceeded federal limits for potentially cancer causing chemicals. >> doc, i got this thing. am i going to get cancer? >> it's a very difficult question. i can't tell them that it's safe or that is isn't safe. >> reporter: dr. long is the quintessential small town doc and pretty sure almost every person in this county has come to see him at some point in his clinic. >> reporter: we sheouldn't be asked in 2018 whether water is
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causing cancer. it shouldn't be a question. >> reporter: eastern kentucky has some of the highest cancer rates in the country and there is plenty of blame. smoking, obesity. but one thing stands out to many who live there -- the water. is it the rain water that you're getting is better than what is coming out of your faucet? >> yeah. >> reporter: on this day, hope is filling up three additional pots of water from her pool. >> it's knots eanot easy but be able to flush the toileted or take a bath. i hope you see this, mr. trump. because i don't know who else to talk about it because they ain't doing a damn plan. >> reporter: experts estimate $1 trillion alone is needed to meet our drinking water demands for the next 25 years. >> central appalachian, at this point, is being left behind. central appalachian certainly voted for president trump, but we always kind of take a wait and see kind of attitude.
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time will tell. >> reporter: is water a basic human right? >> i believe so. i believe so. >> reporter: that's not happening here. >> that's not happening here. >> reporter: dr. sanjay gupta, cnn, inez, kentucky. >> hard to believe that is the united states right there. >> yeah. facebook at the center of the scandal over abuse of its user data. is your information fake? >> we will ask an industry expert about that ahead. stay with us. oh, sorry i'm late, sir.
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points in between, you're watching cnn newsroom. i'm george howell. >> i'm natalie allen. police in sacramento, california, are investigating a sheriff's vehicle that hit and injured a protester. the dems followi. united states kicking off joint military drills with host nation south korea. the annual exercise will be shorter than last year's. it was also delayed for the olympic games. the united states says it will be similar in scope to past drills like these. the eu is calling for a transparent investigation into the deaths of 17 palestinians in clashes with israeli troops friday. hundreds of palestinians were also injured in the unrest at the gaza border. diplomats say the united states has blocked the u.n. skous frec
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council that blocks an amendment. french ambassador is being sued over an incident inside the italian border. they suspect a man was carrying drugs. france say their agents did nothing wrong. here in the united states, facebook is working to counter a crisis in confidence. this after it came to light that the data firm cambridge analytica accessed an improperly stored information from millions of users. >> facebook is now distancing itself from companies that collect information from consumers but many users say it is too little, too late and they have decided to quit facebook. a senior tech correspondents lori segal explains that might be easier said than done. >> reporter: you want to delete your facebook page? before you click that button, are you sure? maybe you're sick of the constant flood of updates from people you never see any more or maybe you just want to keep your
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data more secure? whatever your reasons for closing the proverb i can't believe book might be, boycotting facebook is not as easy as it sounds. close friends and family might still be able to get through to you by other means but you might have a tough time keeping up with other groups or events in your area. think no problems. i'll find other ways to stay in the loop but deleting your facebook might have repercussions on other appears. if you get rid of facebook you have to come up with new unique log ins for each service and you might control over your data but may lose some data in the process. if you created spoke theive account with facebook you have to cancel your subscription and lose your play lists. if you're ready to delete, facebook is more than just facebook.com. the company owns other popular apps like instagram so if you're
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serious about cutting ties you have to delete those two. if you changed your mind about deleting the whole account what data privacy options do you have? start by going neurosettings and changing your sharing preferences. facebook will still own your data but you'll be able to put your limits on what they share with who. if you have your affairs in order and still ready to say good-bye to facebook you can deactivate your account at any time but if you choose to permanently delete it, there is 90 days for facebook to delete that data and there is no going back. dennis is a chief technology officer for blitz metrics. good to have you with us. lori laid is out there. it is complicated to delete facebook. do you see this really making a big impact on this company or can it weather this storm? >> are people leaving united airlines because something bad
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happen? >> some did, yes. they say they will. >> they get a ticket again, right? >> i don't know. >> if you're going to delete facebook because of data privacy you're deleting google and amazon and all of the other online services. good luck trying to survive as a digital citizen and not have facebook log-in. the number of things connect to facebook are just immense. facebook has a ton of data but other guys have more data than this. are you doing it as a backlash there is cambridge analytica where they couldn't cause any issue or a real issue with security? i don't think there is one. >> you're saying we are defenseless? >> we are part of it. you will be assimilated. >> that's impressive, a little bit. >> came ridge analytica denies any wrongdoing. who is at fall here in your sfim estimation? >> folks like cambridge analytica will prey upon the ignorance of people. facebook has allowed to create
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apps like they sold the data to cambridge but nothing they could have done with that data and no way facebook say did you delete that data or not? i know they have the new certificate processes coming out but there is an issue how to protect your data. facebook never sells user data and never allow you to export. i think facebook has been doing the right thing but they have not been educating businesses as consumers and regulators what is really possible. >> they vary it down into facebook how to change the setting and that setting or allow this and not allow that, don't they? >> yeah. consumers are fundamentally not okay with having ads so there are settings you say i don't want to have any of my data shown for targeting. i went into my facebook last week and i found i have 238 targeting tixle ining pixels o. you go to a website and look at red shoes they target that. you can opt out of all of that
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but you can't completely opt out of advertising because facebook is an ad opinion supported network. >> i want to talk about internal memo leaked from facebook. it's adding insult to injury, to say the least from the former executive andrew bosworth that says the following. he says this was taken out of context but a lot of people seeing this saying, wait a minute. >> growth at all costs. that is part of the bro grammer mentality i was a part of in silicon valley a few years ago. when you have an engineer team and rallying the troops we will win at all costs. facebook is trying to shut down the pr and figure out who leaked that. because it looks bad. they can't just say, totally growth at all costs don't matter if people are committing suicide and people's heads are coming
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off and getting shot. they have to denounce but, at the same time they weren't playing the pr angle properly. >> is this pr angle that you mention, facebook is facebook. you know? it's what everyone loves but is there a stain on facebook that is going to have repercussions? >> it is. this is going to be a permanent stain because years ago, it was just us college students that were just sharing funny photos and rating other people. now it's 460 billion dollar company with 40 million dollars in cash. they can't behave like a teenager wearing, you know, flip-flops and hoodies any more. >> right. >> things have changed and people want answers for this. dennis, thank you so much. >> thank you, dennis yu. inlightening. it is easter sunday. pope frances tweeted the faith of christians is born on easter morning. we go live to the vatican ahead. plus. >> i didn't vote for a pastor. i would not want him to be the person that led me in the areas
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of morality or my family or anything like that. that's not what a president is supposed to do. >> she is talking about mr. trump. she voted for him once. will she again in 2020? we take you to trump country to see if voters have changed their perspective on this president. un-stop right there! i'm about to pop a cap of "mmm fresh" in that washer. with unstopables in-wash scent boosters by downy. ah, it's so fresh. and it's going to last from wash to...
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if you'd have told me three years ago... that we'd be downloading in seconds, what used to take... minutes. that guests would compliment our wifi. that we could video conference... and do it like that. (snaps) if you'd have told me that i could afford... a gig-speed. a gig-speed network. it's like 20 times faster than what most people have. i'd of said... i'd of said you're dreaming. dreaming! definitely dreaming. then again, dreaming is how i got this far. now more businesses in more places can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. the latest cnn poll finds president donald trump's approval rating increasing by seven points. that was for march. analysts are out debating why recent scandals seem to not be hurting the president in the polls. >> our miguel marquez spoke to
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voters in the state of missouri where the race for the midterm elections is already heating up. >> reporter: liberty, missouri, in clay county, the kansas city suburbs. trump country. you voted for donald trump? >> i did. >> reporter: pam meadows, a piano teacher, registered voter and person of the faith, says she likes everything from his policies to his leadership style. the clay county economy growing since 2013 going gang busters now. today, jobs are plentiful. unemployment less than 4%. >> i see the economy is turned around and i see he is definitely a straight shooter and what we see is what we get. >> reporter: even adult actress stormy daniels alleging a trump with president trump in 2006 and claim she was harassed by those loyal to the president doesn't shake her faith. >> i didn't vote for a pastor. i would not want him to be the person that led me in the areas
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of morality or my family or anything like that. that is not what a president is supposed to do. >> reporter: missouri penitentiary went big for president trump in 2016 beating hillary clinton by 19 points. his support may be narrowing. an approval among missouri voters at 47% last year, those d disapproving, 48%. >> i think he demonstrates a lack of awareness of the way that democratic politics works. >> reporter: 25-year-old lindsey initially registered republican. today she is an independent who voted for hillary clinton. is the country going in the right direction? >> i would say no. >> reporter: where is it going? >> towards a place of increasing division. >> reporter: missouri is home to one of the most competitive senate races in the country. >> when she had the chance, she said no. >> reporter: moderate democratic incumbent claire mccaskill in an
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uphill fight. do i approve of the job the president is doing? >> jo. >> this man supported bernie sanders but his dislike of the president is a motivating factor in november. will your dislike of president trump drive to you the polls in december for senator mccaskill? >> yeah. >> reporter: she is a middle of the road democrat? >> yeah. >> reporter: often votes conservatively? >> yes. >> reporter: but you will support had he ever. >> i will support her. >> reporter: even those who support the president now may not have his vote in the future. when 2020 rolls around you will cast your vote for him? >> i can't say that now. i don't know who is running against him. >> reporter: a couple of trends is clear. dislike of the president is driving not only moderate democrats to the polls but the far left who voted for bernie sanders to the polls in
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november. and also those who like the president today, they would consider voting for somebody else in 2020. miguel marquez, cnn, liberty, missouri. on this easter sunday, we want to take you now live to rome where we are seeing the pope make his way in from the crowd. soon, he will deliver his address and that translates as a blessing to rome and the world. we will hear what the pope has to say live from the vatican coming up after this. poor mouth breather. allergies? stuffy nose? can't sleep? take that. a breathe right nasal strip instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right. jardiance is the only type 2 diabetes pill proven to both significantly reduce the chance of dying from a cardiovascular event in adults who have type 2 diabetes and heart disease...
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6x the cleaning power, even in the quick cycle it's got to be tide it is easter country. the important christian holiday that celebrates the rise of jesus. >> the pope has be's words, he people to act in the face of injustice. >> beautiful words as always from pope frances encoringing us on. we will talk with our vatican
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analyst now john allen. happy easter to you, john. and now we have another expectation from this pope. tell us about it. >> well, first of all, happy easter to you, natalie, and to george, on what is, i have to save a fairly lovely and splashed sunny day and still chilly. spring has still not gotten here. pope francis, as you say, is a messag messenger of hope. in his early sunday mass he was underlining this prize of what christians believe happened today. today is about the res recollectionion of cries, him rising from the dead after ten days in the tomb and followers didn't see it coming and pope says that is what god is like. god always surprises us. he says god doesn't know how to
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tell us something without surprising us. the pope made the point quickly those surprises are supposed to get us moving and shake us up and put us into action. i couldn't help but think that is pope francis in miniature, himself. he, too s a figure also capable of surprises and he is always a man on a mission, a man in motion. so that was his message for easter sunday 2018. >> now he delivers his message to the world. we will be listening. john allen for us at the vatican, thanks as always. again, happy easter to you. sorry it's chilly there. the day is april fool's day. you know what happens? >> chilly in rome. snow coming to the united states? ivan is here. >> very sensitive there, john. i think it's lovely. it's not going to snow so there is that but it will in the northeast u.s. my goodness. what a season here. now we are getting into april and it's snowing. it started snowing back in october. what a year it has been.
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it's still snowing. it's exciting. i lived in the northeast for a long time. when you first use the snow blower at the beginning of the season the whole christmas and everybody. no. when you have to use your snow blower in april, it's a big problem and you have to drive along, it's a bigger problem. here are the winter storm warnings at this hour on this april 1 across portions of montana but this thing is going to head off to the east so that it will impact with nebraska and we are expecting several inches of accumulation there and also across the northeast. philly, new york, and even into boston. you don't see the purpose up there for the winter weather advisory yet because we are not as close to the event that will happen mainly for the northeast on monday. very late sunday night. it's already getting going as you saw there across the eastern u.s. it will be moving through kansas, st. louis, louisville, the ohio valley as we call it there and getting into the mid-atlantic. d.c., i think it will be mainly a wet event. thankfully. not the case for new york and boston where several inches of
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accumulation, 2 to 4 inches and higher amounts here where the warnings are posted and localized amounts of 5, 6 inches as well across the northeast. again, this is a quick shot of snow that is happening tonight through the early part of monday so the commute will be impacted and then we will get rid of it. maybe we will get nice weather for next weekend? not in time for easter. temperatures in the 50s and 60s so we will squeeze out some mild temps. we will get the 70s. you see the contrast there? from raleigh to cleveland, 30s to 70s. that cold air will win out eventually and continue to push to the south and east. it's winning out across kansas city there with temperatures only in the 30s. it's nice and warm out west with temperatures in the 60s. i'll leave you with something that doesn't happen very often. we say once in a blue moon? this is the second blue moon of 2018 and has is just a rare thing! this was shot in london. in fact, the second -- the next event where we have two blue moons in one calendar year?
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2037. it's quite something. i hope you get out there. the moon doesn't care about our calendar. it does its things. >> you know what else happens once in a blue moon? satellite falls from space. whatever happened to that? >> it's still up there and hasn't crashed in and we are hoping for it to burn in the time now is late tonight into tomorrow but the upper atmosphere has not -- has been slowing it down a little bit here. we are still expecting and hoping all of it will break down and burn up on re-entry. we are talking about the chinese space lab that is completely lost control and it is going to be crashing down but don't worry. i think we will be okay. perhaps a few pieces down on the ground but unpopulated areas. someone won the possibly. $500 million yesterday so you have a better chance of doing that than getting hit by the satellite. >> thank you for watching "cnn
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newsroom." i'm natalie allen. >> i'm george howell. the news continues here on cnn. "that's not right..." "maybe if i reboot..." "what's with all the popups?" "why does it keep on crashing?" "this is taking forever." "i think it's time for the fixmestick." fixmestick is a plug-in virus removal device. it's the smart, simple, safe way to clean your computer yourself. with fixmestick you don't have to replace your computer. it helps you keep your files, and your privacy. fixmestick reboots your computer from a system on the stick, so that it can remove the malware that got past your antivirus software. it's the smart, simple way to clean an infected computer, with a whole lot going on inside the stick... [computers sound] "alright, this computer's powered down. " "let's reboot from the stick, and start scanning..." fixmestick contains 3 independent scanners, and connects to more in the cloud, for fast and effective detection of the latest threats.
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