tv New Day Sunday CNN April 1, 2018 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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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. ♪ tonight we felt is most tense interaction between police and protesters. >> oh, my god! >> the vehicle accelerated very fast and struck her violently. donald trump has decided that he is going to follow his own instincts. >> trump allies are telling the president he doesn't even need to replace her or even have a chief of staff for that matter. >> in the end, i think president trump will be the boss of this oval office.
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>> the u.s. and south korea kicking off international military exercise as the world waits and see how north korea responds. >> washington is downplaying these annual war games now that president trump plans an historic face-to-face meeting with north korea's leader. ♪ good sunday morning to you. happy easter. i'm victor blackwell. >> i'm diane gallagher in for christi paul. >> witnesses say a woman protesting the shooting death of ste stephon clark was hit by a sheriff's deputy's car and then it drove away. >> a statement is released the collision with the pedestrian, their words here, after protesters began yelling while pounding and and kicking the vehicle's instructor and that vandals, as they describe they, scratched, and dented and
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shattered the vehicle's rear window. >> cnn obtained video of this incident. we warn you some of you may find it disturbing to watch. >> [ bleep ] oh, my gosh! oh, my god! >> what we don't know is from this statement, if the sheriff's office is trying to explain or justify what you just saw in explaining that vandals, as we call them, pounding and kicking the vehicle. we are hoping for some follow-up is the sheriff saying that is why this happened or is this a post hoc helicopterer after their because of? hopefully, we get clarity from the sheriff's office. you see in the video here a woman is carrying a sign and crossing in front of the deputy's car and signaling for it to stop but then the sheriff's deputy's car appears to accelerate and we see it hit her. the woman was taken to a
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hospital. the sheriff's office says with minor injuries. cnn correspondent ryan young is in sacramento with more for us. >> 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 moving through protesters. then there was a hit an an impact between the two. not sure what happened. what we are showing you now. look at the sheriff's deputies and police officers from around the area decided to come down here and cue in case anything 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. as ryan was sort of showing
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you there, police were lined up in their riot gear. 50 to a hundred demonstrators were peacefully protesting. ryan also spoke with one of the witnesses of that collision between the sheriff's deputy's car and a protester. take a listen. >> a woman was walking in between the two vehicles stopped in front of the deputy' vehicle, 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. >> obviously, snrr there are more questions that need to be answered. we are told the investigation into this is ongoing and when we get more details, we will bring them to you. president trump and the first family are spending easter at his florida resort, but when he returns to washington later this afternoon, a familiar face
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and a close confidant will be missing. the president said good-bye to his former communications director hope hicks on thursday. sources tell cnn he might not replace her. president trump is growing more independent and defiant and wants to call his own shots. cnn's abby philips joins us live from florida where the president is this morning. abby? >> reporter: good morning, diane. the president here in florida for the easter weekend where he spent it mostly playing golf and sending a few tweets. once he returns to washington this afternoon, he is going to be in a mood, according to "the washington post," to do exactly what he wants to do. for the last several weeks, there have been a significant number of significant departures in this white house but perhaps the most meaningful is the departure of hope hicks who was a close confidant of the president who has been around him for a very long time and
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who, according to white house aides is a guardrail for him and deciding him along in edition decision making processes. what is left now is a president who doesn't want to slow things down. he doesn't want to seek counsel of aides who have differing opinions. he wants to do exactly what he wants to do. according to "the washington post" in a new report, they have reported that the president is increasingly surrounding himself with people whose view the world just like he does. in the past week, he dined with his former campaign aides corey lewandowski and david bossy. lewandowski was almost banned from the white house by the chief of staff john kelly. there are reports that john kelly is increasingly being sidelined by the president. the president retreating to the residence, meeting with his close confidants and talking to them on the phone and making decisions in that way. we have seen this in important decisions the last several weeks. on tariffs he announced the last week, he wanted to pull out of
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syria, catching his defense department off-guard. this is a president who is eager to move forward exactly the way he wants to. later this morning, we might see the president going to easter services here in mar-a-lago which he and the first lady have done in the past. >> abby phillips there near the president's resort, thank you so much. this morning, the u.s. and south korea kicking off massive military drills off the korean peninsula. the so-called war games typically involves tens of thousands of troops and tanks and bombers and even submarines. it's quite the photo op and ordeal. this year, the exercises are taking on a different tone as the u.s. and south korea hope to avoid upsetting the north korean dictator as they negotiate over nuclear weapons. john kirby is joining me now. admiral kirby, look. the drills will be sure this wee year. four to eight weeks long like in
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previous years and olympics were why they started later but cnn is being told diplomatic developments on the peninsula led to these concessions. is this a positive sign or something that could be detrimental to the military efforts in the pacific? >> i think it's both a positive sign but i don't think at all is detrimental to our military readiness. so it's much more former, not the latter. even at one month, if that is what this ends up being, you still have 23,000 u.s. troops, 300,000 or so south koreans involved in these south korean military. that is sizeable. this is a full spectrum exercise. there will not be aircraft carrier but navy ships and testing air and ground forces as well and it will be pretty robust. i think, clearly, that part of the reason it's a bit scaled down and shortened is to take advantage of this new diplomatic breakthrough we seem to have on the peninsula and this makes sense.
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from the u.s. perspective, we get to focus on military readiness and try to make sure we continue to send strong message about our treaty commitments to the south and the seriousness with which we take the security on the peninsula. at the same time, we are taking measures that are in keeping with the warmer rhetoric, the reduced tensions that are on the peninsula. i think it makes a lot of sense. >> so many of the journalists there have said they weren't invited as they have been many years to see this grand finale where they show off at the end of it and it allowed them to get video, allow them to report on this. it appears they are trying to keep it off the front page of the newspapers, not just here but also over there. >> it seems to me like, again, i think there is wisdom here that you don't want to overly provoke kim jong-un. what is going to be interesting as we watch this exercise now start to move forward is how the north reacts. in the past, when they have announced it and they usually announced it in february/march. the north reacts with a
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statement and then shortly after usually rocket launches. one week after the exercise began last year, the north launched four missiles in response. i suspect they are calculating he won't overreact and maybe one reason they are not as forward leaning on the media posture as they have in the past. no reason to provoke it. remember, too, that you have a potential summit coming up between kim and president moon later in april and that is important to make sure that that meeting gets off on a good foot as well. >> thank you, admiral john kirby. the president is celebrating construction on his new wall along the border with u.s. and mexico. we got these pictures to prove it. problem is, it isn't really new and this isn't the border wall that he promised. we are fact checking the president's claims next. when people ask me for whiter teeth, i always tell them the thicker the enamel,
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14 minutes after the hour now. president trump will head back to washington today increasingly smaller team around here. according to a new report from cnn and "the washington post" may be just what he wants. joining me is julian zeleny and siraj hashme. good morning to both of you. >> happy easter. >> you too. sirage, the president's supporters for many of this is what they wanted him to do go in and shake it up. if you don need the people around you, get rid of them. sarah sanders the white house press secretary says the president is in action mood and does not want to slow roll things from staff border to changing. what is wrong with that? >> nothing wrong with that. in fact, probably a lot of things donald trump used to do in his private setting when he operated his own business and multimillion and possibly billion dollar enterprise. what is interesting, though, he is growing more and more from
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what many americans are viewing and reminds you of the movie "scarface." except for the murders. i have no idea if that is true and which he is alienating people in the white house but certainly seems he is becoming more and more independent. >> tony montana, really? that is what we are doing this morning? that's what we are doing? let me come to you, julian. so on the point of policy and trying to get things done, we may see a president who is trying to move at a pace, obviously, what he is used to in business. this may not have much to do with the president's personality, but his resume. he is not used to moving at the glacial pace of congress. >> right. well, what he calls the glacial pace, others might call the democratic process. in politics, making progress
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involves negotiation and compromise and hearing opinions that are different from your own, because that is the way our political system works. so the problem is, i think, there is going to be a conflict between the way that he did business or the way that he sees the world and the way that our democratic processes work. and i'm not sure he is going to be able to change that. >> siraj, take, for instance, the president a few weeks back announcing these tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports comes to the country. initially, that was across the board and then as the policy took a step further, there were exemptions for the eu and canada and mexico and brazil and argentina and south korea and went on and on most of them are at a quota system. there is still bureaucracy. to what degree will the impulses that the president will rely on will make it to policy?
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>> what is the interesting part about this -- you know, you talked about the south korea war games in the previous segment. you know, a lot of people will look at that as kind of, you know, reescalation of tensions wen within the korean peninsula and point to john bolton on who lk the national security adviser. president trump is doing whatever he wants to do. right now by taking away a lot of these people in the white house he will do what he wants to do any way. the tony montana example may not be the best example but interesting to find the president might be growing more in his thinking and i would say that general jim matutis is the one person has influence on him on what he did on the bill and building up the military really sacrificing funding for the wall. >> one of those -- many of those stabilizers that people thought were going to come in to help
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this president are now out. rex tillerson and h.r. mcmaster and, of course, mattis is still there at defense. let's switch to another compromise during the campaign building the wall along the border. the president tweeted out pictures last week of what he says is construction on the new border wall. turns out this was replacement of old fencing. the customs and border protection deputy commissioner held a news conference this week. they sent out this press release saying construction is under way of the new border wall. here is actually what is happening from that acting deputy commissioner himself. >> where i'm scheduled and on budget to build a new 30-foot border wall as proofed by the administration and replaces two miles of the pedestrian barrier. in the grand rio valley we are building 35 new gates along exiting border wall and replace
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47 miles of dilapidated fencing with new wall system and we plan to build 25 miles of new levee wall as well as eight miles of new border wall system in stark county, texas. >> much of that is replacement of existing fencing. did the definition. new and wall change with this administration? >> absolutely. this is trump rebranding 101, meaning he can't get the wall that he wants so far, so, instead, take other things, such as fixing up existing walls, and brand them as the trump wall. this is a very important campaign promise to him. he can't get what he wants. there is the democratic processes at work. so he is going to try to call something that looks like a wall, "the wall." he might be successful with his supporters but i think it's far short of what he intended to do. >> siran, listen to mayors on
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either side of this fencing that is being replaced. >> we all, as a community, want to make sure the people out there in this country know that california is not the beginning of a wall project for the trump administration. it is completely different. >> we knew that it was a lie. >> do the supporters potentially will they buy that this is the wall that they chanted for? >> not if it's coming from cnn. if it was coming from fox news, probably. what is interesting, though, there are some support rs. true america first policy supporters understand this is actually -- who actually believes cnn's reporting on this this is not a new wall and its replacement fencing. the hundred miles of border wall that they are using the 1.6 billion dollars on is really not a hundred miles of continuous wall. it's in bits and pieces along the border. this is not something that they really signed up for. they really wanted the entire
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almost 2,000 miles of southern border to be reinforced with border security and the border wall and it's not meeting up to their standards. >> and mexico is going to pay for that. thank you both. >> thank you. >> thank you. coming up on "state of the union" with jake tapper recently fired david shulkin and senator bernie sanders will also app on "state of the union" at 9:00 a.m. here on cnn. some are looking for an apology after ted nugent called them liars. more on that ahead. it's easter sunday and pope is giving his message at the exactly. live report coming up gnome. mid adult 7+ promotes alertness and mental sharpness in dogs 7 and older. (ray) the difference has been incredible. she is much more aware. she wants to learn things. (vo) purina pro plan bright mind. nutrition that performs.
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now more businesses in more places can afford to dream gig. it's hard to get all the daily that's why i love fiber choice. it has the fiber found in many fruits and vegetables, all in a tasty chewable tablet. fiber choice: the smart choice. ♪ welcome back. i'm diane gallagher in for christi paul on this easter sunday. >> i'm victor blackwell. good morning to you. a chinese college student in orlando made no threats to harm anyone. >> but then after a series of decisions that worried his fellow students and then campus police, he is now being kicked out of the country. the purchase of a rifle, a dramatic change in appearance, holding up inside his room and a pricey shopping spree that included a corvette, a student
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at the university of central florida is being deported to china after the school's police chief said there was red flag after red flag that something bad would happen. >> we just saved a bunch of lives. there is no doubt about it. >> reporter: police started investigating 26-year-old wenly sun earlier this year after he made unusual statements to a school official. they flagged it to the atf and found out that sun owned an assault-style rifle and ammunition. when a deduct interviewed him, sun referred to his weapon as a sniper rifle but said he never thought about hurting himself or others. days after that interview he bought a second assault-style rifle this one with a scope. police were monitoring sun but said he owned both go guns legally. then his visa was revoked due to an issue unrelated to his gun purchases and he stopped going to class. he is hold by immigration
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officials and is expected to be deported soon and not allowed to return to the u.s. for ten years. campus police say other students who own guns should not be concerned. they say this case was about the behavior of one student whose actions showed he was in crisis. harsh words from nra board member and rocker ted nugent and happened during an interview on a conservative radio program he called on survivors of the parkland shooting, he called them liars and mushy brain children. when asked how the students are railing against the nra, he says, quote, not only is it ignorant and dangerously stupid, but it's soulless. outspoken parkland survivor david hagg is standing up against the criticism he received from fox news host laura ingram after she locked him in a series of tweets earlier this week and then later apologized. >> i think my biggest takeaway from this is when somebody -- no
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matter who somebody is, no hats how big or powerful they seem a bully is a bully and it's important to stand up to them. >> more than a dozen companies pulled their advertising from laura ingram's show after her attacks. she announced she is on a vacation next week amid the controversy but says it was a preplanned take of leave for this easter week. joining us to discuss is cnn senior media correspondent brian stelter. good morning, brian. let's get to ted ju nenugent. he said the dumbing down of america is manifested in the culture and dep rah radiation of our academia that has caught these kids in the lies. he is name calling and blaming their education. some of the students are demanding an apology and it appears he is different than laura ingram gram because is
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attacking their education and ways he disapproves of. >> let's state the obvious. if you were an adult and tacking high school students, you're losing. and i think that is some of what we are seeing in these responses, some of these mostly right wing responses to the parkland students. obviously, in the weeks since the massacre there, there has been a lot of debate about guns and there is a lot of disagreement with these studentstudent students. most of these students supporting gun control and laws they would like to see passed or changed. we should be debating those proposals. but what we have seen, as well, are really gross attacks against the students and david hogg in particular and other students have been attacked as well and name calling. the rhetoric we are seeing from ted nugent. somebody like ted nugent is
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losing the argument, thus, he is going in this direction. we have seen a bunch of that in the past six weeks or so. what is interesting about teenagers. we remember being teenagers. you're learning a lot. you're learning and figuring how to go about in this world. i don't think the students will get every single message right every single time but they are trying to figure it out. to go after their education or as laura ingram did to not getting into college is way too low of a blow. >> speaking of laura ingram and david hogg. she did apologize and sponsors pulled out of her show. the kids are putting themselves out there. we are treating them as experts in the situation. is it about the individual meanness of the name calling or is it about challenging them? because it does seem that maybe there is a bit of a double standard here. some of the kids were a bit more conservative. kyle and pollack family.
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don't seem they are getting the same defense from members of the media and twitter sphere as well when people attack them for their viewpoints. >> people of the media and want to enrage in this gun debate should absolutely be consistent. when laura ingram mocks david hogg in this case, i think almost a universal sense that was beyond the pail. you see the advertisers withdrawal. i think it's a desperate discussion but when you look at these situations, you mentioned kyle, one of the other students, there was talk on twitter about whether, curt of msnbc was attacking the student. curt was not on the payroll. it gets messy quickly when you
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talk about ad boycotts and laura ingram is no exception. she is on a vacation a week and fox said preplanned and i assume she will be back after her vacation and this is an act for everybody to cool down. bottom line these students have incredibly political power and when you say david hogg get more than a dozen companies to go with him after ad rejection on twitter, that is something incredible. >> catch brian stelter today on "reliable sources," today at 11:00 a.m. only on cnn. the pope is leading easter sunday celebrations there at the vatican. we will take you live there next. ow the peninsula trail? you won't find that on a map. i'll take you there. take this left. if you listen real hard you can hear the whales. oop. you hear that? (vo) our subaru outback lets us see the world.
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christians around the world are celebrating easter this morning. it is the most important holiday on the christian calendar celebrating the resurrection of jesus. pope francis has been providing over mass at the vatican where he gave his blessing from st. pete's basilica. actions of an army thief echoed in the pop's message urging christians to act in the face of injustice and to keep their hearts open. cnn senior vatican analyst john allen joins us more from rome on the pope's general message this more and the pope's general message he led into the holiday with was potentially have a low-key easter, in some ways. >> reporter: hi, victor. first of all, happy easter to you. >> to you too. >> you're right. pope francis set a tone of
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trying to avoid over exuberance of p. . the pope has two corner stones on easter. one the mass he leads in st. petersburg. only two times he stands in this case. the other is christmas and he gives a blessing right after he is elected. in the mass this morning, we heard the pope talk about god is a god of surprises and how how hearts need to be open to surprise and how we need to be willing to get moving, once god does surprise us. then in the address which is 360-degree review of the state of the world the pope mentions special concern as for syria and the democratic republic of congo
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and south sudan and migrants and people of the poor and human trafficking and slavery and not a surprise for anyone who knows the pope but he focused the subject is not dimming. >> reporter: on friday pope francis said he feels ashamed of the state of the world. what did he mean by that? >> reporter: well, he actually said we all should be ashamed. this was in the context of his meditations during a procession which commemorates the steps of christ on the way to being crucified on the cross so it's a somber moment. the pope was basically urging people to pray to god for the gift of what he called holy shame, that we should feel ashamed of the state of the world, in particular, that we are leaving it in such a mess to the next generation, to the young. and that we should also pray for holy repentance for a chance of
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heart, meaning a kind of determination to clean this mess up. >> valuable lessons from pope francis there on this easter sunday. the entire weekend. john allen in rome for us, thank you. two fatal crashes in just a month's time from two different types of self-driving cars. coming up next, should we be worried about this technology?
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two fatal crashes involving semiautonomous vehicles in a single month. "wire" magazine reports that tesla's autopilot involved in a deadly crash and happened a week after an arizona woman was hit and killed by a self-driving uber vehicle. should that have us worry about the self-driving cars system? >> reporter: now before that wreck, i went to new york city
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for a story on autonomous vehicles. as we drove in a semiautonomous car, i asked dr. elizabeth phelps who discoveries motion at nyu. what happens when you have a first death from something line this makes the headlines? she mediciade an important poin >> we don't hear about car accidents, you know? we don't hear about everyday car accidents that often but they happen all the time. they are not in our minds because it's a part of driving and it's a part of everyday life. once we realize that humans and machines can have mistakes even though there will be mistakes and less often than human error, we will get more comfortable with it. >> i want to bring in alex who is a senior associate editor at "wire" magazine. your take on what she said there. should we be alarmed about these kind of crashes or do we put them in perspective in sense that there are so many thousands that occur every year with human
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drivers? >> i think we certainly need to look at these accidents, but not to be alarmed, but rather to use them as learning opportunities, especially with the tesla crash and the uber crash. it's an investigator's job to look at this and say what went wrong here and how do we use the information to improve the system. i think people interested in driving in a self-driving car and say this way is to cut down on 40,000 road deaths every year, then alarm isn't the right reaction. this is technology. you want to keep pushing forward. the important thing is to learn from what went wrong. >> how much do you trust the technology? >> i trust the technology a fair bit. i've gotten to ride into a lot of these different cars. i think with technology like tesla's, which also appears in cadillac and nissan and other cars, which are the semiautonomous systems, i think
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it's important to keep in mind what the companies will tell you which is that those systems are not that capable and that the human driver is in charge and that you have to remind yourself i'm supposed to be looking at the road. when you start talking about fully autonomous systems, i think they are not quite ready for the road yet, or they are only ready for very certain situations. but i think that quite soon we will will be at a point i would at least be willing to get in one without a driver behind the wheel. >> so looking at what has happens thus far, you write there is a second fatal crash involving tesla's semiautonomous system. what do you know about that one? >> it's -- we don't have a lot of information on what happened so far. we know that earlier this month a driver on a california highway had his tesla model x suv with autopilot engaged. that is a system that keeps the car in its lane and a safe distance from other vehicles and that for unclear reasons, the car hit a safety barrier that
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was dividing two lanes. all we know at the time was that the car was in autopilot and that the driver's hands were not on the wheel. that is according to data that tesla pulled off the vehicle after the crash. and we do know that in the minutes leading up to the crash or in the hours leading up, the driver had been given several warnings by the car that he needed to put his hands back on the wheel. >> so when we look at that accident, we look at what happened in arizona with uber, how do these crashes and these deaths, how do they affect the industry moving forward? i mean, there has got to be some liability that these companies are concerned about. >> i think for tesla, the liability question is now going to become a much bigger one. this is the second time in the united states that we know that someone has died while using its autopilot system. tesla will come back and say there are a lot of safety gains and i think that is probably true. but nonetheless when you're creating a system that not fully
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capable of doing drst driving but drivers might tend to trust more than they should, then you do need to question whether tesla is doing everything it needs to do to make sure that drivers really understand the system. >> with that said, you know, we look at the major players in this game. we have uber, google, tesla, general motors. they are all trying to perfect this technology. do you have a gut feeling or any real insight into who you think is going to be coming out ahead of the game? >> i think it's safe to say when you're talking about fully self-driving cars, cars that don't need a steering wheel or pedals or any kind of human doing the driving, that is where way mncho seems to be the furtherest ahead and doing this the longest, almost ten years now, and saying by the end of 2018 it wants to launch a commercial service in arizona and it just struck a deal to buy thousands of suv electric suvs
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from jaguar and wants to provide a million autonomous rides a day. no one else has made those kind of claims. >> alex davies, thank you for talking to us. >> thank you. all right. two left. i picked one correctly. >> i picked this correctly. i should watch college basketball. the national championship is set. andy scholes is in san antonio and let us know what to expect. >> good morning. the season coming to an end for sister jean and loyola. coming up, we will hear what the ramblers had to say about their amazing tournament run. so, my portfolio did pretty well last year. that's great. but the market was up nearly twice as much. that's a tough pill to swallow. exactly. so i started trading. but with everything out there, how do you know what to buy? well, i think my friend victor has just the thing for you. check this out, td ameritrade makes it easier to find the investments that might be right for you. like our etf comparison tool it lets you see how etfs measure up to one another.
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after a march that is truly madness. full of upsets and college basketball's final four and down to just the two final teams. >> andy scholes was there. >> reporter: good morning. the clock is striking midnight for loyola. their cinderella run finally coming to an end here in san antonio at the final four. sister jean, the 98-year-old team chaplain for the ramblers was here cheering on her team, her spirit has captured the hearts of the entire world throughout this entire tournament. the ramblers actually had the lead at halftime enthey had not lost a game outline year when doing that but michigan just too much in the second half of this when sister jean would leave before the end of the game. the cheers from the crude and the ramblers coach and players very emotional after their run came to an end. >> it's not going to sink in yet. you know, it hurts to have this
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be the last one. you know? we wish that it could have indianaed better. we believed that we could have, you know, gone on. >> what they did is very hard to do. they changed -- they left an impact on this school. >> despite, you know, going out this way, we are going to never forget this and i think a lot of people remember this run for a long time. >> the star of the night was michigan's mo bogner. the 20-year-old from berlin, germany, having the game of his life. his parents came from germany to watch their son play in zone. i caught up with them after the game. how proud are you of your son right now? >> yeah, i'm proud, of course. but happy, happy, happy! yeah.
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>> so happy for him. proud of the whole team! >> yeah. >> the whole team played heart off, i guess, especially in the second half. we are very proud of the team. and mo is a good part of it. >> yeah, that was always pretty cool for me because i watched this my entire childhood, this final four every year. >> reporter: the night cap between one seed villanova and one seed kansas was supposed to be a heavyweight bout but the wildcats came out and punched the jayhawks in the mouth from the get-go and 22-4 run and nova hitting a final four record 18 threes in the game and could not miss all night. they are moving on to the championship game tomorrow night. the stage is set. villanova versus michigan a little after 9:00 eastern on tbs. michigan is going to be trying to win their first championship
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since 1989. i tell you what, if villanova shoots like they did last night, i don't think the wolverines have a chance. villanova was lights out! >> i picked michigan. so let's hope not. andy scholes for us there in san antonio, thanks so much. \s 71 tonight we felt is most tense interaction between police and protesters. >> oh, my god! >> the vehicle accelerated very fast and struck her violently. donald trump has decided that he is going to follow his own instincts. >> trump allies are telling the president he doesn't even need to replace her or even have a chief of staff for that matter. >> in the end, i think president trump will be the bossis
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