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tv   New Day Sunday  CNN  May 27, 2018 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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>> the whole world is watching! >> is this what you want? i do the country? >> i want to driveway a lunch of y'all. >> kennedy has been shot. >> senator kennedy has been shot. is that possible? ♪ >> announcer: this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. good morning to you. welcome to your "new day." >> it is sunday, may 27th. here are the top stories. with conditions, north korean leader kim jong-un will commit to denuclearization as long as the peninsula follows suit and he gets to stay in power. >> melania trump has not been seen in public two weeks now and her husband insists he is shall
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right there. why the low profile? kate anderson brauer has insight into the new situation. john mccain is an american hero in the fight of his life. john weaver will talk to us about his living legacy. this memorial day weekend as we honor tos thohose who pay th ultimate sacrifice in the war, we speak to a survivor of the pearl harbor attack. a crucial week for the trump administration beginning with pair of major international developments. >> moments after welcoming home an american detained in venezuela for two years, president trump is reviving home he is sitting down with north korea's leader next month, despite the fact that he cancelled the meeting last week. . >> we can be successful in the denuclearization of the korean peninsula. it would be a great thing for north korea and a great thing
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for south korea and great for japan and great for the world. it's moving along very nicely, so we are looking at june 12th in singapore. that hasn't changed. >> overnight, the president of south korea speaking about second summit with the north korean leader, this for the first time, and announcing if kim jong-un is still committed to denuclearization but one important caveat. cnn sarah westwood is live from washington. what does kim want? >> kim jong-un is still open to denuclearization but the north korean leader is fearful the u.s. might consider a policy of regime change or disarm. now even as kim jong-un is continuing demands for the safety and security of his regime, president trump is still projecting optimism that the summit he cancelled will still
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take place as scheduled on june 12th in singapore even as senior administration officials caution that the 16 days remaining between now and the summit is just not enough time to get ready and it's unclear how the white house plans to bridge the divides that led to the cancellation of the meeting in the first place. >> i want to ask you about josh holt, the man who had been held in venezuela for two years. he was welcomed home yesterday to the white house where he saw his family for the first time. talk to us about some of the comments the president made. there were a couple of things he said that might have caught somebody's ear. >> right. >> reporter: president trump taking the victory lap on the release of 26-year-old american joshua holt from a venezuelan prison where he had been held two years. welcoming holt to the white house. president trump touted more than dozen prisoners or detainees freed from the start of his presidency and hope that there may be more americans welcomed
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home soon. take a listen. >> it's really special to have you both. you've gone through a lot. >> very, very, very difficult two years. not really the great vacation that i was looking for, but -- but we are still together and starting off rough but now we are going to be together and i'm just so grateful for what you guys have done and for thinking about me and caring about me, just a normal person. >> you were a tough one, i have to tell you. that was a tough -- that was a tough situation, but we have had 17 released and we are very proud of that record. very proud. and we have others coming. we are in the midst of big negotiations to get others out and, in most cases, they are americans but we can try to help other countries too with this unjustice. >> reporter: holt is backdrop of tense relations between the trump administration and maduro
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regime. the release of holt will not change the u.s. policy towards venezuela. >> sarah westwood, thank you. we appreciate it. cnn political analyst julian zeleny with is us now. what do you make of the president announcing that they have released 17 others already and that he is actually working to secure more, not just americans, but others as well? >> well, this is a president who likes to take victory laps and he likes to count his accomplishments. so here, an important release of a hostage is taking place at a critical moment in his foreign policy. so i'm not surprised to hear that. this is the -- it's the kind of boast president trump likes to do but in this case, it converges with an important development. >> they also said the u.s. offered nothing to venezuela. do we have any gauge of how this return happened? >> we don't know. what we do know there were back
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channels established through one of senator korker's lcorker lat who is negotiate the with va venezuelans a long time now. and this might have been part of that. but we really don't know if anything was exchanged or exactly what the motivation was behind the release. >> president moon, the south korean president, came out saying kim jong-un has said he will commit to complete denuclearization as long as he gets to stay in power. is there any indication what the president is going to go into this meeting if it happens on june 12th in singapore, what he is going to be able to offer, i guess, other than -- other than that? i mean, how -- how does the u.s. balance that with what it has to do to verify that kim will
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actually stay with that promise? >> well, that is the million dollar question and we are dealing with an administration is probably not going to be fully prepared for the summit if it takes place. president trump, on his own words, likes to go in without having much of a game plan, making decisions as this unfolds. so somehow it seems the north koreans will demand some kind of evidence and some kind of verification that they will stay in place, that the u.s. will withdraw some of its military forces from the region. i don't know if president trump will be willing to do that. the good news is they are talking or at least it looks like they will be talking and that is the key for the first summit. simply to have two people in the room, simply to have a conversation going. the details don't actually necessarily need to be worked out before that takes place. >> julian zeleny, we appreciate your insight. thank you. >> thank you.
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later this morning, president trump's lawyer rudy giuliani is on "state of the union," along with james clapper and you can see that on cnn at 9:00 a.m. eastern. first lady melania trump has not been seen in public for more than two weeks and the president insists she is right there. we are looking into why she is keeping such a low profile. >> hbo is calling john mccain the study of an american hero in the fight of his life. >> i know this is a very vicious disease. i greet every day with gratitude. >> mccain's former presidential manager john weaver is with us next to talk about john mccain. it's absolute confidence in 30,000 precision parts. or it isn't. it's inspected by mercedes-benz factory-trained technicians. or it isn't.
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are his own words. this is a quote here. i have lived an honorable life and i am proud of my line. >> a tribute to a man given so much to his country. this memorial day hbo is airing a documentary on the senator who is currently battling brain cancer. >> i was looking at the next step down the road. >> mccain was always able to break the mold that he was in if it's clearly the thing he was in and that is a valuable com commodity. >> i thought i was going to whip him but he thought he was going to whip me. >> he has a political voice and he knows he is compromise some piece of himself. >> for john to say we are all americans and all on the same team i thought was an indication of who john fundamentally was. >> we need to give the american people what they deserve and right now they are are not getting it. >> john sweweaver is with us no. a campaign manager to senator john mccain. john, thank you so much. we appreciate it. tell us something about john
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mccain that maybe we wouldn't know. >> good morning. thank you for having me on. as i traveled the country with john early in the presidential pursuit in 1997 and '98, what we found is that people came to him looking for a return to respect in our government and he had such empathy for that -- for that mission, and he was greatly concerned at that time about what was happening in washington and it has grown even larger today. his love of country was something i've never seen and not seen since. >> you know, we have talked even in the intro to bringing you into the show about how other people see john mccain, his legacy and serving military and the congress. how does he see himseds himself in those conversations you've had with him?
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>> he never talks about himself. as political consultants, we were always wanting to push his heroism and time in the war to be used politically. he never wanted to use that. he talked on limited basis about his time in prison but when he did he talked to others about the sacrifices they made. we walked through airports and he saw airman or women who were in the military he would stop and say thank you to them and he continuously went out of his way to praise our current members of the military. he never once thought of himself. >> you know, there is a moment in this documentary where he says, and i think we have the words that we can put up on the screen. he says, i should have said when he is talking about the
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presidential election, i should have said, look, joe lieberman is my best friend. we should take him but i was persuaded by my political advisers that it would be harmful and that was another mistake that i made. sounds as if he is not regret choosing sarah palin, he regrets going with his gut. is there a lesson there for current and really future lawmakers? >> well, i think so. look. i try to tell my clients to not only be true -- now i wasn't there when he was talked out of choosing senator lieberman and chose governor palin instead, but i believe had he chosen joe being it would have been a happier campaign for him and he would have run it in a much different way. i think the outcome would have different, quite frankly, but he would have felt better about it himself. >> john weaver, thank you for sharing time with us this
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morning. thank you very much. >> thanks. have a great day. >> you too. as democrats approach the midterm elections, we are deep into the season now with so many primaries happening. what is the best strategy to bring in voters? excite that base? or reach out to possibly persuadable trump voters? my next conversation on men when are on opposite sides of that conversation. (vo) why are subaru outback owners always smiling? because they've chosen the industry leader. subaru outback holds its value better than any other vehicle in its class, according to alg. better than rav4. better than grand cherokee. better than edge. make every adventure a happy one with subaru outback. get 0% apr financing on the 2018 subaru outback. pah! thano, no, no, nah.k. a bulb of light?!? aha ha ha! a flying machine? impossible! a personal' computer?! ha!
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election season and democrats have a decision to make. where had they dedicate their money and resources to win in november and double down on getting out and exciting their nonwhite base? or prioritizing we are spa persuading working class time and steve founder is focused on race and politics and author of "the new york times" best seller "brown is the new white how the demographic revolution has created a new american majority." and also with us is rudy. i'm excited to have this conversation and wanted to have it with you two for a while. thank you for being with us. this is the right time to have it especially after the historic win in georgia by stacy abrams. here is when she said after her win. >> we have an opportunity to
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turn out voters who haven't voted in recent years. they vote in the presidential election but not in the gubernatorial election and we have more than enough of those voters to win without compromising our values and pretending to be moderate to conservative to appeal to a certain segment. >> rudy, this is a great experiment in the south and not because she is a black woman who is now running for governor but also because she is running in georgia as a liberal democrat. she is not reaching out or focusing primary, i should say, on some of those potentially persuadable conservative democrats or trump voters. do you thatink that is a mistak? >> my view on this if you look at the structure that georgia electorate, white part of the electorate is probably going to be at least 60% of voters in this election and she is going to have to reach a certain number of those. i think it is going to be primary mobilization election where she is going to have to rely on a heavy turnout around
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blacks and young people, but there is also a necessity to get, say, 25% of the white vote and exactly how she is going to run in the general, we will have to see. i think she ran in a certain way for the primary and it worked very well there. i think as she confronts the general election, she will probably make some effort to reach out to at least more moderate whites and get them into the fold. again, it's a kind of situation where you don't get a lot of white support in georgia but you do need a certain threshold to actually succeed in winning a statewide election. >> you wrote this week what abrams is proving the way to increase voter turnout is inspiring progressives and not coddling moderates and conservatives. we expand the conversation beyond georgia. mccaskill in missouri and nelson in florida and heidi heitkamp.
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>> this is the lowest level of swing voters ever been in the history of recording polling. notion that all of this is up for grabs is unfounded and applies in georgia and the other states. jimmy carter's grandson ran in georgia and he only got 23% of the white vote. there is a ceiling there that is what all of the data shows and it doesn't mean you're against those people. it just means that is what the data shows. stacy's upside in georgia there is 1.5 million edgibligible nonvoteing in florida and a population that is much more likely to prevail than to win over these people that -- the unicorns of politics and that the heidi heitkamp and claire mccaskill, what people don't understand the states that trump won a lot of people voted against trump. you still have a mobilization
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issue and more people voted for hillary clinton in missouri than voted for the republican candidates for senator in the last midterm election. so that is why i say we have to inspire the core democratic sqae constituency of the new color and progressive whites. >> steve, would it not be an electoral malfeasance for those who voted for trump? 2016? >> it's electoral malfeasance -- i would love to have more working white class people and my best friends are working white class people but no evidence in the data you can get more of them. so the continued to waste all of this money, the democrats on the progressive side spent $200 million targeting white working class vote and they had zero dollars on the independent side, the superpacs going after
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african-american voter immobilization. fountain black vote turned out the same level it did in 2012, hillary clinton would be president but you don't hear about that and you don't get invited on television shows why are we going after the black vote but everybody wants to hear about the working white class vote. >> let's talk about the lesson of 2016 and michigan specifically. trump won michigan by 11,000 votes. hillary clinton underperform inside wayne county specifically. if she had performed at the level that barack obama performed in 2012, she probably would have won that state. so when you suggest prioritizing or at least going after i guess a priority, the white working class vote, what about the lesson of michigan and not exciting the nonwhite base there that could have delivered a state? >> well, first of all, i really wish this conversation was not typically posed as sort of, a or b thing. either, a, you mobilize nonwhite
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constituency or go after the white working class vote. i'm not saying a or b. i'm saying a and b. and not the data show x. i don't believe the case. abundant data make the case for a or b. take the 2016 election. the simulations we did of that election under different circumstances of our exchange product and data not challenged and as rigorous you can get show definitively if clinton got the same black turnout in every state as obama did in 2012 and she would not have won the election and carried michigan and wisconsin and not pennsylvania. on the other hand, if she had gotten merely reduce the swing against or nonwhite college voters by one quarter, in other words, still have substantial swing against her and not as
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large she would have won it i think it's absurd for him to claim the data on this side when it's not. look at in pennsylvania, the data clear he would not have won p.a. 18 unless he moved a certain number of trump voters into his column. that is a fact and i don't see how steve can deny it. >> quick, steve, responds to that, please. >> yeah. what i'm talking about is the census data if you look which is the data we have going on. you look at that data and clinton performed at the same level obama did -- >> steve, it's not right! we used that census data in our modeling and that not the case. >> let him finish. >> it shows that in pennsylvania and wisconsin and michigan that that level and you have the same level of black spourlt she would have prevailed and connor lamb was another example. he got fewer votes than hillary clinton did in his district. the notion that he had to win over all of these trump voters is inaccurate.
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the most important point is that this is not -- this notion about a or b is fine, yes. but we are in a campaign you have limited time and limited money, the question is what are you prioritizing? and that is my argument. the democrats prioritized to the exclusion voters of color and exclusive focus with hundreds of millions of dlars going after the white working class and conservative vote to no positive outcomes. >> i've been looking forward to this conversation for sometime and it did not disappoint. thank you both. >> thank you. take a look at this paper. i know it looks like another grade school paper, right? there are errors and teachers correcting it. if talk a closer look, yes, it says the white house there. this is a letter from president trump to ivan mason a comp. teacher and full of what she calls is silly mistakes and she received it in response to a letter she wrote about the
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parkland, florida, school shooting and she did what she always did at school. she corrected the writing and returned it to the white house and said the form letter was most likely written by a staff member, not the president, but the president did sign it. it's more than two weeks since the first lady made any public appearances and some people are wondering where is a melania trump? the author of "first women" has some insight for us next. in the spring of '68, you got the most violent period of the entire car. >> i'll be so glad to go home! >> i see the promise land. but i want you to know the night that we have, the people, will get to the promise land. >> martin luther king was shot and killed tonight. >> for my parents' generation, king was the dream and then he's gone. >> i'm announcing today my candidacy for the presidency of
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the united states. >> oh, my god. senator kennedy has been shot. >> this was really the death hope. >> wallace knew how to get a crowd energized. >> i know words you don't know. >> police and demonstrators hustling over this busy intersection. >> the graduation" is probably the most important movie of t'6. >> i hope to restore respect to the presidency. >> one of the most traumatic and consequence wall years in history. >> 1968, starting tonight at 9:00 on cnn. four-part two-night series event. disrupting business and taking on a life of its own. its multi-cloud complexity creating friction... and slowing innovation. with software-defined solutions, like hpe oneview,
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we have not seen first lady
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melania trump more than two weeks. she spent five fights in the hospital for a kidney procedure earlier in the month. the white house say she is doing great and happy to hear that. kate anderson b brower is here with us now. what is the holdup in seeing her publicly? is it her recovery? >> well, i reached out to her spokesperson who said she has been meeting with the staff quite a bit to plan upcoming even events. the congressional picnic is coming up at the end of june and july fourth celebration so she is doing things privately but i think we have to remember she prefers not to be in the spotlight and this coined procedure came on the heels of the feed fest initiative announcement. so we saw more of her than we have ever seen before in the short amount of time and there were times she only moved to the white house in june of 2017 so a years ago basically. so i think that, you know, she
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prefers to not be too public and we might not see her for a little while. >> i was going to say, this could be contributed to being typically of this first lady. she apologize her privacy. >> she does. remember, when she was in trump tower with their son barron, there were periods of time we didn't see her at all and it was kind of a surprise when she tweeted she had moved into the white house last year. so she is incredibly private. but she is meeting with staff and she has asked them all to write letters and to get in touch with everyone who has written her notes about her recovery. so she is not completely shirking her responsibilities as first lady, which i don't think she views the role quite is same as some of her predecessors did. >> how do you think she is viewing it? >> because she is less public and she didn't necessarily want to be first lady and this is her first time in the political
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scene, she is not as prepared as a lot of other women who came before her, including laura bush and michelle obama whose husband was a senator. she has a small staff, less than half of what michelle obama has. i don't think she has the fln infrastructure in place to do a lot and i think how she sees the position. >> we know she is so enthusiastic about the feed fest initiative. when she is with children, she lights up and she shines there. kate anderson borrower, thank you. >> thank you. toys "r" us are closing their stores and to prevent what happened last month when two independence men were arrested in starbucks since waiting for a friend. next, can a half-day session fix this problem? it's dead again. i need a new phone. and you deserve that new phone on the best network. verizon. oh, we're going? sure-- ehh, not my thing. (vo) now get up to 50% off
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this tuesday afternoon starbucks is scheduled to close its 8,000 plus stores company owned stores at least for bias training. when they reopen the company hopes something like this will be less likely to happen again maybe you remember this video. two men in philadelphia last month who had called -- police were called on them by a starbucks manager. the company's ceo apologized to the men and a new policy says anyone is allowed to sit in starbucks and use their bathrooms whether or not they buy something. >> so the question is can what happened be fixed in an afternoon? howard ross is the man to ask that. he is an expert on unconscious bias and the training needed to overcome it. he with swith us now. thank you, howard, for being here. we have a cliff from the training video that starbucks is going to use. let's listen to that together first here. >> without a doubt, the events
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in philadelphia prompted to us bring 8,000 stores and 175,000 partners together on 5/29, because that is not who we aspire to be. >> we are here to make starbucks a place where everyone, everyone feels welcome. >> helping people see each other fully, completely, respectfully. >> a lot of people say, look. kudos for them for attempting this. the optics bring a lot of conceptism because people wonder how one day of training can change what people want to have changed and that is the mindset, the way that we see each other. with that said, what is the value of this one day of training? >> well, i think that it's important for everybody to realize that -- that this is a beginning and one day of training i think it's pretty accurate to say one day of training, if all they do is not likely to have much impact. it may impact certain people but
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likely to impact people inclined in that direction any way. one day of training, on the other hand, could be the beginning of something really impactful if they follow up with the right kinds of activities and, so far, relative to their public statements, they seem to be saying that they attempt to do that. >> you suggest, i read in an article that quoted you, that workers need constant reminders. what do those look like? >> well, i think what we have -- we have to think about we are dealing with something that is a long time, obviously, challenge for us and that are the unconscious perceptions that we have with each other based on race, in this case, or gender, sexual orientation or whatever else. so, of course, even the most impactful training you could ever do, at best, puts people in a new direction. let's say you don't have an issue you have to deal with the issues you're dealing with in the training for three months you're not likely to remember it but if you have things that are embedded into the system, reminders that are embedded into
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the system or lists that people follow to do the right thing, that sort of a thing, then it could be much more impactful over 9 long run. >> it becomes habitual. >> yes. >> what are those things? when they sit down together help us understand what are the conversations going to be to be and what are they prompted about and to see from this point forward? >> well, i think can say definitively what starbucks is doing -- i can't say -- but best practice we suggest are three basic streams of conversation. the first is the what is unconscious bias? how does it affect us? how does it affect the way we make decisions, especially when we interact with people? that sort of thing. we want people to get the information they need to get a better understanding of how the mind works and the research that we have shows that that was the most important thing any time you're doing some kind of diversity or bias training, that the most impactful thing is to help people understand how they are making decisions. because most people don't wake up in the morning and say how can i suppress people in another race today?
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and most of this is very -- individual behavior. the second piece is the so what. how does this impact their behavior and how will it show up people have a sense of not only the background experiences and research behind it, but also so they can be on the lookout for certain kinds of situations that might be more prone to bias. the third is the now what. what are things we can do to mitigate our own reaction to bias individually and do systematically as an organization to see more bias -- >> thank you for being with us this morning. starbucks on tuesday will plant the seed and we will look for the fruit. thanks so much. >> howard, thank you. the oldest surviving pearl harbor vet remembers the people that maybe he met or he thought was -- on memorial day. that is next. , your society was led by a woman, who governed thousands...
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bipolar i disorder can make you feel unstoppable. but mania, such as unusual changes in your mood, activity or energy levels, can leave you on shaky ground. help take control by asking about your treatment options. vraylar is approved for the acute treatment of manic or mixed episodes of bipolar i disorder in adults. clinical studies showed that vraylar reduced overall manic symptoms. vraylar should not be used in elderly patients with dementia due to increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements, which may be permanent. side effects may not appear for several weeks. high cholesterol and weight gain; high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death; decreased white blood cells, which can be fatal; dizziness upon standing; falls; seizures; impaired judgment;
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heat sensitivity; and trouble swallowing may occur. you're more than just your bipolar i. ask your doctor about vraylar. come hok., babe. nasty nighttime heartburn? try new alka-seltzer pm gummies. the only fast, powerful heartburn relief plus melatonin so you can fall asleep quickly. ♪ oh, what a relief it is! staying well -- >> if you like the idea of surfing for exercise but not sure about braving the waves this week's staying well looks at a surf-inspired on land. >> this is surf-inspired fitness. it's not on some airboard. it is on top of the air cushions
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that makes the board rock side to side and then straps give it a little bit of stability. >> i'm a want to be surfer. in the beginning there is the fear of just balancing and stabilizing on the board. it doesn't take too long before you get your feel for the board. i find that that is a great core workout. >> you can't let your mind wander. you have to focus on what you are doing. my core is stronger. my balance is definitely better. >> your feet we have little muscles. if you are having to balance and move with the board then it will get the muscles to be stronger which will create a better support system in your entire body. you can increase your core stability because you have to move dynamically. if you are an older person that doesn't have great balance it may serve you better. >> make sure it is in the warm water and not somewhere cold and
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i'll be fine. >> let's do an ad of a man eating free waffles at comfort inn. book now at choicehotels.com
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i'm a small business, but i have... big dreams... and big plans. so how do i make the efforts of 8 employees... feel like 50? how can i share new plans virtually? how can i download an e-file? virtual tours? zip-file? really big files? in seconds, not minutes... just like that. like everything... the answer is simple. i'll do what i've always done... dream more, dream faster, and above all... now, i'll dream gig. now more businesses, in more places, can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. the teacher who tackled a school shooter is now out of the hospital. she isn't the only state official calling him a hero. let's listen to indiana governor. >> to know that jason put others
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before himself is not a surprise to anyone i found out that knows him. i am so proud that jason is a hoosier. [ cheers and applause ] >> we are so fortunate to have a man like jason teaching our young ones. >> the governor spoke at a vigil held. 13-year-old student was wounded. her family says she is in critical but stable condition and they appreciate all the well wishes that they have received. one of the americans honoring those who died in the line of service is the oldest survivor of the attack on pearl harbor. 106-year-old ray chavez. >> diane gallagher has more. >> 1941 a date which will live
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in infamy. >> a day that still plays out in the mind of ray chavez. 76 years later. >> i saw all the ships on fire. a terrible smoke screen through the harbor and covering the ships. >> reporter: at 106 years old chavez is the oldest surviving pearl harbor veteran. >> never forget what you see and learn. i remember and then i forget and remember again. >> reporter: remembering is what brings chavez to washington, d.c. this weekend. although he did meet president donald trump at the white house. >> i look forward to it becau. i enjoyed meeting him.
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pleasant to be right next to him. >> reporter: chavez travelled across country from san diego to d.c. stopping in kansas to refuel and meet with veterans to atte attend. the navy veteran says more than all of the pomp and circumstance surrounding his visit his focus is on those who gave the ultimate sacrifice. >> it's very important that the younger generation know and learn at the beginning of the war. >> vice president mike pence spent part of his friday at the tamp with a younger generation that knows the consequence of war all too well.
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all of these children lost a loved one who served in the armed forces. >> a room full of heroes. >> reporter: and many will spend part of their memorial day here in section 60 remembering their fathers, mothers, sisters and brothers, veterans of wars in iraq, afghanistan. >> i would do it again if i was called to active duty. chances are never. >> reporter: the secretary and deputy secretary of defense surprised chavez with a reenlistment and promotion. >> i never will forget that because i met real fine young men. >> reporter: and the sacrifice of those who came after, as well. dianne gallagher, cnn atlanta.
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those bells are to honor a soldier who died in world war ii. his funeral being held nearly 75 years later. >> across the country six soldiers killed in action are being laid to rest this memorial day weekend. francis drake, moore, elden grim, thomas murphy, walter deckman. their remains were just recovered. >> here in ohio you see the crowd here. they paid respect and welcomed home thomas murphy. each is being buried with full military honors. >> this is one of the days where it is sad but as well as joyous day because we were able to bring them home. >> like living legends here. you talk about superheroes. those are superheroes. >> amen to that.
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thank you so much for spending time with us this morning. we hope that you make some good memories this weekend as we will all remember all of these men and women. inside politics with john king starts right now. is the big summit off? >> i have decided to terminate the planned summit in singapore. >> or maybe back on. >> they very much want to do it. >> plus no facts but a week of tweets about deep state spying. >> i think people will see a lot of bad things happen. >> mid term map includes a chance to make history. >> if we fight, if we push, if we work we will win. >> "inside politics" the

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