tv New Day Saturday CNN August 18, 2018 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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artifacts for the springfield, missouri museum. >> if they can't pay up by october 2019, next year, they may have to put the items up for auction. you can help, go to the save lincoln fun page. so far they were taken in more than $21,000. security clearances are very important to me. very, very upimportant. >> he's drunk on power. he s. i think right now this country is in a crisis. >> there is no -- i'm giving him a bicker voice. now he has a bigger voice. many people don't know who he s. i say it, i say it again that whole situation is a rigged witch hunt. my daddy is a hero. he helps me grow up strong.
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>> somebody ask her, bring them back. >> i just want them back. i want them to come back. >> he was trampbs ported. >> this is "new day" weekend. >> good morning to you, i'm victor blackwell. >> i'm chris kristi paul the president defiant threatening to take the clearance, 50 former cia officials are condemning him revoking john brennan's clearance. brennan's take, here he is. >> he's drunk on power. he really s. i think he is abusing the powers of that office. i think right now this country is if a crisis in terms of what mr. trump has done and is liable
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to do. >> what is correct, al to understand here the people that could lose their clearance yet, either have been highly critical of the president or are tried to the russian investigation in some way. >> the washington post is reporting documents to strip their clearance are ready for the president to sign. we will begin with cnn sarah west wood, what are you learning ability what is ahead in terms of security clearances? >> reporter: well, president trump is following that backlash from john brennan. former intelligence officials are speak out against the press dent this might set as the white house is struggling to explain the reasoning behind that decision. this is coming as the washington post is reporting like you mentioned the president is considering stripping the security clearances of at least thin other officials who are connected in various ways to the russia investigation. 60 ex-cia officials have spoken
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out against the president's decision to target brennan, saying in a statement, all of us believe it is critical to protect classified information from unauthorized disclosure, but we believe equally stronger former government official versus their right to express their views on what they see of national security issues, without fear of dock so. the country will be weakened if there is a political litmus test applied before seasoned experts are allowed to share their views. now, many of the intel officials aren't agreeing with the way he went after trump. thai some are revoking security clearances, include director of national intelligence under obama james clapper and former fbi direct oor james comey and bruce orr, he's a name that has
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come up even more as congressional republicans and trump scrutinized his ties to the hillary clinton campaign 2016. >> we appreciate it so much. chaumpg. president trump says he's received a tremendous response for revoking former cia director brennan's security clearance, he suspects he will revoke more him embarrassment expressed by the admiral who oversaw bin ladin. tremendous response that's clear. what theed a men strikes has not been clear about is why the president did it. i want you to listen to the justifications from the press secretary and her bought. >> any benefits that senior officials might glean from consultations by mr. brennan are outweighed by the recollection posed by his erratic conduct and
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behavior. >> look, i say it, i say it again, that whole situation is a ricked witch hunt. >> make sense? well, this is not new. it's not the first time it's happened this week. after former staffer omarosa newman said she heard a recording of the president using the "n" word multiple times the president tweeted, there are no tapes. i don't have that word in my vocabulary. the very next day sanders said she could not guarantee and omarosa is incredible. you can understand sarah sanders gave full throated endorsements in the past that have not turned out true, many times. the president has made 4,229 false claims or misleading claims who ill in office. on average, that's more than seven a day. let's now pre in our guest, michael williams.
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he is the state senator in the state of georgia. we're appreciative of you coming back to the show. >> i appreciate being here. >> let's first start with this concept of the president, the administration saying omarosa is not credible. i want you to watch this series of statements over the last year-and-a-half from the administration. >> isn't it true the president had already decided to fire james comey sand he asked the justice department to put together the rational for that fireing? . >> president trump made the right decision to accept that recommendation. >> regardless of recommendation, i was going to fire comey. >> he didn't have anything to do with the statement put out? >> i wasn't involved in the statement or drafting at all. nor was the president. >> the president weighed in as a father. he did not decktate this statement. >> the president did dictate short response in the "new york times" article on behalf of his
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son. >> the congress woman stood up in the long tradition, stood up there all of that talked about how she was instrumental in getting that funding and she sat down. >> i wasn't even in congress in 2009 when the money or the billing was secured. so that's a lie. >> summarize the allegations against rob porter are serious and deeply troubling. they were investigated as a part of the back ground check as it was not completed and rob porter since resigned. >> the fbi submitted a partial report on the investigation in question in march and then a completed background investigation in late july. >> you were asked whether the president knew about the payment that facility tatded stormy daniels. >> there was no knowledge of any payments. >> it was paid by a law firm. the president repaid it? oh, i didn't know, he did.
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>> after all that how does this administration have the authority to say someone else is not credible? >> first of all. he is the president of the united states. he is shaking up wauldz. he's draining that swamp. what we are seeing is a lot of backlash. are there personal issues he may have? he is are you man he is doing what the people want. >> that itself the response he's getting. >> when you say personal issues, that with the truth? the administration is saying something else and the truth is coming out later. >> he goes out there and does what he feels is right for our country. edoes what the american people want to do to drain the swamp. >> everything has to do with the truth. for to you say he doesn't have a
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problem with the truth. he is doing what the country elected him to do. those things are mutually exclues sniff. >> no, they're not. let's go back to all the criminal that you listed out the ex-cia director having his security clearance revoked. >> yes. >> the political elite are attacking him from doing that. the american people were fine with. that why are they attacking president trump? because it's affecting their wallet the pocketbook. the people having these high clearance after they leave government service, they get paid a lot of money to be on advisory boards, councils to help private companies with the information they have. >> first i find it interesting a state candidate for governor is sit across from me and putting himself outside of the political elite. the reporting from the washington post-is they have prepared documents for the president to sign to revoke more security clearances, they're
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warting for the optimum time to use them as distractions. does that not hollow you the premise if they believe they are abusing tear privilege of having this, putting national secrets in jeopardy, why wait? if it's a problem do it today? >> do i know why they will what it? i don't know why? to say the washington post says that, to believe that as being correct, al and they have always been against the president, i can't say that's a ballot choice. >> do you believe the mess is the enemy of the people? >> i believe the press is conflicted now. i think the press has an opportunity to make a profit. >> to make money? >> and also a desire to report remember when you look at the various news channels, tox, cnn, they are presenting information to get clicks and eyeballs. they are more concerned about making money than delivering real news. >> okay. so you believe this conversation we are having is fake news?
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>> i didn't say. that i didn't say that. >> so tell me what, the concept of the president's attack on the media. i've asked you if you believe the media is the enemy of the people. >> let me ask you this question. you all -- >> typically this is how it works i ask the questions, you give the answers. >> i will answer that saying, why has the president not talked about how facebook and apple and several of these media companies have stripped alex jones? >> i feel oliver darcy has been on this story for cnn online and on television. i see you read the president's tweets this morning, we have, indeed, talked about it. i want to talk about omarosa and this book. she claims she has heard the president use the "n" word on recording multiple times the president says he hasn't the white house can't guarn tee there is no recording. would it matter tu if he had?
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>> yes, it would matter. it would matter as an individual. it would not necessarily matter to me as the person that is running our country the reason i separate those two is how. he has his personal beliefs, his personal ideas. i truly believe he is able separate those from how he is running the country. >> you say this is an important point here four as a man, donald trump using the "n" word, you personally would have a problem with that? >> yes. >> you don't have a problem of the office of the president using the "n" word. >> he did not use it in that office. he used it outside his office. if he was president and goes on tv and uses the "n" word, he did it before he was president. >> so wait a minute. he did it before he was president, so it's okay? >> no, i never said it was okay. it's always wrong for me
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individually. >> yes. >> what is the distinction you are createling here with the n-word there is one sex i have a problem with it. there is another it's okay. >> i have a problem always with the use of it. i don't have a problem of donald trump having used it in the past as my president. i always say using the n-would have had should not be accepted in society. just because he may have done it years ago, not as our president, doesn't mean we need to continue to berate him because he used it. how old is donald trump? 70-years-old? >> 72. >> 60, 50 years ago, we were not in a society that we are in now where people freely used that word. >> we are not talking about 16-year-old donald trump. we're talking potentially a 5055-65-year-old donald trump. >> do you know when he uses it? >> i don't know how hold he is. >> my question, he can't say if he's 50 or 66.
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>> this is not where i expected this conversation to go, senator. i do want to go to the military the idea i have a state official sitting across from me saying i'm okay with my president having used it because it happened before he was in office, tell me if i'm getting this wrong. >> to be clear, personally, it is always wrong. it is always wrong to use that word, but as the president today, he has not used that word. as a president today, he has not done that. to hold somebody accountable for something he did years ago as our president today, i think it sets a bad precedent. >> so if the taik tape comes out, your defense is to hold him accountable as a television hope is a bad precedent? >> i think it can set it up for a lot of bad things. >> we will put a comma there at that conversation. i have to get to other things, that's an important distinction you created right there. let me talk about this military
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parade the president is married to the idea of having this grand gesture. do you support the idea of this parade? >> i do. >> tell me why. >> one again, donald trump's campaign platforms was to make america great again to bring back american exceptionalism, to take pride in our country. this is one of the ways he wants to do that, not only are we the economic capital of the world, we are also the military power of the world, let's celebrate that embrace that, not abuse it, but show the world that we are -- >> yes let me ask you this, the president in bedminster, this is the 148th day the president is at one of his golf property, not the restaurants, his golf properties. he has been in office for about 575 days i believe it is, more than a quarter of his presidency he spent at a golf property, not one day with the troops in afghanistan. if he wants to make some grand
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gesture, why not as president go and speak -- he's a war time president, why not go and speak to his troops at war? >> i'm not going to sit here and second guess why he hasn't gone and spoken to the troops while he is playing golf. i do not know the answer to that i do know he truly loves this country. he truly loves the men and women fighting for our country. >> why not do that by speaking to them face-to-face? >> he is doing that by inyears creaseing the budget o -- ingreeceing the budget so you can take care of your family kids and your wife. >> this president although he did sign into law a pay raise for the military. it's not the first. it's been going on for decades. >> i never said it was the first. >> pay raises, you put that featherner his cap as if it makes him unique this president is unique in the case it's been 575 days of his administration and this war time president has not gone to speak with his
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troops in the arena there in afghanistan. but he's got time to go and play golf or go to his golf properties 148 days of a 5 sfaf-day administration. >> also, donald trump is a business guy and to be an effective business guy, you have to delegate the ceo of a multi-billion dollar company cannot do everything. he cannot be the person that does every single task. he has people in leadership in the military he respects and honors, he hand chose and is going out there and doing that, he is fighting for what he feels is most important to take care of tear family. >> he's the commander-in-chief. >> he is. >> he's the commander-in-chief. you can't delegate that. >> he's not delegating the commander-in-chief. he is delegating who is talking to the troops while he is back at home fighting for their livelihood. >> thank you so much. breaking news right now,
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kofi annan, former u.n. secretary general nobel peace prize winner has died. the diplomat from ghana, he spent his top post for human right the current secretary general released this statement, kofi annan was a guiding force for good. it is with profound sadness that i learned of his passing. his family says he passed away peacefully after a short illness. his sweet children were by his side during his final days. coming up, andrew cuomo under fire for saying america was never great. so you now he is walking that remark back. also, we have new disturbing details we are learning regarding the deaths of a
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new details for you this morning regarding the deaths of a pregnant woman and her daughters in colorado, but let's listen here first to one of those little girls singing about her father. ♪ my daddy is a hero ♪ he helps me grow up strong >> hmm, her dad, chris watts is the prime suspect and accused of killing his wife and the daughters. watts has not been charged, but prosecutors are expected to file those charges in a few days. we have new information. listen to what cnn's randi kaye has learned about the family. >> guess what, girls? mommy has a baby in her belly. >> yay! >> reporter: a moment of joy
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that's turned to pain and mystery. that was shenan watts telling her two daughter she was pregnant again, 4-year-old bella and 3-year-old celeste. there is the video of her sharing the news to her husband chris watts. >> that's awesome. i guess win want to, it happens. >> reporter: but not long after that video was taken, something terrible happened. on monday of this week, shenan and her daughter went missing. then came tuesday and her husband chris began a series of public pleas for tear safe return. >> just come back. like if somebody has her, just please bring her back. i need to see everybody. i need to see everybody again, this house is not complete without everybody here. i just want them back. i just want them to come back
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and if they're not safe right now, that's what's tearing me apart. >> reporter: authorities searched the home and cran vanv the neighborhood. two days later a grizzly discovery. >> we were able recover a body shenan watts body. >> it was covered on the property of a petroleum and national gas company where chris watts used to work the bodies of two children were found nearby. then another bizarre turn the desperate husband and father who had pleaded for his family's safe return, was now suddenly the prime suspect in their disappearance. >> on the late hours, the husband, chris watts, was taken into custody and taken to the county jail. >> reporter: he has yet to be officially charged. police say he faces three counts of first degree murder and
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tampering with a human body. >> no, he wouldn't do anything. then i seen his interview, i was like, oh my god, something's not right. >> on facebook with emotion running high, shenan's brother directly accused chris watts. this piece of blank blank, me he rot in --. police have not suggested a motive, before his arrest, watts told reporters he and hess wife had exchanged words. >> we had and i emotional conversation, i'll live leave it at that. >> a portrait of a happy family. >> i got a friend request from chris on facebook. what the heck, i'll never meet him. accept. one thing led to another and eight years later, we have two kids, we live in colorado and he is the best thing that has ever happened to me. >> reporter: randi kaye, cnn,
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new york. >> well, new court documents suggest some of the victims may have been strangled. >> autopsies were conducted on the girls and her mother the attorney requested dfa swabs be taken under the mother's finger cenales and around the necks. we will be talking about this case and what those might be telling her. >> all right, still to come, new york governor andrew cuomo is walking back his remarks that america was never great the comments set off a lot of criticism around walk and the country. lit affect voters at the polls in november there in new york? and potentially in 2020 across the country. atlanta mayor joins us ahead. improve our workflow. attract new customers. that's when fastsigns recommended fleet graphics. yeah! now business is rolling in. get started at fastsigns.com. yeah! now business is rolling in. i love you, basement guest bathroom.
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. well, good morning, 32 minutes past the hour. i'm kristi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. the paul manafort jury will return on monday after entering the second day without a verdict. the president child in calling manafort a good person and the trial sad. >> he is charged with bank fraud, tax evasion and facing up to 305 years in prison if convicted. so good to have you here to discuss. >> thank you sore having me.
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>> you are, of course, an attorney, do you get the sense the president should be weighing in on this at all, seeing the fact that jurors are in dleb racing mode at this point? >> it's america. we should all have a right to weigh in. i don't think he's correct. but he certainly has a right to express his penalties. but i think at the end of the day, who know what is a jury is thinking and deliberating. you don't know if you have one person who is holding out or if you have six people. so i think we have to wait until the verdict i don't think the president israeli has any insight into what this jury will do more than any of us. >> you don't see the president's words as tampering in anyway? >> i don't think he's tampering, he is expressing an penalties. if the jerry is truly doing its job, it's not listening to the president or watching the news. >> so you are a democrat, let's have a conversation about broader democratic politics. we are in mid-term season, there
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are many candidates saying they will not vote for planes pelosi as speaker if democrats tack it back -- will not vote for nancy pelosi. >> i am a huge admirer of nancy pelosi's ability. the fact that our top three leaders are in their late 70s, i don't care who they have. >> that is in fact a problem. it is a problem we are at a moment in time where young people are involved as they never have been before. these are the parkland students getting young people involved. i don't care how good you are, there is a generational gap. you can ask me for a yes/no answer for what happens four months from now, very soon the democratic party needs to get faces and people who can speak to people if their 40s to people in their 20s. no doubt about it. >> a member of congress to call out the top three? you've got nancy pelosi, jim
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clyburn, calling them out solely because of their age or do you think he has a point, that you need fresh blood at the top in. >> i think i'd much whether have a conversation on what our issues are, not someone's age. i think it's completely unfair to say someone is unfit to lead because they are 70. i would say it's an porn opportunity for us to look at our leadership across the board. i do think we have solid leadership. i think certainly all voices need to be reflected. i don't think someone's age stops them from reflecting the voice and the people in the party. >> there was an issue that popped up this week with governor andrew cuomo where he said that and he says later an artful expression america was never that great. he was talking about the campaign slogan of president trump. let's listen here to how she
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trying to clear that up. >> i want to be very clear, of course, america is great. of course, america has always been great no one questions that, as you know, my family is evidence of american greatness. >> okay. so the thing is, the president's slogan was let's make america great again, implying that america wasn't great in the first place. is it not the same argument? sit fair for the president to slam the governor in this case? >> i think it would be disingenuous to say that americans have had moments that have not been that great. >> that being said, we are the greatest country in the world, as you look at our history with the struggles of civil rights, as you even look at moments that we are experiencing with this president, we've had some moments in our country's history that we should not be proud of,
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but that is what a democracy all about. and there is no country on this earth that has a stronger democracy and a stronger opportunity for us to correct when we are wrong than this country. so. >> we're running out of time. i had to get to one other question, it's not just about georgia. it's about the nation. 72,000 deaths in the opioid crisis. georgia, apparently is leading the way to a sense, while numbers are 14% nationally, 16% increase in deaths in georgia last year. what is georgia doing? what is the plan to try to combat this? >> there is a comprehensive effort in this state w. refortunate we are home to the cdc in atlanta. we are dealing with addiction, not just an opioid crisis, but many of our cities, we are dealing with a crack epidemic. drug addiction and the way we address it, criminal justice
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reform and mental health services, it will continue to be a compehencive approach -- come comprehensive approach. >> thank you. >> thank you for have something e. >>. attorney general sessions is coming up with suing opioid makers. dr. sanjay gupta has his medical penalties and whether it helps america's battle with addiction.
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are taking to battle addiction. we are talking about the ways america is combating this crisis. >> so doctors in several states, michigan, tennessee, florida, they're limiting opoised due to the cdc restriction, but that could have a harmful effect for people that need it, are they not? >> that's the real balance. i saw the recommendations, they were recommendation, first of all, there is no doctor that says doctors can provide things. if you look at the first page, they say it's for chronic pain outside of active care, outside of palliative care, outside of end of life care. certain people they realize will have a demand, yeah, this is the balance, there are people that
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really need these medications. >> how badly do they depend on them? >> if somebody has been dependent on pain and taking them long term, at that pont they need them it would be hard to taper them down. that is one of the big concerns. it's worth pointing out we take 80 to 90% of the world's opioids in this country. my point is this, it's not that people don't need these medications the rest of the world physician out how to take less. people have pain issues all over the world. so why do we -- >> do they? >> different ways of treating pain, non-opioid based ways of treating pain. you have emergency rooms that are completely opioid free emergency rooms. >> in other countries. >> they figured outd out ways to
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say, someone comes in for a broken hip, for example, can you give injections to decrease inflammation as as opposed to take pills to affect the whole body. i'm not saying that is the message for everybody, opioids have been there for everybody. the advances in this country, why have those alternatives not exbanded do you think? it goes without saying, this is a huge business. there is not a lot of incentives to change something where you have 80 to 90% supplies it's not to be patronizing to researchers doing good work out there, morphine, these opioid based ped indications have been the answer for decades now.
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>> so i wanted to ask you about president trump this week asking attorney general jeff sessions to sue companies who produce opioids. is that an answer to trying to combat the crisis? >> i would say it's not the answer. but i believe it's become necessary at the state level. there are 27 states that have done this, they're suing manufacturers. now the federal government say they may join lawsuits and do one of their own. i think that for some time you've had certain companies that have been out there giving information we know is false. >> that false information probably created this culture, it was intent. it's a big company smr they're trying to make money. >> so if they behave badly, if there were false ways they were distributed, paid people to promote them, those are probably
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authentic lawsuits. >> so there would be a place they would be beneficial and legitimate? >> i think. so i'm not a lawyer. you can look at the evidence and say, yeah, a lot of those things teamed to happen. >> if sessions said, how do i pursue from a medical perspective, would you give him in making that termination? >> i'm a forward looking guys, if it's to focus on the problem, i would say, what are the guarantees where companies are ships tense of thousands of pills to a communities of 5 million people? those types of things have to stop. in terms of the punitive part, i
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well, a new baby boy is without a dad today. i.c.e. agents hauled him away, the father, as the family was headed to the hospital where the mother was scheduled for c-section. >> the mother says she does not know what to do now, because chris holstrom with kcal-kcbs, he's a reporter that has more. >> reporter: she is holding back the tears.
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she says she is doing bad at this moment. that's when you post-need your husband. the other of five just gave birth two days ago, the same day her husband was detained by i.c.e. agents. it was wednesday afternoon, she was on the way to the hospital with her husband. she was heading there for a pre planned c-section. under surveillance shows them at the gas station, two cars surround her vehicle. she says they were i.c.e. agents. she says they asked for herrere. she says they had him step out of the vehicle to check for weapons. when he got out, they put him into custody. you can see she was tis ter cal and had no idea what was going on. she says her husband has no criminal history and police have
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never stopped him, he's never had a ticket. she was forced to drive herself to hospital. shortly after, she gave birth to her baby boy. she is physically okay. this mother is living a nightmare. she says, my husband needs to be here him he had to wait for his son so long and someone just took him away. >> the family is working to get an attorney, i.c.e. has fought yet xheptd on the incident. >> yet commented on the incident. >> we are back in just a moment. people want to buy this house. but you got this! rocket mortgage by quicken loans makes the complex simple. >> we are back in just a moment. understand the details and get approved in as few as eight minutes. by america's largest mortgage lender. commented on the incident. >> yet commented on the incidetnt. >> we are back in just a moment. for just $59... ancestrydna can open you to a world of new cultures to explore. with two times more detail than any other dna test... you can get a new taste of your heritage.
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and got them back on track. there's a new place with daily laundry service. a place with a day spa. a place where seniors get the care they need in the comfort of home. home instead senior care. she pretty much lives in her favorite princess dress. but once a week i let her play sheriff so i can wash it. i use tide to get out those week old stains and downy to get it fresh and soft. you are free to go. tide and downy together. so, howell...going? we had a vacation early in our marriage that kinda put us in a hole. go someplace exotic? yeah, bermuda. a hospital in bermuda.
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a hospital in bermuda. what? what happened? i got a little over-confident on a moped. even with insurance, we had to dip into our 401(k) so it set us back a little bit. sometimes you don't have a choice. but it doesn't mean you can't get back on track. great. yeah, great. i'd like to go back to bermuda. i hear it's nice. yeah, i'd like to see it. no judgment. just guidance. td ameritrade.
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michael smer coniconish is taki break. >> i am back with you. the feud over security clearances escalating. ex-cia director john brennan firing back at president trump after the president threatened to strip a doj's clearance very quickly. >> he really, i think he's abusing the powers of that office. i think right now this country is in a crisis in terms of what mr. trump has done and is liable to do. >> the white house isn't backing down the washington post reports documents needed to strip additional clearances tied to the russia probe are ready for the president to sign, sarah westwood in new jersey, i understand when we say dozen, 66, former cia officials are standing in solidarity with brennan now?
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