tv New Day Sunday CNN November 25, 2018 3:00am-4:00am PST
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nternet for a low price. sign up online and get a $300 pre-paid card. comcast business. beyond fast. we will close the border. when they lose control of the border on the mexico side we just close the border. >> the president is hinting that he may have struck a deal with mexico. >> next go is like the united states, worried that more ca caravans will come. >> police say bradford was fleeing the scene and brandishing a weapon and when a hoover police department working as mall security shot and killed him. >> serve out here hurting so bad! this is not the way to say good-bye. not with a bullet! not in the back! for anyone that was offended by my comments, i certainly apologize. >> she made a statement which i know that she feels very badly
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about it. >> it's given our state another black eye. up oral a sunday morning! we are grateful you are. 6:00 here. i'm christi paul. >> i'm martin savidge in for victor blackwell. deal or no deal at the u.s./mexico border in the incoming mexican government denies reports it's reached a deal to keep asylum seekers out of the united states. plus, according to "the washington post" trump campaign manager said the president is surrounded by disloyal staff and, quote, swamp creatures. the comments from those in the president's inner circle. >> are you heading home today? could ab rough road for millions of americans. winter storms are expected to create trouble for travelers, unfortunately, across the
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country. >> maybe an excuse not to make it to work tomorrow? ha ha! just could happen. we want to start with the big pushback on president trump's overhaul of the asylum process at the u.s./mexico border. it would require asylum seekers to wait in mexico while their applications are processed in the united states. they say it would double the number of asylum applications processed at the border but the mexican government says he has not reached any agreement with washington. sarah westwood is with us now. how is it reconciled is in the president says a deal. mexico says there's not. >> reporter: that's right. there is certainly confusion over the status of this deal as mexican officials signal that it's still in the preliminary stages of negotiation and president trump is touting this deal as all but a certainty in a series of tweets yesterday, saying that asylum seekers will have to wait in mexico while
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their claims are processed in u.s. court which, of course, would be a major overhaul of the current asylum system where migrants are eligible to request asylum as soon as they are on u.s. soil. president trump has already tried to make changes to asylum policy in recent weeks. in fact, the week before the midterm election, the president unveiled a proposed rule change that would require migrants to present themselves at legal points of entry if they wanted to request asylum that would prevent he them from claiming asylum if they were caught trying to cross the border illegally but that attempted executive action was blocked for now by a federal judge and the president has been fixated on that ruling as he spends the thanksgiving week down here in west palm beach and tweeting about it from his property in mar-a-lago. the president will soon wrap up his thanksgiving holiday here in n., head back to washington, and on monday, he'll be heading to mississippi for two campaign rallies for embattled republican
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candidate senator cindy hyde-smith in a runoff race in mississippi and why the president is holding two rallies in two different locations in mississippi on monday and gives the president the opportunity perhaps to address this issue of asylum and perhaps clear up some of the confusion about where the steel stands. >> we appreciate it, sarah westwood. cindy hyde-smith is facing new criticism over a measure she supported while she was in the mississippi state senate. it praisesed confederate soldier's to -- his homeland. this could be a referendum what critics see as her very public missteps. >> reporter: senator cindy hyde-smith tried to dial back the storm of criticism that republicans sparked about joking about a public hanging.
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during tuesday's debate in a runoff campaign, hyde-smith apologized but accused others of twisting her words for political gain. >> you know, for anyone that was offended from my -- by my comments, i certainly apologize. there was no ill will, no intent whatsoever in my statements. this comment was twisted and it was turned into a weapon to be used against me, a political weapon used for nothing but personal and political gains on my opponent. >> reporter: her democratic opponent mike espy said her comments were not toward anyone. >> her comments came out of her mouth so it calls out state harm. it has given our state another black eye that we don't need. >> reporter: since the public hanging remarks, a number of corporate donors to the hyde-smith campaign have add asked for their money back,
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including walmart and a photograph with her posing with artifacts. how much of the remark is having on voters depends on who you talk to. >> if people truly are understanding what she is all about, i don't think that will affect them. >> it made it very clear, both to me and to a lot of other black mississippians, that the republican candidates do not really have our best interest at heart. >> reporter: espy, who is still considered an underdog in this deeply red state, is counting on an energized black electorate. president trump will be in mississippi to campaign for hyde-smith and tuesday he seemed to be working damage control. >> she made a statement i know she feels very badly about it and it was just sort of said in
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jest. she is a tremendous woman and it's a shame she has to go through this. >> for a closer look at what is at stake in the mississippi race, let's bring in historian for princeton university, julian zeleny. >> good morning. >> this should have been, i would say, a very easy win, but ste instead for the republican candidate because of her own words it has turned into a battle. how close do you think it will be? >> the odds are still not as good as what happened in alabama where a democrat was able to win against a very flawed candidate. mississippi is deeply red. it's a deeply trump state and rural voters will play a big say in the final outcome, but certainly her history, her remarks, the ongoing connections between her positions and her record and racial issues has energized african-americans.
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it's certainly frightened being moderate voters and it's made it competitive, which is kind of an amazing story. >> african-american voters, i believe, made up 33% of those that voted at least in the initial round of voting earlier in the month. but this is a runoff and the problem possess runoffs here is people hay not be as enthused as the first time around. getting out the vote is going to be key. >> absolutely. it's always hard in a midterm and it's even harder in a runoff where people are not paying attention. although in mississippi, i think they are paying attention. i think the kind of remarks we have seen will get the attention certainly of african-american voters who are not going to tolerate this in 2018. but, still, the odds favor the republicans and i think espy knows that, but he's hoping what has happened the last week awakens democrats and make sure that vote turnout happens. >> yeah. the espy campaign is hoping that
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this has energized democratic voters but it can also energize republican voters. as horrendous as the words may be, there are some who will say that is okay by me. >> it's what you might call the caravan effect. it's the way president trump whipped up the votes in certain red state for the senate races in the midterms and there might be a way in which that happens here in this race. it actually helps turn out with white voters. we would hope that is not the case again in 2018, but i think some people watching this are wondering in this battle between rural sqae rural constituentsies and moderate white voters who wins out in this day and age when these remarks are on the table. >> is there a clash going on between the modern south and the unfortunate and ugly history of
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mississippi, and how is that going to play out in the ballot box? >> well, espy, when he says this really reflects poorly on mississippi, he is appealing, as a moderate democrat, he is a very moderate democrat, if he is actually appealing to white mississippi voters, including the business community, saying this is not good for the state. again, he is replaying, in some ways, the arguments we heard in alabama when roy moore was working. and so i don't really know how this is going to play out. again, it's stacked in favor of a republican victory but espy is trying to make inroads on both fronts, african-american and voters who are not, but who are sick of this image of mississippi and want to make a statement that they are not about comments about public hangings in mississippi. >> we should point out this is the last unresolved senate race of the 2018 midterms. what is at stake as far as
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politically in washington? >> very important. what we have seen the first two years of the trump presidency and the narrow majority of the senate is every vote matters. mcconnell is hanging on to each vote with controversial legislation. so, again, democrats are not going to win a majority of the senate, but if they can cut down that vote by one, that can matter on crucial legislation, including health care, for example. >> julian zeleny, always good to talk to you. thanks very much. >> thanks for having me. >> today on "state of the union," adam schiff and joni ernest are on the show. tune in at 9:00 a.m. eastern. central plains and central midwest, if you're in that area you know heavy snowstorm is expected to make a mess if you are traveling this holiday weekend. cnn meteorologist allison chincar is in the cnn weather
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center for us with the forecast. what is the worst part of this? let's just get it out there. >> yeah. we have a lot of cities stwael that are going to be dealing with travel concerns today. we have got the midwest and southeast. oddly enough the southeast is due to dense fog. you got about 40 million people under dense fog advisories and affect atlanta and memphis. the midwest is where the big system is going to hit. cities like detroit, chicago, st. louis is where our next big system is coming and that is going to be a true blizzard. to have blizzard-like conditions it's not always about the snow. it's actually generally about the wind and the incredibly poor visibility and we are going to have all of that. here you can see about 30 million people under some type of winter weather alert from colorado all the over towards michigan. we also have the wind. even if you aren't in the blizzard warning you still have the potential to get wind gusts up to 65 miles per hour. remember, if you're on the highway that can give some issues with the high profile
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vehicles. here is a look as that system begins to push off to the east and affect areas of the midwest today and then it's actually going to affect the northeast for tomorrow. so those cities aren't quite out of the woods just yet either. some of these locations may pick up as much as a foot of snow. >> allison chinchar, thank you so much. >> if you're out there, drive carefully. >> be careful! an alabama family demanding answers. police killed their son after mistaking him for a gunman at a thanksgiving night mall shooting. "the washington post" is reporting on a scathing new book that calls out washington insiders by name. and scientists are proposing a way to tackle climate change but it involves spraying more chemicals into the air to dim out the sun? more on this technique, ahead.
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we got new video to show you of the after did this math of pictures from paris. french president emmanuel macron is talking about tax hikes on diesel and gasoline. >> police were force to do use tear gas and water cannons. 42 protesters were arrested in paris and two police officers and six other people were injure. family of an alabama man shot by police, they are demanding answers now. emantic bradley was killed by an officer who thought he -- that emantic shot two people at a mall on friday night. it turns out bradford was not the gunman. >> yesterday, dozens of protesters showed up at the mall
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saying justice for e.j. and black lives matter. >> reporter: the initial report was two men had gotten into a fight of some kind at the mall that resulted in an 18-year-old man and a 12-year-old girl being shot. they were both taken to the hospital. now police said bradford was fleeing the scene and brandishing a weapon and that is when a hoover police officer working as mall security shot and killed him. later hoover police issued a statement saying bradford may have been involved in some aspect of the altercation but he likely did not fire the rounds that injured the 18-year-old victim. so police say there is at least one gunman still at large. bradford's family has now retained civil rights attorney benjamin crump. his office released a statement from the family saying they are heart broken and as we continue to grieve, rest assured that we are working diligently with our legal team to determine exactly what happened and why this police officer killed our son. we will never forgetej a e.j. a
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ask for your continuous prayers. a woman said she hid in a dressing room with others and she is frustrated how law enforcement has handled this entire situation. the officer involved with the shooting has been placed on administrative leave. the alabama law enforcement agency is now heading up the investigation into the shooting. natasha chen, cnn. in the garden center of a florida walmart. police say a man shot his female partner several times after a domestic argument and then he got away on a bicycle. >> the woman died at the hospital and police found the suspect david johnson at the couple's home nearby. he had a self-inflicted gunshot wound and was hospitalized but authorities say he is not expected to survive. according to "the washington post," a scathing new book calling out top washington officials as president trump's, quote, inside enemies, is hitting shelves on tuesday and it's alleging in this book dozens of white house insiders
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[ neighing ] [ sigh ] it's bring your own phone, not pony. so i could've taken the bus? yeah. bring your phone. switch your carrier. save hundreds a year with xfinity mobile. call, click or visit a store today. well, good morning to all of you wherever you are waking up and if you're waking up in the nation's capital, that is one beautiful view. >> it is. >> right now. >> i'm martin savidge in for victor blackwell. >> we are so glad to have you
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with us. you too, marty, as always. >> thank you. >> who may be in and who may be out of the white house? the president is holding interviews for top level cabinet members and senior staff at the mar-a-lago estate this weekend. this as a new book by a former trump campaign manager, no guess who that is, corey allow wlewna >> there are loaded words in this according to "the washington post." >> there are two books. one is tell-alls from reporters and former aides who are disturbed by what is going on at the white house. the other kind is this book called "trump's enemies." it's an aggressively pro-trump
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book saying trump's only problem in the white house are these deep state figures. a book guaranteed to sell well among sean hannity and rush limbaugh fans. it goes in names names. saying michael cohen and paul manafort, two former trump loyalists who flipped on the president and cooperated with robert mueller and describes these two as rats and figures like gary cohn as a liberal and goes on and on about that. the book is a reminder this administration has been rocked by different people. like lewandowski is on the outside and stirring up trouble. he got an interview with the president with the book. they sat down with the president for a friendly chat and some of it appears in the book and here
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is one of the standout passages i thought. the president said, i really mean it when i say the fake news is the greatest enemy of the people. he said that this is something that he is very proud of, that he has told the public again and again that the news is fake. you can see the quote here. of course, in trump's under-down world he says real news is fake and fake news is real so he has done a lot of damage to media literacy efforts to label the cnn and "the new york times" as fake. he says he is proud of that and one of his accomplishments as a president is to try to create this confusion in the public about what to believe and what not to believe. this book will help in terms of the pro-trump base and i'm sure do well. one of the most popular books of the year has actually been the critical books of trump. the books that are political but not pro-trump.
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>> with that said, how is michelle obama's book sales? >> michelle obama's book in its first week on sale sold more than 1.4 million copies. this is off the chats even for a first lady. 1.4 million copies in the first week. the publisher says more than 5 million copies will be out for frint available for the holidays. she timed this really well, after the election angle going into thanksgiving and christmas and a time book sales are hot. michelle obama has accomplished something few others have. she is critical of trump in the book but the book is not about trump. unlike so many other titles this year, "fire and fury" and others that are sold at barnes & noble and amazon, michelle obama put out one that is popular. it's only a week so michelle obama has a lot more weeks in
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this holiday season to rack up more sales. >> the lewandowski book poise out there is a huge divide in this presidency depending on where you are politically. >> if you're standing by the president you'll buy "trump's enemies." if you're interested in a critique of the president and reliving the obama years, you'll buy michelle obama's book and barely any space in between. i agree a problem with two different news world serving two different americas right now which contributes to the divide. >> yeah. and depending on which book you get for the holidays it says a lot about you, unless you get all three, of course. >> there you go! >> right. >> play it easily down the middle. brian stelter, as always, thanks very much. >> thanks. >> catch brian and his show "reliable sources" today at 11:00 a.m. eastern right here on cnn. the white house wants the supreme court to bypass lower courts and fast track the
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military military transgender ban. is dimming the sun a feasible way to combat climate change? some scientists seem to think so. we will explain how it might work. ♪ when you shop with retailmenot, you find money everywhere. and when you save on everything...like travel... ...clothing... ...make up... even prescriptions... it really adds up. it's kind of a big deal. retailmenot. yours for the saving.
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president trump's administration is asking the supreme court to step in and take up the military transgender ban. essentially bypassing lower courts. the rules would disqualify service members who, quote, have required or undergone gender transition and individuals without transgender dysphoria would be required to serve under their biological sex.
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joey jackson is with us, cnn legal action, along with kristen. when president trump announced in july this potential plan he had back therngs the policy to ban transgender people, you said let's meet face-to-face and you it will me i'm not worthy. what would you say to him today? >> i would say the same thing. i would want to be face-to-face and have a conversation and try to really understand what are the reasons? because the reasons to ban transgender people does not make sense. we are capable, we are worthy, we are american citizens who want to serve and we are able to do the job. there 134,000 transgender veterans living in america right now. there are 15,000 transgender service people in the service right now in uniform. so there are thousands of us who have done a job, there are thousands right now serving. so it just does not make sense to cut people who are capable
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when we are in such short supply in the middle of wars around the world that we are fighting. why would you cut these people who are capable? >> joey, what do you make of how successful or unsuccessful this attempt may be by the president to leapfrog and go straight to the supreme court? how would that be received in the supreme court? >> good morning. thank you very much for your service, kristen. it is very much appreciated by me and people throughout the world. and, of course, our country. i think to your question, christi, i think it will have little, if any chance and let's talk about why. as an initial matter there is a process, a protocol. usually the federal courts decide upon an issue and then it goes to the court of appeals. we know in this particular case that at least three federal district courts, the initial level of the federal court have
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decided on this issue and they have made a contrary decision from what the decision would like. we know also that the ninth circuit, which the president rails about persistently and repeatedly has taken up the matter on appeal but they have not yet decided the matter on appeal. why is anyone what i said is relevant? it's relevant because the process would require, in general terms, that appellate courts decide, number one. then number two, generally, there is a split in appellate decisions meaning we are a large country. we are a country of 50 states. it's not uncommon for one, for example, appellate court. you have 13 district courts and 12 really in d.c. which makes the 13th. you may have a split, meaning there is a distinction and opinions and there is a difference for which the supreme court may want to get involved and it has not happened. . i don't think this is hype and i don't think an issue that bypass the normal protocol. finally i don't see that it's
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this imperative of importance that is bypasses the process. >> is there any indication of what the urgency is here? >> that is the issue. every legal issue is important and everyone wants to get their matter heard. people are entitled to relief but it's not, you know -- this is not bush v gore where we are attempting to subsidize who is the next president of the united states? please, supreme court, resolve the issue for us. it's a matter that needs to get resolved and i hope it's evolved for everyone who wants to wear the uniform regardless of who they are and how they feel but i think it will get resolved in time, but i don't think although we know this president busts all norms and busts what he wants to do, i don't think it's the time to be heard yesterday and last point, i certainly don't think, you know, when you're in the middle of a fight with the supreme court justice, the chief justice of the united states, how you're going to ask him to do that. so i don't think so. >> kristen, this is a president
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who has said i am the greatest supporter of the military. what are the conversations of people in the military about president trump, especially in light of what has happened here in the last 48 hours? >> in the military, we have many, many sayings and one of the greatest sayings i say is show us, sew me. i want to see your actions to start speaking and not your words. show us through by supporting the troops. i'm a troop. we have 15,000 troops that need your support. i would say also to all of those people out there that you say you support lgbt, you support all of these rights and african-americans and you support transgender people but you don't do anything. so stand up and start call your congress persons and senators and stand up and show the numbers of people who actually do support the troops, support lgbt, support people who are
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being disenfranchised and shut out. >> kristen, there has been some criticism of the president lately of not deploying troops in combat zones saying that john mccain that what a while ago he was not a war hero but most recently not visiting that american cemetery in france. what was your reaction to that moment a couple of weeks ago in france? >> well, i've spent a lot of time in combat zones and in pretty harsh environments and the rain never stopped us. the weather never stops us. we do what we have to do. we do that. all of the other world leaders were there. it was disappointing, it was disrespectful, it was not cool, not cool at all. >> all right. kristin, we thank you for your service. thank you, joey jackson. thank you for taking time and always good to talk to both of you. >> thank you. >> thank you. britain's plan to lead the
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european union brexit was just been given the okay. theresa may faces a battle back home in that agreement has been condemned but you now have to lobby to get it approved and ratified by parliament or risk leave the european union in march without any formal exit plan. cnn's erin mclaughlin is in paris. this is a remarkable day but not totally unexpected. >> no. >> reporter: it was expected that the 27 remaining eu leaders would sign off on the so-called brexit deal but, nevertheless, the leaders here saying that this is a historic day. it's also a sad day for the european union. essentially what they have done is endorsed two key documents, the so-called divorce deal, a
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585-page legally binding withdrawal text which lays out the terms of the divorce, the terms of the uk's dart toepartum the eu. what they have also approached today is laying out the framework for the future relationship between the uk and the eu. but this is done today, martin, with sadness. we were just listening to the president of the european commission who said that this is a sad moment for the eu and the uk. he also said that history will prove that, saying it's the only deal possible. the best deal possible signaling their two british parliament, where this deal goes next, that negotiations as far as the eu is concerned are closed. now teresa may is here today. she has spoken to the eu 27 leaders. we are expecting a press conference from her shortly. >> cnn's erin mclaughlin with
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the news out of brussels, thank you very much for that. listen to this one. scientists say they have a plan to tackle global warming. it involves spraying more chemicals into the atmosphere to dim out the sun. how does this work? we will explain. e founder of ug. before shipstation it was crazy. it's great when you see a hundred orders come in, a hundred orders come in, but then you realize i've got a hundred orders i have to ship out. shipstation streamlined that wh the order data, the weights of , everything is seamlessly put into shipstation, so when we print the shipping ll everything's pretty much done. it's so much easier so now, we're ready, bring on t. shipstation. the number one ch of online sellers. go to shipstation.com/tv and get two months free.
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let's talk an athlete, dancer, an avid skier and then there was an accident and she turned her pain into purpose. please meet this year's top ten cnn hero. >> 26 years ago, i went out skiing and i remember i somersaulted and i landed on my back. i knew in that instant that i was paralyzed. but i was determined to show that i wasn't going to give up so easily. i was inspired to create a program that could gift my ability to anyone that has a neurological impairment. >> go to cnnheroes.com to vote
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for amanda or any of your top ten cnn heroes and thank you for doing so. the trump's administration alarming climate assessment how can human kind attack global warmer. a technique similar to the uv sunglasses to block out the h m sun's harmful raise. >> allison chinchar, cnn meteorologist, is back to help us understand how this technique works because it's not really sure. >> i got to admit it not only sounds confusing but crazy. let's break it bodown. they want to send airplanes into the atmosphere and spraying air a soles into the atmosphere like you're adding extra clouds but not all aerosols are the same and that is the key here with this because when you do that,
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you essentially are trying to block more of that sunlight. here is how aerosols work. in general, they reflect. 25% of the sun's energy back into space but, again, we said not all of them are the same. so you have to understand the two different types of aerosols. you have the lighter ones, translucent ones and those not only reflect radiation but, in essence, cool the atmosphere. which is what we are trying to do. if you use darker aerosols, that absorbs the radiation and actually warms the atmosphere even though at the surface you're actually still cooling it. it really depends on what type of aerosols they use. the reason behind this theory they try to cite volcanoes. usually when you get large volcanic eruptions they send sulfur in the air. in 1991, this volcano sent more than 20 tons of sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere and those particles remind in the stratosphere two years.
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when you look at what happened. when the particles went up the temperature went down. the problem it quickly went back up once the particles went away. the problem really with this proposal is it really acts like a band-aid and a temporary solution. the only way around it is to continuously spray those aerosols back into the atmosphere but then the concern becomes what are we putting into the atmosphere? the problem with this study they asked if we could do it but they should have asked "should we do it"? >> a good point. then the issue of cost. i wonder what that is. allison, we will have to follow-up on that. thanks very much. all righty. look at what was happening in argentina. chaotic there after soccer fans attack the opposing teams. why it forced one of south america's biggest rivalries to return home. (speaking in italian) prenderro dieci biscotti...
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whenshe was pregnant,ter failed, in-laws were coming, a little bit of water, it really- it rocked our world. i had no idea the amount of damage that water could do. we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they were on it. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today. there are clerge football rivalry games and the army/navy game. it will be played less than two weeks from now. >> a navy player has his sights
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on what comes after the game? >> this is really a cool story. very good. and great timing heading into that game. while other college football players dream of the nfl, the players who play in this game dream of serving their country. for navy's andrew wood, it's always been his goal to be a pilot. at 6'4", 300 pounds this offensive lineman is not what you would immediately picture when you hear the word "airman." >> it's very important for us to have somebody like andrew come to -- embodied everything we are looking for in this program. >> andrew is the most highly decorated lineman. >> he had s.e.c. offers wayand don't normally get that but he is a young man who knew what he wanted in life. >> to be here it at the naval academy is to have that tangible
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goal of flying afterwards and sitting down with my family throughout the recruiting process and talking about goals i had, not just the next four years but the next 40 like you hear a lot of people say. i don't really know where my station for planes came. i just remember growing up just looking at pictures of my granddad and the planes he flew over in the korean war ten a grew from there. >> from day one all he told me he wants to fly and the naval academy is where he wants to do it. >> he's played in every game of his career. and has been a full-time starter the last three seasons. been a heck of a player and really kind of the epitome of what you're looking for in a naval academy football player. >> he seems like a guy who has been here forever. we are going to miss him. >> people don't think i could play football. playing football i had to get down to 230 pounds so i had to drop 70 pounds from the conclusion of football to
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graduation. >> probably his whole life he has tried to gain weight and maintain weight, bulk up for football. the day it's over, i think he goes into reverse. >> if i was selected to be a pilot, it would be a huge honor and it's something i've. working toward all of my four years here and i finally obtained it. >> and there is more. the naval academy announce their service selections this weekend and andrew will, indeed, be a pilot, fulfilling his lifelong dream. the army/navy game is december 8th and we will have live coverage all weekend long. if that game is better than this one last night we are no a real treat. lsu and texas a&m went to seven overtimes! >> oh, my gosh! >> rodgers won it with this two-point conversion catch in that overtime. college station goes crazy. 74-72 was the final! most combined points scored in college football history. >> if you think our rivalries
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are intense, check this out. fans of the argentina soccer fan through projectiles. the team shielding itself from rock and shattered glass and some players had to be hospitalized. river plate throwing things in the street and were met with tear gas. the match was postponed and played later today. what a great story on andrew wood. he can drop the pounds and get in a plane and be a pilot. >> thank you, vince. we will close the border. when they lose control of the border on the mexico side we just close the border. >> the president is hinting that he may have struck a deal with mexico. >> next go is like the united states, worried that more caravans will come. >> police say bradford was fleeing the scene and brandishing a weapon and when a hoover police department working as mall security shot and killed him.
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