tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN October 20, 2019 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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coast, we continue following the breaking news on the streets of hong kong. protests continue to play out on the streets there. welcome to viewers here in the united states and around the world. i'm george howell at cnn world headquarters in atlanta. again, these live images that you see in hong kong, these unauthorized rallies that have grown tense and hostile here in the last hour. huge crowds of protesters are on the streets for the 20th straight weekend, some of them vandalizing shops and subway stations, even setting fires and putting up barricades in the streets. police are responding with tear gas and water cannon. we are watching this. our anna coren is in the middle of it all. we have spoken with her earlier. we may be able to bring her in. but, again, she told us last hour when the protesters start moving, that's when police are moving in. anna coren live on this story. anna, what are you seeing? >> reporter: well, george, we
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have now moved down to where the protesters are. earlier when we spoke with you we were 200 meters away with the riot police. as you can see, they have set up a makeshift barricade. this is what they do. they have their umbrellas. no doubt they have their petrol bombs ready to throw at police. the water cannon is positioned about 200 -- >> we lost anna coren's shot. again, anna in the middle of all of this. this is a live picture. if we can bring anna back in, we will do so and bring you her recording on the ground. this is the 20th straight weekends we have seen these protests. people were upset over an extradition bill. it bill has been withdrawn. again, that extradition bill would have allowed mainland china the ability to extradite people from the streets of hong kong. it sparked concerns among them there that they were losing their civil liberties.
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people were on the streets speaking up and demanding civil liberties be protected. again, keeping in mind it is -- i believe we may be able to bring anna coren abouting i en . we are not. stateside, the u.s. president, after a late night, a series of tweets, we have a very rare instance of donald trump admitting he is bowing to outside pressure. our jeremy diamond reports. >> reporter: president trump will not host next year's g7 at his resort near miami, florida after all. just two days after he trotted out his chief of staff, the decision to host the global gathering of world leaders a lot one of his own properties and in the face of blistering criticism from democrats, as well as some republicans, the president reversed course. in a tweet late saturday night, the president acknowledged the criticism tweeting while he
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thought he was, quote, doing something very good for our country, democrats and the media, quote, went crazy. the president tweeting, therefore, based on both media and democrat crazed and irrational hostility, we will no longer consider trump national doral, miami, as the host for the g7 in 2020. we will begin the search for another site, including the possibility of camp david, immediately. thank you. it was a rare reversal for the president. it all came after the president was accused of once again -- profit from his presidency. what went unsaid in the president's tweet was the criticism that he faced for members of his own party as well. who at a minimum worried about the appearance of impropriety of a president hosting a major world forum at his own for-profit property. the president's reversal came after his chief of staff mick mulvaney defended the choice insisting government officials
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had concluded that the doral property, which is owned by the president was somehow the best option in the entire country. while mulvaney said during that briefing that camp david had previously been a quote miserable place to have the g7, the president on saturday night indicating it was back on the table. jeremy diamond, cnn, the white house. and now live to our london bureau. professor of international politics at city university of london. good to be with you >> good to be with you, george. . >> we are seeing the u.s. president, a rare instance where he is reversing course. usually we see donald trump double down. there is also a triple down. but rarely an about-face. this is not the first time that questions have come up how mr. trump might profit during his time in office. again, this decision seems to have come under a great deal of
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pressure for him to reconsider. >> well, exactly. and i think as the correspondent said, the pressure is coming from several sides. what we seem to be going through now is president trump not getting the ringing endorsements from gop and the senate and the congress as much as he used to. he is getting a little bit more criticism. that is adding to the broader public worry about the way the president is handling his own presidency. it's interesting that in his tweet he still remains committed to the idea that what he was doing was good for america. and i think that goes to the core of the way in which he sees the american government, the white house and so on. it's a bit like an extension of a private government, the trump organization kind of government. and he still sees it as the right thing. but under the pressure which is mounting on a number of different fronts, he is now being forced to reverse course. we know the pressure is building because of the syria decision as well. >> as we follow the impeachment
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inquiry as it carries on, we are learning more about shadow diplomacy, that officials say was in full effect, centered around personal attorney rudy giuliani. as a journalist, i always want to look at these varying perspectives on this. again, it seems one perspective, the supporters of the president who say rudy giuliani did nothing wrong, critics would say this is a clear example of a quid pro quo. given all the evidence we have seen so far, have we reached a point where there is some aspect of this investigation that is strong enough to sway hardened opinions one way or the other? >> i think it is reaching that point. and it's interesting, i was reading a university of maryland poll just released a day or two ago. and it -- what it shows is not only has there been very large movement right across the spectrum of politics towards an impeachment inquiry and possible impeachment, what it shows is that those voters from any
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party, any party at all who are paying very close attention to the facts of the telephone call and the facts of all the other inquiries which are going on have shifted position more than those who just follow it on the news. so those who have read the memo about the phone call and so on are beginning to pay more and more attention, including republican voters are more prone to a position which says this is a problem for the president and this could lead to a successful impeachment. so i think that's what we need to do. and i think in that regard what we have had up to now and coming in the next week or so as well is a lot of testimonies. but the president has withheld a very large number of documents. so i think there's two things. one is what do the documents say. the second is which outlets are people trusting to put forward a factual, if you like, as
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possible a picture of what the facts actually were. that is likely to shift depending on the contents of those particular documents themselves. >> that is a very interesting point. the other part of this, so looking at the president's own party, there are members in the gop, few of them, who will criticize president trump. but we are seeing more and more of that happening. tracks in the walls so to speak with mitch mcconnell speaking out in an op-ed about the president's decision in syria. the question here, do republicans start to voice their concerns more and more, or do they continue to compartmentalize any frustrations they have with their standard there? >> i think we have to see which way the wind police. it goes back to the point i just made. more and more people are paying closer and closer attention. as more facts come out, i think it will shift.
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those speaking out feel strong enough to be able to voice their concerns, but there are other few. the other side is very few are coming out and saying president trump is absolutely right, defending him. they are waiting to see which way the wind blows. the wind is blowing more and more strongly of the people questioning president trump. gop members will probably wait a while, i would think. they have another year or so until the elections. and i think there's no interest they have in coming out and voicing too many concerns. even mitt romney and those criticizing president trump, are still getting attacked from the right. things are changing, but they will change very slowly. >> an interesting wind to follow there. live in london with perspective. thank you. >> thank you. also in the united kingdom,
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the issue of brexit. european union saying it will need a few more days to figure out if the uk is asking for a brexit extension or not. what does it want? that's the question. boris johnson sent several be contradictory letters. one was boiler plate language asking for a three-month extension, along with a cover letter saying it was set to fulfill the legal requirement. then mr. johnson followed with another letter asking the eu to turn down the request. and that could land him in hot water with the courts. live in london as well is our anna stewart. anna, it gets confusing. the prime minister sending one letter to the eu, some point out without his signature. the second contradicting the first. it leaves a lot of people saying, what? >> reporter: a lot of scratching of heads george.
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yesterday was super saturday. today confused sunday. this appears to comply with the law. it requires an extension until the end of january. then we have this one. the previous letter is unsigned. this one is. this is much more stamm. it goes many photographs long. having asked the extension the first letter, this letter says while it is open to european council to receive the request mandated by parliament or to offer an alternative i have made clear since becoming prime minister, my view, and the deposit's position, that a further extension would damage the interests of the uk and eu partners, and the relationship between us. there are so many different things we can talk about here. firstly, the eu, it is within their hour to grant this extension. they don't have to do so immediately. it may be wise if they want boris johnson to get the deal
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and get it through to get the decision done. we are expecting that to happen either monday or tuesday this week. you also mentioned the courts. this is something i'm sure we will be coming back to. tomorrow a court is sitting in scotland. the second one frustrates the perhaps and perhaps, this is a perhaps, it means he is not implying with the law after all. that is a big legal question. so plenty more happening in parliament. probably plenty more happening in the courts. and probably plenty more protests as well coming up, george. >> anna stewart with the story live in london. we'll stay with us. thank you. the ongoing stalemate energized calls now for a second referendum. that is exactly what attracted a big crowd of people to central london on saturday. take a look at the massive crowds that took over the streets there. organizers believe up to 1 million people were present. but for some conservative members of parliament, leaving
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westminster was like running a gauntlet. gove and leadsom getting an earful here. we have more now on what the protesters say they want. >> reporter: this march started near hyde park, through central london, past whitehall, in parliament square where members of parliament were meeting is and voting on what would happen in that extraordinary saturday sitting. organizers think about a million people came out to march. now, the police have not confirmed the incomes. they don't give crowd estimates any more. but the streets of london were completely packed. lots of kids, dogs, silly signs with serious messages.
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the people want a peoples vote, a second referendum. they want what would be a final say on brexit. whether in or out, with a deal or without a deal, it is time to bring it up once again. the weather started out nicely. then the rain came in. it did not deter the crowds that came to talk to hear what they had to say about brexit. they were airing on the large screams on air. even if the brexit deal were to pass and the uk were to leave october 31st, the protesters say it would not be the end. they see this as just the beginning of a new campaign. they say their kids, their grandkids will continue to campaign through the united kingdom to be part of the uk. thank you. we have been following the demonstrations in lebanon. protesters now get a break on
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taxes as cracks start to appear in the governing coalition. cnn is live will in beirut as "newsroom" continues. clean carpets and floors.ep so i got this. yep, this too. even long hair and pet hair are no problem. but the one thing i won't have to clean is this. because the shark self-cleaning brush roll removes the hair wrap while i clean. - [narrator] shark, the vacuum that deep cleans, now cleans itself. now available in our new uplight model. so bob, what do you take for back pain? before i take anything, i apply topical pain relievers first. salonpas lidocaine patch blocks pain receptors for effective, non-addictive relief. salonpas lidocaine. patch, roll-on or cream. hisamitsu.
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the turks blame the kurds. the kurds blame the turks. at least one u.s. official said turkish-backed forces are responsible. but the u.s. defense secretary says the pause in fighting generally seems to be holding. here's mark esper on saturday. listen. >> i think overall it generally seems to be holding. we see a stabilization of the lines, if you will, on the ground. we do get reports of intermittent fires, this and that. it doesn't surprise me necessarily. that's where we are picking up. that's what we are seeing so far. >> esper qualifying it saying the cease-fire appears to be holding. jomana is on the border. it comes down to the question generally is this thing effective? >> reporter: well, see, george, this is the situation with the cease-fires in syria. it's very difficult to monitor, very difficult to enforce.
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we have seen that historically with cease-fires in that country. in this case specifically, you don't have a neutral force on the ground that's objecting it. you have the secretary of defense saying it is holding for the most part. we have heard this also from turkey. at the same time you have both sides accusing each other of violating the cease-fire. now, to set the keep in the background behind us is a syrian town where a lot of the fighting during that offensive was focused. and that is where we have heard the reports coming from both sides of breaches in this cease-fire. now, for the most part here we haven't heard much today with, you know, some bursts of gunfire intermittently and some thuds here and there. but it seems overall, as we are hearing from people on the ground, as we are also hearing from the secretary of defense, it is holding. it's not at that point where you can see this cease-fire is
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collapsing. turkey is accusing the kurdish fighters of breaching the cease-fire. they said they have a surveillance patrol that came under attack, killing one turkish soldier and wounding another one. the syrian democratic forces, that mostly syrian kurdish fighting force are calling on the united states to enforce the cease-fire. the cease-fire for the pause in the fighting, as turkey calls it, was to facilitate the withdrawal from the designated safe zone. turkey says they have until tuesday evening based on the agreement with the united states to withdraw from these areas. otherwise, take a listen to what president erdogan had to say would happen. >> translator: if it works, it works. if it doesn't, the minute 120 hours expire, we will continue from where we left and keep crushing the heads of the terrorists.
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>> reporter: so the message is very clear from the turkish government, george, saying tuesday evening, if the united states does not deliver on that agreement and the syrian kurdish fighters do not withdraw, their operation will resume at that point. >> jomana will continue to stay on the story with you, jomana. thank you. we continue to follow the protests across lebanon. tens of thousands of people dem traiting they want the current government to resign over the country's economic crisis. on saturday evening, the finance minister declared no new taxes would be imposed upon citizens. but overnight four ministers resigned from the deposit. let's more more about senior international correspondent ben wedeman. ben, clearly the pressure is on when it comes to the coalition government. >> reporter: yeah. clearly, george, that pressure
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is working. we have seen the original 20 cents per called what's up tax was extended. four ministers have retied. the lebanese deposit, a few months ago declared an economic state of emergency. it has scrapped all the plans even though the lebanese economy is teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. a foreign debt of $80 billion. and one of the highest debt ratios on earth. most of the people in the street who represent all sort of the entire sectarian spectrum of lebanon, is that they blame the ruling elite, which of course is what makes -- they make up the
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government. so they blame the ruling elite, which they say is corrupt, in competent, and self-serving. if you speak to most people here on the street, they will tell you that rulers here have stashed away billions of dollars in switzerland. and they say they could solve this country's economic problems if all of that money was brought back to lebanon. george? >> ben wedeman covering easements all over the world. some of the hardest, most dangerous places, in the middle on of a protest. but getting a hug, ben, that you definitely deserve. good to have you with us to report this, ben. thank you. the ongoing protests in chile have turned deadly. three people killed when a vandalized supermarket went up in flames. the capital city under a military-imposed curfew. hundreds of troops are still
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patrolling the streets there. chile's president says he will suspend plans to increase metro ticket prices, which sparked the violence. we continue following events in hong kong. the latest on the protests there 20 weeks on with this live image at 5:25. cnn in the middle of it all bringing you the journalism, the reporting. stand by for that. justin trudeau cruised to victory in the last general election. monday's vote may not be so easy. what they are saying in montreal, still ahead. would i a lousy view may give a need for pyongyang's secretory. we continue on the other side of this break. lor and it cares for my hair. no color protects or covers grays better. so much care in one little box. excellence crème
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welcome back to viewers here in the united states and around the world. you're watching cnn "newsroom" live from the atl. i'm george howell with the headlines we're following for you this hour. u.s. president reversing course saying he won't host the next g7 summit at his trump doral resort in tflorida after all. the white house was accused of possibly violating ethics rules despite mr. trump insisting he would not personally profit at his private resort. the eu says it will take several days to decide how to respond to the uk deposit's confusing request for a brexit extension.
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it was an unsigned photocopy of the language mandated by law. the prime minister followed up with a signed letter a asking the eu to turn down the request. so kopt tkeubgt contradictory l in. >> live pictures of hong kong at 5:30 p.m. police firing tear gas to disperse the crowds earlier. and they have used water cannon with blue dye to identify protesters taking part in the demonstrations. the protesters have damaged shops and subway stations and put up barricades. and in lebanon, tens of thousands of people want the current government to resign over that country's economic crisis. saturday night, demonstrators got a break when the finance minister declared no new taxes would be imposed upon citizens. following events in canada.
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monday will be telling. a major test for the canadian prime minister justin trudeau. his country is holding a general election. trudeau could lose his liberal majority. cnn's paul newton has this. >> reporter: for justin trudeau, this is new political ground, shaky grouped, where he now needs to tip toe around his own tainted image. >> this election isn't about me. this election is about you. >> reporter: these are the images that had jaws dropping around the world. >> i'm disappointed in myself and i'm apologizing to canadians. >> reporter: he knitted he couldn't even remember how many times he had done it. all the more surprising in his hometown of montreal, where they take food and politics seriously, forgiveness came almost as quickly as the leader's contrition. >> you don't believe he's a racist? >> no, i don't.
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being able to stand up in front i don't have your country saying this was a pastime that you're ashamed of what you've done. >> the fact that outside the trudeau stronghold, the island of montreal, you don't have to go far, just to the other shore, and you can already hear the skepticism. >> i don't believe the party needs another leader, another face. we are not representing well internationally. >> where do the opinions leave voters this time around? deadlocked. polls are proving little better than a coin toss in predicting if trudeau or his conservative challenger will be canada's next prime minister. but if he wins, trudeau is now a diminished politician, both at home and abroad. >> we're looking silly. >> reporter: a newspaper editor has known trudeau for years, although they don't see eye to eye politically any more. he said trudeau is no racist.
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a scandal within his own cabinet, and then the blackface incident is more than many canadians can bear. >> everywhere i go people are talking about the fact that we look like a silly country. that's in people's heads. >> reporter: fiscally and socially conservative, he has been unable to capitalize on any of that sentiment. they may end up propping up a weakened trudeau government even if sheer wins the popular vote. no matter many voters are turned off. >> for some people i imagine it's going to be a choice between the best of the worst. in a way. >> reporter: in some ways, trudeau has helped make this campaign something in canadians
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have in no way enjoyed but instead endured. paula newton, cnn, montreal. voters in bolivia will be heading to the polls in the hours to come. the current president there morales hopes to be re-elected. the former farmer has been meeting with supporters in the andes. he has controversial policy force defining term limits. bolivians voted not to have morales run again this year. however, he managed to convince the constitutional court to let him stand anyway saying that term limits violated his human rights. north korea appears to be going to new extremes to protect its secrets from the potential spi spies that are out there. they are blocking the view of key state facilities from hpbts in high-rise apartment
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buildings. brian todd takes a look at what's behind it. >> reporter: kim jong-un's paranoia and his obsession with secret and security appear to be playing out across the most exclusive neighborhoods. nk news was checking on a lead when sources noticing something strange. near an important section of pyongyang, they saw many upper floor windows in luxurious high-rise apartment buildings mysteriously covered. >> the window bars are made of concrete, immoveable. they are either fully opaque or slats that allow you to just look in one way. >> reporter: look at the
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compartment complex a year ago and now. his sources observed what they believe are hundreds of apartments and hotel rooms with windows covered. and, in some cases, only on upper floors. windows at the hotel, a famous destination for tourists were replaced with translucent covers so guests can't make out detail of anything outside. >> the overarching goal is to prevent people from being able to look into what is known a the forbidden city. >> reporter: it is a nickname for a section of pyongyang where important government buildings are located, the headquarters of the korean workers party and other offices where can kim and elites conduct business. the position and height of many of these now blocked windows, analysts say, seem to be fueling the regime's paranoia. >> if you were an assassin you would want to be higher up.
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if you wanted to eavesdrop, try to establish somebody's schedule, these would be apartments that would give you a i great view of who is in which office. >> reporter: kim's regime are taking away the view of people who are very powerful. those elites who analysts say he describes with luxury goods and cash to keep him in power >> when you get to the point where you are blocking the view of your elite families in north korea, it is something that will breed discontent. >> those who have been elevated to power by the supreme leader understand this is something they may have to just swallow. >> it maintains authority with mortar rounds and anti-aircraft. compared to that, having your
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nice window barricaded is not exactly, you know, something worth dying for. >> analysts say this could be a sign of another crackdown by kim jong- jong-un. stepped up arrests, executions of those he suspect are being disloyal. we got no response about the coverings on the high rise buildings in pyongyang from soerbg so south korea. u.s. government would not comment. you have stolen about 2.5 thousand dollars of hotel points. worst of all, you have put me in a middle seas. >> on a $5 flight. >> oh, my god. >> we show you still ahead how ethical hacking can reveal how vulnerable we are online. away. and you should be mad at people who take unnecessary risks.
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the internet creates an environment to hacking. here's how an ethical hacker was able to disrupt his life by simply using information he posted on social media. >> you have stolen about 2.5 thousand hotel points. worst of all you have put me in the middle seas. >> on a $5 flight. >> [ bleep ]. i am here in las vegas for two
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of the world's biggest hacking conferences. meeting rachel tob specializes in a a special form of hacking, social engineering. >> i feel i pretty much know everything about you. >> i instantly don't trust you. am i going to be safe today, thanks to you? >> you and every other customer will be safer today thanks for what you are willing to let me do. okay. so you want to assume everything you put on social media is public. information that can be found in places like this can be used to authenticate you with companies. i used this to get your address. >> i called up this furniture company and i basically said, hey, we're going to buy another one of these pieces of furniture but i need to make sure that i don't accidentally have the wrong information on the account. they said, no, you ordered
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something a while ago. but the thing you ordered we shipped to this address. and, yeah, i think i got this updated address, which is pretty scary. because that happened in 30 seconds. i got your current address. i got your birthday from twitter. i called pretty much every business that he ever listed that he used on his twitter or instagram. what you have to understand is when you do that, i now know which companies you use and which companies to call as you. >> what did you get from the boutique hotel. >> your phone number and email address. >> they gave you my phone number? >> uh-huh. i'm going to be living thatting. when i call your phone number will display on their caller i.d. >> this is donie oh, sullivan. >> who are you really? >> i can tell you my date of bitter to verify that it's me. >> that's wild. >> i'm having trouble getting
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access to my internet. i need to transfer points to my friend for a bridal shower. i hope you can help me out. >> i have 90,000. is that correct? rachel tobac. they have been transferred? okay. fantastic. thank you. have a great day. bye-bye. are your points gone? >> they're gone. that is crazy. when you call this airline it's going to be coming from my number. >> yes. >> i have a flight leaving vegas. >> i'll put you in the middle. can you move me to a middle seat in the back of the plane. i know you probably don't get that request a lot. perfect. so the row before the last row, middle seat. >> i had an exit aisle. >> i know. he picked it up, mr. o'sullivan,
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how can i help you? >> if they said you called up and requested this i would flip the [ bleep ] out. >> you have to have a password, two-factor. we are living in the dark ages on the phone compared to how hard it is to break into accounts online until these companies learn to change their awe tent indication protocols. remove your geo location tagging. when you're on twitter, instagram, facebook, there is no need for people to know where you are staying in those places. after that, products you buy, services that you have purchased, help that you try to get online like on twitter, do privately. maybe mdms. i'm just going to call them up as you and try to get your information. the most important thing is i'm not going to victim plame you. yeah, sure, there are things you can do to make my job harder. ultimately it is the company's
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responsibility to keep their customer's data safe. awe tent indication on the phone is a start. >> rhyme so glad i agreed to this, rachel. and suvs. four years in a row. since more than 32,000 real people... just like me. and me. and me. took the survey that decided these awards. it was only right that you hear the good news from real people... like us. i'm daniel. i'm casey. i'm julio. only chevy has earned j.d. power dependability awards across cars, trucks and suvs. four years in a row. cdc guidance recommends topical pain relievers first... like salonpas patch large. it's powerful, fda-approved to relieve moderate pain for up to 12 hours, yet non-addictive and gentle on the body. salonpas. it's good medicine. hisamitsu. what might seem like a small cough can be a big bad problem for your grandchildren. babies too young to be vaccinated against whooping cough are the most at risk for severe illness.
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the best of pressure cooking and air frying now in one pot, and with tendercrisp technology, you can cook foods that are crispy on the outside and juicy on the inside. the ninja foodi pressure cooker, the pressure cooker that crisps. do your asthma symptoms ever hold you back? about 50% of people with severe asthma have too many cells called eosinophils in their lungs. eosinophils are a key cause of severe asthma. fasenra is designed to target and remove these cells. fasenra is an add-on injection for people 12 and up
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with asthma driven by eosinophils. fasenra is not a rescue medicine or for other eosinophilic conditions. fasenra is proven to help prevent severe asthma attacks, improve breathing, and can lower oral steroid use. fasenra may cause allergic reactions. get help right away if you have swelling of your face, mouth, and tongue, or trouble breathing. don't stop your asthma treatments unless your doctor tells you to. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection or your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. haven't you missed enough? ask an asthma specialist about fasenra. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
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welcome back. this story we'll tell but next is just incredible. an ability of compassion in action. you'll remember back in may the former pro footballer keenan lowe managed to disarm a. now a super power who helped to save a life. polo sapped val explains. >> reporter: angel tkpwrepb tphad doughs diaz walked into his high school campus back in may armed with a shotgun and loaded with a single shell. this newly released surveillance video shows us what happened next. that's campus coach and security guard keenan lowe encountering diaz at the entrance to a classroom. he grabs the gun with one hand, and reaches for the crisis-stricken 19-year-old with the other. what followsis a consoling hug
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and responding conversation. coach lowe kept a relatively low profile only discussing that moment publicly a few times, including this interview with gma after it happened. >> i feel like i was put in that room in that very moment for a reason to protect those kids. if i ended up getting the gun from him, getting the gun with my right hand and holding him off with my left hand, calling for a teacher to come grab the gun from me. . >> surveillance shows accounts from witnesses and likely reassures parents who feared the worst on that summer day. >> by the grace of god, nobody was hurt. >> reporter: he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to three years probation. as part of the deal, he will get mental health and substance abuse treatment. in a statement, the deputy district attorney confirmed diaz never intended to hurt anyone other than himself. the weapon did not fire when diaz pulled the trigger, giving
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the consoling coach time to act. polo sandoval, cnn, new york. polo, thank you. meghan markle, duchess of sussex, is getting emotional, revealing being a new mom in the public eye isn't very easy. markle gave a rare look into her life for the british tv documentary, "harry and meghan, an african journey". she answered this question, how are you doing? >> look, any woman, especially when they're pregnant, you're really vulnerable. and so that was made challenging. and when you have a newborn, you know -- >> it's a long time ago, but i remember. >> and especially as a woman. it's a lot. so you add this on top of just trying to be a new mom or trying to be a newlywed, it's -- well,
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yeah, and also thank you for asking because not many people have asked if i'm okay. but it's a very real thing to be going through behind the scenes. >> when that video was made public, the #we love you meghan began to trend with twitter. a group of archaeologists have found the biggest cache. mum filed bodies of men, women and children dating back to 10th century b.c., 3,000 years ago. the coffins are exceptionally well preserved and highly detailed in color. the artist prince his song i feel for you, won two grammys back in 1984.
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now an earlier acoustic demo of the song has been released. if you haven't heard it, we have a sample. but first the grammy-winning cover by chaka khan. listen. ♪ that takes me back. i remember that stuff. great stuff. now here's the original as a 20-year-old prince recorded it in the late '70s. listen to this. ♪ that is incredible. just incredible. the release of its timing to the 40th anniversary of prince's
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second album where the studio version of the song first appeared. amazing. thank you for being with us for this hour of cnn "newsroom". i'm george howell at the cnn center in atlanta. for our viewers in the united states, "new day" is next. for our viewers around the world on cnn international, "talk asia" is ahead. thank you for watching the cable news network cnn, the world's news leader. ♪
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