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e uniquely challenging times we're still fighting with dedication and devotion. california law gives survivors a chance to take legal action, but only for a limited time. if you were sexually abused by a priest, scout leader, coach or teacher contact us confidentially today. it's time. hello, and welcome to viewers joining from the u.s. and around the world, i'm michael holmes, thanks for your company. nearly two weeks of protest against racism and police brutality in the united states are starting to focus on specific demands for change.
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>> george floyd. >> say his name. >> george floyd. >> what you're seeing there, thousands of people marching in washington sunday, chanting george floyd's name and i can't breathe. demonstrators in los angeles calling for police reforms and for the police department to be refunded, funds redirected elsewhere. u.s. house democrats are proposing legislation monday to end racial profiling, excessive use of force and qualified immunity for the police officers. antiracism protesters have been jamming the streets in cities around the world. activists in rome taking a knee for eight minutes in memory of george floyd, and former officer who put his knee on floyd's neck is expected to make a court appearance in hours ahead, derek chauvin charged with second degree murder. we'll have report from los
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angeles where massive marches took place all weekend long but first cnn's pete montane has the latest from washington. >> reporter: this group in front of the white house is thin but doesn't make the message less poignant. protesters left in the newly coined black lives matter plaza. at times they've been loud and know that their chants can be heard from the white house and president trump was home on sunday. just want to show you a bit more quiet and somber moment before earlier sunday. protesters marched from dupont circle in heart of washington, d.c., about 0.8 miles, lay down in streets, lay down and chanted i can't breathe softly for eight minutes in honor of george floyd. this is not the only group marching. group of evangelicals marched
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down pennsylvania avenue with them. mitt romney, maybe the highest ranking member of the gop to join this movement, here's what he had to say. >> end to violence and brutality and make sure people understand that black lives matter. >> reporter: this group also marched two miles from here to the u.s. capital, united states senate is in session monday, house is meeting remotely. and protesters are saying meaningful reform also needs to come from lawmakers. >> reporter: this is quintessential hollywood. hollywood beautifoulevard and highland. behind the cameramen is the theater where the oscars are held. this is probably the largest crowd we've seen so far, thousands of people taking to the streets in support of george floyd, to protest police brutality and killing of black
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americans at the hands of the police. just heard from cofounder of the black lives matter foundation/organization. she just spoke, lot of folks have been taking to the microphone, now we're on the move again. you can see from the pictures it's diverse crowd, all colors and ages, everyone marching with different signs, there's been some efforts by police and city and state authorities to de-escalate tensions, one to remove the national guard. some units left until june 10th but bulk of the force has been taken off the streets. and no longer see riot police in full gear on the streets. mayor looking to cut $100 million to $150 million from the lapd budget, but that doesn't go far enough for a lot of people
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here. chants directed at district attorney, mayor, they want systemic changes, bigger changes, and don't want to have more reasons to come to the streets. don't want to see any more innocent americans lose their lives at hands of the police. in minneapolis, nine members of the city council have committed to start defunding and dismantling the police department. protesters carrying signs to urge that. council president is looking to move funding to community-based strategies. there is no intent not to have a police department. at least not in the short term. mayor jacob frey was booed by protesters over the weekend after telling crowds he was not in favor of defunding police. turning attention to the white house now where response to national unrest has seemed woefully inadequate at best.
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president trump may make finally an attempt to unite the country with an address. >> reporter: big question is what is the messaging going to be moving forward. we got wind of the speech when secretary ben carson was interviewed by jake tapper and was pressed on president trump's response to the killing of george floyd, in particular to president retweeting a post that attacked floyd's character. listen to what carson had to say. >> i believe you're going to be hearing from the president this week on this topic in some detail. and i would ask you maybe to reserve judgment until after that time. what will help the nation heal is if we will engage in dialogue together. let's not make the solution be democrat or republican solution but an american solution. >> reporter: since then a senior
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official has confirmed that a speech is being batted around to my colleague and i. but big caveat here is same one with this administration we talk about all the time. ultimately comes down to president trump and message he wants to send. it's unclear still if that message is one of unity, if he wants to talk about tensions we saw over the weekend. source close to the president and white house told me the president came out of this weekend feeling bullish, lifted up by those job numbers we saw on friday, also very happy with how peaceful the protests were. he believed, according to this source, that is a direct correlation to his message of law and order, because he was dominating the streets with all the law enforcement officers, that's why the protests were peaceful. so you're going to hear him talking about that as well as message we heard from protesters on defunding the police. all day sunday president trump
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continued to try to link that to joe biden and many officials close to the president believe this is a good idea, will help them get moderate voters who might not want to go that far. reporting from the white house, kristen holmes, cnn. mr. trump lashed out at former secretary of state colin powell on twitter after powell criticized the president's handling of the nationwide protests. general powell also said he's voting joe biden come november. he's the latest former military official to criticize donald trump. here's some of what he said on "state of the union" with jake tapper. >> we have a constitution and we have to follow that constitution. president has drifted away from it. one word i have to use is one i never would have used before with any of the four presidents i've worked for. he lies, he lies about things. and he gets away with it because people will not hold him
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accountable. >> and colin powell also had this message for the country. >> what we have to do now is reach out to the whole people. watch these demonstrations and protests, rather than curse them, embrace them to see what it is we have to do to get out of this situation we find ourselves in now. we're america, we're americans, we can do this. we have the ability to do it, and we ought to do it. make america not just great but strong and great for all americans, not just a couple. >> political strategist joins us now from los angeles. great to see you. protests have been remarkable and global, but i guess the challenge is not allowing that momentum to fade, not allowing george floyd to be another name on a list until the next incident. how do you do that? what is the end game? >> right, so the end game is that in america we have only gotten any real change around
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human and civil rights through two methods, either a court ruling or legislation. so i think the challenge is going to be for all the people concerned about police brutality and police killings is how do you change the law, right? how do you get at any point prosecutor so bonnie isn't investigating clyde, the d.a.'s office which depends on the police and sheriffs aren't investigating these situations. in california only way to get independent prosecutors is go through state law. be interesting to see if the groups can work on getting independent prosecutors and getting rid of qualified immunity, the law -- it's not really a law, but a thing that judges go by that basically police officers can't be sued in civil court. >> right. one thing that is interesting that i didn't know until other day. nearly 18,000 police agencies in the country, which kind of makes uniform reform difficult.
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i think that as you said, bonnie cannot be charged with investigating clyde. you would like independent prosecutors office. what would that look like? >> we need independent prosecutors office in every single state. what that looks like is independent prosecutor appointed but not by any elected official who takes police union money or is influenced by police unions. because that's really who the people who want to see change around law enforcement and criminal justice reform are fighting. they are fighting the police unions. who have a stranglehold on elected officials from coast to coast with their money at all levels of government. when you talk about having independent prosecutor, you have to make sure that person is not being influenced by the police union or by anyone who is influenced by the police union. that can be accomplished in each
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and every state in this country, and that is exactly what we need. >> officer now charged over george floyd's death, former officer chauvin, he had 17 prior complaints against him, received i think two official reprimands, one verbal. do you find yourself wondering why he was even on the force? and how often does that scenario play out or officer just leaves and goes to a different force, which is pretty easy to do. >> that is common, not surprising. happens a lot, particularly in los angeles with the lapd and sheriffs department. reason they're allowed to have that many instances of misconduct and complaints and keep their job is because of the police union. so we're going back to the police union. the police union advocates for their members out of all the labor unions in america they're the only union with the optics of fighting to keep their members out of prison and jail
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and their money successfully does that for them. again looking at end game, we have to strategize on how we get around police unions. sometimes that means carrying a ballot measure, sometimes that means working with lawmakers who aren't getting police union money and getting laws passed to create the independent prosecutor offen prosecutor offices in the states and also interested in what korcory booker is doing to get rid of qualified immunity. >> you seem to have the momentum at the moment. after the deaths of michael brown and eric garner, 43% of the people said it was part of a larger problem. now 73%. lot of people think it's different. do you agree? >> i've seen it happen before,
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you know, everyone gets upset, in the streets, but i never really see that translate into legislation. i haven't seen that translate into sustainable change that affects generations to come. we do this wash, rinse and repeat cycle. new video next week with new black body and anger. i'm always trying to figure out how to make type of change so future generations don't have to put up with this anymore, deal with it. that's the challenge of black lives matter, supporters and allies, everyone. how do we move forward? complaining has never been a strategy, never been one. we have to move forward with legislation. >> yep. hopefully the momentum keeps up. as you say, and george floyd doesn't become another one on
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the list. thanks for your time. >> thanks for having me. daughter of martin luther king jr. is speaking out about racism. spoke to cnn earlier about how america got to this breaking point and what the nation must do to heal. >> people are fed up. we've been experiencing these injustices for years now, and there's just an accumulation. and i think with covid-19 slowing people down and now being brought into the reality of our world and re-examining our world, you know, we have people now erupting in these protests. i'm happy about it. these are revolutionary times like my father said in his time. means that systems and people will be changed. i'm encouraged by what we're seeing all around the world. i think there has to be a lot of
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antiracism work amongst the white community, working through things in people's hearts, implicit and explicit biases. participating in helping to dismantle the systemic issues in corporations, organizations, establishments across america. all across america we've got to change the equity from the boardroom diversity to the executive suites and churches, same thing has to happen. has to be work. has to change the way we do law enforcement, i'm encouraged by what's happening in minneapolis, city council calling for transformative new model of public safety instead of just policing. and we've got to organize as my father said our strength into power. the coronavirus pandemic continues to claim lives all
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around the world, some areas are starting to see improvement, but others, especially the most vulnerable, are reporting record numbers of cases. also when we come back, we're tracking tropical storm cristobal, which is lashing the u.s. gulf coast with heavy rain. we'll have that and more after the break. that connection is more important than ever. for customers 55 and up, we want you to get the value and service you need to stay connected. that's why we have a plan built just for you. saving 50% vs. other carriers with 2 unlimited lines for only $55. and we're here to help when you're ready to switch. visit a store or go to t-mobile.com/55. feel cool. because the tempur-breeze transfers heat... away from your body. so you feel cool... night after night. during the tempur-pedic summer of sleep, experience the mattress
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♪ landmarks across new york, including one world trade center were lit blue and gold on sunday night in honor of flattening the covid-19 curve. new york celebrating a downturn in hospitalizations and deaths in the pandemic. falling in new york but rising in many other parts of the world. according to johns hopkins university more than 7 million cases have been confirmed globally, many infections coming from latin american countries, brazil, mexico, peru and chile all reporting record number of new deaths and cases. in new york things continue to
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improve, italy's death toll just 53 people, spain confirming one new death third straight day. and in the u.k. government is proposing travel restrictions. starting today, self-isolate 14 days upon arriving. but companies urging officials to get rid of the rules, devastating tourism. new zealand, zero active coronavirus cases anywhere in the country since late february. the country has been praised for early action and strict measures to battle the virus. prime minister jacinda ardern.
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>> this is an achievement, nation of 5 million people as country, they have zero active cases of the coronavirus. first time since the virus first appeared in new zealand february the 28th this year. follows 17 consecutive days of zero local new infections. as result new zealand is lowering pandemic restrictions to level one alert effective as of midnight tonight. details revealed in the press conference helmed by the prime minister in last hour and a half, here's more. >> new zealand did something remarkable in our fight against covid-19, we united in unpre unprecedented ways to fight the virus. today no active cases.
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tested almost 45,000 in past 17 days, no one tested positive. no one in hospital for covid-19 for 12 days. 40 days since the last case of community transmission. 22 days since that person finished their self-isolation. so today i can announce that cabinet has agreed to move to level one, to get our economy fully open again. >> new zealand will move to level one alert as of midnight tonight. what does that mean? first the end of enforced social distancing. workplaces in new zealand will reopen, schools will reopen. previously there was ban on social gatherings, no longer in place. still a ban on overseas international travelers from entering the country. during the press conference, ardern said it's because of the strict controls of the border
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that new zealand government can relax the measures. that said, exemptions. international overseas travelers are allowed by permission of the government if they can benefit the new zealand economy. james cameron, the hollywood film director, and his crew from the united states have been granted permission to enter new zealand and continue work there after 14 days of quarantine and self-isolation to work on the sequel to the "avatar" movie. thanks kristie. tropical storm cristobal has made landfall in louisiana, drenching the gulf coast with heavy rain. joined by cnn meteorologist karen maginnis. what are we seeing? lot of rain, isn't it? >> tremendous amount of rainfall for something that didn't look
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that impressive on the satellite imagery but can see on the enhanced imagery, still a lot of deep convection wrapped around a kind of diffuse core to the system. going to be weakening further but made landfall 7:00 p.m. local time in coastal louisiana, but impact was felt hundreds of miles away. all the way along the eastern edge of the florida panhandle, had staggering reports of six and ten inches of rainfall, no doubt when all added up, will see amounts higher than that. what can we expect in will continue to make way to the north, it's north of new orleans, about 20 miles or so. in all, 8.5 million people are under tropical storm warnings, from morgan city, louisiana, all
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the way towards the pensacola region. this is low-lying area, very prone to flooding. coastal highways and roads are under water. some have been for most of the afternoon and evening. area from jacksonville to tallahassee to panama city to pensacola to new orleans, this is where we're seeing the heaviest precipitation last 24 hours. also power outages, knew would happen, higher wind gusts around 60 miles an hour but typically looking at 2,000 to 3,000 without power in louisiana and mississippi but alabama had 10,000 people without power last report. as this moves across the lower mississippi river valley looking at places like jackson, mississippi, four to eight inches of rainfall, little rock,
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two to five and high potential for flooding. memphis, two to four inches, move all the way to missouri as remnant low and in the vicinity of the great lakes region. back to you. >> karen maginnis there. changing society by changing way we think. how unconscious biases affect the way minorities are treated in america and what experts believe we can do to change that. that when we come back. ts, ...your wish... is our latest litter-vention. new naturally strong, with odor-absorbing activated charcoal. 100% natural, 100% powerful. there's a tidy cats for that!
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here in the united states and around the world, i'm michael holmes, you're watching "cnn newsroom." nine members of the minneapolis city council say they plan to defund and dismantle the city's police department following the killing of george floyd. says there's support to make it veto-proof, plan to shift funding to community-based programs. major cities are lifting curfews. protesters marching through midtown manhattan, and new york's mayor going to shift unspecified amount of police funding to youth and social services. there is a growing belief that many of the racial injustices we've seen in the united states have stemmed from unconscious biases people have about other ethnicities. tom foreman explains. >> reporter: back up from that terrible moment when ahmaud
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arbery was chased down and shot to death jogging in georgia. note the claims of innocence, and think about third accused man. william bryant, lawyer says he was innocent, on his porch, saw two men in truck he recognized chasing somebody he did not, followed them taking video of the incident. >> he does with all due respect what any patriotic american citizen would have done in same circumstances. >> another take. >> if arbery had been white, man you're talking about who have out there to find out why they were chasing him. >> that's jane elliott, educator and activist who has done a lot of work on the subject of unconscious or implicit bias. so has christopher bridges. >> it's a way of acknowledging
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that everybody has biases, earned or conditioned upon us by this society, functions without our conscious awareness. >> black boy and girl and bsh busy at table. time and again the black boy is identified as a challenge by teachers. researchers say because whole society is steeped in the idea kids like him are trouble. >> problem is impact different groups than other general biases we may have. >> take the ingrained attitudes into adult life, get even among folks who don't think they're racist, bird watcher asking woman to leash her dog met with furious. >> there's an african-american man recording me and threatening myself and my dog.
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>> woman campaigning door-to-door for public office to have the police called on her too. >> i felt degraded, humiliated. >> please. >> when police arrive, studies have shown they're much more likely to react with violence if they encounter african-american man, even unarmed. average black man has 1 in 1,000 chance of being killed by police over his lifetime, more than double the risk to a white man. >> they're more likely to kill a black person than a white person because they've been taught for 500 years that white people are superior to all others. >> defenders say statistics show african-americans commit crimes at higher rate but skeptics ask how can we trust those stats if implicit bias is constantly steering everyone to look for crimes involving black people. in the arbery case, subject
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initially said saw him poking around a house under construction and another said had gut feeling arbery may have been responsible for thefts. even though camera caught white people looking around the same building. >> in america it impacts lot of the ways that african-americans and other people of color live and experience their daily lives. >> fatal police shooting this year of breonna taylor, unarmed and in apartment in kentucky is boiling with accusations of bias. in schools hoping what is learned can be unlearned. >> anything you can create, you can destroy. we can destroy racism. >> these biases affect our views of age, religion, where you're from, what you wear.
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but right now the debate is how to grapple with gray thinking when it comes to black and white. tom foreman, cnn. calls for racial justice taking place all over the world. protesters in bristol pulled down a statue of a slave trader. rolled it along the street and dumped it in the river. activists in south korea marched through the streets of seoul holding signs that read black lives matter and enough is enough. cnn is covering these protests all over the world. darlington is in brazil but start with italy. >> reporter: i'm ben wedeman in rome, thousands of people have come out to express solidarity with the black lives matter movement in the united states.
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this is the largest demonstration i've seen in the piazza for quite some time. earlier one of the people making a speech listed all the victims of police brutality in the united states. and this is just one of several such demonstrations being held in italy. of course across europe as well. there's been a massive outpouring of solidarity with the black lives matter movement in the united states. >> reporter: thousands of people took to the streets across brazil on sunday as different social movements joined forces to protest against racism and against the president. the biggest marches in rio, sao paulo, held up signs with names of george floyd and several black civilians killed by police. and accused the president of
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trying to undermine democratic institutions in the coronavirus outbreak. similar rallies in sao paulo and brian snitk brasilia. president dnts participate, warned against the social isolation he opposes, saying a wave of employment is coming. portrait of courage, this woman's dad taught her, no matter the threat, always look in their eyes so they have to acknowledge you're human. boy was that put to the test this week. her story when we come back. cancer won't wait.
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contact us confidentially today. it's time. you're looking at a portrait of courage. african-american woman standing up straight, looking angry white man right in the eye. there to peacefully protest
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alongside others. he didn't want them there, and did not mince his words. this all played out in the small town of whitefish, montana, wednesday night, part of the wave of protesters that swept across america after the death of george floyd. this one got ugly. >> [ bleep ] you! you know what. >> we want peace. >> you know what, [ bleep ] children. >> peace. >> the protesters there yelling peaceful over and over again, as that man continued his tirade. police eventually did come and escorted him away. he's since been charged with disorderly conduct and set to appear in court june 17th. as for the woman who refused to back down, that awesome
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photograph there, stood calmly and coolly, her name is samantha francine, she joins us now. give us the context how this man to the best of your knowledge was so enraged. >> you know we -- in small town montana, people don't realize that racism still exists. there's a lot of ignorance here, had a lot of people angry about what we were doing, he was not first one to come up and let us know they were not happy about that. but when he approached, he was looking for fight. had been driving around baker avenue yelling at us prior to that moment. then when he showed up, he was just looking for a fight. so -- >> you know the thing, one of the most remarkable things is the crowd response, all of you there, just peaceful, peaceful,
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time after time. it's remarkable. what has been the reaction that you've experienced in the aftermath of this? >> it's been quite -- it's been a lot of love. lot of protesters out there were young teens, grace jensen who took the photo, such a sweet young lady, and all the other ones around there, lot of their first times doing anything like that, and they really did step up to the challenge. it was cool to see, unbelievable. and since then the video and photo being out, there's been so much love i've received from around the world. if you had told me this was going to be happening to me now, a week ago, would have told you you were wrong. it's been beautiful experience, intense. i have no malice in my heart towards that man. yesterday my friend and i brought his wife a gift basket
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just to let her know she's not him as well, and we wanted her to feel love too. so. >> i'd heard that, speaks to your character and character of your friend that you took gift basket to his wife after he did that to you. tell me, what is going through your mind in that photograph? you do not give an inch, you are just looking that man right in the eye, and when you watch the whole video, he's screaming in your face. hateful things. what is going through your mind? why did you hold your gaze? tell us about that. >> so like i posted on facebook, in that moment not much went through my head except the words my father who passed away used to tell his children. predominantly white town and my
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father was white and raised us, no matter what, who the threat it, what the threat is it, look them in the eye so they know you're human. in that moment, i don't think i felt fear, haven't processed all of it with everything that's been happening, but i felt those words that my father spoke to me from young age and i saw fear in his eyes and i knew he wasn't going to hurt me. i knew he was just upset and uncomfortable. i stood my ground and it got captured in beautiful way. it's a proud moment. >> i think you're being generous, his way of expressing being uncomfortable was shout and scream in people's faces from an inch away. there was one post on reddit thread on the incident, says he is towering over her, trying to use the power of his height, size, gender and race to intimidate, she is standing
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there with the confident resolve of someone who has been through it all yet her she is and now she has more backup than ever before. i wondered what you thought of that summary. it was a lovely line to read. >> i have gone through so much, experienced so much the last 27 years and in that moment everything i've gone through made sense. every person that's yelled at me like that, every person that's hurt my feelings, let me down, embarrassed me, in that moment, and surrounded by so many awesome people, there was such incredible energy, just knew what to do. >> i think you're an extraordinary young woman, well done, you and everyone who was there that day as well. all they said was the word "peaceful" over and over again. samantha francine, great to meet you, thank you so much. >> thank you.
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cnn has reached out to the man charged with disorderly conduct for that performance, we have not yet heard back. we'll be back after the break. l. where will you go first? wherever you may go, lexus will welcome you back with exceptional offers on exceptional vehicles. find out all the ways a lexus can be yours at lexus.com experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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welcome back. right no ww, stocks in asia mosy mixed following news that the u.s. added 2.5 million jobs when the market was expecting a sharp drop. a lot of green arrows there. let's brings in john defterios in abu dhabi. yeah, that job report had errors in it, but still a surprise friday. is that what's describing markets? >> it is still sustaining the rallies that we have in asia, but not the enthusiasm we had earlier in the trading day, michael. that was a swing of 10 million jobs because we were expecting a loss of 10 million jobs and went above 2 million. some aberrations with people still filing and suggesting they were affiliated with the same company even though they were laid off temporarily. it's not the strong v-shaped recovery. hong kong was higher but turned negative and you see both hong
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kong and shanghai and seoul there, all three in a very tight trading range. u.s. futures have been holding on to the gains. this would be eight days straight of gains. people are starting to get concerned about the valuations we're seeing in the asian markets, the european markets and also on wall street. we see gains in the oil market as well, michael. we had news over the weekend with saudi arabia and russia in the so-called opec plus deciding to roll over this cuts for the next month, taking over 10%, just under that, off of global supplies because of covid-19. but this is a tricky game as well because you don't want to overreact. if the price rises too high, around $43 for a barrel for the international benchmark, that would encourage the u.s. production to come back on stream. remember the crash we had in march and april. they're trying to stabilize the market above $40, perhaps $50, but they don't want to see this snap back in the u.s. wells coming back on stream. >> yeah, because there is that
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other wild card when it comes to oil, isn't there, and it's cristobal, the big storm. that's got to have the industry nervous and preparing, i would imagine. >> yeah, that is very true because of past experience and the damage we've seen, particularly offshore in the gulf of mexico. this is now a tropical depression, but it doesn't mean that the oil and gas industry didn't have to do to basically batten down the hatches. according to the u.s. government, and the environmental and safety division, they shuttered about a third of both offshore and onshore. they had 188 rigs offshore that they decided to close, at least temporarily. you always have to be ready for this kind of shock to the market right now. they've taken off about 700,000 barrels from the market. it's not a huge move, but it was a precautionary measure, michael, and it seems right now there is no threat to the industry because of cristobal. >> all right. john, good to see you, my friend. thanks so much for that. john defterios there in abu dhabi.
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>> thanks. well, former u.s. president barack obama spoke to graduates of the glass of 2020 during a virtual commencement celebration, acknowledging the ongoing protests in america and telling the graduates they can create a new normal. >> you don't have to accept the world as it is. you can make it into the world as it should be and could be. you can create a new normal. one that is fairer and gives everybody opportunity and treats everyone equally. and builds bridges between people instead of dividing them. >> on that note, thanks for spending the hour with us. i'm michael holmes. this has been "cnn newsroom." don't go anywhere, though, we'll have more "cnn newsroom" after the break. i'm not hungry! you're having one more bite! no! one more bite!
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♪ hello and welcome to our viewers here in the united states and all around the world. i'm michael holmes. thanks for your company. nearly two weeks of protests against racism and police brutality in the united states are starting to focus on specific demands for change. thousands of people marching in washington sunday chanting george floyd's name and "i can't breathe". pouring rain didn't stop protesters marching through billings, montana. and

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