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for the same medications as the vet, but up to 30 percent less with fast free shipping. visit petmeds.com today. hello and welcome to our viewers joining us here in the united states and all around the world, i'm rosemary church live from cnn's world headquarters in atlanta. ahead this hour, the next coronavirus epicenter could be one of america's tourist hot spots. this as president trump claims the virus is dying out. two atlanta police officers
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surrender one day after being charged in the shooting death of a black man. falling poll numbers, rising coronavirus deaths and an explosive tell all. donald trump prepares to end one of the worst weeks of his presidency by heading back on the campaign trail. you good to have you with us. so as more u.s. states relax restrictions and move to reopen businesses, the coronavirus is showing signs of surging half the country. ten states are facing their sharpest spikes in new cases since the pandemic began including florida. disease experts warn the virus could spiral out of control there. cnn's erica hill has more. >> reporter: record single day highs for new cases. just over 2500 added thursday in arizona. more than 3200 reported in
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florida. >> florida has always made the stuff of nightmares for me. >> reporter: new modeling predicts that state could be the next epicenter. the president dismissing data. >> if you look, the numbers are very minuscule to where it was. it's dying out. >> one of the problems we face in the united states is that unfortunately there is a combination of an anti-science bias. they just don't believe science and they don't believe authority and that's unfortunate because, you know, science is truth. >> reporter: florida is one of ten states boasting their highest seven-day averages for cases as 23 states hosted up particulars. governor cuomo sees a quarantine for anyone traveling to his state from florida. >> i have experts who have
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advised me to do that. who would believe this 180 turn around. >> mandatory statewide in california. hard-hit texas and arizona posting for stricter regulations. >> wearing a mask or not wearing a mask shouldn't be how you're going to vote in the upcoming election. it's really about protecting yourself from an infection. >> when it comes to those with infection, those with type a blood have a higher chance of catching the infection and type o has lower chance. the nation's top infectious disease experts optimistic about a vaccine. >> we're going to move fast and we're going to assume we're going to be successful. we're going to move fast and if not the only thing we've lost is money. >> reporter: football likely side lined. dr. fauci telling sanjay gupta,
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unless players are in a bubble insulated from the community tested every day, it will be very hard to see how football is able to be played this fall. 13 players at the university of texas positive for the virus according to the school. college football is slated for kickoff august 29th. here in new york city on thursday mayor bill de blasio announcing the city can move into phase two on monday and restaurants can offer outdoor dining. all of the rules will apply for social distancing. meantime, the governor of this state, andrew cuomo, announcing an outdoor order for businesses who do not comply with rules and regulations for reopening, they could be subject to losing their liquor license. back to you. and joining me now from seattle, cnn medical analyst dr. amy compton phillips. great to chat with you.
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>> thank you. great for having me. >> president trump has claimed that the coronavirus is dying out and that oklahoma's case numbers are very small and the spike has already ended. tulsa, oklahoma, of course is where he intends to hold his 20,000 strong rally saturday. what's your reaction to his false reading of the numbers and, of course, his intentions to pack so many people together without masks? >> yeah, unfortunately this is one of those areas where i am speechless by our government response to the pandemic, to be honest with you. you know, we are still in the midst of this first wave. we've come down a little bit but now as you know, in so many states it's going back up again. in oklahoma in particular they're seeing a spike in cases so if you have an area with a spike in cases and they put 20,000 people together in a closed environment, the risk of having explosive growth is huge.
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so this is a really worrisome moment. >> yeah. of course, he's getting those participants to sign a waiver so he's not responsible if they get sick, which perhaps reveals a lot there, too. so more than 118,000 covid-19 deaths in the u.s. and now new projections show the state of florida could become the next epicenter. virus. why is that happening at this time and how can that state avoid this or alter the trajectory? >> at a few case examples, so look at japan. japan you would have thought would have had a huge number of cases of covid. because people in japan have the norm be wearing a facemask, they've had a very, very minimal transmission and a lot lower number of cases than we have here in the states. you also look at the case of the hairdresser in missouri who had
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active disease. she was suffering with covid and kept coming to work cutting hair and she did that for 80 some on clients but she was wearing a mask and her clients wore a mask and none of them got the infection. so we know it's possible. think about all those grocery store workers that during the entire pandemic have been wearing masks doing safe hand washing, disinfecting carts, we know there are ways you can prevent the infection from happening, but when you have governors saying it's not important, when you have people like president trump saying, you know, it's not my problem, it's your problem, sign a waiver, come to my rally, it sends the wrong message. if our leaders send the message that you wear a mask, do physical distancing, wash your hands, we would have a lot less than the 200,000 people dying. those are 200 individuals dying from this germ. it's really, truly maddening. >> it is a concern. i do want to talk about masks in just a moment, but also on
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thursday top infectious diseases expert dr. anthony fauci called anti-science bias a problem for america. he said they don't believe science and that's unfortunate, because he says science is truth. we know that. president trump is ignoring the science here and manipulating the numbers whampt could . what could be the consequences of this being in the grip of a pandemic. that is due to the science being ignored here. >> it's absolutely the issue with the science being ignored, the same thing in brazil and countries where people, where the leaders have ignored the science and tried to gloss over the fact that we're in the middle of a pandemic and people are at significant risk from coming into contact with each other, they're the countries who have suffered the most. if you look at companies like germany or new zealand, they're wonderful. let's deal with this early, up
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front. deal with it very, very concretely initially and then that way we can open up without having so many numbers of our citizens die, those are the countries doing really well. so it's not a bad thing to use science to do this. it actually saves the citizens of the countries who use science to guide policy. >> that takes us back to the masks because that is key here, isn't it? masks have become so politicized that some americans actually think it signals how people will vote in this country. california's governor has made masks mandatory across the state. is that what needs to happen to avoid another round of shutdowns, another wave of the virus? but is that even possible in the country because of the resistance of some portions of the population? >> it is possible. it takes political courage. i think back to seat belt use. back in 1968 the gov mandated
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that you had to put seat belts in every car. people didn't use them. nobody ever used seat belts. it was in the mid '80s when new york was the first state to use an anti-seat belt law. now 49 states have mandatory seat belt laws. you wouldn't think about being in a car without a seat belt. it took that mandate to make seat belt use normal. i believe we need that kind of mandate to make mask use normal. >> as you say, they need the political will, don't they? dr. amy compton phillips, thank you as always for talking with us. appreciate it. >> thank you so much. a court appearance is expected friday for a fired atlanta police officer charged with murder in the shooting
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death last weekend of an african-american man. the prosecutor told cnn he would not seek the death penalty in the killing of rayshard brooks. we get the latest now in the case from cnn's ryan young. >> reporter: after nearly a week of emotions, anger and tension, both responding officers charged in the shooting d surrendered. garrett rolf is being held without bond stemming from 11 charges including felony murder. his attorneys told cnn his use of force was justified. critics saw i over charged. how do you respond to that? >> i say that's just not true. what we did is we charged based on the facts. >> reporter: officer devin brosnan turned himself in and has been released on a signature bond. he's been charged with aggravated assault for standing on brooks shoulders.
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he said brosnan put his foot on his arm for ten seconds to make sure he couldn't get access to the weapon. >> he's disappointed in the system to be honest with you. he's dedicated himself to law enforcement. whether it's the law enforcement, gdi, has to be a jury. it will be a rough couple of months. >> reporter: on wednesday night officers across atlanta refused to respond to calls in three of the department's six zones. others walked out or called out according to the police union. atlanta police department denied claims of a walkout. cnn spoke to a handful of officers who asked not to be identified for fear of retributi retribution. one telling cnn we are one bullet away from dying. morale is the lowest in 18 years. this is because of the mayor and the d.a. >> across the country morale is down with police departments and
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i think ours is down ten fold. >> reporter: despite this, atlanta's mayor says the city has shown commitment with a pay raise and bonuses. four months before his death we're hearing from rayshard brooks in his own words. the challenges he faces with being released from jail. he had no money, a mountain of debt and no job. >> i'm not the type of person to give up. >> reporter: months before his death he talked about a previous arrest where he pleaded guilty because a public defender told him he could get ten years behind bars. >> it hardened me. hey, i have to have my guard up because the world is cruel. you know, it took me through seeing different things in the system. just makes you hardened to a
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certain point. >> reporter: ryan young, cnn, atlanta. today is juneteenth marking a momentous event in history. how donald trump is trying to make credit for making americans aware of it.
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it has been a trying week for president trump from that up particular in coronavirus cases to supreme court setbacks. cnn's jim acosta takes a look at the turmoil he's facing. >> reporter: with 2020 shaping up to be a reelects nightmare, president trump appears to be in denial when it comes to the string of crises overwhelming his administration. take mr. trump's response to concerns about the coronavirus at his rally this weekend in oklahoma. >> if you look, the numbers are very minuscule compared to what it was. it's dying out. >> reporter: but that's not true. the virus is spiking in states across the south in places like florida. >> the potential for the virus to take off there is very, very nerve racking and could have catastrophic consequences. >> reporter: the president is even questioning the consequences of testing telling "the wall street journal" i personally think testing is overrated even though i created
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the greatest testing machine in history. one of the nation's top health experts dr. anthony fauci worries about an antiscience bias. >> one of the problems we face in the united states is that unfortunately there is a combination of an antiscience bias that people are -- for reasons that sometimes are inconceivable and not understandable. they just don't believe science and they don't believe authority besides the virus, president trump's presidency is in a tail spin from losses at the supreme court to the biting kmenltcomme from former aides likon bolton. after they scrapped the daca program, mr. trump tweeted, do you get the impression that the supreme court doesn't like me? doesn't sound like the winning he promised voters in 2016. >> we're going to win so much you're going to get so sick and
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tired of winning. you're going to come to me and say, please, please, we can't win anymore. >> reporter: as for bolton, who's just the latest ex-aide to slam the president, he's alleging in a tell-all book that mr. trump sought china's help in the 2020 race and even blessed chinese concentration camps. >> i don't think he's fit for office. i don't think he has the kpe tones carry out the job. >> reporter: the president who once said he hired only the best people, the only thing i liked about bolton is everybody thought he was crazy. >> he was a washed up guy, i gave him a chance. >> reporter: he was defending his lafayette square photo op where he held up a bible. you have people screaming all over the place and i didn't think it was exactly the right time to pray so i went there, stood there, held up the bible, talked to a few people and then we left. i came back and i got bad publicity. incredibly the president is
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raising success for juneteenth popularity. he said, i did something good. i made juneteenth very famous. the president insists his rally will be safe. >> we'll go there. everyone is going to be safe. they have to be safe. they want to be safe. >> reporter: the president concedes there is a chance a small percentage of people at his rally in tulsa this weekend may contract the coronavirus. as it turns out, the topic of his rally did not come up at the latest meeting of the coronavirus task force, the one place where they would have told aides an indoor event during a pandemic is a bad idea. and joining me now in new york, michelle mitchell. she is a history professor at new york university. thank you so much, professor, for being with us. >> thank you. it's my honor. >> so u.s. president trump is now taking credit for making
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juneteenth very famous when, in fact, it appears he himself had no knowledge of the significance of the day that kmem more rates the end of slavery in america until he had to move his tulsa rally that day to june 20th. what's your thought. >> it's at once laughable and infuriating that he resisted moving it once he was made aware and now today to take credit when, in fact, in terms of making juneteenth part of the national consciousness, it really was a grassroots effort that began in the '80s and '90s and also you have to think about texas migrants themselves that took it to new communities. the fact that he is taking credit for something that really is known because of grassroots initiatives is really infuriating. grassroots initiative of african descendent people who were
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enslaved. >> and, professor, as tulsa remembers the pain of a racist massacre back in 1921 ahead of the trump rally, residents there are now organizing a counter rally. how significant is that move in meeting this moment? and how inappropriate is the president's choice of tulsa at this time? >> it's deeply offensive. one could argue that his choice of tulsa, and from what i understand holding his rally near where the massacre with the violence happened, it's an attempt to rally his base. we don't know yet what the content of his speech will be, but just the very choice is incredibly problematic. historians now estimate that around 300 people were killed. at the time in 1921 people thought around 100, which is already fine. if you take 300 people killed, if you take an entire black
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business district destroyed that's never really been rebuilt, it's just -- it's hallowed ground, incredibly offensive and with all of this going on here, it's just problematic. >> the details of that massacre, incredibly shocking. as we watch this country react to the killing of george floyd and rayshard brooks at the hands of police, along with too many other african-americans who have lost their lives under similar circumstances, we see the country respond with an awakening of sorts perhaps not witnessed before. do you think juneteenth, 2020, will be different because of that and marked by perhaps a greater amount of hope that racial inequality in this country may be addressed and things may change and we could see reform become a reality sooner rather than later? >> it might. it's definitely going to have a different tenor than last year.
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last year seems so, so long ago. there were hearings on juneteenth about reparations in the house and so that was a very different moment, a different way of commemorating juneteenth. the fact that there are going to be protests, there are going to continue the protests going on, it's going to be a different politicized moment, yes. >> right. professor, this comes as the washington post reports the top state department official marry elizabeth taylor resigned. she wrote this in her letter of resignation, moments of unheefl change you, shift the trajectory of your life and mold your character. the president's comments and actions surrounding racial injustice and black americans cut sharply against my core values and convictions. taylor added that she had to
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follow the dictates of her conscience and resign. it is, of course, a bold move. should a young, successful black woman have to resign from a top post to make her point to send a message to the president? >> it seems that's what it takes, yes. >> and how were you moved by her actions? >> it's heartening on the one hand because this has been just such a distressing moment, and the administration has been distressing on so many levels. so that sort of an action, it's meaningful and, you know, i don't know whether or not it's actually going to move the president, but it's meaningful. >> michelle mitchell, thank you so much for joining us. appreciate it the. >> my honor. thank you. and both republicans and democratic lawmakers say they will introduce legislation to make juneteenth a federal holiday. >> together with my colleagues,
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cory booker and tina smith and ed markey, we are proposing that juneteenth be a national holiday. >> it's an opportunity to reflect on our history, the mistakes we have made but yet how far we've come in the fight for equality and a reminder in just how far we still have to go. >> and demonstrations against police brutality and racial injustice are set to take place across the country later in the day to mark the anniversary. just ahead of juneteenth, u.s. house speaker nancy pelosi had four portraits of former speakers of the u.s. house removed the chamber. the men opposed the union and sought to break it up. pelosi said there's no room for men who embody the grow tess
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being racism in the confederacy. pelosi wasn't aware of their service until recently. congress isn't alone in dismantling federal symbols. a crowd cheered as a 30 foot statue was removed in decatur on thursday. the town ordered it to be put in storage after the city argued it had become a threat to public safety during protests. the judge wasn't trying to prevent its public display but was taking an appropriate measure to protect it. this is "cnn newsroom." coming up, john bolton's new book has washington buzzing against his strong allegations. how mike pompeo is upping the rhetoric calling his former colleague a traitor. back in just a moment.
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welcome back to our viewers here in the united states and of course all around the world. i'm rosemary church live from cnn's headquarters here in atlanta. the fallout from john bolton's bombshell new book is showing no sign of slowing down. bolton was president trump's national security advisor for more than a year and has made numerous allegations about his time at the white house. and secretary of state mike pompeo is now firing back saying john bolton is spreading a number of lies fully spun half truths and outright falsehoods. it is both sad and dangerous that john bolton's final public
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role is that of traitor who damaged america by violating his sacred trust with its people. for his part bolton is accusing the white house of attempting to censor him from sharing embarrassing facts about mr. trump in an election year. he has asked a federal court to dismiss the department of justice's attempt to stop the book's release saying it is difficult to conceive a speech that is closer to the core of the first amendment than speech concerning presidential actions in office. it john bolton hasn't just angered the white house though, democrats are also furious that he refused to testify to the house during the impeachment hearings. adam schiff was the top impeachment manager for the democrats. speaking to cnn's erin burnett,
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he criticized bolton's sheer nerve. democrats are beginning to discuss what to do next. >> we have just begun discussions with leadership about what next steps are appropriate to find out more about what john bolton experienced, saw, witnessed in terms of the president's wrongdoing. you know, i think it's worth making sure we understand just how he has exposed and undermined the country, but how we do that we're still in the process of discussing. >> some of the most significant allegations bolton makes in his book concern mr. trump and china and its president, xi jinping. ivan watson has that part of the story from hong kong. >> reporter: hong kong protests, indoctrination camps in china, the u.s.-china trade war, all flashpoints in the tense u.s.-china relationship. >> i appreciate your joining me. >> reporter: all areas where a
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former trump insider says the public message doesn't match his private statements. beijing is bristling, condemning a new law signed wednesday by trump. the weager human rights action shows the mass incarceration of muslims in china's shinnen movement. they survived modern day concentration camps. others say loved ones disappeared into the sprawling prison system. in his yet to be published book obtained by cnn, former national security advisor john bolton alleges chinese president xi jinping, quote, explained to president trump why he was basically building concentration camps in june of 2019. bolton writes trump said xi
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should go ahead with building the camps adding that it was exactly the right thing to do. beijing routinely defends its network of so-called re-education camps, arguing they're necessary to combat violent extremism. on june 9th, 2019, more than 1 million people in hong kong marched through the streets protesting against a proposed law that would have criminals extradited to mainland china. three days later bolton said, i don't want to get involved. we have human rights problems too. finally bolton alleges trump turned the conversation to the coming u.s. presidential election eluding to china's economic capability and pleading with xi to ensure he'd win. through the increased chinese purchase of u.s. soybeans and wheat. that account now rejected by a top white house official.
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>> absolutely untrue. never happened. i was there. i have no recollection of that ever happening. i don't believe it's true. i don't believe it ever happened. >> reporter: trump accuses bolton of being both a liar and a criminal. >> he broke the law. very simple. i mean, as much as it's going to be broken, this is highly classified. that's the highest stage. it's highly classified information, and he did not have approval. >> reporter: asked about bolton's claim that trump asked china for help to get re-elected, a chinese government spokesman responded thursday saying, china does not interfere in u.s. internal affairs and elections, but trump's relationship with china will likely be a pivotal issue in november's runoff to the election. ivan watson, cnn, hong kong. a disturbing symbol has prompted facebook to ban several ads the trump re-election campaign is running. facebook says the ads violate its rules on hate speech. the ads feature an upside down
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triangle. anti-hate groups say that symbol is similar to one the nazis used a among political prisoners in concentration camps. the trump campaign insists the triangle is a signal of antifa and facebook should not have removed the ads. another social media giant is also cracking down on president trump's posts. on thursday twitter labeled a video that mr. trump tweeted as manipulated media. the video starts with a portion of a viral video showing a black child running from a white child, a totally fake cnn graphic was added reading terrified toddler runs from racist baby. the video claims in the quote, america is not the problem, fake news is. it's the third time in a month that twitter has taken action against mr. trump's postings. portugal has emerged as an example of what countries can do
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to combat coronavirus. coming up we will take you to lisbon to find out more about a potential breakthrough treatment portugal is using to help covid-19 patients. back with that in a moment. so what's going on? i'm a talking dog.
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a cluster of coronavirus cases in beijing is growing. there have been more than 2 dozen new confirmed cases in the past 24 hours. the outbreak is centered around a food market in the capital. chinese health officials say they have the outbreak under control oo and in russia the pandemic has taken a toll on the health care workers. 489 medical personnel have died from the disease.
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doctors, nurses, ambulance crews have often complained of a shortage of gear. overall they report a half million coronavirus cases and more than 7600 deaths. brazil is getting closer to 1 million confirmed cases as it reports 23,000 new cases alone. the death toll is almost 50,000 making it the world's number two hot spot after the united states. meantime senior officials have said the outbreak is under control. there is a break through using steroids to treat patients.
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frederick pleitgen is live. good to see you. thanks, fred. >> this pandemic has put all nations to the test and some have surprised us with the test. portugal being one of them. how did they do it? >> reporter: well, they did a lot of things. they did do that mass testing and shut down their borders quickly, rosemary. these are all things they said was part of the uk is ses. the interesting thing is with that oxford study that found that steroids could be effective in helping people stay alive who were on ventilators. portuguese weren't even part of it. it's something that made common sense to them. so it's something that they did. they believe that was something that was part of the reason among others why they managed to keep people alive and why they managed to get people to come out of icu fairly quickly and to get better. here's what we found out. >> francisco fonseca is doing something incredible, building his beach bar.
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he had seven days on a ventilator in a medically induced coma. >> it was really painful. not the breathing itself but the skin. i knew it was not the skin stuff, it was like in the lungs. >> reporter: portugal seems set up to be devastated by covid-19 with the fewest intensive care beds per capita in the entire union but so far the opposite is true. >> they're very successful in dealing with the coronavirus pandemic. they say key parts of the strategy where they closed down and they also did mass testing to try to mitigate the pressure on their medical system. >> reporter: one possible reason doctors in coronavirus wards here in lisbon's central university hospital have for months been treating pash went steroids to come bad
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inflammation. >> translator: we've seen with court particular could he therapy we've been able to reduce the inflammation in patients. >> reporter: about 67% of ventilated patients are treated with steroids including a 63-year-old woman who was able to leave the icu just one day after we filmed. a new oxford study has found this type of treatment can reduce the risk of death for hospitalized patients. the world health organization calls it a potential break through. the doctor says it's an effective tool that's helped keep a death toll rising in new patients around 60%. that's not all they're doing. >> translator: we have a team that does outreach that goes out of the icu and observes patients. what we do, we do early intubation and ventilation. any patient with signs of difficulty breathing and criteria that needs ventilation, we don't delay the intubation and ventilation and we admit
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them early to the icu. >> reporter: while some other experts around the world say patients should only be placed on ventilators as a last resort, the medical professionals hearsay early ventilation in certain circumstances has been working. it certainly worked for francisco fonseca who now hopes that his health tas come back, tour riists will come back to portugal and help him jump start his business. rosemary, tourism not just important for that gentleman but the country as a whole. the fact that they had this very early, very fast, and that testing is helping them open up and bring tourists back and they hope and believe they can bring them back in a safe way. since they opened up, there is a bit of a rise in new coronavirus cases specifically here in the lisbon area. that's something that this country has an eye on as well where of course they want to
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open up the economy but the last thing they want just like every other country around the world will be a speak in new coronavirus infections. rosemary. >> absolutely. still an impressive story. frederick pleitgen. many things. we'll be right back.
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one person often mentioned as a possible running mate for joe biden has withdrawn from consideration for that role. democratic senator amy klobuchar called the former vice president to say she didn't want him to pick her. >> this is a historic moment and america must seize on this moment and i truly believe, as i actually told the vice president last night when i called him, that i think this is a moment to put a woman of color on that ticket. >> biden tweeted his appreciation. he said in part, from the moment you announced you were running for president in a snowstorm, it wasn't hard to see you had the grit and determination to do anything you set your mind to.
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well, american football is, to put it mildly, a contact sport. not exactly ideal in this era of social distancing. our brian todd takes a look at how covid-19 is shaping up to be a formidable opponent for the national football league and putting the upcoming season in real jeopardy. >> reporter: america's top voice on coronavirus is casting real doubt on whether one of america's favorite sports can return this season. dr. anthony fauci telling sanjay gupta, unless players are in a bubble and insulated from the community and tested every day, it will be very hard to see how football is able to be played this fall, a prospect that millions of fans don't even want to think about. >> it's going to be absolutely devastating for sports fans, and this is for a higher percentage of sports fans the league and the sport that they cannot do
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without. >> reporter: the nba is planning to put players in a so-called bubble, resuming its schedule with all teams and no fans at a disney resort in ar lan doe later this summer. will the nfl consider that? responding to cnn, they said, no. we have been preparing for all contingencies and we will continue to take guidance. the league said it has a comprehensive testing program in place but hasn't said if it will test players every day as dr. fauci recommends. the nfl says it still plans to play the 2020 season as scheduled. the commissioner giving no details. >> the protocols are stringent. they're designed to be that because they're protecting the safety of our players and personnel including coaches. >> reporter: according to the nfl network, several players from the dallas cowboys and houston texans recently tested positive for coronavirus. both teams followed proper health protocols, but experts
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say football carries even more risk of coronavirus transmission than other contact sports, like basketball or hockey. >> it's hard to imagine an activity that is more likely to spread coronavirus than the muscular and intense clashes that you see in football. taking off of a helmet, putting it on. where we exchange people who are almost at war with each other, yelling at each other. all of these things spread the virus a lot more than other spor sports. >> reporter: it's still unclear whether the nfl will allow fans in the stadium if and when it starts the season. epidemiologist wonders what will happen. >> i think the most dangerous thing if football resumes too soon are the incremental
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increase in number of people who would show up, trainers, then there's the trends of the football players, then there's the owners and the owner's box and then there's our friends and soon this idea of only being players on the field becomes ten more thousands of people who show up. >> reporter: then there's the timing of the season. dr. sanjay gupta worries when the season begins in september there could be an uptick in coronavirus cases and he says flu season begins in late september or early october which could worsen things. so a tough decision in for a league that doesn't let us in on many of its plans. brian todd, cnn, washington. thanks for your company early this hour. i'm rosemary church. "early start" begins right after this. stay with us. hey allergy muddlers...
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trump supporters are right now lined up for the campaign rally in oklahoma despite a surge of new coronavirus cases in that state. florida also seeing a spike in new cases and its intensive care hospital beds filling up fast. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world, this is christine romans. >> i'm laura jarrett. friday, june 19th. happy friday, juneteenth. it's friday here in new york. this morning the trump campaign is forging ahead for campaigns for a huge rally in tulsa,

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