tv CNN Newsroom CNN September 16, 2020 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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just by giving them a chance everybody here is a champion and everyone has shown their shown abilities in their community. >> be sure to watch the one-hour special this saturday 10:00 p.m. eastern and pacific. it is the top of the hour. i'm brianna keilar. and while hurricane sally made landfall early this morning, it's dumped up to two feet of water and is far from finished. we're also seeing some of the largest reported damage to date. part of the three-mile bridge which connects pensacola is missing. in alabama, there is widespread damage and flooding. they're experiencing the most
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significant outages with a quarter million people without power. it is forecasted to last until early tomorrow morning before it moves on. we have crews spread out along the gulf coast at cnn. riding out the storm or nite and you and your producer are trying to make progress here and get to gulf shores. tell us what the roads have been like. >> reporter: well, it's about what you would expect. we're in a town called foley, alabama, in the heart of baldwin county, which is just that part of southeast alabama that is on the east side of mobile bay. and we have been trying to make our way through some of the streets to get down towards gulf shores. this is very typical of the kinds of things we're witnessing in these neighborhoods in these
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streets throughout the day, where we're told there are a number of water rescued going on throughout this particular county in southeast alabama. and this is where the eye of the storm and the intense areas around the eye wall came ashore just before day break in the hours just before day break today. and we have seen hundreds of trees toppled over, power lines down. some trees landing on top of homes. you can see the force of the winds. this is one of thousands of trees down here in this particular county and just how massive it is. there's an inlet that comes in from mobile bay at the end of this street. but this is typical of what we're seeing throughout the region in southeast alabama. >> i want to turn now to the pandemic.
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they're seeing the biggest one-day spike. there are more than 52,000 new cases added just yesterday and 1,422 more -- 1,422 million americans dying from the virus. the nation is nearing the tragic milestone of 200,000 americans dead to the virus. and as the president dismisses and mocks masks, the cdc director is pleading with america to wear them. >> cdc director that face masks are the most important powerful public health tool we have and i will continue to appeal for all americans, all individuals in our country to embrace these face coverings. if we did it for six, eight, ten, 12 weeks, we bring this pandemic under control. we have clear scientific evidence they work and they are our best defense.
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i might go so far as to say this face mask is more guaranteed to protect me against the covid and may be 70% and if i don't get an immune response, this is going to protect me. i want to ask the american public to take the responsibility, specifically the 18 to 25 year olds see an outbreak. >> i want to see an exchange you have. >> the most powerful public health tool we have non-medical
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experts? >> when used appropriately, they can have unintended consequences, much like dr. fauci said and often times there are unintended consequences. so, the president agreed mask wearing is good. it's recommended. the president continually recommended it from this podium and he's pointing out some of the unintended consequences. i have his whole exchange. would you like me to read it out? >> i watched it last night. he didn't say anything like that. >> unfortunately a bunch of you are keen on not referring to the second half. directly under the statement he talked about a waiter touching a mask and a plate and that being an unintended effect of wearing
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a mask. that's an example of a mask not being used appropriately. he describes the exact scenario in which the mask can have an unintended consequence. we can send you the clip. we'll put it on twitter for you. >> good for you fact checking you. you had the facts to back it up. sglil >> reporter: it's not selectively editing to ask who told the president that? because last night he was asked by who it is that said masks were not good is the only group he said was a situation in which he was interacting with a waiter who he said was messing with his mask. and dr. fauci said he was worried about people not wearing the mask properly and playing a part in the spread of covid-19. but that is not what the
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president is saying last night. because he was asked while he's been holding rallies why he often has not worn a mask at a place where he's not socially distanced from people >> we're not taking the president out of context by quoting what he said about masks. you saw what the cdc director said today if everyone wore a mask, we could get the pandemic under control in 6 to 12 weeks. that's from someone who advises the president. that's someone we didn't get a clear answer on. >> the president makes fun of his opponent for wearing a mask and repeatedly makes fun of reporters. >> breaking news from ehs.
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>> tell us what has happened with michael caputo. >> he's the top public affairs official and now he is leaving well through the election, taking a leave of absence. and they say it's a health related issue. this after photos surfaced accusing government sign it shoulds of sedition and saying they're thwarting efforts to get this pandemic under control. those are comments the cdc director said today had saddened him deeply because he talked about the professional nature of those working in the administration. we should note that comment coming from him. after that, depending on the outcome of the election. that's an ally of caputos who
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was brought on around the same time he was. and he was accused of attempting to interfere and because of all the uproar over this, we're now seeing that he's going to be leaving and we are told that contact where he had an abruptly scheduled meeting with staff yesterday and a meeting with secretary hhs secretary. thank you. and the trump administration saying once a vaccine receives approval, operation warp speed aims to have them available within hours.
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they say vaccinations for the general public likely won't be available until next summer. i'm joined by medical director and assistant professor at baylor college of medicine. esengs eel, the mask could protect you more than a vaccine. he's warning it's not a silver bullet, that there may only be a certain percentage of people it triggered an immune response in. explain this to us. >> i think it's important to note one is not more important than the other. we need both to win this war against covid-19. wearing masks are going to prevent you from catching diseases in the air, when you interact with people. the vaccine is going to help contribute to the population developing herd immunity.
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they stated it only had to have a 50% efficacy to receive approval. that means one out of two people will be protected from covid-19. it's not 100% guarantee once we have a vaccine, everyone is protected >> i don't know that everyone was around that. i want to talk to you about michael caputo, for conspiracy theories and the cdc doctors and scientists want americans to suffer from the virus, which is ridiculous. what does that do for morale in the medical community.
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>> these agencies because they wouldn't approve convalescent plasma. it's not something you've been repeated. that protects the health of the american public. how can we, as americans, trust that they're going to effectively do their job when we have one of their lead spokespersons touting conspiracy theories. it doesn't make sense. covid-19 is not a partisan issue. i guarantee you covid doesn't care if you're independent, republican or democratic voter. it effects us all the same. it's high time we start putting people over the politics. >> thank you so much. it's great to see you. we're getting a clearer picture of the president's handling of the coronavirus pandemic and less than two months until the election, it's becoming a political sore point for thelection.
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saying that everything trump is telling americans is a lie and a journalist, who has covered many presidents came to his own damming assessment. let's listen. >> the biggest problem is trump is a conman. everything is a con, including the way he's behaving as relates to coronavirus. >> i don't know, to be honest, whether we can tell what is real or unreal. that is why, at the end of the book, i say my judgment is this is the wrong man for the job. >> tony schwartz is with us now. co author of donald trump and he is also the author of the new book, "dealing with the devil, my mother, trump."
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you spent a lot of time with then donald trump, working on the art of the deal. you had insight on mow his mind worked long before people were in the running for the presidency. what sounds right to you? the description that he's a conman or bob woodward saying he doesn't know the difference between truth and fiction? >> it'sbercome confusing even to me. >> i have never found, especially we didn't more out of control and touch with others today. we are in a relentless gas lighting in which he does lie and much more often than he
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tells the truth. nearly everything he says is untrue and we now know he knows that's untrue. he will say it's a lie i can tell a lie. >> being around him as you wrote this book. did you get the sense he was trying to weaponize lies or did you get the sense that truth just isn't even a value for him. >> this is the same for socio pathic and what's the primary element? it's the absence of conscience and empathy. when you want to dominate, it's as if you're going on to a
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football team and saying yeah, we're going to play the game but we're not going to observe any of the rules. that's the way he operates and more so today than ever. >> have you seen this manipulated video or heard about this one he shared of joe biden. it's got antipolice anthem by nwa, which is not the music that was playing at this moment. i wonder whault you think, having had exposure donald trump over some time, what do you think is the response that social media companies and twitter in this case should be doing? i listen to you say things no anchor person would show. this is common place to call him out. when i finish the art of the
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deal and it took off in the successful, trump doubled down on the story that i shamefully helped create of who he is. and that story was all fiction. i discovered freedom in actually engagic the truth he could not, which is to see my best and worse. trump's choice is i'm going to continuously do what i think serves my greatest personal interest, which is the only interest he has ever had. only interest. >> thank you for being with us. tony schwartz. >> thank you. next president trump claims again we're getting a vaccine in a matter of weeks. we're going to fact check that for you. and i'll speak to the woman on health care.
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going to do to protect people like her? >> should preexisting conditions, which obamacare brought into fruition be removed -- >> no. >> please stop and let me finish my question, sir. should that be removed within a 36 to 72-hour period? without my medication, i will be dead and i want to know what it is you're going to do to assure people like me we work hard, do everything we're supposed to do can stay insured. it's not my fault i was born with this disease and not my fault that i'm a black woman and i'm minimized and not taken seriously. i want to know what you are going to do about that. >> first of all, i hope you are taken seriously. i hope you are. >> she's joining us to discuss this moment. she's an assistant professor of
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and you were very clear and firm. >> it broke my heart and made me angry. and that's why when the event concluded, i sat on one of the walls and broke down and cried. because he did not address the question at all and took what i said about obamacare and took what i toads chop obama to shreds and attempt to chop joe biden to shreds because he was one of the most important people in creating the affordable care act.
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for the record, i'm insure fwhied state of pennsylvania because i worked for the state of pennsylvania and even though it's very expensive for me because i'm a single income, i have no children and a single income and expensive to live where i live and i get quite a bit. that's not my complaint. my problem is that as sick and disabled people, who have diseases we cannot control, we were born with and stuck with for life, we are thrown away like trash. we are treated like he treated me. he flufed me off like soot on the bottom of his $3 thoin pair of shoes and we have a right to live, we have a right to be treated equally within the
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medical community and insurance companies. without preexisting conditions. they're going to put a morbidity date on my life, which i have already passed. and i will be uninsured again. >> you were there for this whole town hall. and you watched the presidencier your question and others. did you get the impression he understands how health care works? >> no, not at all. he repeats himself reduntantly about how obamacare is a disaster but he never talked specifics because i can tell, over the last 3.5 years, he does not read and if he does read, he's not reading thoroughly and he's not reading the way i read.
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with a note pad and highlighter and taking notes so that i know what the details are about what it is that i do need. and he doesn't do that. and he comes from a position where he needs nothing he can say anything he wants from the day he was born. i was born into philadelphia by a wonderful single mother, who raised her kids without a welfare check or food stamp and a grandmother who helped us out and told us we can be better than what we were born. and people like that should not be thrown away. they have diabetes -- >> certainly i think many connect with you on that point. i wonder going into this, were
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you undecided. obviously, you have a lot of concern with the president right now. were you undecided? and where are you now? >> my indecision wasn't to vote for trump or biden. the indecision was whether to vote or not. for the first time in my life, since i was 18, i didn't vote in the primaries. i just sat in my car disgusted. and so i didn't vote in the primaries. with everything that has taken place over the summer, i have sat in my car and just cried because i can't believe all these people are dying, all these black people are being shot, all this disrespect between americans on the street. it doesn't make sense to me and politicians, i don't care who they are, democrat, independent, republican, they don't seem to really care about us on inblock.
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they don't care about the people who were actually living it. they don't live it. they're beyond it. because they're politicians. they get good paychecks and have excellent health care. their jobs are secure. that's not how it works where we live. we have to struggle. i become a professional because i'm so over taxed because my tax bracket is in the middle where i pay for the rich and the poor and there's nothing for myself. and they don't care about that. they don't care that there are millions suffering, trying to figure out how to pay rent. they're being evicted. it is of no fault of their own that they lose their jobs and can't get another one in their field.
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>> they shouldby considered. and you talk about not being sure if you're going to vote you've heard the president say to african-american voters, they should vote for him because, quote, what do row have to lose? i wonder what your reaction is. >> in 2016, the dignity of my ancestors, i'm a black indian. so, i have people on both sides of annexation of slavery. i'm not going to lose my dignity or the dignity of my ancestors to a man who has no respect to a person's ethnicity, where they come from, what their struggles are. he chops us to shreds and throws aus away. and when he finds one, he thinks agrees, he points to them and says that's my african-american. i'm not owned. okay? thalts rr over.
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i can't respect that. but what i wanted to do was give him a fair opportunity to address my personal issue. i want toed be objective. i didn't disrespect him in any way. i stood up when the man walked up the stairs to get at the stage. and what he did to every single person in the room who posed a question was disrespect us utter ly by lying, manipulating and basically not answering our questions at all. >> explain then your ret znt to vote and why maybe you think you're not going to cast a ballot in november? >> because i'm 57 years old. i've been a dedicated voter since i was 18 years old. and what have i ever achieved or gained from it? nothing. i don't care if it was a
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democrat, republican, obama, it doesn't matter. i really did not gain much, if anything, from their presidency. so, what was the point. until i got home last night. and it's a newly minted citizen. and we were talking about his family and making comparisons and he's so grateful to be in the united states. if he casts his vote, how dare i, an american born citizen not cast my own? that's what changed mine. jm voting for the biden-harris ticket. i am, as you can partially see, i'm a james baldwin fan.
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and the year i was born in 1963, james baldwin said that he can't do it because he's alive. i'm going to put my heart on the line again and i'm going to go ahead and cast that ballot and keep my fingers crossed and play to my god that maybe this time somebody will hear my tears and feel my pain and feel the tears and pain of 10s of millions of people across america who are disabled, who are sick, who are underinsured, uninsured or pay stacks of cash to be insured. whose life is something that is a gift. sooner or later, it's going to make me have a stroke or kill me flat out. and the older i get, the closer it gets. but i'm going to go head and use these years that i have left and
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have faith in the country in which i was born. i teach the constitution for a living. i believe in it. and i'm going to go ahead and go with my gut and cast that ballot and hope joe biden and harris and a teacher like me. this isn't about just me. this is about moving just like me. and i want to understand. >> thank you so much. appreciate you so much. we're going to. - [narrator] did you just reward yourself for spending a perfectly reasonable amount of time on the couch with tacos from grubhub? grubhub's gonna reward you for that with a $5 off perk. (doorbell rings) - [crowd] grubhub! (fireworks exploding)
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about the kren coronavirus vaccine but scientists warn it could threaten whether americans are willing to take the shot whenever it's available. they're one of the great break throughs and helped eradicate diseases in the u.s. like measles. >> we're very close to having a vaccine. one, i'm done with the truth, the previous administration would have taken perhaps years to have a vaccine because of the fda and all the approvals. and we're within weeks of getting it. we think we have it. >> he said three weeks/four weeks, even though earlier in the day, yesterday, a day that, mind you, there were no vaccine breakthroughs that occurred that would have changed the timeline, this was the timeline he gave. >> we're going to have a vaccine in a matter of weeks. it could be four weeks. it could be eight weeks.
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but we're going to have it. now, will it be before the election? it could be in terms of we have something. >> like he's just making up the timeline. whether he says three weeks or four weeks or eight weeks it's an unrealistic timeline. his vaccine chief said yesterday in the new england journal of medicine that, quote, developing a vaccine by january 2021 will represent progress. and the president is seeking a political victory. cdc has told states they must be ready to distribute as early as november 1st, two days before the election. >> if we can make them advanced prior to the election day, we will and if we can make them advanced after, we will. it's totally irrelevant. it's unlikely that number
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happened in aux. october. and eevrlven more likely to hap in december. >> in the service of politics and not health is causing many americans, who don't consider themselves antivaccination to have reservations. according to a poll conducted earlier this month, only 21% of people said they would get a coronavirus vaccine right away. down from 32%, who said they would in july. senator and democratic vice presidential running mate, kamala harris said this, when my colleague asked her if she'd get a vaccine approvaled and distributed before the election. >> i think thoolts going to be an issue for all of us. i will say that i would not trust donald trump. and it would have to be a credible source of information that talks about the efficacy
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and the reliability of whatever he's talking about. i will not take his word for it. >> now, the issue also came up in north carolina when cal coni cunningham said this. >> look, i've got questions and i think we've seen entirely too many times, and especially in recent years, politics intervening in what should be driven by health and science. whether it's cdc, centers for disease control recommendations on how to deal with this pandemic. we've seen politics intervening there. >> do i read that you would be hesitant to take the vaccine if it was approved by the end of the year? >> yes, i would be hesitant. >> we heard a candidate tell 10 million north carolinans he would be hesitant to take a vaccine. i think all that's
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irresponsible. >> now, if democrats see political opportunity in fears about a vaccine, it is unethical for them to seize it. no one should be playing politics with the health of americans. but his sentiment is shared by a growing number of americans, and for many, worries about the vaccine start with the president. a president who says this about masks. >> i think wearing a face mask, as i greet presidents, prime ministers, dictators, kings, queens, somehow i don't see it for myself. i want people to have a certain freedom and i don't believe in that and i don't agree with the statement that if everyone wear as mask, everything disappears. there are a lot of people who thinks masks aren't good. >> who are those people? >> waiters. >> he resides in a world where
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everyone around him is tested as he lies about how bad the pandemic is. >> we're going to get through this and we're right now, i hope, thankful. we're rounding the final turn. >> a president who has known for six months how easily it's transmitted. >> you know, you don't have to touch things, right? but the air, you just breathe the air and that's how it's pass said. that's a very tricky one, a delicate one. it's also more deadly than your, you know, even your strenuous flus. >> a president that has suggested cures that have killed people when they tried them. >> they say disinfectant knocks it out in a minute and is there a way we can do something like that by injection inside or almost a cleaning? >> president trump, who touted hydroxychloroquine, an unproven
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drug and whose fda issued an emergency use authorization only to revoke it in the face of what is ongoing events and other serious side effects. they manipulated cdc data to keep in track with the lies of the president and now he wants the country's trust on a vaccine. how do you trust someone who has repeatedly shown they're not trustworthy? trump has politicized the virus and it has cost lives we'll never get back. and if he doesn't stop, it will cost more. a recent poll shows almost two-thirds of americans believe political pressure from the trump administration will cause the fda to rush approval before election day. and the folks most likely to say they would not get a vaccine, even if it is ready, available and free before thelectielectioe
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republicans. not nptd independent, not democrat, they are his supporters. these are the lives of his supporters. we're waiting for joe biden to come to the podium and explain how he would roll out a covid-19 vaccine. and coming up a mom jumps through hoops to get her 2-year-old tested for covid and realizes it's a widespread problem for getting kids tested around the country. alright, i brought in ensure max protein to give you the protein you need with less of the sugar you don't. [grunting noise] i'll take that. woohoo! 30 grams of protein and 1 gram of sugar. ensure max protein. with nutrients to support immune health.
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a top trump administration health official is accusing the media of over blowing the coronavirus and downplaying the rick it poses to children. here is dr. eleanor katz on the hhs podcast learning curve. >> i just wish that the media would get honest about the coverage of covid. >> no way. >> we know, we know that
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children, for children this is not a life-threatening illness. there will be a few -- some cases, rare cases and i don't mean to discount because the severity and the stress to a family -- this is not a serious illness. that is a good thing. our children need to be in school. >> they do. and when we put them in school, with safety measures in place, why couldn't they go to school. >> nearly 600,000 children have contracted coronavirus according to the american academy of pediatrics. more than 100 children in this country have died and many are coming down with kawasaki disease causing inflammation in the walls of the blood vessels. experts are linking it. i'm joined by sarah clip, a health holsy reporter for "the new york times" and you've been doing a lot of great reporting
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on children and covid-19 testing. it caught our eye because you had to get your son tested because someone in his day care tested positive. you could just tell us, sarah, about what that process was like? >> yeah. i expected to it to be easy. i live in washington, d.c. we have a lot of drive-thru testing sites but when i started looking into it, it turns out the drive through sites won't test young children. so it took up a morning trying to figure this out and i didn't have childcare because my day care was closed due to coronavirus and then i put my reporter hat on and wondered how common is this and it turns out this is just a huge gap in our testing infrastructure. there is not much pediatric testing for coronavirus in the united states. >> so, did you find out why they aren't really testing young children and now in the end were you able to get your 2-year-old tested? >> yes, so we heard a wide range
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of explanations when we talked to different sites. some don't have pediatric nurses on site so they're not comfortable testing small children and some felt that wasn't a population that needed testing and there were concerns about priefvacy and i heard the could get tested at their pediatrician but they're having trouble getting tests so that is not an option for a lost children. for me it took a morning of calling around. i got lucky, another parent told me about a testing site they have found and that is where i took my son. but it is surprising to me seeing all of the testing sites close to where i live but it was such a hassle to find one that could test a toddler. >> i'm afraid we buried the lead. his results were -- negative, right. >> negative. >> just to be clear. >> and all of us tested negative. >> very good. he was a champ as you write with
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the nose swab which i'm impressed by. thank you for sharing your personal experience and checking to see if other people were acted. we appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. next, big ten football is back. why they reversed course and house the president is taking credit for it. plus one couple's wedding in maine has been tied to 176 cases of covid and seven deaths. at th. i'm a horse, but cuter. i'm a horse, but magical. pizza on a bagel-we can all agree with that. you're like a party rental. did you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance ta-da! so you only pay for what you need? i should get a quote. do it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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died actually attended the wedding. but they contracted the virus from people who did attend the wedding. cases linked to this wedding have been detected in a nursing home, in a prison, both more than 100 miles away from the venue. and president trump taking credit today after the big ten reverses course and decided to bring football back. he tweeted it is my great honor to have helped. cnn sports correspondent carolyn manno has details on what the season will look like. >> the big ten is back. a decision with political implications as the election nears. the council of presidents and chancellors voting unanimously to resume the football season the weekend of the 23rd through the 24th after postponing through the end of the year. the conference said it is adopting significant medical protocols including daily testing and enhanced cardiac screening. health and safety of the students remaining the top
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