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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  October 10, 2020 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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can come to the phoenix, anyway. >> woo! nice job, everyone. >> to learn more about scott's program and to see if phil made it through the class, go to cnnheroes.com. thanks for watching, everyone. our coverage continues. hello, i'm kim brunhuber, this is "cnn newsroom." we're live from cnn world headquarters in atlanta. welcome to you, our viewers here in the united states, canada and around the world. the trump white house is already a proven hot bed of the coronavirus. staffers there fear a large event planned in the coming hours can only make it worse. a source tells cnn that 2,000 people have been invited to see and hear president trump on saturday in his first public
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appearance since returning monday from the hospital. the president said he's been retested but doesn't know the result. he told conservative radio host rush limbaugh he was very sick but now feels great. >> i was in not great shape and we have a medicine that healed me, that fixed me. i feel better now than i did two weeks ago. it's crazy. i recovered immediately. i might not have recovered at all from covid. >> president trump says he doesn't know where he caught the virus but admits it might have been at a rose guard ten event. they tested positive in the days that followed and the top infectious disease, the facts, they're clear to him. >> we had a super spread er evet in the white house and it was a situation where people were crowded together without wearing masks. so the data speak for themselves. >> with the u.s. election now
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looming and president trump trailing in national polls, he appears eager to get back on the road for more campaign rallies beginning monday in florida but thursday's second presidential debate has been canceled after the trump campaign refused to do it remotely. we are keeping a close eye on hurricane delta battering the louisiana coast with flash floods and wide spread power outages. we'll have more on the storm. one question the white house refuses to answer is whether the president still has an active case of covid-19. we'll get the latest from cnn's kaitlyn collins from the white house. >> reporter: although it's only been a week since the president was hospitalized at walter reed, he is moving full speed ahead and planning an event at the white house where 2 thousa,000 have been invited and a campaign
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rally on monday. the big question is whether the president has tested negative. they will let us know when the president does test negative again. he was tested on friday because he admitted as much during an interview. he said he had been tested and he hadn't gotten his test results back. they did not send out any kind of update even though they had done that on a daily basis since he returned to walter reed. before that they were briefing reporters in person and they stopped those updates. no updates about his current condition even though they are hoc moving ahead with the rallies
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and events. the president will be addressing people from a balcony far up where he won't be interacting with guests but you have to remember, that supreme court event the president wasn't walking around the rose garden. multiple people have now of course tested positive for coronavirus, including the former new jersey governor chris christie who still remains hospitalized and they said he was hospitalized as a precaution. there are far reaching repercussions from that event. kaitlyn collins, cnn, the white house. let's get an international perspective. thank you so much for joining us here today. we saw over there how having covid changed boris johnson's outlook.
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not so much president trump for those hoping the president might have a hospital bed change about covid. he's gathered people for events when we don't know if he's healthy. it seems perfect flexing. he went on fox, did a made for tv medical exam by one of their medical experts. how does this help him pick up ground against joe biden? >> i think the first thing to say is it's deeply concerning. we know the numbers, more than 210,000 americans died but we're just three weeks out from the election so i think the level of uncertainty, of concern, of chaos that this has led to amongst the electorate can't be under stated. we know that donald trump's base, he has that hard core who have stuck with him. i think for so many americans,
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they're worried. we're seeing this in the polls. i think older americans in particular are concerned, deeply concerned about the signal that this sends. it's not only about the election, of course the number one thing in so many people's minds right now is november 3rd. people are already voting. it's so much to do with what signal it sends to people about the seriousness of the pandemic we're in. it's not a clear message of wearing masks, keeping distance. i think there's so much concern about whether the president is concerned yet as he's interacting again with americans. >> you mentioned the older voters. i don't like to focus on the polls. the trends are interesting. a series of recent polls show the president is losing support amongst older voters. you mentioned one reason. do you know exactly why that is and how that might affect the
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votes overall? we're seeing one of those polls there just now on the screen. >> yeah. i think what we've been seeing for a little while is a concern amongst older voters about whether the president is reflecting the values, certainty, stability that they value. when you add the fact that they are in a very naturally high risk category for the pandemic, this is a grave concern for anybody over 55. this increases for those over 65. this is a president who hasn't taken this seriously, marginalized scientists, public health experts, even the cdc at times. these are values that are held dearly by older americans and so it's not surprising. a president that won the over 55 vote by 13% in 2016 is now
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really trailing and that's likely to hurt him. you know what we know from all of these polls is that it's not about people's preferences, it's about whether those people exercised that preference by voting and that is the thing we can't be certain of. how does it matter when we count those votes that have been cast. >> one way to make up that ground might be to go on national tv with millions of people watching in a debate. the president said he wouldn't participate in that debate. didn't miss an opportunity if you were advising the trump campaign, would you insist he do it given the state of the race? >> i think this is a president who knows that his strongest response comes when he's in those rallies. the people that turn out are supportive of him, he doesn't bring on new voters, but he increases the enthusiasm,
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ensures people will get out and vote for him. the debates didn't go well. they were poorly received by the majority of americans and i think he knows if he faces another debate, questions of his tax concern, of his handling of the coronavirus, of his decision to hold what's become known as a super spreader event at the white house in recognition of amy coney barrett, all of these things would come front and center in the next debate so i'm not surprised. i don't think any of us are surprised he's decided not to go forward with that. >> we'll have to leave it there. thank you so much for joining us. we appreciate it. nearly half a million homes and businesses are without power along the u.s. gulf coast after delta roared ashore friday evening. it made landfall in creole, louisiana, as a category 2 hurricane and it's now a tropical storm.
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this was shot in lake charles as the storm packed 100-mile-an-hour winds. the area is dealing with life threatening flash flooding. just listen to this. imagine being out in that. that's the sound of the winds howling through sweet lake, louisiana, only 20 miles from the spot where the storm made landfall. of course, lake charles, louisiana, hasn't recovered from hurricane laura which struck back in august. martin savidge is there and here's his report on delta's impact so far and the challenges the city faces. >> reporter: hurricane delta came to shore east of the city. that was good news for the city because it meant the city was spared the worst of the storm. this is a city that couldn't face any type of storm. it was so badly six weeks ago by hurricane laura. the mayor here said he believed
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95% of the buildings and homes in this community have been damaged in some way by laura. they were in a much weaker position to try to fasz hurricane delta. we do noah cording to the mayor there were 911 calls that came in. the problem is emergency crews couldn't go out and respond because it would have been too dangerous. we'll have to wait until the winds subside where they will again go through search and rescue operations, something they are sadly practiced at. the real concern has been the issue of debris. so much debris and there was so little time in between storms they couldn't clear it all up. much of that material becomes dangerous, it becomes missiles and it can harm people and do more damage to storms. sadly, they had just got the power back and in many cases people had just come back to their home. they have to start all over.
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martin savidge, lake charles, louisiana. >> let's bring in meteorologist karen mcginnis now. karen, we saw a lot of bad news in that report, but the good news is, delta has weakened. >> it has weakened. the threat is not over. we're starting to see now what we had warned about as this storm was approaching the coast, that is the potential for tornadic activity. there is a tornado effect for iscambia county. this is a broad shield of rain. there is no center of circulation because it is at tropical storm strength. so it continues to elongate and it weakens. still the threat of rain, still the threat of storm surge. wind damage still the potential problem. already in excess of 660,000 people, primarily most of those in louisiana without power. but also into texas and into mississippi where they saw high winds. we had very heavy rainfall.
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very heavy rainfall. this is where that precipitation is located right now. you can see some of the heavier precipitation located right along interstate 20 between jackson and shreveport. extending over the lower mississippi valley. nashville picking up with the rainfall. i looked at some of the wind reports across louisiana and into mississippi. some of the higher wind gusts, 45 to 50 miles an hour. i know you saw this earlier. i want to show you this video from a viewer. he's around sweet lake. listen as you see this. that is just to the south of lake charles. so devastated six weeks ago by hurricane laura. this gentleman that sent us this
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video, you can imagine. he was hunkered down. he said they were safe, but if you can imagine listening to that wind, it was frightening. people from lake charles are still recovering. this has been a long haul. back to you. >> absolutely. we'll be following that for the rest of the day. thank you so much, karen mcginnis in atlanta. coming up on "cnn newsroom," new details about the alleged plot to kidnap governor gretchen whitmer and president trump's virtual silence on the arrest. and a second wave of covid-19 taking over europe. robinhood believes now is the time to do money.
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that was the scene in wisconsin friday night as police fired tear gas at a crowd of protesters. the demonstrators took to the streets for a third straight night after authorities decided not to charge a police officer in the death of 17-year-old albert cole. soon after that curfew began officers were struck by bottles
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and fired tear gas. in the u.s. six men appeared in a michigan court on friday on terrorism and other felony charges. they're among 13 suspects accused of plotting to kidnap michigan governor gretchen whitmer and take over the governments of several other states. she says they are all domestic terrorists. sara sidner has new details about the investigation. >> i hate to say i love the kid, but i'm mad right now. i'm just shocked, man. you help somebody out and they pull off that stuff. >> brian titus said one of the people was his employee. adam fox lived here for a couple of weeks. he lived behind this door and down into the basement. down here with him, his dogs. one with an emotional support collar. >> he was in a militia and he got kicked out so he started his
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own. >> reporter: one of many things he discussed, he noticed packages arriving. what was he getting from amazon. >> mres, food. >> survival stuff? >> buying attachments for ar-15 and buying, like, food. i'm not stupid. i was in the marine corps. i told him he had to go. >> reporter: but before he left, fox and 12 others were arrested in fbi raids. they were ranting against the government online. one suspect calling president trump an enemy. >> trump is not your friend, dude. >> reporter: while another had praise for the president tweeting keep up the good work. we the people love your work. the alleged plot centered around a plan to kidnap michigan governor gretchen whitmer whose coronavirus restrictions have been railed against by armed groups at the capitol. according to the complaint, they did surveillance on her vacation
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home. one suspect said in an encrypted chat, the fear will be manifested through bullets. fox allegedly responds, copy that, boys, loud and clear. >> these are types of things you hear from groups like isis. this is not a militia, this is a domestic terrorism issue. >> this is not just a michigan problem, it's an american problem. there will be more incidents to come. >> reporter: a former neonazi was convicted of a kidnapping. i spoke to him days before the alleged plot was known to the public. >> reporter: what's the scenario in this election that would create the race war. >> am' telling you, this is going to happen. states like michigan, states like wisconsin, the northern states, wilderness area, there have been militias from other
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states training up there. they are waiting and hoping something does go wrong because they want to hold up in them hills and they want to say, we don't want the federal government up here anymore. >> he said the president's rhetoric has emboldened them. whis mer agrees. >> any time they take a shot at me, we see an increase in rhetoric online, violent rhetoric. there's always a connection. certainly it's something we're watching. this has taken it to a higher level. >> reporter: the president doesn't tolerate any violence and he went after governor whitmer saying she did a terrible job. the governor tried to slow the spread of this deadly virus. sara sidner, cnn, grand rapids, michigan. i want to bring in an expert
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to talk about this. we have augusta delomo from harvard kennedy school. she hosts a podcast called right rising. we've been having discussions here in the newsroom about what to call this -- these types of groups. you heard governor whitmer say this is not a militia, this is a domestic terror organization. what would you call them? do names matter? what's the difference between these types of groups and a group like the proud boys? >> that's a great question. we're having the right conversations. these groups do represent a threat to the united states and they are a domestic terror threat. on the other side, it is important to call them militias. this offers us a way to understand what they want. militias are invested in overthrowing the government. they have an ideology that views themselves as protecting
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individual rights and that leads them to engage in extreme actions like the plot against governor whitmer, but on the other side, militias also include activity that's demonstrations. militias can commit acts of terror. that's what we saw with governor whitmer. it's important to distinguish the militia plots we've seen over the past few days and the activities of the proud boys which are more of what we would call a street gang that's invested in inciting violence against protesters, brawling in the streets, corrupting peaceful protests. that distinction is important. >> interesting. so, you know, the president's tacit and sometimes i guess explicit support for these types of groups tweeting things like liberate michigan, for instance, being so quick to condemn groups on the left but being reticent
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to say anything in the wake of this incident, how much support are these groups getting from the president and the administration and what effect is this having? >> it's viewed as a validation for them. in the case of the militia movements, there is a contradiction, right? they see themselves as antigovernment inherently. they see themselves as over throwing the establish am, but trump represents for some of them an outside figure that's fighting the good fight within the white house. he aktsz as a white male heroic figure to them and his emboldening and the call to action, it extends beyond to the trump campaign, his son, donald trump jr., asking them to join and all of this seen as a mobilization and validation. it under cuts them and
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ultimately putting a stop to these organizations zwr it's not just the president and the administration supporting these groups. i want to play a clip from the barry county sheriff in michigan. he was asked about the accusation against them. listen to this. >> are they trying kidnap? a lot of people are angry with the governor? they want her arrested. was this an arrest or a kidnapping. in michigan, you can make a felony arrest. it's mco 76.4, point 5, somewhere around there. it doesn't say if you are in elected office that you are exempt from that arrest. i have to look at it from that angle and i'm hoping that's more what it is. in fact, these guys are innocent until proven guilty. i'm not sure if they had a part in it. >> that blows me away that he's
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trying to justify it as a citizen's arrest. does that type of reaction indicate a shocking sense of support in the community. >> it's one of the biggest problems with tracking and stopping them. there is not an insignificant amount of support and there is a lot of reports from the department of homeland security and the fbi over concerns about infiltration, linkages between local law enforcement like the sheriff and militias and they don't see the groups seriously. they don't see them as a threat. in many cases they view militias as the cases to view them as ways they cannot get them to do. what would it actually take to
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quell one of these terror plots. if local law enforcement doesn't take it seriously, that represents the ultimate end of one of these organizations and what about the next time there's a plot against governor whitmer. >> even more disturbing as we head into the election. we'll have to keep it there. thank you very much for speaking to us about this. appreciate it. coming up, the world health organization is reporting a record number of daily global covid-19 cases. we'll show you why western european countries are particularly worried. we'll speak with a prominent british doctor about a new report that shows why the u.s. has failed to meet the covid readiness. lives to get home to they use stamps.com print discounted postage for any letter
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm kim brunhuber. a couple of thousand people have been invited to see and hear president trump at the white house on saturday despite a recent covid outbreak there that infected the president and a dozen others. the president's first public appearance since returning to the hospital on monday. here's what he told fox news on friday. >> i have been retested and i haven't even found out numbers or anything yet, but i've been retested and i know i'm at either the bottom of the scale or free. >> now while speaking to fox, the president revealed a few new details about his time in the hospital. our chief medical correspondent sanjay gupta was listening carefully for clues about the
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president's health. >> the president did say he had congestion in his lungs. mark siegel ask the president, did he have scans? he said he had all kinds of scans and didn't say what they were. they showed congestion in his lungs, which is the first time we heard that. >> so with the election just over three weeks away and down in many polls, president trump wants to kick start his campaign with a rally on monday in florida, but one medical expert speaking to cnn's jay tapper said large clouds will inevitably spread the disease further. >> well, florida is ripe for another large outbreak. what they've done is opened up everything as if nothing had ever happened there. and you and i could be talking probably in eight, ten weeks and i will likely bet that florida will be a house on fire. this is what's so sad about this. we know these things are going to happen. it's not like you can escape
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this virus. i find it illogical that people think just because they get done with the virus, the virus is done with them. it's not. >> for more on this, let's bring in dr. sonya adasara. she's a physician with the natural health organization. the idea that thousands get together to hear the president speak, a rally, potentially another super spreader event. it seems baffling. what message does this behavior send? >> i think it's extremely reckless and selfish. it's sending the wrong message. this is a potentially deadly virus which we know has seen huge death rates in the u.k. and the u.s. and the message that it sends that the virus that people should take the virus seriously, it's really, really concerning
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and could speak to more unnecessary deaths. >> that's exactly what a new report from the council on foreign relations said. it examined all of this and said while the pandemic is inevitable, it said the u.s. response was deeply flawed and too slow and it singled out leaders including the president for failing to communicate clearly or defend public health leaders frmpt your viewpoint, what have been the biggest fael urs to date? >> yeah. we're seeing people with the same virus, particularly countries in east asia, other countries like the u.s., the u.k. where we've not done so well, we've seen high death
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rates and our economy take a hit as well. they're all key things that we know other countries that did well that we need to be done. number one, we need government to understand science. we need clear public health messaging about what needs to be done to keep us safe and we need the public to follow the guidelines. we need to have them trust what's been told and thirdly we need to have really good comprehensive testing. new cases quickly and we can inform contacts quickly as well. it's really messy for the u.s. and the u.k. about when people have the virus, we need to be able to be in a context of the virus, they need to be able to isolate so we don't spread the virus on. we know in the u.k. in the context of the virus, we think 10% of them are isolating for 14
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days. we know for many of them we need to continue and we didn't have the financial support so we do need to see more financial support and not put others at risk. looking towards the future. what can be done to improve the system so sort of regardless of who's in power, the responds to the next pandemic can be more robu robust. >> yeah. so i think -- first of all i think governments acted quickly following world health organization advice did well. we need to be building up for
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many governments to understand the importance of the global and public health advice. building up testing capacity and joining building up a health facility. in the u.k. we were very concerned in march, april, now we are beginning to get concerned again as we're seeing the virus increase, that we don't have the capacity in our hospitals to not be overwhelmed when we see rates of the virus increase. there's risk here and we've seen this in the past months, surgical services all have to take a back seat because we've had to increase coronavirus. so if you -- we need to build up our health systems so we have the spare capacity when we have pan dem mix like this and so our hospitals don't become overwhelmed. we're not in a situation like we were where in march and april
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there wasn't capacity. >> if you don't mind, can you stick around? i want to bring in melissa bell with more on the cases in europe. melissa, let's start where you are in france setting a daily record for cases. >> that's right. friday it was the worst we had seen so far. more than 20,000 new covid cases announced, kim, for the preceding 24-hour period. it comes as four french cities enter the zone. as is being said, it's all about protecting the icus. one of the cities that comes into the maximum alert zone, in the north of france, is already warning that many of the other procedures, that its hospitals have been taken care of, will have to be put aside in order to deal with what they expect will be a flood of covid-19 patients because they have a high risk of
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inciden incidents. it has arrivals in icu. it is the delicate balance of trying to ensure that the health care system worked. what's different with the first wave we saw, these are by and large countries that dealt with the first wave. the messaging from governments is very clear. the advice of scientists was at the center of their efforts. it was very easy in a sense to close those countries down. we're seeing a lot more pushback because the decisions are incremental. little by little, ma drit on lockdown. more unity than we've seen in the first place. it is a much more difficult decision to make. for instance, here in paris we've been in the maximum alert category for a week. bars and cafes have closed. after the push back from restauranteurs, there are
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questions about whether the current restrictions are going to be enough. so severely tested are icus in places like paris already. >> melissa bell in paris. thank you very much for that. let's go back now to dr. sonya adelsara in london. doctor, can you help us understand where this is going? we keep hearing about record cases and so on. are we heading back to where we were in the worst of the pandemic with hospitals as we were just hearing, out of beds and so on, or is this just the way things will be for the next, you know he loosening cases and numbers shooting back up. >> in addition to the u.k., we are seeing more people coming into hospital with the virus and we are seeing outbreaks as well. i think it's important to realize and if you look at other
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countries that if you don't get voel of the virus, then the virus will continue to spread and if we have movements beyond taking public transport, going to shops, mixing, we do not have the cure for this virus. we do not have a vaccine for this virus yet. there are countries that manage to suppress the virus and with really aggressive testing, finding every new case, isolating them, isolating their contacts, they've managed to keep the virus under control. the problem is in the u.k. the virus is spreading. because we don't have that grip on the testing capacity and the content tracing, we are in the situation where we are constantly having to go into lockdown, out of lockdown and to
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be honest, it doesn't seem like a event, we're having businesses close. friends of mine have lost their jobs in the past few months. this strategy of just putting in restrictions whenever the virus goes up, in and out of lockdown doesn't seem to me like a good long-term strategy. we need to suppress the virus down,less then have a really robust testing situation around and also the public having clear understandings of keeping safe, wearing your mask, avoiding super spreader events, keeping your distance, ensuring as well
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all health workers, staff, key workers being tested so they don't pass the virus to others. >> sounds so sensible when you say it, but so far it's eluded us, at least here in the u.s., and where you are right now. thank you so much, doctor. we appreciate it. after the break -- >> you don't have a choice. >> yeah. >> i get sick or i end up on the street. >> the devastating impact coronavirus is having on generation z and millennials. stay with us. sting today wherever you are - even hanging with your dog. so, what are you waiting for? download now and get your first stock on us. robinhood. there'it has triple action mosupport for your joints,a. cartilage and bones.
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we know the covid pandemic has hit the u.s. hard with millions applying for first time unemployment benefits. generation z and millennials have been hit the hardest.
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cnn's kim la has the story. >> they knew growing up would be tough but they never imagined it would be like this. >> towards the end of april they went to the hospital. it was my grandmother first, then my dad the next day and then the next day it was my mom. >> covid-19 took them one by one over the next few months. leaving the 22-year-old and 17-year-old joseph alone. >> my parents are gone and for the last three months we didn't have capacity to think about our futures. we were scrambling to save our parents. >> she has no time to grief, no time to show her loss. hannah is in college now. joseph in high school. with no extended family nearby or clear path for how to make a living. >> this is a memorial that we made for our parents so we could
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remember them and look in every day. >> they're part of the hardest hit age group in the covid economy. young people. generation z and millennials have america's highest rates of unemployment. about half say they or someone else in their household have either lost a job or had a pay cut since the pandemic began. >> you don't have a choice. i work, get sick or i end up on the streets. >> reporter: 29-year-old hosue martinez is the sole bread winner in the household. paying the rent for this small converted garage he shares with his mom and grandmother. employees were note video fied a covid positive patient visited the store in march. >> that's when i started getting the symptoms, the fever, the cough and at the end i couldn't breathe at all. >> reporter: this is what happened to martinez. for 45 days he was in a
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medically induced coma nearly losing his life in intensive care. weeks later he survived but he's dependent on a walker at the age of 30. >> do you think this will impact your ability to make money or work in the future? >> yeah, yeah, i do. any activity i was doing normally, now they made it like i can't do. young americans with no choice but to deal with the hand they've been dealt. >> i'm still alive and my brother is still alive and we're healthy so i think that's just pockets of joy what i'm looking for, it's what keeps me going. kyung lah, cnn, los angeles. we want to give you this programming note. join anderson cooper, sanjay gupta for a cnn global town hall, "coronavirus facts and
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fears." 9 a.m. eastern and at 9 in the morning on hong con. coming up, american pro football is coming up with new ways to handle the coronavirus. now a new rule could cost teams on the field. details next. stick with us.
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in american pro football there's a new rule for coaches talking to game officials in the covid era. in a memo obtained by cnn, it says teams will be penalized 15 yards if coaches speak to game officials without wearing a mask. the penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct came after some coaches removed their masks. the new york jets have a clean wilf health after sending all personnel home on friday when one player tested positive. it turns out that was a false positive. their game against it here. carolyn manno has more on what the nfl is plan to go do. >> i'm carolyn manno in new
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york. for the second straight week the tennessee titans and new england patriots have had to push their games back because of coronavirus. the patriots were sell the to play on sunday but it's been moved to monday night. the titans bills game will be played on tuesday. they're set to play the chiefs two days later. if that comes to fruition, it will be pushed back. as the league's game will shuffle. as of thursday's round of testing, the patriots, chiefs, titans are all reporting no new cases. encouraging sign as they try to move forward in their schedule. that wraps this hour of cnn. i'm kim brunhuber. i will be back. stay with us. want to brain better? unlike ordinary memory supplements-
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straining, and bloating, again and again. no way. more exercise. more water. and more fiber is the only way to manage it. is it? maybe you think... it's occasional constipation. maybe it's not. it could be a chronic medical condition called ibs-c, and time to say yesss! to linzess. linzess works differently than laxatives. it helps relieve belly pain and lets you have more frequent and complete bowel movements. do not give linzess to children less than six and it should not be given to children six to less than 18, it may harm them. do not take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain, especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe, stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include gas, stomach area pain, and swelling. change your thinking to ibs-c.
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if your constipation and belly pain keeps coming back, tell your doctor and say yesss! to linzess. ♪ president trump plans a risky event close to home. 2,000 people are reportedly invited to the white house this weekend as the president claims he's been cured of the coronavirus. and the u.s. gulf coast is battered once again. hundreds of thousands of people as hit the ground. welcome to our viewers here in the united states and canada and around the world, i'm kim brunhuber and this is "cnn newsroom."

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