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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  March 27, 2021 2:00am-3:00am PDT

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a dramatic escalation in bloodshed in myanmar. reuters is reporting that 50 pro democracy protesters have been killed. ivan watson joins us from hong kong. we are hear hundreds of murtsed. what is the latest?
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>> local officials saying 50 people have been killed. earlier numbers, perhaps 16 killed. it will take a while to sort some of these numbers out and try to confirm them but make no mistake from some grizzly images on social media and anti-coup groups it looks like it has been a day of bloodshed across the country, a day that the military has declared a holiday to celebrate the armed forces and a day when the anti-coup protesters had learned to protests against the military hunta that swept civilian elected government from power on february 1st and since then has been responsible for deadly crackdown on the opposition. kim? >> yeah. the military warned protesters they might get shod in thshot i
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head or the back and come to past. you mentioned that myanmar armed forces day. did that play any role in all of this violence crackdown? >> well, it's a holiday in myanmar, so you had the military throw a party for itself in the capitol with a military parade there and normally attended by foreign delegations. to the best of our knowledge only a russian delegation showed up and applauded by the military deck tator the commander in chief of armed forces who declared himself the rural of the country on february 1st. he went on to say he promised to organize elections in the country. the proxy party lost in last november's election and the military has used allegations unfounded of vote fraud as
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justification for their coup. he went on to say and accuse the ousted government of being guilty of crimes such as corruption that they are being prosecuted for. ironically, the former civilian leader who is being held in detention who he ousted is the daughter of the founder of the military. and it's his initial military of the celebration is celebrated today and nobody has heard from her since february 1st. >> this worsening violence doesn't seem to be stopping the demonstrators from going out. but is there anybody working to protect them at all? >> a lot has changed in less than two months since the coup. just about a month ago, the protesters were out on the
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streets engaging in cost play and using a lot of humor. then the violence increasingly got worse. there are estimates that 100 people were killed by the security forces. increasingly the demonstrators have resorted to making helmets, shields, using fire extinguishers. there are call for violent tactics coming from within the protest movements for a creation of something called a federal army which would presumably link the protesters in the cities with ethnic armed militias that control enclaves in border regions. myanmar are 135 different ethnic groups in the company many different languages and ethnic militias have been at war with the government for decades and
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control thee enclaves. the calls for an alliance the biggest militias have expressed support for the protest movement and cnn interviewed the leader of one of those groups who has denounced the coup and said the military has basically turned myanmar into a failed state. listen to what he had to say to cnn. >> translator: we will stand with the people means if they are in trouble and running to us seeking help who will take care of them? if the military continues to shoot and kill people it means the hunta would have transformed themselves into terrorists. they simply don't care about the people. we won't sit still and find any means to protect the people. >> reporter: there is big question here. what may happen in the weeks ahead? could of this protest movement
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start to evolve into urban guerrillas in the cities? some want it and some don't and there is division within the protest movement about how to move forward. kim? >> we will keep monitoring this story throughout the day. thank you so much, ivan watson, in hong kong. biden slams the elections law and atrocity and blatant attack on the constitution and jim crow in the 21st century. jim crow refers to a legacy of harsh u.s. and state laws to enforce racial segregation up until the 1960s. here is what president said on friday at the white house. listen to this. >> it's an atrocity. the idea -- if you want any indication that it has nothing to do with fairness, nothing to
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do with decency. they pass a law saying you can't provide water for people standing in line while they are waiting to vote? you don't need anything else to know that this is nothing but punitive, designed to keep people from voting. you can't provide water for people about to vote. give me a break. >> cnn's sara murray takes a closer look at the barriers that georgia's new laws have created for the state's voters. >> reporter: georgia governor brian kemp signing a dramatic overhaul of the state's election laws. the first gop victory in restricting voter access in a battleground state. >> after the november election i knew like so many of you that significant reforms to our state elections were needed. >> reporter: the law puts new voter identification requirements on absentee ballots, limits drop boxes to indoor locations during business hours, allows state officials to
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take over election boards and makes it a crime to provide water to voters in line. >> it was an election security bill that increases early voting opportunities on the weekend here in georgia. >> reporter: the legislation doesn't include earlier efforts to get rid of on no excuse absentee voting. advocates say is riddled with restrictions. >> this is despicable and disgusting and it creates more barriers to our voters so that they are not having access to the ballot box like they should. and to actually say to people you can't give somebody food or water, that is just cruel and inh inhumane. >> reporter: it was a striking scene thursday as kemp huddled behind closed doors with a handful of white men to sign the bill. >> this jim crow 2.0 is represented in that picture.
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you see those men. there is no color in them. there is just pure white males trying to basically hold on to power with their life. >> reporter: just outside kemp's office, park cannon, a black state representative, was arrested and marched out of the capitol by several police officers after she knocked on kemp's door trying to gain access to the signing ceremony. cannon is out of jail and facing two felony charges which her allies say she intends to fight. >> we are now is praying for her strength to get through this and wen are definitely lawyered up to defend her in every way we know how. >> reporter: georgia's law just one of hundreds of bills republicans are pushing nationwide as they hold tight to baseless claims of fraud amid their 2020 electoral defeat. even kemp appears to be buying into the big lie as he braces for a re-election fight in 2022. >> there is no doubt there were
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many aalarming issues with how the election was handled and those problems understandably led to the crisis of confidence in the ballot box here in georgia. >> reporter: former president trump, in the meantime, parodying his fact-free claims. >> you look at the last election it was a third world series election. it was a disgrace. >> reporter: fox news facing a defamation suit for spreading lies that the machines were linked to election fraud. >> fox gave life to these lies. you know? fox took the small flame and they turned it into a raging fire. >> reporter: this as former trump legal team member sidney powell defends herself claiming in a court filing even though she spread voter fraud claims no reasonable person would conclude that the statements were truly statements of fact. >> in a statement friday night, donald trump congratulated the
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georgia state legislature saying in a statement they learned from the travesty of the 2020 election which could never be allowed again. too bad these changes could not be done sooner. three civil rights groups are already challenging that georgia law in court. >> i spoke a short time with the washington correspondent for the "atlanta journal-constitution" newspaper. i asked her where the battle goes from here and if the damage is done to georgia's political reputation. listen. >> i think there is still a look at we don't know. there have already been lawsuits filed and there could be changes coming at the federal level. but i do think, you know, the brand of georgia is somewhat tarnished by what happened yesterday, not only with the bill being signed but, as you noted, you know, seeing a black
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democratic lawmaker being arrested for knocking on the governor's door in that process. >> so what do you make of the politics here in terms of voter engagement, you know, so much of politic generally on both sides is fueled by outrage and something taken away from them without donald trump to get exercised about. will this be the issue that energizes democrats and could this play a huge role in the battle for governor between kemp and stacey abrams? >> i think it will. no matter what happens, it will. democrats are energized in georgia after a very successful circle that went into the runoffs in january. now they are saying, look, we were so successful that republicans have passed the law to try to keep our voters boxed in to, you know, democrats feel like this law is specifically targeted at core democratic and
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make it harder for them to vote. i think a powerful rallying cry and resonating. when you have a message that resonates, you know, candidates know that is a winning message. i'm not saying that democrats are guaranteed to win but they definitely have a message that resonates. on the republican side, unfortunately, that message on their side continues to be we can't trust our election system and, therefore, we need to fix it and, therefore, these changes are needed because we don't quite know if your vote can be counted accurately. and what we learned in 2020 is that is not a winning message on the gop side so it's going to be interesting to even see how it affects republican voters in the coming months. >> good point. we will have to leave it there. thank you so much, tia mitch. i appreciate you coming on. the u.s. is making headway
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on covid vaccinations. almost 3.4 million americans got a shot on friday. that is a new daily record according to the white house. the cdc says more than one quarter of the population has received at least one dose and almost 15% are fully vaccinated. but health officials warn the fight is far from over. >> it's clear there is a case for optimism, but there is not a case for relaxation. this is not the time to let down our guard. >> most states have now announced plans to open up vaccine eligibility to anyone 16 and older. only two states haven't shared a time line for vaccinating everyone. that is arkansas and new york. the world health official has finished its report on the origins of covid-19. it's undergoing final checks and should be released to the public within the next few days. france is struggling to contain a third wave of coronavirus infections so countries across europe are
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taking action. the british government will begin testing truckdrivers entering or returning from france, that is according to an industry source familiar with the decision. the exact details of the plan are unclear but an announcement is expected as early as this weekend. france is set to impose new measures in schools as under lockdown and classrooms have to shut down if there is even one positive case. germany is classifying france high risk and travelers from france have to quarantine upon arrival. jim bittermann is joining us. you are in a high-risk zone according to germany. what led to this? >> reporter: i think the germans say it's not political and nothing to do with politics but it's the numbers' the numbers are not good for france. basically, the germans look at the incidence rate which is the number of cases, positive cases
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in a population of 100,000. in germany, it's around 119 people per 100,000 have tested positive. in france it's well over 200 tested positive for coronavirus and as a consequence the germans said that is the threshold so we will impose these restrictions. it's france and overseas territories are under a restriction having to show up in germany with a covid test that not more than 48 hours old and they also face a quarantine of ten days. it's a big new sort of step for the germans and not political, they say, but it is going to lead to some problems and especially the border regions have cross-border traffic. they have people who commute over the border to work and a question how that is resolved as well as with truckers.
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the schools is another issue. the french tried to keep their schools open at all costs. one of the costs is the student are getting infected. last week alone, 21,000 student infections in france. as a consequence now, there is this new lockdown measure in 19 of the so-called departments of france in which the schools will discontinue classes if they have so much as one positive test per class. so that has already led to 3,000 classes being shutdown and probably more in the future. it's a difficult problem. the numbers are rising across the map. so now steps are being taken. kim? >> france really struggling there. thanks so much, jim bittermann, outside paris. appreciate it. a logical nightmare at the suez canal. how crews is trying to move a
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cargo ship blocking the suez canal. two defense officials sail the u.s. navy is sending a team of dredging experts to learn their speake expertise. >> reporter: the race is on to dislodge the container ship wedged across the suez canal since tuesday. they estimated 2,000 cubic of meters of sand and mud need to be removed to refloat the ship. as dredging work continues, a fleet of tug boats stand by, hoping high tide will provide the vital window in which to free the carrier. almost as long as the empire state building is tall, the ever given got stuck during a sand
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storm block a supply change that ranges from global trade between asia and europe. >> worst-case scenario this goes on for a nont to clear the vessel. that is going to cause a massive disruption in the economy. we saw what happened with global recession almost took place in early covid when, all of a sudden, we were not able to 34506 goods in a clear, efficient way. >> reporter: roughly 30% of all the global container volume. incoming ships will made to be anchor in waiting seas in red sea and mediterranean. their only alternative is to
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divert around the southern tip of africa adding about a week to the journey. japanese shipping companies who own the ever given told cnn they are bracing fa lawsuits but insist their priorities right now is refloating the ship possibly as early as saturday. time is of the essence as data from the shipping expert lloyd's list suggests nearly $10 billion worth of goods is disrupted every day, raising the question -- who will bear the cost? ben wedeman, cnn, cairo. >> so will this affect you and the prices you pay for food and other goods? one expert tells cnn probably not, unless you're in the industry. >> perhaps counter intuitive you
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won't see shelves go dry at the supermarkets. you won't see any lack of goods as such. this is why the counterintuitive part comes in. the consumer immediately will notice nothing, but if you're working in companies in export or import you will have your work cut out for you to try to make end's meeting. >> after months on the ground and troops will withdraw from a region in ethiopia. pressure has been mounting to get the forces out and hold them accountable for their actions. cnn's senior international correspondent reports. >> reporter: prime minister ahmad has a series of rapid about turns. first acknowledging for the first time that forces were fighting alongside ethiopian forces in the region and now
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saying that eritren forces will be withdrawn. this coming after months of eyewitness reports that places soldiers at the scene of multiple massacres and comes weeks after u.s. secretary of state anthony blinken first add for them to withdraw. for many of those already hearing from on the ground who have lost loved ones or survive atrocities perpetrated in that region, they are telling us about ahmad's word is not enough alone. many are asking for accountability for into the allegations of atrocities and war crimes against both eritrea and ethiopia.
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emblems of grief pathology officer eric talley's police vehicle, the police chief says what is haunting the killer's motive is still unknown. >> like the rest of the community we want to know why boulder and why monday and we still don't have the answers. >> reporter: what they do know is alissa purchased the firearm here. the gunman also carried a 9 millimeter handgun but police say he did not quse it in the rampage. the first responding officers did exchange gunfire. >> they charged into the store
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and immediately faced a very significant amount of gunfire from the shooter who at first were unable to locate and they put their lives at risk and that will be reflected in additional attempted murder charges filed by the district attorney's office next week. >> reporter: funerals will begin next week for ten victims. >> if you picture a supermarket, picture all of the shelves all of the products, everything, they are going through every single shelf and pulling everything off the shelves' looking in the walls and that is going to continue throughout the weekend. >> reporter: the boulder police department released more details about those first arriving officers. officer talley led that first contact team into the grocery store within 30 seconds of arriving on the scene. the suspect immediately started shooting at the police officers, killing officer talley and those police officers say that the suspect kept firing on them
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until he was apprehended. as far as everyone else in the store, no one else was shot and killed as officers took on all of that gunfire. kyung lah, cnn, boulder, colorado. the back-to-back mass shootings in colorado and atlanta, georgia, have brought renewed calls for tighter gun control laws but any legislation needs ten republican senators and that is considered highly unlikely. it takes a super mantle of 60 votes to get most bills through the u.s. senate. that is how many votes it takes to end a filibuster. there are growing calls to change or scrap the filibuster altogether. president biden was a long time u.s. senator. he says the filibuster of old is being abused as a political weapon. listen to this. >> between 1917 and 1971, the filibuster existed and a total of 58 motions to break a
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filibuster. that whole time. last year alone, there were five times that many. so it's being abused in a gigantic way. >> joining me is harry litman, a former u.s. senator and former deputy assistant attorney general and a host of "the talking feds podcast. thank you for coming op. if you name an issue, gun control and voting rights and it seems clear that president biden and democrats in congress will be running into the buzz saw of republican opposition and the idea of getting anything done in a bipartisan way. do you think democrats will kill the filibuster? if so, what do you think will be the issue to galvanize them behind what could be a very politically turbulent move? >> no.
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you make a great point, kim, because you've named an array of issues and every single one of them now is subject to the filibuster. the filibuster has become very easy for minority party to try to deploy and they can just sit back and be passive about it and force a majority to try to somehow get up to 60. i think the odds on a particular compelling issue of getting to 60 might be better than actually killing the filibuster. there seem to me to be at least two senators who are very unlikely to go along with what they view as a very sort of harsh and radical move even though that view is, itself, pretty dubious. >> let's take voting rights, for instance. i mean, the strategy as i understand it will seem to be that they will, you know, just reintroduce, you know, bill after bill, you know, change it up and so on and it will get shot down by the
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the passing voting rights legislation when we are seeing what going on in georgia and the country really dwarfs it. yet, it only takes a couple of democrats to resist so even as it gets more and more exigent, my read to get every democrat behind mowing it down is very hard. >> changing it 50 vote threshold, that is not the only thing they can do, obviously.
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there are other options. you've highlighted the franken proposal and is there a way to quickly explain it and i'd be curious to hear whether you think it's realistic or just a cute thought experiment? >> no. i think it may be realistic and i think manchin and joe biden in his press conference signaled it might be. the basic idea it's gotten too easy to use the filibuster so instead of making the democrats have 60 votes, make the republicans be the ones who show up and continually have to muster 40 or 41 votes to keep the debate from closing and have the sort of mr. smith comes to washington old style dynamic of there really having to be there in the well and arguing for days
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on end. that seems silly but it isn't. it forces them to highlight the rare issue they think is so important to pull an extreme move. >> thank you so much for your analysis, harry litman. >> thank you. a massive cleanup is under way in parts of alabama, georgia, mississippi after a deadly night of storms. at least six were killed and many homes ripped to shreds as powerful tornadoes tore through the deep south. 23 reported twisters late thursday into early friday morning opinion the national weather service says one tornado in noonan, georgia, south of atlanta, was ef-4 with winds of 170 miles per hour and another twister in alabama was ef-3 packing winds 140 miles per hour. ther
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strict new covid lockdown measures are now in effect for much of kenya. movement in and out of the capitol nairobi and its surrounding counties is now banned. here is the story from jo the a. there is so much travel in and out of that city. how do they contain this? >> look. . we have always seen the kenya government being able to enforce lockdown measures and now these perhaps the most interesting come about in the third wave. they started to look at 47 counties and look at where you're seeing a hot bed of cases. 5 out of the 47 counties in kenya is what they have called the disease-infected area. that being nairobi county and
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the following on your screen. there will be no movement in and out of these areas. only be for movement of goods. customer few in place now at 8:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. and it's to try to bring down the numbers. the president there gave a reality check for kenyans yesterday. he was talking about the increase in hospital admissions have risen by over 52% in the last 13 days. the third wave, he says, started at the beginning of march. one of the doctors that works in nairobi, i spoke to yesterday, he was telling me that these measures should have been taken two weeks ago to try to bring the numbers down. now the big issue here is that the hospital system cannot cope with the admissions and cannot cope with the sick. now we are seeing icu beds filling up and you're starting to hear that a lot of people that need health care assistance
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that is non-covid-19 related are not able to find hospital beds. the president was realistic and said cases are probably going to rise and max out at around 3,000 per day in the next few weeks and hopefully start to subside in the next 50 to 60 days. that rollout is under way in kenya but there is concern that it is just not happening quick enough. the rest of the country put new public health measures in play and installed curfews and schools have been suspended. at the end of the day, as these cases rise and vaccine rollouts is happening in parallel, at the end of the day it's been such a very difficult situation to deal with when you have such a big movement of people on a daily basis in these very densely populated areas. >> exactly. big challenges ahead.
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thank you so much. appreciate it. so far hong kong kept covid cases at a minimum. now it has plenty of vaccine doses to go around so its vaccine rollout should be relatively easy, right? not exactly. >> reporter: hong kong should be an easy vaccine success story. it has secured 2.25 million doses, more than enough to inoculate a population of 7.5 million. a online booking system is in place and vaccine rollout is under way but the rollout has been rough. due to concerns over packaging problems, health officials have suspended the use of two batches of the european-made bonly 506%
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in january intend to get vaccinated. >> one of the reasons is our success in controlling covid the past year. only 11,000 cases in 7.56 million people and less than 1% of people in hong kong have had covid. another factor is fear behind the hesitancy is fear. investigations found no link with the inoculations. at least one death is being investigated. the fatalities have spooked many in hong kong but experts insist there is no reason to be concerned. >> don't be afraid. get vaccinated. what we have seen is there has been a lot of information but
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sometimes with a lot of information in the open public, it creates a kind of analysis paralysis and people perhaps are beginning to overthink. >> reporter: it has yet to be approved by the world health organization. the government has said the benefits outweigh the risks and has accused critics of smearing the vaccine. hong kong's top leader received her first and second vaccinations on camera. as of wednesday, only 5.5% of the population has received a dose. hong kong health experts say 70% of the population need to be inoculated to achieve herd immunity and paving the was he for the city to relax social distancing restrictions and resume international travel and reboot an ailing economy but some say it may take 300 days to
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reach that goal. the vaccine was taken up at a faster rate and many of the of the selfies of their first vjab. but these moments are happening at an even slower pace including my own as hurdles and hesitancy hamper the rollout. taking a stand against racism. why a soccer legend is quitting social media and why he is hoping others will dot same. stay with us. [sneezes] hey allergy muddlers. [sneezes] are your sneezes putting your friends in awkward positions? [sneezes] stick with zyrtec. zyrtec starts working hard at hour one and works twice as hard when you take it again the next day. zyrtec. muddle no more. and try children's zyrtec for consistently powerful relief of your kids' allergies.
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soccer legendary says he has had it with the recent spate of online bullying and racism so he is leaving social media until tech companies do more to hold users accountable for their post and he hopes others will encourage to do the same. he spoke about his decision. >> everyone was with him. that is what he felt. you know? please, please, understand, i'm nowhere near the caliber, nowhere near. i ask to myself, thierry you
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feel strong about it so i show that i'm not happy with things going on social media and where it goes because every time i hear this time of complaint -- it's not just that, it's the onus. i mention it again. a lot of good stuff [ inaudible ]. >> when you speak about this, you show people that you do have the option to take yourself off social media if it is affecting your mental health and i think that we are in a situation now where people have to realize that if the social media companies won't take that action, then we need to take the action for ourselves. >> i played the game. social media not that big at
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that particular moment. i understood recently it's also a good emotion, showing emotion is also good. i didn't know that. i come across with that long ago. we all know, right? that when you see a comment on social media, you concentrate on the bad one and that is the one that is going to hurt that side, okay okay? sometime you like to try to figure it out what shall i do? who am i -- what i'm saying is it right? is it true? am i like this? just imagine a kid going through those questions that i i can't deal with and you ask yourself
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the question. you're a man of a certain age. so just imagine when you're a kid and the impact it could have on a kid. what i'm saying it can be safer for a kid? can it safer for a community or for your mental health and this is very important. things are tiny bit better and now the problem has moved on social media where people can hide, can people can check accounts and difficult choice with this. you close that account, they can reopen another one. who is it? who are you? do we know who you are? >> cnn reached out to social media companies for reaction. twitter said racist behavior, abuse, harassment from no place on our service. twitter is a safe place to express yourself and to follow the conversation about football
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without fear or abuse or intimidation. facebook and instagram sent a combined statement said they will take a tougher action when we are aware of people breaking rules and we will continue this work and we know these problems are bigger than us so we are working with others to collectively drive societal change. that wraps thihour of "cnn newsroom." i'm kim brunhuber. quest world wornnders is next. for canada and the u.s., "new day" is straight ahead. hi sabrina! >>hi jen! so this aveeno® moisturizer
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it's easy and affordable to get started. get self protection for $10 a month. ♪ this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. good saturday look to you. a live technical city of atlanta it beautiful, 6:00 a.m. eastern. and we are starting in the state of georgia and the nationwide outrage over new voting restrictions. >> and president biden has joined the outrage saying that the justice department is joining in what he called jim

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