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tv   Don Lemon Tonight  CNN  May 20, 2021 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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new details on a shocking story we were first to report on last night. the mother of ronald green, a black motorist who died during an encounter with louisiana state police two years ago, speaking out right here on don lemon tonight.
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the family walled at the time that green died in a car accident. police body cam video is now out and it proves that's not true. the video shows green was tased, kicked and dragged by officers before he died in custody. green's mom saying this to me just moments ago. >> it was two, three days after we got there. and at that time they told us that he was in a high-speed chase. the car crashed into a tree and he went through the windshield and died of the injuries. right before then, we found out that through coroner, she told us he was being taken out of state for his autopsy. and it was right then and there that we saw that it was going to be basically a cat and mouse game. they were running us all over the place. >> also tonight, senate republicans lining up behind
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minority leader mitch mcconnell opposing the creation of an independent commission to investigate the deadly insurrection at the capitol on january 6th. so i want to turn now to the gop effort to bury the truth of the insurrection. joining me now, cnn political commentator, and the former top aide to paul ryan, and john boehner. good to see you both. this is really important stuff. and you know, amanda, i made a commitment on the show to continue to talk about the insurrection and what happened on january 6th because it is important to our democracy. several republican senators including john thune and maya grounds are admitting they'll vote against the january 6th commission because it is not good for the 2022 campaigns. people died. voters were brutally assaulted. our cop was ransacked and they're not even pretending to care about anything besides the next election. what the hell? >> i mean, i think you have to call this what it is.
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we are watching the cover-up of the big lie. in all the deadly, dangerous consequences of it. you know, this is always going to be a tough vote for these republicans because a vote for the commission is essential lay vote to investigate themselves. or at least their colleagues. and i was very surprised at how up front john thune was saying he didn't want to support it because of the mid-term elections. i want to be optimistic here. the commission will happen in one way or another. and there were 35 republicans who said, yes, we want to look into this. if senate republicans don't want to get on board with a bipartisan commission where they can have a hand in saying who would be on it and have a say for how it would go, fine. nancy pelosi can look back later and chuck schumer can say you had your chance. we're doing this on our own. and don, nii believe in my hear that there are people in the trump administration who are horrified about what they saw and have information and would
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be willing to talk. >> amanda just mentioned the 35 house republicans who voted for this bill. trump is going after them now. he's calling this bill, this commission, he's calling them weak and ineffective. how much of this is playing into the senate republicans' decision making tonight, do you think? >> yeah. it's hard to suggest that it's not. the president seems to be putting out statements like the in greater frequency, reminding people he's watching. i talked to a number of folks around the senate. their theory of the case here is that if they don't have a commission, this will help their effort to move on. that they're worried that if there is a commission and it rolls out with a report in 2022, they'll be forced to talk about donald trump and that's not what they want to talk about. you're always going to end up talking about donald trump. if it is not this, it is
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something else. i can tell you as someone next on paul ryan, through 2016, 2017, 2017, he's always going to be there. you can't avoid him. the idea that you'll he is came what happened is folly. you might as well get to the truth and i think there are enough senate republicans who actually believe what happened on that day is a disgrace and is worth exploring. i am holding out hope that if there were some revisions, they could get to a place where they could find a bipartisan way. i think there's a chance to do it. >> amanda, in a really disgusting and childish and very transparent attempt in name calling and trying to change the subject here, sort of, mccarthy is calling this the pelosi commission. a blatant attempt to rile up the base and turn this heinous attack on our capitol into a
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partisan talking point. it's embarrassing. >> yeah. a lot here is embarrassing. mccarthy is one of the people who would be a witness to very critical information because he talked to the president as the riot was in full strength, as people in the capitol were begging for help, as the national guard waited on the sidelines for more than three hours. there are huge questions. so yes, he wants to turn this into a partisan thing. he west vir he. we have to look at how dumb they are. when they say we want to move from donald trump on one side of the mouth and then on the other saying of course he is still the republican party. that's incompatible. they're not going to get away from that. if the democrats can't make that a big issue, that they are covering up for the big lie, they still want all the upsides of donald trump, they want his coalition, then that is political malpractice.
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>> thank you both. i appreciate it. i have to get to some other breaking news now. on the raid of rudolph giuliani's home in office. we are learning investigators seized 18 electronic devices from giuliani and multiple people who work for him. so senior analyst ellie joining me now. good evening to you. federal prosecutors are revealing the searches of giuliani and his ally victoria tensing were part of a multiyear grand jury investigation into conduct involving giuliani and others. does this investigation show this goes. deeper than we knew? >> it does. i think that is the most interesting revelation from this new paperwork. the southern district of new york, federal prosecutors, have had an grand jury investigation of giuliani dating at least back to 2019. we learned in 2019, the fbi got a search warn. we know they searched his home
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three weeks ago but they also got a warrant to search his icloud. prosecutors have to be able to show probable cause. probable cause that a crime was committed and when they go in search, giuliani's icloud, they'll find evidence of a crime. so this is a bigger investigation, a broader investigation than we had previously known. >> the prosecutors have their hands on 18 devices in these searches. you said they'll go into the icloud or what have you. what kind of information are they looking for here? >> yeah. phones are just treasure troves of evidence in today's world. when i first started as a prosecutor, when you would do a search warn. you would measure it by the number of boxes. oh, we took 28 boxes. now it is about phones. what is on a phone? emails, texts, we know rudy used encrypted acts. you could have financial
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records. even though giuliani served as donald trump's cyber security adviser, i don't think anyone takes that seriously. as he notorious pocket dialer. so i would not bet on him having been secure in the way he used his phones and i would be willing to bet that they will find a lot of useful information on those devices. >> that's being generous. pocket dialer. thank you. i appreciate it. also, president biden signing an anti-asian hate crime bill into law after a surge of violence. an 80-year-old grandfather brutally assaulted on the street. he later died from his injuries. a 65-year-old woman punched and kicked in new york city. and six asian americans killed at atlanta-area spas and there have been countless other or ifk attacks against asian-americans. now i want to bring in grace ming of new york. she introduced the anti-asian
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hate crime bill. representative, thank you. so. i'm so glad you're here to discuss it with us. many asian-americans are feeling terrorized. how will this bill help? >> sure. we're really excited that president biden has really shown support and concern and has heard the cries of the asian-american community over the last year. this legislation would help not just the asian-american community but any community who is a victim of any sort of bias incident. just to collect data. most jurisdictions in this country are reporting zero hate crimes to the federal government. and we really can't fix what we don't know. >> you were at the white house today when the president signed this bill into law. this is part of what em. >> every time we're silent,
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every time we let hate flourish, we make a lie of who we are as a nation. i mean it literally. we cannot let the very foundation of this country continue to be he'llen away like it has been in other moments of our history and happening again. >> to that end, there is a recent study out of cal state university. it finds hate crimes against asians are up 164% since this time last year. in america's major cities. how do we get to the root cause of this hatred and how do we stop it? >> well, i do want to be clear that this legislation, while it is a very important and necessary step, it is just one piece of the puzzle.
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we do have a long road ahead. one issue i believe is ahead is talking about mental health. a large percentage of the perm traitors, at least in my home city of new york, suffer from mental health issues. so our government needs to invest more robustly in programs, mental health programs. also, education. we're working on legislation, actually, with the black-hispanic caucus and native-american members to diversify our curriculum in this country. there is too much history that our students don't learn about. i didn't learn enough about the chinese exclusion act, japanese incarceration camps, slaves building the u.s. capitol, the very place where i work every day, and to break down the walls and biases and stereo type. we need a more complete teaching of american history. >> i live here in new york as well. and you watch the local reports and you see some of the
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suspects, perpetrators. there are people with mental health problems and that really needs to be dealt with, along with the hate. these 63 republicans voted against this bill. why do you think that is? >> well, don, i don't have enough energy to try to explain why the josh holleys of the world can't support this type of bipartisan legislation. republicans, many of them, we have found, are trying on rewrite history or erase history. if it doesn't happen to fit their creative narrative. >> i hate to interrupt. let me read to you since you mentioned that. senator holley says it turns the government into the teach police. what kind of speech does he
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want? he said it turns the federal government into the speech police. >> yeah, well, this is what we're seeing. when we passed a symbolic resolution condemning bigotry in congress, the leader of the republican members, kevin mccarthy said that no one in america was talking about anti-asian bigotry in this country. so whether it is him, josh hawley trying to rewrite history, not really being responsive to their constituents, concerns whether it is the january 6th commission to find out the truth and to protect people from working the capitol, we have seen that they're just trying to erase and rewrite their own history. >> do you think this bill got wrapped into the gop strategy by putting everything into a culture war? >> well, i don't know.
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look. i just know that the community has been suffering for over a year, battling two types of viruses. also, wanting to make sure that we are continuing the allyship, existing and expanding allyship between so many communities as we stand in solidarity against hate and racism. so we're glad that president biden took quick action. not just words but decisive action to push back against bigotry. >> again, i thank you for coming on the program and i thank you for doing what you did with this bill. you be well. representative ming. >> thank you. disturbing new developments and the shocking story we were first to report on last night. videos out showing a black man, ronald greene, dying after being kicked, dragged and tased by louisiana state troopers after a high-speed chase. his family said police initially told them he died in a car
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crash. this is far from the first time when police said didn't match what we saw on video. sustenancg expeditions and long journeys across the world! but most importantly? they give us something to eat when we drink beer. p♪it's, oh, so quiet♪. they give us something to eat wh♪shhhh shhhh♪eer. ♪it's, oh, so still♪ ♪shhhh shhhh♪ ♪and so peaceful until...♪ ♪you blow a fuse♪ ♪zing boom♪ ♪the devil cuts loose. zing boom♪ ♪so what's the use. wow bam♪ ♪of falling in love?♪ we've got 'em on the ropes. the billionaires buying elections. the corporate special interests poisoning campaigns with dark money, frantic to preserve big-money politics as usual. because the for the people act is on the verge of becoming law.
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hand of state troopers two years ago. the video discredits the initial report about what happened. his mother saying this a short time ago. >> what do you say to the police? >> shame on you, shame on all of you. when we were there, we were lied to in our faces. and they allowed us to continue to go our ways knowing that nothing would be done. that deceit, we already know what the state troopers has done. all those above them, that is really painful. >> we have seen it time and time again. cases where black americans die in encounters with police officers. the video tells the real story though. here's josh campbell. >> reporter: george floyd, walter scott, breonna taylor, laquan mcdonald, a few of the names of black people dying at the hands of police officers. police whose initial narratives
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were found to be inaccurate once video surfaced telling the real story. the official police report documenting the arrest of george floyd simply stated, officers were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and noted he appeared to be suffering mental distress. no mention of floyd being hand cuffed with a knee on his neck for over nine minutes. walter scott pulled over by police officer michael slager for a broken taillight in south carolina in 2015, was shot in the back five times. slager initially claimed he shot scott because he feared for his life after scott grab his taser. but video showed him shooting him in the back from 17 feet away, according to investigators. >> what we see time and time again, officers punishing black folks who run, who don't comply, who don't comply quick enough. >> breonna taylor, a black emt,
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was shot and killed by louisville police officers in march of last year during a botched raid on her apartment. the initial police report stated there were no injuries and no forced entry. taylor was shot at least eight times and police used a battering ram to execute their no-knock warn. 17-year-old laquan mcdonald was shot in 2014 when he walked away from police on a side street while holding a any of. jason van dyke said he raise ad navy at him but in no point on the video release ad year later, was mcdonald seen lifting the knife in the manner van dyke described. >> the amount of time it took, the line in the initial reports by the officers, all these things, that's part of a cover-up. >> reporter: without the emerge yengs of cell phone video and the release of body cam footage, these officers' stories would remain the final word. and we know that that incident in who lou involving the death
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of ronald greene is currently under investigation by the justice department civil rights division, as well as the fbi. we hope to get greater fidelity on what transpired there. that is just the latest example of serious questions when comparing what police said compared to video. in the united states, there are still police departments that donal require officers to wear body cameras, and even in those instances where swum dies in police custody and the officer was wearing a camera, it can sometimes be months or even years before that video is seen publicly. donnell? >> thank you so much. this isn't a one-off. it is over and over and over again. how do we stop police from whitewashing what happened? that conversation is next. s beverage companies, our bottles are made to be re-made. not all plastic is the same. we're carefully designing our bottles to be one hundred percent recyclable, including the caps. they're collected and separated from other plastics,
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ronald greene's family said they were told he died in a conflict with state police two years ago but now we can see what happened. the associated press releasing three segments of the original video which it says is 46 minutes long. we don't know what happened before and cnn has not viewed the video in fulfill i have to warn you, this is disturbing. [ screaming ] >> get up here! >> you'd better not move.
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>> got it? >> joining me now to discuss this, the president and co-founder of the center for policing equity, and captain ron johnson, formerly with the missouri state highway patrol. gentlemen, thank you for joining. i wish i could see you under better circumstances. difficult to watch that video. we saw ronald greene tased, beaten, dragged in shackles by his feet. here's what the police report said. it said greene was taken into custody after resisting arrest and struggle with troopers. a short time later he became unresponsive and was transported to glenwood medical center by the medical service. greene died while end route to
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glenwood medical center. it is outrageous. does this show it was a cover-up from the very beginning? >> so i have to put this into context. there is not one office they are who gets scared and says look what i did. i'd better cover this up. there are multiple officers and this is the full report of the police department for two full years. you can't call that a mistake. you can't call that sort of one individual bad officer. this is absolutely a conspiracy to conceal the violence that produced death. there is no other way to look at it. when it is been held out of public eye for two years, who the heck feels comfortable calling the police to keep them safe in that community? >> captain johnson, this happened two years ago. the public only seeing this video because it was leaked. who controls the release of the
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body cam videos and what needs to change to expose the behavior? >> when we talk about the culture, this defines it. it is not just about the officers on the scene. it is about those administrators. the upper management of that agency. they're the ones that have to review that. they are the ones that send that report through. but they're also the ones that decide what will be released. so when we talk about culture in our country, this is what our community and country talks about. >> yeah, again, this is the ap video. cnn does not have the original video. we don't know what happened between the portions. video. this is only a rt show portion of that video. captain, why police departments, why is it at their discretion? why are they allowed to make decision? isn't that an inherent conflict of interest? what is the whole point of wearing body cam video if you
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decide how transparent you will be about releasing that video? >> you're absolutely right. that's why you hear throughout the country, people talk about, we need some national policies. it is not enough to say we'll have to wear a camera. in some cases, we're not seeing the video. in some cases, we may never see all the video. there has to be some national policy that pults a mandate on that to create trust. >> all these stories, ronald greene, george floyd, breonna taylor, the police reports were clearly deceptive or flat out lies. when i read them, when i read the george floyd report, what incident were they talking about? was there something else that happened at the cupp foods? this doesn't resemble anything we saw on video. how are police allowed to get away with this? isn't there an investigation, especially after a death? >> you would think so. but unfortunately, oftentimes, the investigation is done by
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police officers who have served with those exact same officers. we asked police to investigate themselves and that's why you can have police who shoot tamir rice inside two seconds of getting out of a car but the formal report am i warned him three times to drop the weapon and i feared for my life. that's why you can have a d.a. -- [ inaudible ] decide that had nothing bad will happen to these officers. you don't need to know. just trust us. the investigations are by the people engaged in the crime entirely too often and it is well past time on get that out. there is nowhere in the putts whole communities can trust it will be done right. >> we lost your audio, a little glitch for a second, but we got it corrected. for. now fingers crossed. a state official is telling cnn, the local police were investigating this the night of
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the event. two are still on the job. one faced a 50-hour suspension for ma anymore lating a body cam. is that accountability in. >> no. they've already made their decision. they've already made their decision. i think like they talked about, police are policing themselves and doing their own investigation. in some cases, that shouldn't be. >> thank you, gentlemen. i appreciate it. i'll see you soon. white men increasingly invoking cancel cult when you are it is not about that at all. why they're trying to cling to the woke wars, next. fuel for va! sustenance for mountaineering expeditions and long journeys across the world! but most importantly? they give us something to eat when we drink beer. planters. a nut above. ♪ aging is a journey. you can't always know what's ahead. since 1995, seniors have opened their doors
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are straight white men being silenced by so-called woke culture? what conservatives like the on call cancel culture? that's a claim of the podcaster who has an audience of millions. is it really just a case of feeling threatened by the growing diversity of america? more from cnn's chief media corn. >> joe roggin has come a long way from eating row. s on fear factor -- but he's still good at making people shriek. >> you can never be woke enough. >> causing days of chatter by saying straight white men are the targets of woke culture. >> it will eventually get to straight white men are not allow to talk because it is your privilege to express yourself when other people of color have been silenced throughout history. >> cue another day of the woke
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wars. it is an awakening about racial and social justice to some but an overreaction to others. what is consequence culture for some is cancel culture to others. roggin blaming woke know for atering the comedy land scape. >> can you make a good comedy movie anymore? or have they made it so dangerous in terms of being canceled that comedy movies are no longer something you can do? >> then predicting more back lash toward straight white men in the future. >> it will be, you're not allowed to go outside because so many people are imprisoned. >> do you think he's joking? >> i'm not joking. it will get there. it's that crazy. >> crazy indeed. these arguments from the likes of bill mahr and tucker carlson are worth analyzing because these issues sway voters. his podcast draws millions of down loads and his deal with spotify is worth hundred of
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millions plus. yet -- >> i'm not a doctor. >> he basically said, don't liberty to me. after arguing that young healthy people don't get the coronavirus vaccine. but millions do listen. he's been accused of speier theories and spotify has withdrawn him. he has shown that he's not one to be pigeon holed into an ideology. >> i think i'll vote for bernie. >> interviewing liberal figures i know what those on the far right and pushing back on conservative figures who might seem like his allies. >> how much of that 18-year-old kid deciding to pick up a gun and shoot someone is as a result of him picking up the gun. >> there is only one way to break chain. >> what way is that? >> to not pick tim gun and shoot somebody. >> a simplistic way of looking at it if you're on the outside
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of that community. >> leaving his millions of visitors to tune in. >> it is just comical hearing this rich and famous guy express worries that even though he's paid to talk for a living, that he'll be silenced in the future. but he's not the only one talking this way. this fear about woke culture is pervasive. it is worth scratching at to understand what's going on beneath the surface. >> thank you. so let's discuss now. from the united shades of america, cammal. i know there is a legitimate discussion about woke culture. i don't disagree with everything that he says. where he lost me was the straight white male part. because you know, america. so many people want the fall book the cancel culture argument
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when it is umbrella asking them to consider why something may be offensive to someone else. why do people get so up in arms when they are asked to consider another person's history? that's the part i want to know. >> yeah. straight white men have had an unimpeded access to the microphone for most of the history of the country. it is not unimpeded. but the argument is that we're talking about rogan, bill mahr, and tucker carlson, some of the most successful broadcasters in america who are all rich and straight and white. >> and straight and white. so to me, rogan had that podcast for years. for years he could talk about how he didn't believe in the moon landing, he had conspiracy theories guests on relg
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regularly and nobody paid attention. he is now understanding that $100 million makes more people pay attention. not just hard core fans but people are like, who is this guy that got $100 million? >> i just can't believe that, you know, all one has to do, look at the press conference today had by the republican leadership. it was all straight white dudes. and make up about 30% of the population but hold 80% of the political power and leadership in this country. i'm trying to figure out the whole straight white male being canceled when they're on tv every night, talking about how much they are being canceled. i mean, am i wrong? >> who has been cancelled? hasn't been canceled for either committing a crime or encouraging violence or putting, regularly putting out information that is harm. >> who was canceled because i
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didn't like the one thing that was that. who is the one straight white man who can't talk anymore? i rest my case. >> i haven't, i haven't, i can't think of one. >> canceling people for crimes and things, anyway. >> yeah. i'm picking up what you're putting down. so let's talk about this week's episode of united shades at 10:00, which i watch every sunday night. if i don't get there, then i dvr it. you look at the wealth gap. let's listen. >> millionaires upon millionaires moving here, buying second homes. people call out. give me a house in charleston. in & people live in charleston cannot afford to live in charleston. >> not even close. >> they just met today but each of them has a story that represents millions of americans. many of whom are millennials
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just like them. let me take a moment to officially apologize to millennials on behalf of every generation older than you. sorry! people love to call millennials lazy and soft when in reality every older generation does that to the generation coming up. that i know because it happened to my generation. slackers! >> well, your generation, that was true about you. you're there on the couch. i'm gen-x. come on. we're slackers. >> i think you're an elder gen-x. >> so anyway, you went to south carolina to learn about the roots of inequality. what did you find out? >> we found out the pandemic brought everything into sharp relief. everything we knew has been made clearer through pandemic. everybody who was struggling or on the edge there has been
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pushinged over the edge. if there is a time, it is right now. the only people did well in the pramd the billionaires. >> you talk about wealth and equality. when you're in this business, you need some really wealthy people. you get experience jut by interviewing them. oh, you're rich, rich. as a child growing up in baton rouge, louisiana, you have that much money where you have a plane that takes you wherever you want. like i had a car that i had to drive. >> and let's be clear. there is a point you have so much money that you're not putting ill it book is the economy. mcdonald's workers are saying, the company is so rich. pay the employees better so we can put the money book is the
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economy. >> there are some very wealth i y people. >> thank you so much. i appreciate it. be sure to tune into all new episodes of united shares of america. that's sunday, 10:00 p.m. eastern and pacific only on cnn. , like a fire, that's just growing. i feel kinder, when nature is so kind to me. find more ways to grow at miracle-gro.com.
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so what's going on? [dog] i'm a talking dog. flexible cancellation. the other issue. [dog] oh...i'm scratching like crazy. you've got some allergic itch with skin inflammation. apoquel can work on that itch in as little as 4 hours, whether it's a new or chronic problem. and apoquel's treated over 9 million dogs. [dog] nice. and... the talking dog thing? is it bothering you? no... itching like a dog is bothering me. until dogs can speak for themselves, you have to. when allergic itch is a problem, ask for apoquel. apoquel is for the control of itch associated with allergic dermatitis and the control of atopic dermatitis in dogs. do not use apoquel in dogs less than 12 months old or those with serious infections.
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apoquel may increase the chances of developing serious infections and may cause existing parasitic skin infestations or pre-existing cancers to worsen. new neoplasias were observed in clinical studies and post-approval. most common side effects are vomiting and diarrhea. feeling better? [dog] i'm speechless. [dog] thanks for the apoquel. that's what friends are for. ask your veterinarian for apoquel. tonight...i'll be eating a falafel wrap next to you, apoquel is a dog's best friend. with sweet potato fries. (doorbell rings) thanks! splitsies? ♪ ♪ oooh...you meant the food, didn't you?
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is mealtime a struggle? introducing ore-ida potato pay. where ore-ida golden crinkles are your crispy currency to pay for bites of this... ...with this. when kids won't eat dinner, potato pay them to. ore-ida. win at mealtime.
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the u.s. has the highest-incarceration rate in the world and when offenders are released, they face challenges earning a livable wage. in a first-year home, 80% earned less than $15,000, annual hi. a annually. and almost half of federal offenders were later rearrested. after a decade behind bars, he hector built a successful career as a personal trainer. now, he is helping other formerly-incarcerated men and women follow his path. >> after surviving prison, you come home thinking you are able to start over. you want to be part of the society. but there's just so many layers of discrimination, boxes, you have to get through just to get an opportunity. society thinks, oh, you should just go get a job. and it's not that easy. once you have a record, nothing is set up for them to win.
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at second youth foundation, we give formerly incarcerated men and women job placements in boutiques, gyms, throughout new york city. you can't give someone a mop and say this is your future. take minimum wage and deal with it. when you provide people with liv livable wages, they are able to be productive members of society. and that's why we are a second you. we want to give you your second chance at life. >> get the whole story and nominate someone you know to be a cnn hero at cnnheroes.com. thanks for watching, everyone. our coverage continues. ♪
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[truck horn blares] (vo) the subaru forester. dog tested. dog approved. finding new routes to reach your customers, and new ways for them to reach you... is what business is all about. it's what the united states postal service has always been about. so as your business changes, we're changing with it.
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with e-commerce that runs at the speed of now. next day and two-day shipping nationwide. same day shipping across town. returns right from the doorstep, and deliveries seven days a week. it's a whole new world out there. let's not keep it waiting. you could take your ulcerative colitis treatment in a different direction. talk to your doctor about xeljanz, a pill, not an injection or infusion, for adults with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis when a certain medicine did not help enough. xeljanz is the first and only fda-approved pill for moderate to severe uc. it can reduce symptoms in as early as two weeks, improve the appearance of the intestinal lining, and provide lasting steroid-free remission. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections. before and during treatment, your doctor should check for infections, like tb and do blood tests. tell your doctor if you've had hepatitis b or c, have flu-like symptoms, or are prone to infections. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers, including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened.
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taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra may increase risk of death. tears in the stomach or intestines and serious allergic reactions have happened. you could take your uc treatment in a different direction. ask your gastroenterologist about xeljanz. cal: our confident forever plan is possible with a cfp® professional. a cfp® professional can help you build a complete financial plan. visit letsmakeaplan.org to find your cfp® professional. ♪
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hey, good evening. thanks for joining us. there is breaking news tonight as ceasefire between israel and hamas. just moments ago, secretary general said he welcomed the news. also, new reporting only on cnn about the trump-justice department targeting a cnn journalist. we, also, have new information about whether or not booster shots will be needed for people who got the covid vaccine. and if so, when? first, though, we begin with republican lawmakers and their pursuit of herd immunity from the facts of january 6th. the stampede grew today with gop senators voicing objections to the bill the house sent them to set up a bipartisan, 9/11-style commission to investigate. as for house republican leader kevin mccarthy who's gone so far as to lobby senators against the bill. he spoke out today and because he is known to be as hard to

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