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tv   Don Lemon Tonight  CNN  June 9, 2021 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT

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don lemon tonight starts right now. he was generous enough to give me some of his show to highlight that exceptional ameri-can who gave back scholarship money.
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>> what a selfless act. we need more people like that. >> if i had any emotional depth, i would have wept. her parents, her mother worked so hard to get her to america, she was worn in the uk. they went to ghana, the kid didn't get here until she was 9. they worked the system, got the opportunities, the mother worked two jobs, went to community college. she gets into harvard, gives the scholarship back because she had been blessed enough. >> an amazing young lady, but there are so many stories like that in america, people who weren't born with silver spoons in their mouth. and you remember george bush, he was born with a silver foot in his mouth. ann richards used to say that.
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>> may she rest in peace. >> and some people realize the incredible opportunity we have in a country like america to live in this country. so i think that's a lesson for a lot of folks who are out there, who are privileged, were born with money and with ease, and with comfort, to stop complaining so much and look on the bright side, like this young lady. >> you were absolutely right except for one thing. i've never heard of anybody giving back the money. >> never ? >> never. that's why i had her on the show. not because they worked the system, making the most of her opportunity. i was saying, that was my father. his parents didn't speak english, my grandfather dug
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graves. my father didn't speak english until he was 8. then one generation, from a grave digger to a governor. but to give the money back, my pop was tight as two coats of paint. i never saw him give a dollar back to anybody. >> my sister says, don squeaks when he walks. he has the first dollar that he ever made. >> i believe that. although, you did pay for lunch. >> this was, what, your great-great-great grandfather? >> no, my grandfather. i'm second generation, that's why i still have a little bit of the accent. >> love you, brother. see you soon. >> i love you. >> have a great night. this is don lemon tonight. and are we watching
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bipartisanship theater, or is it a real effort to get something done? just look at what is going on in the congress tonight. the president, joe biden, his agenda stalled by senate republicans, determined to dig in their heels and obstruct at every turn. infrastructure, they're talking. police reform, talking. right? voting, all that, talking. what will all of this talking amount to? mitch mcconnell, no surprise, not yet onboard with negotiations between members of his party and democrats trying to salvage some kind of deal on infrastructure. after president biden shut down the talks last night. >> yesterday, president biden showed that his patience for the smart bipartisan approach was wearing thin. he directed democratic leaders in congress to get ready to ram through more expensive,
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unrelated spending unilaterally. >> this, from the guy who said 100% of his focus is on blocking president biden's agenda. now he says the president doesn't have the patience for bipartisanship? huh. who was it who said, just yesterday, that the era of bipartisanship is over? >> as you look to what the majority leader has in mind for june, it's clear that the era of bipartisanship is over. >> well, that, as progressives are getting increasingly fed up by the so far fruitless bipartisan outreach. meanwhile, joe manchin, who is leading the bipartisan movement,
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says he's all for talking. >> perhaps you can end up giving too much to republicans in some of these negotiations, is that a concern that you have, some of your fellow democrats have already raised concerns about? >> everybody is just talking and working together. >> and what is getting done? just talking. democrat john tester, who is also in that group, says the talking can't go on forever. >> i don't want to drag this out forever. you know, i remember other issues that have been drug out until they die. >> like i said, is this bipartisanship theater, or a real effort to get something done? will republicans run out the clock while democrats are talking? >> if we can get a bipartisan deal, that's good thing. but no voter i talked to in georgia said to me what is most
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important is that we get a bipartisan deal. i think people want to see change in their ordinary lives. and we've got to do infrastructure. >> and bipartisanship for the sake of bipartisanship is empty. with his agenda in a holding pattern at home, the president is on a crucial first international trip with a warning for vladimir putin and a promise for the rest of the world. >> i'm heading to the g7 then to the nato ministerial, and then to meet with mr. putin to let him know what i want him to know. [ cheers and applause ] >> we're going to make it clear that the united states is back and democracies of the world are standing together to tackle the toughest challenges. and the issues that matter most to our future. >> then vice president kamala harris wraps up a rocky first foreign trip.
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sources tell cnn administration officials are perplexed by her answers to questions like this one. >> do you have any plans to visit the border? >> at some point. you know, we're going to the border. we've been to the border. we've been to the border. >> you haven't been to the border. >> and i haven't been to europe. i mean, i don't know -- i don't understand the point you're making. >> let's be honest. i mean, that was a lay-up. that was an easy question. that was clearly a question that the vice president was going to get. per perplexing, the answer is perplexing. sources say the white house is worried that this will overshadow what they hope will be a successful trip. here's a question, though. yes, that is obviously a question that she should have been prepared for, like, when i was in california, i went to the
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border. when i was a senator, i went to the border. now i'm focused on getting the job done and what i can do here in washington. easy. easy. is the vice president being held to the standard of the office or a different standard? a newly released watchdog report said that park police did not clear protesters so that the then-president could go to the church for a photo op. they said it was so a contractor could install a fence around the white house, and it was part of a previously planned operation to do so. but there are a lot of questions the report doesn't answer. why didn't they talk to the secret service? why didn't they talk to bill barr, to the white house personnel? and then there are the redactions that raise more questions in this report.
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on page ten, we learn that park police acting chief got a request, it's redacted, and we don't know who the official was. we only know the request was rejected and reiterated that the operational plan and stated the clearing operation could begin once all law enforcement officers under the command were in place. and remember, when we saw the then-attorney general watching the crowd in lafayette park. the report tells us a lot more about what happens happening. page 14, at approximately 6:10 p.m., news video showed the attorney general entering the park with a security detail. protesters recognized the attorney general and began shouting at him. the operations commander heard the change in the crowd, saw the attorney general, and walked over to him. news video showed the operations
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commander speaking with the attorney general, and then hanging his head while another official patted the commander on the back. and there's more. the report going on to say that barr asked, are these people still going to be here when potus comes out? the operations commander told us he had not known until then that the president would be coming out of the white house and into the park. he said he replied to the attorney general, are you freaking kidding me? and hung his head and walked away. the attorney general then left the park. the operations commander denied that the attorney general ordered him to clear the park and 8th street. okay. we've got a lot more to come on this report later in the show. but this, this is really something. i want you to hear what louie gohmert, a united states congressman, i need to point out, what he said today in a
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hearing by the house natural resources subcommittee on national parks, forests, and public lands. here it is. >> i understand from what has been testified to the forest service and the blm, you want very much to work on the issue of climate change. i was informed by the past director of nasa, they've found that the moon's orbit is changing slightly, and so is the earth's orbit around the sun. we know there's been significant sl so solar flare activity. is there anything national forest or blm can do to change the course of the moon's orbit or the earth's orbit around the sun? obviously, that would have
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profound effects on our climate. >> i would have to follow up with you on that one, mr. gohmert. >> yeah, if you figure out a way you can make that change, i would like to know. >> it would be funny, okay, it is funny. it is funny when a member of the united states congress asks whether the national forest service or the bureau of land management can change the orbit of the moon or the earth. spoiler alert, they can't. also, nasa says changes in the way the earth orbits the sun, they don't explain climate change, either. which is caused by humans. because, science. so even if the congressman was asking in jest, mocking the idea that two government agencies could do anything about the climate crisis, he's just wrong. and let's remember, the congressman is not such a fan of
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facts. less than a month ago, he claimed the insurrection was nothing but people coming into a building without weapons. >> there's been no evidence that this was an armed insurrection. armed meaning with firearms. there were no firearms. there have been things worse than people without any firearms coming into a building. >> armed, but it has to be firearms. flags. okay. so what do you expect from a guy who, bear spray. what do you expect from a guy who hours after the insurrection voted to overturn the election results? so, my original question, bipartisanship theater, or a
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real effort to get things done? time will tell. talking, talking. with all that going on at home, the president is on a mission to prove that democracy still works. >> i believe we're at an inflection point in world history. the moment where it falls to us to prove that democracies will not just endure, but they will excel.
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president biden in cornwall, england tonight, for the g7 meeting. this is his first trip abroad as president, and it comes as his domestic agenda could be falling apart. good evening to both of you. this trip for the president, president biden, he's meeting with the g7 and nato. then he meets with vladimir putin. it's high stakes, and happening
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while his domestic agenda is stalling and needs a lifeline. what will we see? >> it's a lot of challenges ahead for the president. he really wants to kind of reassure allies that donald trump is not president anymore. and they don't have to have this sense of apprehensions that they had with summits over the last four years. he said, america is back. and saying that the united states is going to seek to not only reassure allies, but rebuild the alliances that have been such a cornerstone of the united states for the last several decades. but it does come with challenges. i think what a lot of the european allies learned from donald trump's presidency is how quickly things can change based on an election. he can seek to reassure them, but the concern in the back of
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their minds will be, what happens in four years? and he's also balancing the domestic troubles at home that the white house says he's going to be juggling the foreign obligations and domestic ones while he's overseas. >> fareed, kaitlan said he's trying to prove that america is back, and maybe another way to say that is proving that democracy can still work. >> we have to discredit those who believe that the age of democracy is over. we have to expose as false the narrative that the creeds of dictators can match the speed and scale of the 21st's challenges. >> how challenges is that message, when we see his stalled agenda at home, and it wasn't even six months ago, we saw an insurrection at our capitol.
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>> i think he has a strong hand right now. we did see an insurrection, but he was elected, he was inaugurated, he is the president. and he brings a powerful one/two punch to the party. he's demonstrated that the united states government is back as a competent, can-do supe superpower. we're leading the world on the vaccination drive, and we're ene entering the post-pandemic world faster than anybody else. and this very important announcement that we think will come of donating 500 million vaccines to the world. so what you're demonstratiing american power and american generosity. the infrastructure agenda, these are democracies, they understand politics. they understand it will be back
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and forth. but the two first things, the fact that the u.s. government is leading the world in vaccines, and is now willing to offer half a billion vaccines to the poorest countries in the world, that's a pretty powerful one/two punch. >> they see our news. they're paying attention. they don't see the craziness and jerking back and forth and all of the rhetoric coming out of a president's mouth every single day in the media. and the most anticipated part of this is a week from today, when president biden will meet with vladimir putin. here's what he says. >> i've been clear, the united states will respond in a robust and meaningful way when the russian government engages in harmful activities. there are consequences for violating the sovereignty of
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democrac democracies, in the united states and europe and elsewhere. >> what does success for biden like like? >> it's a complicated business when you're dealing with countries as powerful as russia and even more difficult when you're dealing with china. on the one hand, you want to find a way to deter. the russians are the biggest spoilers on the world stage. there's been almost no annexation since 1945, but the russians did it with crimea. and the scale of the cyber attacks, in syria, and afghanistan, they've been playing the role of spoiler. president biden has to push back against that, but also hold out some hope that there can be a
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working relationship with the russians also get something out of it. it can't just be all push. there has to be some pull of integrating russia in some way. it's going to be hard. putin is a very tough character. but my guess is biden will try to establish a working relationship as well as read him the riot act. >> kaitlan, tell me about how this white house is trying to avoid the comparisons with trump meeting with putin, sort of capitulating to putin. >> i don't think they're concerned that this summit will be anything like that. but i think they want to make sure it's nothing like what happened in helsinki three years ago. that was the last time we saw a u.s. president meet with putin. and there are so many questions about not just that press conference where former
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president trump embraced putin's denials, but also it's the way he met with him. there was a note taker in the room, but the president wanted the notes after they met. and he didn't want them to talk about what had happened. and of course, when he landed in the united states, he tried to rewrite what had gone on during the summit. i think that's why you've seen biden be so forceful publicly. and the issues facing the white house, what is the benefit the u.s. gets from having the summit so early in his presidency? there are questions about waiving the sanctions on the company behind the pipeline. there are questions facing the sitdown with putin, and they want this predictable, stable relationship with russia. but we know putin thrives on
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chaos and unpredictability. there are a lot of unknowns going into it. and they're waiting to see if putin will show up at a press conference after. and we know biden will take questions from reporters. they're hoping putin does, but they don't have a firm commitment from the russian government yet. >> all right, kaitlan, get some rest. we'll be watching you, i don't know if it's the beginning or end of your day. >> i don't know, either. >> thank you both. i'll see you. watch fareed zakaria gps sunday on cnn. what former president trump's white house attorney said made him feel perturbed and trapped, that's next. it's an important time to save.
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counsel don mcgahn confirming to congress that the former occupant of the oval office pressured him to fire robert mueller. he said he refused to do that, and considered that a point of no return. transcripts of his closed-door testimony released by house democrats today. elie honig joins us, good to see you. don mcgahn said he felt perturbed and trapped by the request for him to fire robert mueller mid-investigation. this is obstruction 101, no? >> yeah. perturbed and trapped are understatements. this is the single most flagrant instance of obstruction of justice.
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donald trump instructed don mcgahn to fire robert mueller. he kept coming back, saying get it done. eventually trump said, i need you to lie about it and make a false document about it. i don't care how strongly you want to defend donald trump, no president has to power to instruct someone to create a false document. >> mcgahn says that trump told him, you had better deny this. what does that mean? he's telling him to say something that is false, he's instructing his counsel? >> yeah. it's the coverup. donald trump is telling his white house counsel, i need to you make up a fake story. that's why i'm looking down the street at the justice department. it's taken congress two years to
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get mcgahn's testimony. it's a lot of people's fault, but now the only entity that can do anything about this is the justice department. another thing that happened today, merrick garland said nobody gets treated any better or worse because of who that person is. does that principle apply to donald trump? that's my question to merrick garland. >> gop staffers are staying that mcgahn failed to substantiate any democratic allegations of wrongdoing by president trump. i wonder what you think of that. if you have a former president who is telling his counsel to lie and ordering someone, is there any justice in this for anyone? what is merrick garland doing? >> let's remember who don mcgahn is. he's the person that donald trump chose to be his white
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house counsel. a longtime republican, who was responsible for shepherding through donald trump's judicial nominations. his testimony was consistent with what he told robert mueller. and congress, they're done. they've done all they can. i think it took them too long. i think jerry nadler got slow played. it doesn't mean it's over. merrick garland has a job to do. i understand it's a difficult thing, but sometimes as a prosecutor, you have to do difficult things if they're also the right thing. >> this has been such a crazy period, is there, i don't know, is there intention just to sort of, to go easy on everyone, to bend over backwards to prove they're not out to get the former administration and in
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doing so, they're missing an opportunity to really restore justice? >> that's the conclusion that i am now coming to, don. it's been three months merrick garland has been in office. he said all the right things. i do not represent the president, that's correct, he represents the american people. what will they do about donald trump? it seems to me that garland's approach has been to go along to get along. try not to make political waves. but sometimes when you're trying so hard to do that, you're not doing your job as the nation's top prosecutor. >> thank you, elie, i appreciate it. >> thanks, don. new york's democratic nominee race for mayor is heating up. one of the leading candidates is being asked to prove that he
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actually lives in the city. i'll ask him about that, next. to make the world more responsible, and even more incredible. ideas start the future, just like that.
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new york city voters casting ballots this month in the primary election to select a new mayor. one big issue has come up that you probably wouldn't expect. where a leading candidate lives, eric adams. >> this is a small bathroom, downstairs is where my bed is. >> eric adams insisting he really does live in new york. >> this is our small, humble kitchen. >> giving an emotional press
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conference. >> this is a real journey. this is my block. these are my neighbors, even the new ones. i'm proud to be a resident of bed stuy. >> taking reporters on a tour of his pad, after a politico piece raised questions about if he's spending time at a property he owns in new jersey or if his home is actually his office. >> it's been over 40 days, and i've been crashing out right here on my bed. >> adams touted moving there in march of 2020. saying the arrangement helped him best manage the crisis besetting new york. but with covid positivity rates below 1% in new york, politico
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reports he's still been spotted a number of times arriving close to midnight, and not leaving until early the next morning. >> entering at 1:00 a.m., working until 3:00 to 4:00 a.m., with my staffers who come in and believe. and getting up at 6:30 a.m., 7:00 a.m., to go to the train administrations. i after two or three days, just being at borough hall, i just feel good to be home. no matter how modest it is, it's my home. >> now saying that when he visits his partner in new jersey, he doesn't spend nights there. the former state senator has focused on his new york roots. his career with the nypd, and a tough on crime approach. >> we need to stop the gun
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violence! >> launching repeated attacks on another front runner, andrew yang, who admitted leaving the city during the pandemic. >> why should we trust you now? you may flee again during a difficult time. >> yang firing back with questions for adams as well. and more pointed questions from maya wiley. wtf, and wtf again. alexandra fields, cnn, new york. >> joining me now, eric adams. thank you for joining us. i appreciate it. >> thank you, don. it's great being here. >> let's get to the bottom of this. for the record, do you live in new york city? >> yes, i do. i live in bed stuy.
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have a beautiful block, and it wasn't always that way. when i moved there, it was filled with crime and uncertainly, and no one wanted to be there. but those longstanding neighbors, who are on the block, we made it what it is today. i'm proud of the community and how we stick together. yes, let's be clear, i'm a new yorker, i live in brooklyn, new york, and i live in a beautiful, small, modest building on the block. >> do you understand why this is being questioned, because there have been discrepancies in your official paperwork as well? >> no, i don't understand. many of my opponents, they've been following me around for months. i've noticed that, they're my most credible messengers. they know where i am every day, and throughout the last four to five months. so they should be leading the charge and the voice to state that eric is a new yorker, he's
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a brooklynite, and he lives on lafayette place. >> andrew yang, we know him here at cnn, he's calling for you to release your ez pass records to show that you live in new york. will you do that? >> yes, of course. transparency is the key. done. he can come and get a copy tomorrow. done. i would love that. it would already show exactly where i am, and again, you know, my, you know, friends, neighbors, and colleagues, they know where i am. i'm a brooklynite and i'm proud. so yes. >> you're going to release your ez pass records? >> yes, right away. >> you were a police officer for 22 years. i want to talk to you about what you can do to combat crime. look, i live here. i know people are scared, i see
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what happens on the streets. in may, overall crime went up 22% compared to last year. shootings are up 73%. how are you going to turn this around? that will be a big turnaround. >> more than a police officer. when an individual looks at my record, they know i was arrested at 15 years old. i was beat by police officers, and i went into law enforcement because civil rights leaders asked me to go in and fight from within. and i did just that. 22 years, fighting on behalf of reform and safety. because during that time, i lost a good friend to gun violence due to the crack wars of the early '80s. so what we must do, we must have an approach that is intervention and prevention. all of my colleagues, they're talking about prevention. long term plans, what we have to do. i'm talking about intervention.
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what will we do right now to stop 10-year-old boys being shot, 3-year-old children being shot. we need to go after guns. illegal handguns are really just proliferating our streets. saturating our streets. we need to focus on gang violence. i speak with gang leaders to try to talk them out. those who refuse to put down their guns and stop the violence, we need to go after them. and then we must change the ecosystem of public safety. police may have a role. but there are other components to that. i'm going to put in place a plainclothes anti-gun unit with precision policing, to identify the shooters. >> i want to let people know what we're dealing with here in new york city. and there are other major cities dealing with it as well. 3 out of 4 serious crimes in brooklyn are going unsolved. and you are the brooklyn borough
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president. and hate crime rates, this attack on an asian woman last week from a violent criminal with 17 prior arrests. and that is just one example. wee see this happening all the time, eric. hate crimes for asians are up 335%. for black people, 80%. jewish people, 37%. there's been an 188% increase in hate crimes directed at people's sexual orientation. i know people who have had to, quite honestly, move out of w harlem, because of random attacks on people. they moved to other neighborhoods that they deem more safe here in the city. why do you think there's more why do you think there's more hate and how do you stop it? there's got to be some fundamental changes here.
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>> so true, don. and i'm glad you pointed it out. something that is often ignored. the hate crimes against lgbtq plus community is often ignored. and you're right. i spoke with a dad of joseph, a young jewish child who was stomped, maced and assaulted in times square. and i spoke with his dad. then went to visit many of the synagogues and i have communicated with many of the african-americans and the asian community. this is going to impact our economic recovery. we fail sometimes to understand that the pre recollect business to it prosperity is public safety and justice. that's our economic stimulus pga. no tourist will come here, a multi-billion dollar industry if they don't feel safe. and that's the same, no company will allow the employees to come back if they can't ride the subway system in a safeway.
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so it is drilling in on those hate crimes. three things to do. we need to have a look at the reform laws and include hate crimes as a crime that you can place bail on. individuals are committing hate crimes, coming out the next day and then boasting about it saying i'll do it again. that's unacceptable. two, we need to utilize technology. many of the cases we make in apprehensions and arrests, it takes place. those arrests take place because of the technology with vaid surveillance. three, we need to partner with the district attorneys. we can't decrease the time or plea bargain a crime, hate crime. we need to charge them with the crime and get the most severe penalty. and lastly, i think it is important that we have a long-term plan. i had something called breaking bread, building bonds. people come together. ten people at each dinner talking to each other. we are in a segregated city and we need to be intentional in our
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schools as well. >> eric, i understand that. i had the former police commissioner bill bratton on last night. he said that the reforms that were tried here under the current administration, it was too much. they tried to do too much at once. bail reform. letting violent offenders out. letting people who have a history of mental illness out. there is a statement for people. there needs to be a place for those people. you see those people attacking people on the subway. i live here with my fiance. i'll afraid to have him ride the subway. i live close to where i don't have to. i'm afraid he is in the streets every day and possibly could fall victim to the crime. people i know who have lived here for years, for decades, are walking around, looking over their shoulders every single day, eric. i understand what you say. do you think that too much was done? do you think the current administration has been too lenient? are you going to be tougher on crime? that's what new york city needs right now.
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not someone who apologizes for crime. someone who listens to people who want to go soft on crime. who don't want violent offenders locked up. we need a mayor who will be tough on crime and make the city safe. if we cannot be safe living here, the people can't live here. we may as well live somewhere else. >> don, i'm not the quiet don. i wrote the song. all of my current candidates were afraid to talk about we have to be safe. andrew yang did not come out and talk about gun violence until there was a shooting blocks from his home. others talk about the long term plan. what are we doing right now? i believe you can go after violent offenders without being heavy handed and go after those nonviolent - - measures to
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prevent crime. something simple as this screening. 30% of our inmates -- >> got to go. >> let's stop that. >> i've got to go. i'm getting in trouble because i went longer. so we made news. it will be tough on crime. he has a plan on place and he will replace his easy pass records where he lives. candidate for mayor. >> thank you. appreciate it. ♪ maybe i didn't love you ♪ ( ♪ ) ♪ quite as often as i could have ♪
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at carvana, we treat every customer like we would treat our own moms, with care and respect. to us, the little things are the big things. which is why we do everything in our power to make buying a car an unforgettable experience. happy birthday. thank you. we treat every customer like we would treat our own moms. because that's what they deserve. with all the cicadas
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swarming in the d.c. area, it was only a matter of time until one came up close and personal with president joe biden. after swatting it away, the president that, watch out. >> cicadas, i just got one. >> not even the secret service could protect the president from one of those big bugs. we'll be right back. ♪ ♪ the light. it comes from within. it drives you. and it guides you. to shine your brightest. as you charge ahead. illuminating the way forward. a light maker. recognizing that the impact you make, comes from the energy you create. introducing the all-electric lyriq. lighting the way. ♪ ♪
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