tv Don Lemon Tonight CNN December 7, 2021 7:00pm-8:00pm PST
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olympics? international strife gets heaped on the olympics. that isn't fair to athletes. figure out another avenue. i'll be back here tomorrow night. "don lemon tonight" starts now. >> that's the most exposure i've had to social media in like two years. >> you're probably healthier as a result. >> i do. i cut my consumption of social media and i'm happy and no knee jerk reactions to people criticism but you take it very well. i just can't deal with it anymore because i get the trolls. >> tonight we're kind. we'll see what tomorrow night brings. >> you never know. i'm sure you get some of that, too. >> oh my god. >> can i talk to you about something? we were talking about foreign policy and china and ukraine. but i want -- kitchen table stuff i'm happy about that we'll cover in the show and that is very happy about the price of gasoline for the car, home
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heating oil down and unemployment. those are things americans really care about that affect them at this moment and for this holiday season it appears they're going in the right direction, michael. >> i don't want to sort of talk against my own a block because i focused heavily on the situation with russia and ukraine and i think that's really -- >> it is important. i'm going to talk about it, yes. >> to your point what really matters most at christmas is your son going to get the gi joe with the grip. >> this is not the 1960s or '70s where we had that or the bionic man. this is ps 5 territory, michael. >> have a good show. >> thank you. this is "don lemon tonight. breaking news because the house passed a bill to increase the debt limit. instead of 60 votes, that means
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ten republicans would have to get on board. congress has until next wednesday to address the debt limit as joe biden taking on vladimir putin as we talked about, thousands of russian troops on the boarder with ukraine. the president's message here to putin, just barely saying things we do not do in 2014 we are prepared to do now if putin decides to invade ukraine. compare that to the disgraceful performance that cozied up next to putin and took his word over the intelligence committee saying he didn't believe to see any reason russia was behind the interference. watch this. >> my people came to me, dan coats came to me and some others and said they think it's russia. i have president putin. he just said it's not russia. i will say this, i don't see any
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reason why it would be. >> and while president biden is locked in a faceoff with russia, china is already mad about his diplomatic boycott of the 2022 winter olympics in beijing over china's human rights violations. but as the president confronts two international rivals here at home, americans are finally getting some relief. finally. right? good news, people. we talk so much about bad news, my gosh. this is good news. gas prices are heading south. down. the government forecast says that they could drop below $3 a gallon. and the outlook for heating costs this winter getting better, too. that as there is news from the committee investigating the attack on the capitol on january 6th says mark meadows has one last chance to cooperate. the former president's chief of
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staff says he won't cooperate any more but handed over more than 6,000 pages of documents including texts, emails and calls during the riot at the capitol. he handed overall that without a peep about executive privilege but now all of a sudden, he is saying no? why is that? kind of makes you wonder what is he trying to hide? >> what we found over the last couple of days honestly was that the committee was fully intending to continue to press forward asking about executive privilege items, things that are protected by that. in addition, we found in spite of our cooperation and sharing documents with them they had issued unbeknownst to us without a courtesy call issued a subpoena to a third party carrier trying to get information and so at this point, we feel like it's best
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that we just continue to honor the executive privilege and it looks like the courts are going to have to weigh in on this. >> so take note of this. when his former boss realizes that meadows voluntarily handed over so many of his records without once claiming privilege, he's going to be mad. furious. meanwhile, the committee sent out more than 100 requests for phone records and gotten a substantial number back including from surprise, one mark meadows. and that may tell you a whole lot about who was talking to whom before, during and after the january 6th riot. it also might explain why meadows seems to be trying to get back on the former guy's good side. in the face of that, in the face of everything we know about the former guy and his lies, it is still shocking that not only did he test positive for covid days
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before his first debate with joe biden, we're learning he was sicker than we knew. his blood oxygen level dipped so low after he admitted he had the virus, couldn't carry his own briefcase from the helicopter that took him to walter reed basically med vaccing him to the hospital. that coming from mark meadows in his own new book. the book the former president no surprise is furious about. it was so much worse than what they told you, the public. now look, we all know the former president is a liar. we know he lies. lies on top of lies. big lies, little lies and everything in between. more than 30,000 false or misleading claims during his four years in office. 30,000. the story of the trump era isn't that he is a liar, isn't that amazing? more than 30,000 lies or false or misleading claims but the
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story he's not a liar is bigger than that. how he manages to suck everything and everyone else into the void. in light of what we know now, let's listen to what the doctors on the steps of walter reed said. >> to disclose that the president had been administered oxygen. >> good question. so i was trying to reflect the upbeat attitude that the team, the president, this course of illness had. i didn't want to give information to steer the course of the illness in another direction. in the course of doing so, it came off we were trying to hide something. that isn't true. >> do you remember that? right? i forgot about that.
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that seems like a lifetime ago. last year? it was like a sifi movie. it wasn't necessarily true. how many american lives could have been saved if the former president told the public how sick he was, how dangerous covid is? he put his own life at risk, he put american's lives at risk instead of telling people to take covid seriously, he hid the truth. covid, foreign policy, the eco economy, our democracy, we need to take these issues seriously. we need serious people but instead, this is what we have. who are the voices with the power in the halls of congress? anybody from the qanon congresswoman to matt gaetz trying to blame the fbi demanding answers to what he calls the burro's involvement in january 6th and predicting the gop will take power.
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>> we are going to take power after this next election and when we do it won't be the days of paul ryan and trey. it will be the days of jim jordan and marjorie taylor greene and dr. gosar and myself doing everything to get the answers to these questions. >> woo, woo, woo. the list of names. but guess what? what he predicts could very welcome to pass mat matt gaetz, marjorie taylor greene, paul gosar made it clear where they stand on a number of issues including our democracy. they stand for vile videos and the attack on the president of the united states and stand for bogus conspiracy theories about jewish space lasers.
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they stand for devotion to a disgraced twice impeached one term former insurrection inspiring president. let's bring in our correspondent's reporters. jamie gangel and legal analyst elliott williams. jamie is ready to go. you have an exclusive every night. i love you for it. thank you for coming on, elliott. bring us exclusives. we'd love it for the show. >> all i can say, don, if you think donald trump was furious about mark meadow's book, get ready. according to the committee, we have learned that among more than 6,000 pages of documents that meadows voluntarily handed over to the committee are messages sent and received during the riot.
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text. emails. calls. while the events of the erection -- excuse me. after 40 years i can't believe i did that on tv. insurrection was happening. committee member told us the records include quote volumes of material including realtime communication as the riot unfolded. look, don, we don't have the details of who meadows was communicating with that day yet. but we know a lot of people had mark meadow's cell phones. white house officials, rally organizers, trump loyalists, members of congress, so don, everyone should be aware if they were communicating with mark meadows, texting, calling, emailing on january 6th, the committee may already have those documents. >> oh, wow. wow. wow. so you're right, if he's angry
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about that, he's really going to be mad about this and not even claiming executive privilege. elliott, chime in here because committee member pete aguilar is telling cnn tonight some records on meadows turned overcome from a personal device and get this, meadows was in communication with individuals in the planning of january 6th rally. there is no doubt the committee has some followup questions, correct, mr. attorney? >> correct, mr. host. more over, you don't need them to testify once they have records. what they can do is ask other people whose phone information is appearing in the records. people get in their heads that you have to have always the big fish, the king pen, the chief of staff when you run an investigation when often it is far more valuable to speak to the people about them what you
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have hard evidence about in the form of phone records. these records are incredibly valuable and more over, look at the fact yesterday mike pence's chief of staff mark short word of his cooperation came up. that's an individual who can fill a lot of this information in. yes, it would be incredibly valuable to have mark meadows testify but it's not fatal to the investigation if he doesn't. >> elliott, another question. anyone who communicated with meadows on january 6th or the days around it have to be nervous about it. do you think it will prompt others to come forward? >> yeah, i think it does and also the fear of what happens if the committee does come trying to speak with you and they don't compile. you know, the committee made clear they will attempt to hold people in contempt. mark meadows might be a more challenging figure to conduct number one because of the fact he provided documents and number
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two, he's going to have had conversations with the president that are going to be more protected. the committee can still go after any of these individuals. they have far more incentive to compile. not just people that spoke to mark meadows but people around them so there is a growing web of individuals who could potentially be targets of the committee so yes, they have every reason to want or have an incentive to commit. >> so gjamie gangel, what are they looking for? >> the committee sent out more than 100 requests for call detail records and already received a substantial number back. so let's talk what these call detail records are. they did not include the content, there is not a recording or a text but they give details who was calling or texting whom when they placed the call, for how long the calls
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lasted. don, this gives the committee potentially the ability to draw a web of communications what was going on before, during or after that january 6th riot. look, the other point here is the committee believes it may be able to learn what was actually in, let's say, those texts or phone calls from those cooperating in the investigation. if mark meadows doesn't cooperate, maybe the former vice president chief of staff maybe texting. maybe mark short has that text exchange. and my sense is it's likely they're already seeing some of these text exchanges. >> interesting. so what can the committee piece together from these phone records, elliott? >> so here is -- just put it in concrete terms, don.
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under normal circumstances you might ask somebody hey, what were you doing on january 3 rd at around maybe 2:00 p.m.? and have the person say i don't remember, maybe i was eating lunch or something. that's a different question than january 3rd at 2:14 p.m. you had an 11-minute phone conversation with don lemon. what did you talk about at that time? right? that's incredibly valuable and think about that across the communication that person might have had over a series of days with a series of people and so on. it allows investigators to very specifically target the information they're looking for rather than use their -- because it's quite limited the time you have with the witness. you're only going to get a couple hours with them. now they can target and pinpoint every conversation, every recipient, every third party that might have been spoken to and makes for a far more productive incest gages. >> meadows about face on cooperating came after he
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learned about these subpoenas that -- >> yeah, let me take it a step further. he used to be the ranking member on the committee that subpoenas that people all the time. >> so he knows? >> what could he have possibly thought was going to happen? they were going to subpoena his phone records. the idea my gosh it came out of nowhere that this committee issued a subpoena for my phone records, who knows what is driving the behavior and personality but given the work he did for his entire time in congress is mind boggling he seemed to be so shocked once he got hit with the subpoena and saw they were looking for other information. it just makes very little sense. >> elliott always -- >> like most of this. >> always a pleasure. jamie, thank you for the exclusive reporting. thank you. president joe biden going toe to toe with vladimir putin over russian troops on b border
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the president of the united states joe biden giving a warning to russian president vladimir putin telling him the u.s. will retailuate with strong measures with a focus on russia's military buildup along the ukraine cnn learning the call turned tense at times. joining me is william. good to see you, secretary. thanks s for joining us. the stakes are incredibly high. this is a head-to-head with biden and putin. do you think the president did enough to get putin to back off? >> i think he did enough to make clear what the response of the united states would be should putin decide to use force. from a purely military point of view, president putin holds a lot of cards. he's got 170, 80,000 or more he could put in very quickly and move military.
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it would be a lot of bloodshed but nonetheless, i think the military outcome would be pretty convincing on his part. the consequences of it i think he has to take into account he's looking at us. we are divided from within. we can't make a decision on masks, on covid, we can't make a decision on our defense authorization bill. we are suffering from war fatigue and alienated many european allies that we are trying to make amends now with president biden. from his point of view things are looking pretty good but i think president biden did a great job outlining what the consequences would be long term and long term i think president putin has to then calculate what would that do to unite all of the nato countries against him? those countries that are neutral toward russia at this point, what would they do? i think he's got a lot to think about but if we expect president putin is going to quote back down, it's sort of like you
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talking to me? is a guy who has iron grip control over russia with a strong military and nuclear weapons so the notion he's going to simply back away is unrealistic. what i think needs to be done is we need to send our secretary of defense to nato countries and treasury secretary to meet with nato countries and western countries and say look, if it comes to this will you be with us? i don't think we can say at this point given the kind of fractures that we seen as a result of the former president and the fact that we had the agreement that really undermined the french sail of submarines to australia. >> we need to make sure our allies have our back on this one. >> we have to do it i think not on a telephone call. we have to do it in person. we have the resources and our guy there is and get that done. >> so the national security advisor jake sullivan is saying
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the u.s. would respond with harsh economic measures if russia invades ukraine and also said this. watch. >> as president biden looked president putin in the eye and told him today things we did not do in 2014 we're prepared to do now. >> okay. things we didn't do in 2014 we're prepared to do now. what things exactly, secretary? >> well, the economic sanctions for sure. looking at how we could interrupt their economy in terms of their banking system, whether or not they would be able to convert into dollars in terms of oil tedeals, et cetera. it could be a personality by nato allies would be hurt if we say we'll impose sanctions on the pipeline. who does that hurt? it hurts russia and also hurts germany. it also hurts other european countries so that's why i say we need to send our secretary of
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treasury and others over to allies saying look, if we do this, if we impose these sanctions and don't wave them, this will hurt you as well as russia and we're going to have the following measures to help you out from our energy supplies and economic help if necessary but we're in this together because this is not the united states against russia. this is russia versus nato and the western world so to speak in terms of whether or not a country can have an autonomous sovereign nation that is free. that's the issue right now. president putin came back and sort of like the civil war said no, this is a case of northern aggression. this isn't a civil war. it's nato aggression. the fact is what has happened is putin now has 175,000 troops or will have on the boarder and dla threatening to invade and could do it pretty soon and so i think he's laid out his case. he has some issues that have some merit. we ought to listen to those and
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find a way to say how do we really calm this down? the last thing we want is a military confronation. >> i want to get this in because these things don't happen in a vacuum. this standoff with happening after the white house announced a diplomatic boycott of the olympics saying the u.s. will pay the price. that's what they're saying. beijing often talks tough but they have to be closely watching what is happening with ukraine because they have their eye on taijuan. >> well, beijing may talk tough. they're in a position to act tough. they have really revolutionized their military the last 40 years. they are nearly a pure competitor on a military basis so the notion we can somehow take on beijing as well as russia simultaneously is really kind of farfetched but i think they're watching it. they're raising their voice saying this is unfair because they don't believe in universal human rights and their position
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is anything that happens inside of china is our business and not yours or anybody else e's. we take issue with that. that's the reason we raised human rights issues but something sensitive to them and they're watching closely what we do and they're also, i think, i don't think they want to attack taijuan, they have the capacity to do it if not successfully now, within a reasonably short period of time. we have to get back to diplomacy and say how do we reach accommodations with these two powers? beijing is more powerful certainly in terms of economic but growing military power and russia is a military power. how do we accommodate their interest without selling out our values and our interests? and that's diplomacy and why joe biden is sitting in that office. >> and because of everything you said, that's why we love having you here to hear your wisdom. thank you very much. appreciate it. gas prices dropping, dropping after the october boom.
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- san francisco can have criminal justice reform and public safety. but district attorney chesa boudin is failing on both. - the safety of san francisco is dependent upon chesa being recalled as soon as possible. - i didn't support the newsom recall but this is different. - chesa takes a very radical perspective and approach to criminal justice reform, which is having a negative impact on communities of color. - i never in a million years thought that my son,
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let alone any six-year-old, would be gunned down in the streets of san francisco and not get any justice. - chesa's failure has resulted in increase in crime against asian americans. - the da's office is in complete turmoil at this point. - for chesa boudin to intervene in so many cases is both bad management and dangerous for the city of san francisco. - we are for criminal justice reform. chesa's not it. recall chesa boudin now. a big economic relief for millions of americans who have been dealing with soaring energy prices. cost at the pump, finally easing up. with the national average for a gallon of regular falling to
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$3.35. the lowest since october. just look at that. ahhhhh. the government is forecasting gas will drop to $3.01 by january. down by 40% since the october peak alleviating concerns natural heating bills could have doubled this winter. so joining me now, the former chairman of the counsel of economic advisors austin. austin, good to see you. can we celebrate the good news for a minute? i'll take it where i can get it. >> yeah, i'm kicking myself because i filled my tank a few days ago 64 when i filled up my tank and i should have waited. >> yeah, look, this is definitely welcome news for people hit really hard by energy
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costs. why do you think these prices are dropping and do you think it is going to last? >> they're dropping. the biggest reason is the price of oil is dropping and the price of oil has dropped more than gas prices have dropped so it's probably going to keep going in the short run. some of that may be due to the announcements about the strategic petroleum reserve. a lot of that is due to opec and the other oil producing countries kind of backing off. they were trying to restrict output and that sort of fell apart a bit and announced that in january they're going to increase production. i think all of those factors are feeding into this but gas prices are highly variable. they go up. they go down. by next summer they will probably be up again. let's take it while we got it. >> that's exactly what i'm saying. listen, i've been on this earth long enough to see really high
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gas prices and really low gas prices and gas lines and so on and so forth. so you're right. they fluctuate a lot. but this is what i'm wondering if, you know, because we're still in a pandemic, right? coming out of it but still in it. the big question is if this drop in energy price will apply to other parts of the economy being hit by inflation, like ele electronics and food, they're way up. what is the reality right now about inflation, sir? >> wiell, the reality we'll geta number on friday and that number will be pretty big because it won't include this. it's going to be looking back over the last month. so we're probably still going to have several months of high readings of inflation. we're still looking through things that don't have anything to do with oil, ports and
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computer chips and everything. there is definitely the possibility if we can get control of the virus and people can go back to spending money on services, not trying to buy physical goods at the same time we could have big drops in the unemployment rate, the gdp economic growth rate up five, six, seven percent at an annual rate and inflation easing, you would think people would be feeling better than they have been the last couple months if that happens. >> okay. l let's hope. the reality is a lot of this is beyond the president's control. we say that but they get the blame for good and bad. what options does thadministratn have? not great options in the immediate term. they can do things like the
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strategic petroleum reserve but that's really just a temporary fix. i think they've got to get control of the virus and on that side it's not that promising. this omicron variant is spreading in different places so that could send us into another round of this. let's hope that doesn't happen. i think anything they can do to shift what american consumers are spending their money on a way from physical goods which were at these unprecedented levels of spending money on physical goods, everybody trying to do that at the same time, of course, the supply chain can't handle that. if we could go back to spending money on services by getting control of the virus and i really think that would go a long way to ease the pressure on inflation. >> listen, i'm heading against a wall here. the markets are all over the place, gas prices are coming
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down, oil, all that. what is the health of the economy? it's confusing for people. what is the actual health of the economy now? >> look, it's confusing. what you said is right, it's confusing, the job market is strong. wages are up. you've seen the unemployment rate is down a low level. for people that want to work and find a job, this is a great moment to do that. there is still a lot of reluctance especially in sectors where there is exposure to the disease or where people are not vaccinated so i think we're going to have to work our way through that labor scarcity. economic growth clearly slowed in the summer but if we can get a handle on this, the forecast at least are for pretty robust rebound in terms of growth and we just got to manage the inflation side but could be quite strong more like what it was at the beginning of 2021
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where we felt like yes, we're taking the roof off. we're -- >> roaring '20s. >> a convertible out in the sun. >> thank you. always a pleasure. >> great to see you again. so he was sicker than we knew. details coming out how bad the former president's covid case really was. we've got those, next. washed all day without heavy perfumes? now they can! with downy light in-wash freshness boosters. just pour a capful of beads into your washing machine before each load. to give your laundry a light scent that lasts longer than detergent alone, with no heavy perfumes or dyes. finally, a light scent that lasts all day! new downy light, available in four naturally-inspired scents.
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bash. another one for mark meadow's book and he writes on october 2nd of last year that morning dr. conley pulled me aside and delivered bad news, although the president's condition improved slightly overnight his oxygen levels had dipped down to about 86% and could be trending lower, a dangerously low level for someone his age. compare that to what we heard from trump's physician. >> this morning the president is doing very well. he's not on oxygen right now, that's right. >> he's not received any at all? >> he's not needed any this morning today at all. that's right. >> i'm not going to get into all the testing going back but he -- and all the staff routinely are tested. >> could we ask if his oxygen level ever dipped below 90? >> we don't have any recordings here of that. that's right.
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>> what about here? >> at the white house or here anything below 90? >> no, it was below 94%. it wasn't down into the low 80s or anything. >> oh, okay. dana. good evening by the way. that was a dance. was it a coverup? what was going on here? >> sure, it certainly seems as though it was a coverup and a pretty messy one. it was a pretty inadequate one because if you remember don, at the time while that doctor was saying what appears to be many things that were just not true about the then president's health, mark meadows who wrote this book was quietly at first saying on back round meaning not for attribution that the president was in really bad shape and it came out it was him and he had to kind of fess up to it and the former president got really mad at him. so this is now being put in a
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book where the former chief of staff hopes to make some money off of revelations about what really want on in those days but what it is reminding us is how little we really knew about what was going on in general but especially when it came to the very dire situation of the leader of the free world's health. >> yeah, and just how serious covid could be and was. we know the former president is a habitual liar and to your point, this is an example how people around him and all of us got all swept up in this culture of deception because we didn't participate in it and the people on the outside did. but we had to live with it. go on, sorry. >> yeah, no, that's exactly right and you were making this point, don, that it's very, very crucial for him to be making
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these -- putting everything behind a very thick curtain at that time because remember, it was a month before the election where he was already in complete denial mode about covid and the last thing that he and the people around him wanted to do was admit that everything that he was projecting about covid that it wasn't as bad as it was, that you didn't need a mask, so on and so on and so on was not true and he knew it wasn't true because he was suffering and it took a very long time for them to convince him to even go to walter reed even though he clearly needed it because his case of covid was so bad. never mind the other revelation that we got, i believe it was last week about the fact that he had an initial positive test. >> and then went -- >> before he went to the debate and that was a moment we saw things went off the rails. >> dana, i got to get to the next top hour. mark meadows, this book.
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w you know what. what is going on here? he's got to be really pissed. let's just say it. >> you know who is miffed, the former president. >> yeah, the former guy has to be really ticked off. dana bash, always a pleasure. thank you. >> nice to see you, don. >> you, as well. so moral lows, upheaval highs and not enough changes. capitol police losing here. take this. 130 officers since theinsurrect. more after this. hi mr. charles. we made you dinner. aww, thank you. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (sha bop sha bop) ♪ ♪ are the stars out tonight? (sha bop sha bop) ♪
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and that's just basic wavy guy maintenance, right? next up, carvana. oh, boy. carvana just doesn't seem to understand how the test drive works. they give their customers seven days. and if they don't like it, they give 'em their money back. wait, they take the car back? that's crazy! what if it was driven by like a zookeeper? or a mud wrestler? or a guy who's on the outs with the missus and he just needs a place to sleep for seven days? yeah. (vo) buy your car online. love it or return it. with carvana. get help managing your money for the life -- and years -- ahead. with fidelity income planning, we'll look at what you've saved, what you'll need, and build a straightforward plan to generate income, even when you're not working. a plan that gives you the chance to grow your savings and create cash flow that lasts. along the way, we'll give you ways to be tax efficient. and you can start, stop or adjust your plan at any time without the unnecessary fees.
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we'll help you go from saving... to living. ♪ play all day ♪ ♪ thousands of women with metastatic breast cancer are living in the moment and taking ibrance. ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor is for postmenopausal women or for men with hr+, her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole significantly delayed disease progression versus letrozole. ibrance may cause low white blood cell counts that may lead to serious infections. ibrance may cause severe inflammation of the lungs. both of these can lead to death. tell your doctor if you have new or worsening chest pain, cough, or trouble breathing. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever,
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so take this a damming report on the lack of charges by the u.s. capitol police department a year after the january 6th insurrection left 140 capitol police and d.c. metro police officers injured. the department's inspector general saying officials have only implemented a hand full of recommended policy changes including programs to boost moral and additional training. >> departments still lacks an overall training infrastructure to meet the needs of the department. the level of intelligence gathering and expertise needed and an overall cultural change needed to move the department into a protective agency as opposed to a traditional police department. >> so on this show, we'll continue to report extensively on the needs of the capitol police and d.c. officers who were beaten by rioters and who had the courage to come forward to describe the hard rors they -- horrors they experienced like officer michael fanone. >> at some point during the
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fighting, i was dragged from the line of officers and into the crowd. i heard someone scream. i got one. as i was swarmed by a violent mob they ripped off my badge. they grabbed and stripped me of my radio. they seized ammunition secured to my body. they began to beat me with their fists and with what felt like hard metal objects. at one point i came face-to-face with an attacker who repeatedly lunged for me in attempt to remove my firearm. i heard chanting from some in the crowd, get his gun and kill him with his own gun. >> officer daniel hodges describing how he was nearly crushed to death trapped inside a doorway by people he calls terrorists. >> i remember him foaming at the mouth. he also put his cell phone in his mouth so he had both hands free to assault me. eventually he succeeded in stripping away my gas mask and a
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new rush to spray hit me. a mob of terrorists were coordinating efforts now shouting as they sin ynchronize pushing their way forward. the man in front of me grabbed my baton i still held in my hands and in my current state, i was unable to retain my weapon. he bashed me in the head and split my lip and added additional injury to my skull. >> he's lucky to be alive after that ordeal. 130 officers left the force this year. it's really past time to put all measures in place to protect these officers. up next, more than 100 say pea nae subpoenas that. who and what the january 6th committee is targeting now. subp. who and what the january 6th committee is targeting now. ben isn't worried about retirement
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his personalized plan is backed by the team at fidelity. his ira is professionally managed, and he gets one-on-one coaching when he needs it. so ben is feeling pretty zen. that's the planning effect from fidelity are you one of the millions of americans who experience occasional bloating, gas or abdominal discomfort? taking align every day can help. align contains a quality probiotic developed by gastroenterologists. it adds more good bacteria to your gut to naturally help soothe your occasional bloating, gas and abdominal discomfort. support your digestive health with align, the #1 doctor recommended probiotic. try align today. and try new align fast acting biotic gummies. helps soothe occasional digestive upsets in as little as 7 days.
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[microwave beeps] [ahh] ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm so defensive, i got bongos thumping in my chest ♪ ♪ and something tells me they don't beat for me ♪ ♪ i love romance, but i got eggshells around me ♪ ♪ don't step on 'em, don't step on 'em ♪ ♪ don't step on 'em, don't step on me ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ he'd better not take the ring from me ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ hey google. ♪ ♪ ♪
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