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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 19, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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welcome to all you watching us here in the united states, canada and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. ahead on "cnn newsroom" -- >> translator: we will not give away the south to anyone. we will return everything that is ours and the sea will be ukrainian and safe. >> ukraine's president vows that he is not giving up even one inch of territory to the russians as new explosions rock the country's capitol. and plus hundreds of heat records broken in europe and the
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united states. we'll look at whether there is any relief in sight. and children as young as six months old just days away from getting covid shots. >> live from cnn center, this is "cnn newsroom" with kim brunhuber. we're tracking developments in ukraine where the area around the capital kyiv was rattled by a series of explosions a short time ago. air defenses worked on enemy targets, but so far no fires or casualties reported. officials are urging people to stay in shelters. meanwhile two european leaders say the war may drag on for years. boris johnson and jens stoltenberg made the statements separately and both said that the west should be in for the long haul. and president zelenskyy is pledging to regain all the territories captured by russia
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in ukraine's south. he spoke after visiting two cities in the region and seeing residential areas ham areaed by artillery and missiles. >> translator: the losses are significant. many houses were destroyed, civilian logistics were disrupted, there were many social issues. we will definitely restore everything that was destroyed. russia does not have as many missiles as our people have the desire to live. we will not give away the south to anyone. we will return everything that is ours and the sea will be ukrainian and safe. >> and salma abdelaziz is monitoring the latest developments and she is joining us from kyiv. let's start with the explosions there in kyiv. what more do we know? >> reporter: early hours of this morning we heard air raid sirens. those are not completely uncommon, but this time we did later hear explosions, one of our local producers hearing those and from officials we found out that kyiv's air
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defense systems were deployed and they were able to intercept rush sian missiles. not clear whenat the target was but it is rare that kyiv is targeted. but yet another reminder of russia's ability to target the capital. and it is a day after president zelenskyy made this important visit along the frontlines, first to mykolaiv, that has been a major flash point. near the beginning of the war, there were dozens killed and wounded in that attack. and a couple weeks ago a grain silo was trustruck. and civilian neighborhoods also have been struck by russian artillery. president zelenskyy was touring some of this damage in a residential area, standing along side the local governor and he spoke to cameras and said special attention was paid to threats from land and sea, we do not stop working for victory.
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really a continuation of president zelenskyy's strategy. he is an ever-present leader, he wants to continue to boost morale. so that visit was very important to that flash point city. he then went on to odesa, that is of course ever more important for ukraine because of the occupation of so much of the southern coast now by russian forces, of course the area now occupied by russian troops. so odesa is that key port for ukrainians and they say that russians are not allowing ships to go through. so president zelenskyy was receiving an update on nine civilian ships that local officials say are being blocked by russian forces. black sea itself has become a flashpoint, so that is why you heard there the importance of the sea. ukraine lost much of its navy in 2014 during the crimea conflict, but yet it has been able to inflict damage on the russian navy. and so there is a sense that
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that power, that resistance is extremely important. and of course we're looking at ukrainian forces who are facing a much more superior military, outgunned and outmanned. but it is not just about the shear firepower, for president zelenskyy it is about keeping that spirit of resistance and strength on the front lines. >> salma abdelaziz, thanks so much. earlier cnn spoke with a security expert and resident of kharkiv, a city that suffered heavy bombardment since the start of the war. and she talked to us about the staggering toll of russia's attacks and the long road to normal life that eventually lies ahead. >> according to the latest data, the government officials in kharkiv tell us it is about now 3,000 residential buildings that were severely damaged or destroyed since the beginning of the war. and including 100 schools and about 90 kindergartens.
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and that means that russia is deliberately targeting not only residential areas, but also critical infrastructure and also all the objects that allow the city to function normally. and that means that it will not be -- the city will not be able to return to the normal life soon because people just don't have their homes to return, the schools will not return back to normal. >> many thanks to maria for speaking with us. this war has prompted an historic shift in security. sweden and poland formally applied to bid nato but tur accuses them of housing kurdish groups. some swedish kurds are watching the talks with rising concerns
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of their own. ninas dos santos reports. >> reporter: locals are uneasy that they have been dragged in to sweden's nato negotiations. of course we're scared, this man says. we're caught in the middle, says other, and not being given a say. weeks after its application, sweden's plans to join nato remain in limbo thanks to turkey which claims that kurdish separatists operate from these shores. that is something sweden denies, yet ankara is still trying to extradite dozens of people including members of sweden's own parliament, most of whom have no links to turkey at all, like this man in this room born in iran and iraq. edwin is saying if you are a kurd and you want freedom, you are a terrorist. that is not true. no matter where you come from, if you are a kurd, you will have problems with turkey, this man
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says. >> from the turkish perspective, they are saying sweden, you want to join a military alliance where we are one of the members, we perceive it as national security threats. they make the same demands on the other nato member states but they don't have the same leverage as they do now that sweden is waiting to come in. >> reporter: sweden is home to 100,000 kurds, almost 1% of the entire population. and there is widespread sympathy for their cause. that means that as turkey continues to stall sweden's nato bid, there is a growing sense of indignation. swedes are almost 134rsplit on . and kurds have differing views too. and this iraqi kurd says that he is against nato membership. look at what nato members did in my country, he said.
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they completely destroyed it. i'm strongly affected by they says since i've come here as a prisoner of war. turks fighting for kurdish rights in sweden are also stoking ire. this 74-year-old turkish born peace prize nominee is now a swedish citizen. but he is fighting off extradition to turkey for his writing in defense of minorities there. >> i feel i'm a swedish citizen and how can swedish government can make a bargain on this issue. i can't find the words to define this strangeness, this absurdity. >> reporter: sweden decided to join nato to make its population safer. for a part of the people, the process of excession is making them feel anything but secure.
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nina dos santos, cnn, sweden. dangerous heatwave is crossing over parts of europe. in france more than 200 monthly high temperature records were broken on saturday. several southwestern cities even saw all-time highs. thankfully the high pressure system responsible for the heat is moving east making way for cooler temperatures. spain is also experiencing unseasonable hotter than normal temperatures. this is the most extreme early heatwave the country has seen in more than four decades. sweltering dry heat and windy conditions are causing wildfires in several parts of spain. about a dozen villages have been evacuated in the northwest as hundreds of firefighters battle to get the blazes under control. and in a mountain range, almost 20,000 hectares have been scorched, that is close to 50,000 acres. journalist al goodman is joining us from madrid. the heat there causing much more
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than just discomfort. >> that's right. and contrary to what you would believe -- or what you would think, the hottest part, the most hard hit part from the heatwave in recent days from the temperatures and also from its effects is the north of spain, not the south of spain. so the hottest place in spain on saturday recorded was at the san sebastian airport, 110 degrees fahrenheit. it is the earliest extreme heatwave in 41 years and that is on the heels of the hottest may recorded in 58 years. by contrast in the south, places like seville have 95 degrees fahrenheit. and so it is causing the fires,
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latest figure is that it is closer to 25,000 hectors, well over 50,000 acres, that have burned and the bullet train tracks, the high speed train tracks, have been cut from that section on to other parts of northwest spain. there is another large set of fires burning clear across the country in the regions around barcelona with one in the interior province there. and there is some relief here in spain like you mentioned in france, coming as cooler weather from the atlantic ocean blows across the country, displacing this really hot air mass from northern africa. so here in madrid, this day sunday, highs expected of only 28 degrees celsius, 82 fahrenheit, that is down from 40. but just north of here in france, those 40 degree celsius temperatures that you were just mentioning, 40 degrees in june was the earliest recorded for a 40 in france ever according to the weather service there. and of course the officials are trying to keep the population
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well aware of this, keep them hydrated and cool as possible. everybody remembers there that just three years ago in the summer of 2019, june and july, there were more than 1400 deaths in france due to the heatwave at that time. going just a bit further north to the united kingdom in the southern part just like in the southern part of france, that is where the heat is hitting, 30 degrees celsius, 86 degrees fahrenheit. we hot for there. it is just hitting the whole continent. >> thanks so much al goodman. and derrek van dam is joinig us now. it is not just europe that is feeling it, here if n the u.s. well. >> it is interesting too, we'll touch on all that, but i want to get to the climate angle of this. of all the natural disasters that we study as meteorologists from tornadoes to hurricanes and typhoons all the way through drought and coastal floodings,
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heatwaves actually has the strongest evidence linking climate change and our changing climate across the planet longer duration heatwaves, they begin earlier in the season and the frequency, basically the strength of the heatwaves becomes more intense. right? so just take france for example yesterday. 200 records set or tied. there were three different locations that set their all-time record high temperatures, it had never gotten that hot at those three particular locations ever before. we have to say something is happening here and we need to take a deep dive into it because it is a climate crisis, a climate emergency that we're dealing with. not only across europe, remember that is weather, not climate, short term weather versus changing climate. look at these incredible images coming out of spain because 42.8 degrees, that is roughly 110
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degrees fahrenheit. and unfortunately, this has led to wildfires across the northwestern portions of spain. we've seen some of these videos. there were 3,000 people evacuated from a theme park in central spain due to a fierce fire that scorched that particular region. and just look at this phenomenal photo of the firefighters battling the blazes across the zamora region. so across the atlantic, another heatwave to talk about. seems like we just got past our heatwave. this is across the eastern sections of u.s. and now dealing with another heat dome, this is trapping the heat, it is building across the nation's midsection. anywhere you see the shading of orange and pink, those are excessive heat warnings and advisories. we had impressive heat yesterday and it will continue today right through the second half of this week with the potential of over 100 record high temperatures tied or broken including here in atlanta. kim, prepare yourself.
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>> all right, thanks so much derek van dam. one of america's iconic national parks is set to partially reopen next week after historic flooding. the u.s. park service says the south loop of yellowstone will reopen to the public on a limited basis starting wednesday. this area includes the famous old faithful geyser. u.s. geological survey says unprecedented rain and rapid snow melt caused definite investigation starting flooding, it was a one in 500 year event. some of the worst hit areas of the park are in the state of montana, but yellowstone also covers parts of would i owe 34i7 wyoming and i'ddaho. and in utah, there were wildfires and because of winds aircraft to fight the plays have been grounded. the state's governor told residents to take extra precautions saying it is
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impossible to overstate the fire danger right now with the heat and wind. just ahead, colombians are about to choose a new president, but one vice presidential candidate could make history. we'll have a look at that when we come back. as the pain n sets in. and the hill grows steeper. no matter what, , we go on. biofreeze.
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the stage is set for the presidential runoff election in colombia between the leftist petro and the populist self-proclaimed king of tiktok hernandez. some of the key issues are economy, income and equality, corruption and a rapidly degrading security situation made worse by criminal drug gangs. petro is promising sweeping social and economic reforms while hernandez has campaigned on anti-corruption rhetoric and calls to shrink government. the election could see a number of firsts, among which as petro's choice of a running mate. if petro wins, colombia could have its first black rvice president. here is a look at the potential
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his tor history-making history. >> reporter: when she left school because of pregnancy, francia marquez would never have thought that her name would be chabted o ed chanted on the streets. she began as a gold miner, a cleaner and now a candidate for the vice president of colombia. and sunday the same name is on the ballot as left wing coalition tries to reach power for the first time in columbia's history. and marquez could become the first vice president of colombia desis dissent discent. >> translator: i have a dream to see my country full of joy and
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dignity. >> reporter: her candidacy has been the target of hate and racist attacks. she held rallies behind gun shields after receiving death threats. a famous singer called her kingdom on the campaign trail. >> only the ballots will say francia marquez is successful and her request a triumph of, but even if it ended in defeat, her supporters say she has already made hisser to because the barriers she broke to come here date back from centuries. >> reporter: the community traces its roots to slaves brought here in the 1600s. marquez herself told cnn that one of her ancestors was enslaved. and the pacific coast is the home to the second largest african community, but one historically neglected and
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marginalized. here people say that it is easier to join the army than go to university. for young people, they say it represents a change for the entire community. >> translator: we're moving from struggle to power, we're showing this is not temporary, the community identifies with this battle. >> reporter: change often happens in unexpected ways. it was 2008 when hope and change swept the first african-american president into office in the u.s. back then, marquez was a single mother of two cleaning homes to make a living. now it is her supporters who chant, yes, we can. voters in france are heading to the polls right now for the fourth time in two months as legislative elections wrap up today. more than 48 million people are registered to vote in hundreds of runoff races, more than 25
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million voters abstained from the first round of legislative elections. president macron's party and its alliance need 289 seats to form a majority government in the national assembly. it won't be easy, he is facing a tough challenge by the left and right. and election officials from key battleground states with set to testify when the january 6 hearings resume this week. just ahead we'll explain why the select committee wants to hear of donald trump's conversations with those officials after he lost the 2020 election. stay with us. daddy, is that where we're from? well, actually, we're from a lot of places. see, we're from he, and there...
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welcome back to all of you watching here in the united states, canada and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. hearing resoum tume tuesday int deadly riot on january 6. it will focus on donald trump's attempts to coerce several state officials to throw out their 2020 election results after he lost. one member of the select committee explained why the upcoming hearing is critical. >> we will get information about this broad effort to illegally seize the election even though -- seize the presidency even though he had lost the election. as you can tell from our first hearings, there are different ways that he tried to do that, by pressuring the vice president, failing, and now we'll hear about his pressure on the states to replace the
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electors chosen by the voters. >> marshall cohen takes a look at what is ahead. >> reporter: the january 6 committee continues it work next week with a major hearing set for tuesday. this is the fourth public hearing and it will focus on former president trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election in two specific states that he lost, georgia and arizona. the panel will feature testimony from two senior georgia officials, secretary of state brad raf and two that supported trump but refused to do his bidding after the election when he pressured them to interfere with the vote counting. in a critical phone kale just a few days before january 6, former donald trump desperately tried to get raf agains berger
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to yooverturn the votes. >> all i want to do is this, i just want to fine 11,0780 votes which is one more than we have because we won the state. >> reporter: the committee will also hear from rusty bowers, currently speaker of the arizona house of representatives, he is a republican and he also supported donald trump in 2020. just like the other witnesses who are testifying, bowers was on the receiving end of a pressure campaign by trump and trump's attorney at the time rudy giuliani. they wanted him to toss aside biden's victory in arizona and appoint republican electors instead. but bowers publicly rejected those efforts and he publicly rejected trump's baseless claims of massive voter fraud. also earlier this year, he even
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blocked a bill that some republicans were pushing in arizona that would have allowed the republican legislature there to overturn elections in the future. so, look, the democratic run select committee has tried to drive home the point that january 6 was about so much more than what happened at the capitol. they say it was a months' long effort to overturn the will of the people and in the view of the committee they say it was an attempted coup. mar she will cohen, cnn, washington. >> despite a growing mountain of evidence against him, the former president is lashing outcohen, washington. >> despite a growing mountain of evidence against him, the former president is lashing out telling friendly audiences that the riot at the u.s. capitol wasn't an insurrection. here he is saturday at a rally near memphis. >> the false and ridiculous story they are pushing of the so-called insurrection to overthrow the united states government is a complete and
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total hoax and everyone knows it. and you know who knows it best of all? the unselects. the uncelebrity committee. >> kellyanne conway who was one of trump's top white house aide says that the death threats against vice president mike pence, she spoke with michael s smer smerconish. >> i blame the people yelling hang yinstead and i would think that there are laws in place to prosecute people. i'm all for prosecuting people who committed crimes. i'm also very proud of what donald trump and mike pence accomplished together for this country over four years and this will not be washed away. >> a number of people died at the capitol on january 6 and in the days that followed, and one of them was capital police officer brian sicknick who was injured during the riot.
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his death the following day was attributed to natural causes. sicknick and other officers guarding congress were quickly overwhelmed as a massive crowd surged the capitol after trump told them to, quote, fight like hell. sicknick's girlfriend says she holds trump responsible for everyone who lost their lives. >> we don't know what would have happened. brian died from natural cause, but we don't know what the next day or the day after that would have led to. we have no way of knowing. but donald trump wanted to step in there and play a higher power. i believe that all of the people that died on that day and the days following, you know, would still be here today had it not been for donald trump. >> upcoming hearings are expected to focus on trump's actions both before and during the deadly rampage. and cnn will bring you this week's hearings live on tuesday and thursday and our coverage begins both days at 1:00 p.m. eastern time, that is 6:00 in
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the evening in london. many american parents could soon get their wish, inoculations for their young children against covid-19. rochelle walensky, director of cdc, has approved the emergency use of pfizer and moderna vaccines for the kids. jacqueline howard has more. >> reporter: the white house says shots could begin as early as this upcoming week. pediatrician's offices and pharmacies will be the sites where most of these vaccines will be administered. and remember children under five will have two options, moderna or pfizer. the fda authorized both for children as young as six months old and moderna is administered in two doses given four weeks apart, pfizer is administered in three doses as a primary series. first two doses three weeks apart and the third dose at least eight weeks after the second dose. and dosage is different for each
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vaccine. moderna is given as 25 micrograms each dose, which is half of the 50 micro grams given to older kids. and pfizer is given as three micro gramgrams per dose for chn under five and that is 1345u8er t smaller than the 10 given to older kids. and for both vaccines, common side effects include pain at the injection site, fever, headache, chills, fatigue, and both companies, moderna and pfizer, have said that these child-sized doses of their vaccines appear to illicit up mine immune respo kids that are similar to what we've seen in adults so far. americans are celebrating the country's newest national holiday. coming up we'll take a look at the festivities and history of juneteenth. and after the covid pandemic
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exposed disparities in oklahoma, california, the city council declared racism to be a public health crisis. that is ahead. good t thing adding lysol laundry sanitizer kills 99.9% of bacteria that detergegents can't. clean is good, sanitized is better. ♪ the tempur-pedic breeze° makes sleep...feel cooool. because the tempur-breeze° transfers heat away from your body... ...so you feel cool, night after night. experience t mattress ranked #1 in customer satisfaction by j.d. power, three years in a r.
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cities around the u.s. are holding parades and festivities all weekend long in honor of juneteenth, it commemorates the end of slavery in the u.s. after the civil war. it officially takes place on sunday as the name is a blend of june and 19th. the celebration in buffalo, new york was particularly bittersweet, residents there are still grieving from the racist mass shooting just over a month ago. last year juneteenth became the first federal holiday to be approved for 40 years. fredricka whitfield has more now on its history.
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>> reporter: juneteenth is a celebration that marks the end of slavery in the united states. also known as emancipation day. many consider to be the country's second independence day. it was on june 19, 1865, that union soldiers led by this man general granger arrived in galveston with orders to inform residents that the civil war ended and enslaved americans were finally free. the message came more than two years after president abraham lincoln had issued the epans nation probclamationproclamatio. many slaves didn't see freedom until the end of the war. many african-americans have marked the anniversary for years but it was a woman from texas named opal lee who started a movement to make juneteenth a federal holiday. known as the grandmother of juneteenth, the 95-year-old
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campaigned on the issue for decades. she even held a 2 1/2 mile march each year to commemorate the 2 1/2 years it took for slaves in texas to learn they were free. >> please, please continue the kinds of things that you know we need to become one people. it is not a white thing, it is not a black thing. it is an american thing. >> reporter: in 1980, texas became the first state to make juneteenth a state holiday. by 2019, 47 states and the district of columbia followed suit. last year president biden signed a law making juneteenth a federal holiday, a dream come true for lee and so many others. >> by making juneteenth a federal holiday, all americans can feel the power of this day
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and learn from our history and celebrate progress and grapple with the distance we've come but the distance we have to travel to. >> reporter: historical marker can be seen today in galveston, texas at the site where general granger and his troops set up their headquarters announcing the end of slavery. ♪ today americans recognize juneteenth with parties and gatherings. and the day is marked as a celebration of african-american freedom and achievement. >> i'd scream it from the house tops that unit y is freedom. people have been taught to hate. and if people can be taught to hate, they can be taught to love. >> reporter: fredricka whitfield, cnn. viewers here can see special coverage juneteenth a global celebration for freedom, sunday night at 8:00 p.m. eastern.
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join don lemon for special coverage before the concert that starts at 7:00 p.m. eastern only here on cnn. earlier this month the city council of oakland, california approved resolution declarie racism to be a public health crisis, this is after the covid-19 pandemic exposed inequality between white and minority residents in the city. the office of the city attorney told cnn the resolution is not responding to any singular incident but spark by the way that racial health and economic disparities grew dramatically during the covid-19 pandemic in oakland and beyond and reminds us that racism has profoundly harmed communities and left disturbing health disparities. we took the time to draft this in a thoughtful way. joining me now is dr. kim rhodes, an associate professor in epidemiology and biostatistics at the university of california san francisco school of medicine.
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thanks for being here with us. so take us behind the reason for this move. why has racism led to a public health crisis in oakland? >> well, thank you so much for having me on. i would start by saying that racism is a public health crisis across the country, and i want to applaud my city of oakland for having the courage to name it as such. i think that it is important because it really reflects on the long shadow of slavery which has translated into as you know racial seg y segregation in hou ultimately in health care which has its final impacts on how long people live and how well they live. >> by making this declaration, concretely what does it mean beyond acknowledging a problem? >> yeah, good point.
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so first of all i'd say in everything that we do in health care, in taking care of clinical problems, if you don't name the problem appropriately, if you are incorrecting your diagnosis, then your treatments will be less effective. so i think that the first thing is to name it, but the next step has to be about action. one i think that i think is good about what oakland is doing is there areare actual funds that e been allocated to this effort to actually make progress against racism in our city. >> what role did the pandemic play in highlighting some of these inequalities? >> well, the pandemic really laid bare the sort of social underpinnings of the distribution of disease. so i'd start off by noting how it was so difficult to actually get access to testing at the beginning of the pandemic. you might not even know that you
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were infected if you were not in sort of a privileged category of people. whether that is being a physician or if it is having exactly the right symptoms that were being required to get tested or having access to somewhere that had tests. you may remember there was a shortage of swabs, a shortage of reagents, so it was actually difficult to get. and you had to be socially privileged in order to just access the basic necessities around covid. >> and you were involved in a grass roots way to help underserved communities during this covid crisis. but let's use a concrete example. cdc has recommended vaccines for kids six months to five years but so far through this pandemic african-americans have been less likely to get the vaccine or to get boosters. so how concretely would this declaration help in a situation like this? >> i think that is a great question because going back to
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the idea that after all is said and done, a lot more is said than done. the plan is to use the funding to collect more data. i guess a critique i would offer of that is that it is not clear to me that we need more data. and what we already know as you pointed out is that the distribution of resources to combat covid have not been taken up by certain populations, have not -- there has not been access to it. emogen health which is the grass roots effort that you made reference to that i have spearheaded really i think highlights the idea that we just need to try something. so if the money is going to be spent on day ta collection, tha data collection should are around an intervention so that we can ask the question can we make a difference in equity by actually doing something rather than continuing to measure and not being surprised by the
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results that again there are inequities and disparities. >> as you said, this is far beyond oakland and i think only oakland and boston have been the two cities that have made this type of declaration. do you see this expanding nationwide? >> well, i think that it can expand nationwide if we see interventions again from grass roots organizations who are already working on economic development on housing and security, on food insecurity, to getting our populations educated. measure that. when you see the outcomes from that, when you see people getting engaged and being part of the solution, then i think that other jurisdictions will take it up. and i also think that we need to do an economic analysis. it is pretty clear when you lift up economic development, education, give people a place to live, they become productive members of society and our economy will flourish therefore. so honestly, i don't know if other jurisdictions will take it up before they see this kind of
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evidence. but the evidence that we need to cle collects is not more documentation of the prop, it is evidence that the solutions actually work. >> well said. we'll have to leave it there. thank you so much, dr. rhodes, really appreciate it. >> my pleasure. thank you for having me. there is a tie at the top of the leaderboard at the u.s. open, but it is still anyone's golf tournament heading into the final round. just ahead, we'll have a look at the two leaders each trying to win his first major. stay with us. our latest devis airflow to fill your space with lasting fragrance inspired by the scents of nature you love. air wick. connect to n natur.
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fwe're a few hours away fro the start of the fourth and final of golf's third major tournament of the year. and top of the leaderboard is incredibly tight right now. american will czar r zalatoris t fitzpatrick lead. >> reporter: third round is known as moving day, but so extreme with the conditions here at the country club in a most of the players would have been happy just to stand still on the course and the leaderboard. conditions were just brutal, but
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co-leaders managed to keep their composure and make serious progress in the competition. >> gave me a lot of plof belief lot of confidence that i belong in this situation. you know, there is a difference in thinking it and actually being in the situation and believing it. and so i think that that is probably the biggest change. you know, i put myself in this situation a few times in my career and obviously got to go out and get it tomorrow. >> the 25-year-old american will zalatoris is no stranger to being in contention in the majors and another strong round on sunday could land him his first trophy. meanwhile the 27-year-old englishman matt fitzpatrick already knows how to win here, he did it in the u.s. amateur championship back in 2013. he told me afterwards that that experience could make all the difference. >> i certainly think it gives you an edge over the others, yeah. i genuinely do believe that. you know, it is a real positive moment in my career.
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kind of kickstarted me. and to come back here and play so well again, it kind of, you know, just gives me great confidence round by round. >> reporter: saturday this famous old course really showed its teeth, battle at brookline became a war of attrition pl whatever happens, it is sure to be entertaining. >> and that wraps this hour of cnn news "room." i'll be back inin a moment with more news. please do stay with us.
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hello and welcome to all you watching here in the united states, canada and all around the world. ahead on "cnn newsroom." >> translator: we will not give the south away to anyone. the sea will be ukraine kran and safe. >> ukraine's president vows not to yield any territory as he surveys the destruction throughout the south. as dangerous and extreme

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