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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  October 10, 2022 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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hello, i'm victor blackwell. welcome to cnn newsroom. we're starting with the shock and outrage in ukraine and around the world after russia retaliates and targets ukrainian civilians. overnight the kremlin unleashed a barrage of missiles at kyiv and several cities across the country and knocked out critical infrastructure. at least 11 people are dead,
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dozens more are hurt. today, putin is boasting about these attacks and vowing there will be more. he says the attacks are retaliation for the weekend attack on a key bridge that links annexed crimea to russia. ukraine's president zelenskyy meanwhile says putin's latest assault shows a world he is a terrorist. cnn nick paton walsh is in onei targeted overnight. nick, what are you seeing there? >> reporter: what we saw here was a sign that while russia boasts about the precision firepower, it's hard to discern what the target was and clear it hasn't really hit it. across ukraine, we've seen startling brutality, frankly. this is not the first time that russia has it seems targeted or killed civilians since the start of this war, but we haven't seen a level of violence unleashed across pretty much all of ukraine's major population centers like we've seen today for a number of months, possibly
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since the start of the war. kyiv fundamentally gained the blunt brunt of this. carnage, many bodies left in streets that would norm early be full of people on their way to work or even school here. we went to one site where two missiles had hit, the first hitting an abandoned tellecoms building and the second, two minutes later, a common russian tactic, fire one missile and follow up shortly afterwards possibly in the bit to try to injure rescue workers what run to the scene. the second missile, though, hitting in the middle of a public street hitting a public transport bus. five people critically injured on the bus and many more requiring some kind of treatment. so the death toll appears in this area to have reached five, over a dozen injured. 80,000 without power. the extent of the damage to the
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infrastructure here and other cities not entirely clear but reporting moments of power loss. this really response to the bridge, the vital artery between the mainland and annexed illegally occupied crimea taken in 2014. that was damaged over the weekend by a blast. most people point their finger towards ukraine but ukraine wasn't entirely responsible or openly claimed responsibility. the second issue russia has to face is the performance on the battle field. they've been a disaster for well over a month and on multiple fronts have been in retreat, poor supply lines and command and control. a lot of different reasons this is happening but pretty much in one direction for sometime. this was certainly russia's bid to show it had military might left. it doesn't have limited supply of these sort of heavy weight cruz missiles. it has been a bid to share they have a card to play and not
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entirely clear how successful it's been in terms of setting back ukraine's infrastructure and increased anger and resilience among many ukrainians we spoke to. >> nick paton walsh, thank you. minutes ago, ukraine's morning minister lashed out at put putin's attack. he accused russia of using the attacks to terrorize ukraine's peaceful population and says putin is retal iating for the bridge and wabattle field loses. christiane joins us. what did you learn and did they expect something like this after that bridge aexplosion. >> i don't know if they expected this wide and coordinated attack across the country response, but they knew that they would get a response. first and foremost, as nick said, they have not claimed responsibility for the bridge. i asked the foreign minister and he said a, i'm not there, b, i
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don't have the information and c, i won't say one way or the other at the moment. officially, they have not claimed it and what he did say, though, when i asked him about how it would affect them going forward to continue the battle and keep taking the battle to russia, here is how that part of the conversation went. do you agree that there is an escalation ladder underway right now and what happened around your country today cause you to rethink your offensives and your counter offensives to liberate the territories that have been occupied and seized? >> no way. nothing. whatever he does, whatever he does, we will continue to liberate our territory. i want you to understand a very simple thing. this is the war for the existence of ukraine. this is the war for the
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existence of international law and rule based order. so he may escalate, he may do whatever he want but we're going to continue fighting and we will win. >> so very defiant but also saying the kind of the thing the united states says. president biden or the european leaders say this is about more than just ukraine. ukraine is doing the fighting but it's for all of our futures as democracies and as those who believe in a rules based order. so again today, president biden put out a statement reiterating and reupping america's support, nato has done the same and they will continue to help ukraine in this fight. ukraine does need and he said this to me a lot more of the help that they're already getting, more artillery, more ammunition and most especially, more sophisticated air defense systems to protect their cities and their playgrounds and their critical infrastructure from the kind of assault that they saw
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today. >> did the minister have any insight, any thoughts on the statement from the president about the world being closer to to terrible armageddon at any point in the last 6 0 years? >> well, they're very, very aware of it and they know that putin has kept, you know, sort of vaguely threatening. i mean, he gets more and more of a threat as the time goes on but they say look, we have tried everything appeasing putin, if that's what we're being asked to do to stop the war and negotiate right now to see our territory. we can't do that because we've been trying -- he said this, trying to be warm and fuzzy. i kid you not. that's what he said. and tried from the start to help ratchet down this situation. he said what do we get? we got the invasion of our country on february 24th and it is simply escalated since then. you can see the trying to negotiate as nice guys with putin just doesn't work.
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we're going to continue fighting and beyond that, he said, vick tore, it was incredible. he said even if the west and our friends get tired of us, we will have no choice but to keep fighting. we have no choice. we will keep doing it. >> christiane amanpour, thank you for bringing that interview to us. thank you. >> thank you. >> christiane mentioned president biden called out russia's intensifying strikes on ukraine saying they demonstrate the utter brutality of mr. putin's illegal war. cnn senior white house correspondent phil mattingly with us now. what else did the president say? >> reporter: i think christiane tees up what is happening inside the white house in european capitals as they grapple with what is a clear escalation, certainly over the course of the last 24 hours but really over the course of the last several weeks. look, the assistance from the u.s. and partners over the course of the last eight months has been unbowed. there is no question about that. that is going to continue. in the president's rather
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lengthy statement condemning the missile attacks today, he made that point saying quote, these attacks only further reinforce our commitment to stand with the people of ukraine for as long as it takes and victor, as long as it takes part is something the president has repeated over and over again. but tomorrow there will be a g 7 video conference with the top leaders from the group of seven countries and president zelenskyy is expected to speak at the that conference or at that meeting and it is very clear and i think christiane kind of laid out details from the foreign minister there are more requests. the u.s. sent $17.5 billion in the course of the last eight months very clearly working on economic aid and assistance and the ukraine provided very specific lists of what they need particularly in the issue of air defense systems. where that lands and what the u.s. is able to provide what u.s. allies are able to provide will be a central paint of discussion not just tomorrow but over the course of the next couple days. clearly, what we've seen and kyiv and other cities over the course of the last 24 hours
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under scored a reality the escalations put the conflict in a different place we haven't seen in 7.5 or eight months and what the western allies will do for president zelenskyy and ukrainians in terms of assistance, how does it reshape the assistance is certainly a real question debated inside the white house and inside european capitals, victor? >> phil mattingly setting up the next conversation. thank you very much. retired u.s. army colonel co-author of the book understanding urban warfare. kim is cnn's global affairs analyst. t let me start with you and the conversations whether to adjust some of the military and hardware support. is it time to give the longer range weapons to ukraine? >> they don't necessarily need to have anything striking to russia proper as long as they can reach the border which is i think what they can do with most of the weapons systems now there
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is not a need but as the correspondence said, it's ammunition, right, replacing basic artillery shells, the rocket systems. those kind of things they need to get. so they definitely need to continue getting those. they don't necessarily need longer range missile systems at this time. >> kim, was this in response to just the explosion at the bridge or was this an explosion, response to all of the counter offensive progress that the ukrainians have made? >> i think the ladder. this was about changing the channel. if you go with the all politics is local, think about what vladimir putin is hearing at home. he's hearing about territorial losses day by day of his forces as winter approaches and those losses are going to be set in stone for a bit when neither side can really fight back, he's hearing from the military bloggers, the hard liners, criticism of his military
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campaign, not direct of him but close enough. what we're talking about today, not the strike on the bridge took crimea, we're talking about the fact that multiple cities across ukraine got hit including civilian areas, tourist areas and it was an expensive changing of the channel because those were a lot of smart weapons in amongst some of the dumb rockets but for vladimir putin, it was probably worth it. >> colonel, can putin keep this up? we just heard from nick he doesn't have a lot of this hardware. >> no, i mean, absolutely not, this is a short retaliation response of really very little military value as kim said. it really going to satisfy prowar nationalists at home and judging how the war is fought to date, they don't have a large capacity guided ammunitions and if you look, over half of the missiles and rockets they did shoot were shot down by ukrainians. so additional air defense
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systems are absolutely critical to the ukrainians. >> kim, what should we expect out of this g 7 summit tomorrow? a statement of condemnation or something stronger? >> you know, they keep issuing statements of condemnation and they're going to have to do that again but behind closed doors, they're going to have to start talking about what biden brought up, the whole armageddon question. could putin be cornered into thinking his only way out is to use a tactical nuclear weapon? not the fault of the ukrainians pursuing defense of their homeland, just scary insight into what putin might be thinking and the ukrainians i've spoken to are much closer to believing that's a possibility that's got to come up in the g 7 conversation. >> colonel, let's turn to north korea. kim says that the ventrecent te
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were similar ulations to fi tactical targets. does north korea have the components to do that from what we now know? >> they may have the components to do that and possessing the capability and employing them is -- are two completely different things for sure. as we've seen, nobody is deployed nukes since world war ii so have the capability and deploying are different. >> kim, the forth koreans aren't n interested in negotiations or talks. what can the west do to put pressure on kim if not directly? >> look, kim is angling for recognition of north korea as a nuclear weapon state and he's taking the lesson from ukraine that if you give up your nuclear weapons capability, here is what can happen, a bigger neighbor can try to gobble you up. that doesn't give the biden administration a lot of room for maneuver. i think they have to hope they can sort of run this out, let
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him bluster as he has in the past and then see if this is yet again kim trying to act out as a way to get to the negotiating table. >> so we returned to the strategic patience of the obama years? >> without stating it out loud, that may be what we're in for. >> all right. kim, liam collins, thank you. a san antonio police officer is fired after firing ten shots into a teenager's car while he was eating at a health care dod -- mcdonald's parking lot. former president trump had no idea his supporters were attacking but the testimony says otherwise. hear the new tapes yourself. so you only pay for what you need! (limu squawks) he's a natural. only pay for what you need. ♪liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty.♪
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a texas police officer has been fired after shooting a teenager in a mcdonald's parking lot. police body cam footage shows he approached the teenager eating a meal in his car and opened fire. the teen is in kcritical condition right now according to his attorney. we are going to show you the video but the video is disturbing. here is josh campbell with the story. >> reporter: authorities say san antonio police officer james brennan was handling an unrelated disturbance call when he saw a car he believed evaded police a previous day. >> i got a vehicle that fled from me the other day. >> reporter: 17-year-old eric cantu was eating a meal in the parking lot. video camera video shows the officers walking up to the driver's side of the car,
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opening the cooedoor and orderi the startled driver out. >> get out of car. shots fired! >> reporter: according to the body cam video, the teen put the car into reverse before the officer fired five times. after the driver shifted the vehicle and moved forward brenham fired five more times. the police department said the teen was found a block away suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. a passenger in the car was uninjured. eric cantu was hospitalized in critical condition. the teen is literally fighting for his life every day as his body endured a tremendous amount of trama. the police department said it fired brenham for violating several department policies. >> in this circumstance, they terminated the police officer due to his actions during this incident in violation of departmental tactics, training and procedures. >> reporter: according to sapd, the department's deadly force policy does allow police to fire
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is someone is using deadly force against the officer for self-defense but the manual says they should attempt to move to a point of safety rather than discharging a firearm and officers should not shoot at any part of a vehicle to disable a vehicle. the sapd is investigating the incident and will forward the findings to the district attorney. they will then submit to the a grand jury. the d.a. dismissed evading attention and assault on an officer against a teen saying the facts and evidence we received so far led us to reject the charges against eric cantu for further investigation. the county's online court record system shows cantu's case has been closed. victor, police claim this former officer james brennan was struck by the door of the vehicle as the teen reversed. we don't see that from the vantage point of that officer's body camera and of course, there
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is no other video of this incident because although this former officer had called for backup, he didn't wait for them before he actually approached the car. we reached out to brennan to seek comment on what was going through his mind and his comment how this transpired. we haven't heard from him or whether he has legal representation. we learned who will not represent him. he got a statement from the san antonio police officer's union they say they will not represent him and he was a probationary officer and didn't serve the full year to allow him the benefits. it's currently being investigated by the sapd and the district attorney is investigating and then it will be in the hands of the grand jury. >> we'll see where it goes. let's go to new york and a shooting on the property of congressman lee zeldin's residence. it landed feet from his teenage daughters. nobody in his family was hurt.
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according to police, the shooting has no connection to the congressman's family and officials are investigating whether it was possibly gang related. he is a republican nominee for governor in new york. he's made raising crime a central theme of his campaign. democratic opponent kathy hochl said she's glad they are safe and thankful to the officers' response. kevin fanone secretly recorded a meeting with mccarthy. in the recordings, the california republican maintained donald trump was unaware of the violence inside the capital although testimony to the january 6th house committee revealed otherwise. trump actually watched hours after tv coverage at the violent attacks. whit thney wild is with us now. what else are we learning from the recordings? >> let me set the scene. it was between kevin mccarthy and fanone and harry dunn and
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the mother of an officer that died after the piriot. his name was brian sicknick. here he is in his own words. >> watching tv. >> he knew what was going on. he knew what was going on. he knew they were fighting for hours and hours and hours. you know, just -- [ inaudible ] >> i don't know that he did know that. >> fanone felt compelled to make this recording because he didn't know if kevin mccarthy would say publicly what he said. here is how fanone described making this decision and why he felt it was important to actually make these tapes. here he is. >> i'm glad i recorded it. that's why i recorded it because i didn't expect kevin mccarthy
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to number one, tell the truth, number two, recount the conversation accurately and number three, i wanted to show people how indifferent lawmakers are not just republican lawmakers but all la rwmakers t the actual american people they are venting. >> victor, the tapes show fanone confronting mccarthy for his statements that day and pushing hard for accountability. the l.a. city counsel president has now resigned after leaked audio revealed her making racist remarks. we have that story for you ahead.
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a los angeles city council member resigned after growing outrage for her racist remarks towards black people and indigenous latinos in a secret audio recording leaked online. the counsel president was also heard disparaging a white counsel's young black son even suggesting physical harm. camilla is with us now. so what's the update? >> hey, victor, she's resigned from this very powerful position. the president of the city counsel but it is important to point out that she is still a
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member of the city counsel. at least at this point she is. i want to get straight to the statement that she released just about an hour or so ago where she says i take responsibility for what i said and there are no excuses for those comments. i am so sorry. then she goes on to say in the statement that in the end, it's not my apologies that matter most, it will be the actions i take from this day forward. i hope you will give me the opportunity to make amends therefore, effective immediately, i am resigning as the president of the los angeles city counsel. i want to start from the beginning. this was a leaked audio on reddit. "the new york times" obtained the audio, cnn has not verified. at first they are talking redistricting. it's not just her but a number of prominent latino leaders in los angeles and they begin to talk about another council member, mike bonan a white man
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with a black son. she begins to talk about an incident they were at a parade together with the child and she alleges this child was misbehaving, trying to jump off the rails. she was afraid that the parade float would tip over and then she makes these comments. take a listen. >> there is this white guy with a little black kid who is misby haifing. a little white kid i'm like this kid needs a beatdown. let me take him around the corner and i'll bring him back. >> she also goes on to say that he handled his child like an accessories and described him in spanish as a monkey. of course, she apologized for all of these comments but for the parents, these apologies are not enough. they not only called for her to resign as the president but they want her to resign as a member of the city counsel. her and the other members who
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are heard in this recording. i want to get to the statement from the parents' of the child because that's important, as well. here is what they're saying. they're saying we're appalled, angry and absolutely disgusted that martinez attacked our son with horrific racist slurs and talked about her desire to physically harm him. it is vile and utterly disgraceful. they did go on to talk about in this statement about an effort to weaken the black political power here in los angeles and of course this is coming weeks before an election where l.a. voters will design their next mayor and a number of city counsel seats here. people here of course, are very upset. >> yeah. understandably. camilla, thank you. mara s. campo is the host of tv's "last words." some people say this is a
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diverse city, los angeles, are you surprised someone would say t this? >> this speaks to the narrative a lot of people believe of these alliances between marginalized communities and communities of color, which is true sometimes but proves to be a false narrative which is what we're seeing here where some politicians view these alliances not as alliances but a zero sum game, us service them and speaks to the broader context of this call which the reporter just mentioned there, which is that a lot of people say this call was really about diluting black political power. any political figure speaking this way about a child in particular is completely wrong and points to the larger issue and context of the call which as i noted about diluting political power among black voters.
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>> again, nori martinez resigned as counsel president but not resigned from the city counsel. do you think other conversations can survive politically? >> i don't know if they can but i don't think they should. we talk how political discord evolved in this time but in the context of today's political climate what we heard was awful. a political leader referring to a black child with an overt racial slur and saying she wanted to take him around the corner and beat him. and then the others on the call, not saying anything to challenge that and at some point your silence makes youcomplae compli. if you're on a child and someone is speaking that way about a child and you say nothing, that
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means you don't deserve to hold elected office. >> let's turn to kayne and this tweet taken down. he's been -- his instagram acc account, twitter is restricted where he says he's going to go deaf con three on jewish people. when you saw this from kanye, what did you think? >> what is interesting is gotten in the past over and over and over again where he completely invalidated the suffering of africans by saying slavery was a chose and he stalked his ex-wife and released videos fanaticizing about murdering her new boyfriend and continues to get passes because people say he's mentally ill or a genius, this is part of his genius. at some point enough has to be enough. so when i saw this tweet, i had to ask myself is this finally enough? is this finally the point where
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the platforms say a suspension just shutting down his account temporarily is not enough. let's be clear, what he is doing is very dangerous. if the last few years have taught us anything, it's that words and rhetoric can translate into action and they can be incredibly dangerous and when we talk about anti-semitism in particular, history has shown us how incredibly dangerous this is. so it's time to say enough is enough and in this case with kanye, he's proven that there is no line that he is not willing to cross. let's be clear. a lot of things can be true at the same time. he may be suffering from mental illness. he may be a genius. he can be a self-hating anti black musical artist. it is time to turn that microphone off. >> yeah, it's interesting you bring up the genius past ts he s because he'll release a new shoe and album and the demographics, the demos that fill the stadiums
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and line up for the shoes are opposed to his political views and views about slavery being a choice. we'll see if this is different. up to this point, it has not been. thank you, good to have you. >> thank you, victor. officials in lee county florida say the death toll is rising. we're live from ft. myers with the latest on the devastation, next. what's the #1 retinol brand used most by dermatologists? it's neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair® smooths the look of fine lines in 1-week, deep wrinkles in 4.
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parts of florida ravaged by hurricane ian are ready to get students back into class. in sarasota they have a faphase reopening and in ft. myers beach families returned to their homes to see the damage. more on the recovery effort. what are the people seeing when they get back to ft. myers beach? >> reporter: yeah, victor, it's absolute devastation here and destr destruction. that's what they're coming back to. maybe they're going back to their home, their condo orb or business. behind me used to be a strip of fun on the beach. you would have had a dance club, dance floor, club, restaurant, bar, souvenir shop. everything is open. mangled metal, hanging wires and uprooted infrastructure and pipes and everything else
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because the storm surge came from here and went in and ripped everything out back towards the sea. we've spoke with business owners that are having a really hard time because they weren't able to even be eligible for flood insurance right here and we spoke to some homeowners that say they're really learning more about their policies right now, as well. take a listen. >> opened my house and it was the mud. it's -- i'm on my second round of cleaning mud. the insurance adjustor was here. it turns out unbeknown to me that i thought hurricane insurance covered surge because that's part of the hurricane. it does not. my previous insurance company dropped florida period. so i mean, that was -- i was left in the limbo. >> reporter: and that's really what a lot of people are learning is that storm surge is considered flooding and you would need flood insurance for
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that so other homeowners insurance doesn't qualify so many people are having to get help by fema or state agency. for small business owners they're in a mind because fema doesn't help them. they're offering loans. people with restaurants here tell me they already had small business loans. they already had covid relief loans they were trying to pay back and took out second mortgages on their own homes to fund these businesses on the beach to live that dream out and have generational wealth, something to pass on to their children and now, victor, they have nothing. >> remarkable there. the thank you for the reporting. > >>. a new study is raising the question of colonoscopies and how much it reduces the risk of colon cancer deathth. we'll have that for you ahead.
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a new study just out about kol on os copies looked at thousands of people who had the procedure and thousands who did not and the findings are surprising. let's bring in elizabeth cohen. elizabeth, what did they find? >> reporter: the study found that kothey work. let's first look at the results of the study. what they found when they looked at 12,000 people in three european countries, poland, norway and sweden. it reduced their cancer risk by 30%, and reduced the risk of dying from colon cancer by 50%. u.s. studies show an even more dramatic benefit of col
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colonoscopies. in europe, and i know this sounds weird to american ears, they don't sedate people for colonoscopies. so people are in pain and they squirm around and it might make doctors not as aggressive as american doctors working on patients that are sedated. in europe, it's not standard to get a colonoscopy. what they found is only 42% of the 28,000 people they invited to get screened, only 42% of them said yes. so certainly, there's more work to be done there to explain the benefit of colon cancer screening to folks in those european countries. >> had no idea they happen without sedation, but i understand how that could reduce the effectiveness there.
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for people with a history of colon cancer in their family, my grandfather died from cancer whip i was a child, what should those families do? >> i'm sorry to hear that. so folks like you do need to pay special attention. in the united states, the standard recommendation is start getting colon cancer screening at age 45. if you have a family history, talk to your doctor about getting screened even younger than 45. >> elizabeth cohen, thank you so much. with territorial losses mounting, russia launched several deadly missile attacks in ukraine. we're live in kyiv with the fallout, next. before... & bath fitter. before.. & bath fitter.
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>> a bleak jobs forecast. bank of america is warning the u.s. economy could start losing jobs each month beginning early next year. 175,000 of them. cnn's alison kosik is with us now to explain. not the only warning, though, about the economy today. >> reporter: it's not. i'll get to the point you just mentioned. the other worry that turned the market like that was during an interview with jamie dimon, jpmorgan's ceo. it aired on cnbc. and like a light switch, stocks went from flat to tanking more than 200 points. they recovered as you can see,
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but what he said is what many have been thinking, that it's likely the united states will enter a recession. this coming up from the biggest bank in the u.s. he put a time frame on when he thinks this will happen. listen to this. >> currently, right now, the u.s. economy is still doing well. but you can't talk about the economy without talking about the stuff in the future. this is serious stuff. these are very, very serious things, which is likely to push the u.s. and the world. europe is already in a recession, likely to put the u.s. in some kind of recession six, nine months from now. >> reporter: so we're not there yet. in part, because the labor market is so strong. we learned that on friday, that in september, 263,000 jobs were added to the economy. but as you mentioned, victor, another big bank is warning today that the labor market, yeah, that too will start to crack. bank of america warning in a note that the federal reserve's aggressive moves of hiking
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interest rates will cause the u.s. economy to begin losing tens of thousands of jobs a month beginning early next year, to the tune of 175,000 job losses a month in the first part of next year. but the bank does see that -- the bank thinks that the recession will be mild, but i'll tell you what, any mild recession, we don't want to see any recession, but mild means fewer job losses. victor? >> give me some good news about holiday discounts. >> reporter: you want a holiday discount? then you better start shopling soon. because i don't know if you have noticed, but retail chains are pulling out the stops already. christmas trees are on the floor at costco's, lowe's, you're seeing target offer their earliest access to holiday deals beginning october 6. did you notice amazon is hosting a new prime day sales event? so we're get thing holiday creep. what w