tv CNN Tonight CNN November 1, 2022 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT
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>> all right, in case you had noticed, one week from tonight, polls are going to close all cross the country. we will be following the votes all night long and probably the following days after that right here on cnn. starting tonight, we are going to focus on some of the key races that are going to decide the future of this country. >> so tonight we begin with battleground georgia. and cnn senior data her data reporter harry enten is here with us. he is awake, he is alive, he is at the magic wall, he's fired up and ready to go. as we can see -- harry, we love having you here.
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so tell us what's happening in the georgia senate race. >> look, look how close this is. this is the forecast for the georgia senate race. herschel walker with 49%, raphael warnock with 49%. normally, we don't include libertarian candidates but i have here chase all of our at 2%. why? because the rules in georgia basically stipulate that if the leading candidate does not, in fact, get a majority of the vote on election day november their will in fact be a runoff come december. and right now the forecast suggests that neither herschel walker nor raphael warnock will reach a majority of the vote. i just want to point out how important georgia is in terms of winning control of the united states senate. if herschel walker wins, the democrats chance of retaining control of the senate is just 26%. if raphael warnock winds, look at that, it jumps up to 76%. so, whoever wins georgia has a pretty good job of controlling the senate overall. and here is the only other thing i will sort of point out. the fact that georgia is so close -- look at all of these races right now. our zona, pennsylvania, georgia, nevada, all within three points. democrats must win, probably
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three of these four races. and right now it is just way too close to call. >> i know this is your super bowl, baby, i know how excited you are. tell us about the georgia governor's race. >> yeah, so if the georgia's governor races -- this is the forecast for the georgia governor's race, brian kemp with -- just 45%. at this particular point, it looks like kemp will get well above that 50% to avoid that runoff that would occur if he if in fact got less than that or if abrams got less than that. at this point, the governor's race, brian kemp is the clear favorite heading into election day. >> harry enten, thank you very, much great to have you on the program. >> my pleasure. >> all right, color, i think this calls for a dueling panel. -- going on in georgia. >> i hear them getting excited behind you. >> they are! >> -- we will start with you. we have five minutes on the clock. remember -- >> -- >> four minutes.
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>> oh, you didn't know the message? i guess she gets four minutes. sorry. >> all right, four minutes, set the clock, please. and i'm going to bring in s.e. cupp, -- and john avlon. i'm also going to waste some time -- stephen miller of child separation at the border fame, trump aide, he's putting out about how he believes that biden is anti white. >> when did racism against white people become okay? joe biden put white people last in line for covid relief funds. kamala harris said disaster aid you go to non-white citizens first. liberal politicians block access to medicine based on skin color. progressive corporations, airlines, universities -- all openly discriminate against white americans. racism is always wrong. the lefts anti white bigotry must stop. >> i have to read the statement from stephen miller's outlet
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called america first legal. our advertisements make the point that racism is always wrong, regardless of who it is targeted against. does it? the goal of our educational advertisements that afl's advertising simply inform the american people about something they all knew to be true in 2022 but that major news outlets failed to report. unknown should face racial discrimination regardless of the circumstances. s.e. cupp, he thinks airlines are corporations discriminate against white people. his level of victimization knows no bounds. >> you know, this kind of garbage is partly why we are here today with paul pelosi in the hospital, with a shortage of election workers, because they are too afraid to go and do their job, with judges and public officials and lawmakers needing extra security, because of death threats and threats to their family. because trump and republicans, some years ago, decided to tell
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every white man in america to be a favorite of afraid of everybody else. -- and everybody else is coming for you. that meant the media was lying to you, minorities are coming for your jobs. women are coming to emasculate you. the deep state is coming to -- i don't know -- raid mar-a-lago. >> -- >> whatever it was, they were coming for you. and you need to hate them. and the white male grievance machine has brought us here to very scary times. so, that ad -- that ad -- is the culmination of, and i think sort of the trigger, the catalyst, of so much of this awful political rhetoric and violence. >> -- this is running in georgia right now. i'm so confused. stephen miller want voters to vote for herschel walker? or would he prefer they vote for a white candidate? >> i don't know. i think stephen miller throwing stuff up against the wall to see what sticks. >> -- >> but i will say this.
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i don't think it is a reiteration of something. this is a continuation. and it's a continuation that really began since reconstruction with birth of a nation. i'm going to take it all the way back there. the very first thing was set up a structure of white grievance like they were coming to get you and that message has been used a variety of ways. -- >> this is not new. >> that everything is discriminated against white people and -- this goes back to. -- >> 1865 1866. so, this is jesse helms versus heart mcgahn. the ad where the black hand takes away the white guys paycheck. this is a distillation of white grievance politics we have seen. and i guess kudos to actually distilling it that well but. this is the kind of -- that we see all the time. and it's just racism. >> again, in georgia --
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who does this help? -- >> we know exactly when it's about. -- ultimately against affirmative action. let's do that again. >> panel, thank you very much for that. laura, fascinating, and i'm sorry stephen miller ate up and made it up my. time >> anytime. -- but now i have with me dante sahle-work, dave it's a baby and -- we will start the clock because obviously appeared right now that race is a huge part of this -- particularly in georgia. remember this moment in reaction to what they were saying earlier. senator lindsey graham had to say about walker, the disruption of the so-called liberal narrative. listen to this. >> we are a party of racist. shawn, mean you are racist. the republican party is racist. what happens when the republican party elects and nominates herschel walker, an african american black heisman trophy winner, right, olympian
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-- it destroys the whole narrative. they are scared to death of herschel walker because of herschel walker becomes a republican, maybe every other young child in america of color might want to be a republican. >> is that the fear? is that the goal? is that the thought here? what do you think? you are laughing. >> it's just a grievance. it's this grievance of porous. people call us racist or the complaints about the anti white racism. anti white racism is not a thing. that doesn't exist. racism is systemic. it is something that is backed by power. it is institutional. there is no institutional racism, there is no power structure that is organized against white people. it just doesn't exist? so, this is just the story that republicans are telling? and it's not true that everyone runs around calling the racist all the time. when people do races things people say that. and so i think that it just
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feels like he is using herschel walker right there. he's pointing at him, like, we -- another one of these things that people say -- oh, i can't be racist because my friend's best friend is black. guess, what you actually can be racist and support herschel walker. it is a lot more complicated than that. i'm not saying you are. but the idea that he is saying, like, i can't be, is ridiculous. >> i hear it. what do you think. and why do you think -- the narrative? do you think it is because it is working? >> i don't know if it's working. if you look at the polling numbers, they are neck and neck. it's 40 9:40 92 49, 49, 2. i turned around a little bit, kirsten powers. they are consistent with some of the attacks we've seen on african american conservatives, clarence thomas, thomas byron donalds. the congressional black caucus is now supporting a -- over an african american woman
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veteran who happens to be republican. so i think that there is a lot of race injected into all of this unnecessarily. and it would be nice if we got back on who is qualified, who is the best representative of my personal beliefs? because that is what i'm going to do? >> the thing about that, though, dante, is, i think the reason they often argue that they are not supportive his because being the same race of some of the affinity organizations is does not automatically qualify you are in here you. it has to be the qualifications. >> yeah, it does. and when you look at what herschel walker is and what he has done throughout his life, it does not add up. it does not compare to what raphael warnock has done. he has dedicated his life, his entire life -- is a lifetime of service. and so in the gop comes out there and says that herschel walker is going to be the one that -- the black church will go to. it's just not true. and i think that we have seen that throughout this entire campaign, where the black community more so identifies with raphael warnock, someone
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who has had a lifetime of service, someone who is speaking out for student debt, someone who is speaking out for health care. all these things that most black americans identify with themself. they do not identify with herschel walker at all. >> i wonder if it comes down to the idea, the assumption, that is long as you put a black candidate up, you will -- demographic that will follow. it's not -- they don't obviously just necessarily vote. on that kevin costner reference, boom. >> laura, wow. the timing is impeccable. >> just saying -- >> also, your panel was so provocative that our panel wanted in. -- >> new worlds, new rules. >> israeli yoda coming -- and james earl jones? no, i know it was a -- reference. and there. >> thank you -- go. >> --
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he's positioning right now is the epitome of racism to me. >> how so? >> because he's clearly not qualified for this position. and, yes -- probably anyone they can control because they know what they have him in place he will vote the way they want him to anyone represent where he's coming from. >> that's actually literally the argument that's being. made well, maybe he did pay for some abortions but we know he will vote along mitch mcconnell side. that's the argument that's being made. so, if the argument is, let's get past race, and by the way, we should have more racial and religious diversity between the two parties but if the argument is we have to get past that into qualifications, we'll, you just gotten past yourself. >> okay. i told you it was worth it. >> okay, the only comment. wonderful. -- a perfect conversation and conversation, we are going to keep happening. that's why, alisyn camerota, you've got seven days to go. >> i'm glad you are keeping tabs because i have no idea what date is. but we want to know what you want to think of the georgia race in who you want to have control of the senate. you can keep tweet us at the
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-- >> there's some new video tonight showing -- agents showing -- push venezuelan migrants -- this is at the southern border near el paso texas on monday. that's where officials say several migrants became combative, with a least one throwing a rock, injuring an agent. another reportedly assaulting an agent with a flagpole. let's talk about the border situation and what's really happening. we are back with s.e. cupp, cnn political commentator. -- we have john avlon here as well. john, are enough democrats talking about what's happening at the border? i know republicans are talking
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about it every day. why a republican -- >> offense when it comes to crime. there is no reason to see these issues. this whole fiction that democrats favor open borders's total -- there's a lot of ways to measure that, which is, -- assess the word apprehensions. that implies enforcement. it's not working. the border is a mess. but democrats should be trying to own it and say that we want to pass a bipartisan comprehensive reform. you are not probably going to get that from folks on the far-right but -- >> -- >> they should be talking about it more. and when republicans bring it up as a point of criticizing democrats, they are talking about it. because john, you are absolutely right. to his history is that democrats have always been the ones that have offered comprehensive immigration reform in the last ten years it has been republicans the ones that have completely shut the door on. in 2030 2013 was john boehner that --
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because i cannot have this past with majority democratic votes. in 2017, if you all remember donald trump had the opportunity to be a transformational president on comprehensive immigration reform and he was looking at a deal where he -- -- -- chuck schumer offered him for that deal. -- you guys were talking about him earlier? stephen miller. and he said, absolutely not. -- shut the door, it was republicans, democrats, who have always been of the table to get this done and that's what we need to do. >> and yet the narrative, as you well know, and maybe you have something to say about this, is that democrats don't care about the border, vice president kamala harris who is tasked with it, republicans paint her as being asleep at the switch. so, what has gone wrong here? >> i think that immigration has become too valuable a wedge
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issue for both parties to actually solve it. there is not a reason we cannot solve our immigration problems. but closed borders and kids in cages? that is not a policy solution. nor are sanctuary cities. that's not a policy solution either. and instead, both sides really, i think, use immigration to fearmonger, make people afraid, and it keeps these problems -- what we saw is heartbreaking. you can't assault border cops? and it's assault -- fleeing awful circumstances and being thrown back into mexico. this is heartbreaking all around. and -- >> i hear what you are saying about it being a very handy bogeyman for election years, for sure. but how does it benefit to democrats? >> because then they get to say the republicans are going to jail migrants, send them home, all things republicans have done. but listen, the back and forth, it's very much, to me, like the
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gun debate. the back and forth of, you wear this, you are awful, you are a murderer, you are for this, you are for that, you want to break the constitution -- it gets us nowhere. and i've seen that because i've covered this for as long as you have. i have seen this kind of argument happened over and over again. >> except for, i would say, we can't really both sides this. because democrats were on the verge of doing this. they were looking at the republicans -- there were eight republicans in the senate that we're ready to pat this in 2013. and they did. >> -- >> and some of the same as ones are in congress right now. -- so, it is not both parties, s.e.. in fact, democrats would -- >> i'm not both sides-ing. but the democrats throwing wrenches into quote comprehensive immigration reform, in order to make it impossible for republicans -- >> but we were right here! we were right here. -- in possibility for republicans
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to -- >> john boehner said -- >> no, it was political. >> jeff initially, to get comprehensive immigration reform, you are not going to get the far left, you are not going to get the far right. and that's fine. -- trump's law perhaps and you have to find a way to legalize the undocumented in this country and get a pathway to -- and also work visas. >> that's what most immigrants want, they want legal status. -- >> george bush tried this and he got attacked from the right. -- >> and sanctuary cities, by the way, has never, for democrats, been a solution. it has been something that has been necessary because immigrants have been attacked so horrifically in so many of these places that they had to come up with something so that -- >> by date hasn't been temporary. there is been a long -- >> it has evolved, s.e.. >> that's exactly my point -- >> hold on, i want to follow up
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on something you said, john. the wall, that's interesting. it's interesting to think about how you might have to finish trump's wall. because it's been demonized, as you, know by the democrats, who at one time actually, decades ago, thought that might be a solution. >> -- democrats -- more money for border security, for sure. but if you want good faith, comprehensive immigration reform, you are going to have to give something to republicans that gives them cover. >> 25 billion dollars in security that we were giving! >> the symbolism of the wall is powerful to some folks, find. the -- stop demagoguing this issue and start dealing with it. and that's going to mean both sides are going to give in the far left and far right are not going to like it. and that's fine. >> but don't you agree with s.e., -- too handy of an election wedge issue? >> it can't be. >> no. and i have to say, alisyn camerota, for democrats, it's not. this is an issue that is personal to me. as an immigrant, i understand,
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i know these people that are desperate and are coming over, fleeing fascism, by the way -- >> right there -- >> people that's republicans should embrace and want to come over here -- >> refugee status. >> refugee status -- that has said absolutely no more immigrants or migrants. >> it's a culture war now. >> -- fleeing maduro's regime, ortega 's regime, these are major problems that are fueling this. but if you are coming here for refugee status you deserve, don't attack the border patrol with the foreign flag, for god sakes. >> -- okay, laura? >> it's pretty incredible to think about where you are, alisyn. i'm sitting here listening and thinking about these notions. and immigration, this is such a lightning rod conversation and one in which i think will be the evergreen conversation in
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the ballot box. in fact, jim jordan, the congressman from ohio, is talking about this and i asked him the question, look, what if republicans are the ones to get the majority? what is the plan to address these issues? -- bogeyman. here's his response. >> so, how do you intend, as a republicans, if you are the majority, to call a totally open border? which, you know, you have to agree, is a hyperbole? but how do you intend to curb legal immigration? >> what would you call 2.3 million people who come into our country? that half 1 million known got away -- homeland security. and then all the people we don't know about. what would you call that -- what would you say -- how is that not going from a secure border to no border? >> but you attributed exclusively to the biden administration. >> -- but yet mayorkas will sit in front of our committee and say, the border is secure. you just want to laugh at the guy. the border is secure and you
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can't answer a question about the people on the terrorist watchlist? the answer is to go back to the policies that were working. but the left can't do that. because, no, no, no, those were trump policies, those were conservative policies, those were common sense policies the country actually wanted. so, the left can't go back to that and that's why we are in this ridiculous situation. >> alisyn, for anyone who tells you the trump shadow is not a looming on these issues, it's always a notion of, your was -- talking about the whataboutism and what's happening. this is the conversation that people are really having about open borders, about who was able to curve it best, about the crisis, or the non crisis. this is what we are talking about. >> yeah, and as our panel was just noting, congressman jim jordan is a little slippery. >> yeah, yeah. you had a great question for him. and everybody was all ears, laura. and he said, let's go back to the policies. but he immediately doesn't spell out with those policies -- >> kids in cages? is that what we go back to?
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>> but yeah, exactly. first of all, any -- get this done. but actually, ironically, part of the thing that the biden team -- title 42 -- >> -- >> but just to walk out on everybody for a second, that's led to a high degree of recidivism across the border. because people are not processed. it's part of the trump policies that are in place that are leading to the recidivists crossing the border. we'll talk. >> look, i'm going to -- we want in, we want to. and we are going to come back after a quick break. you know what, it's coming right now. we are going to talk about this with our panel as well in just a moment. and by the, way president obama was also speaking. we are going to talk a little bit about what he had to say as well on the other side of a break, alisyn. >> we will be right back. for your most brilliant smile, crest has you covered.
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>> when i -- test in math and sometimes i didn't study. [laughs] straight up to late the night before. and it would be nice if you could just write down eight for every answer. you just have the same answer every over and over again. except, you know what? that is the wrong answer. and the republican policies, they are not going to help you. but that is why democrats actually have plans to take on drug companies, to lower prices, to get the oil industry to clean up its act. [applause] the pass laws to make housing more affordable, to make sure the corporations
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are putting jobs in nevada instead of overseas. they have got a plan. that is the choice in this election. that is what this is a bat about. there's plenty -- >> margaret tallow, david safavian, and kirsten powers are all with me. that's -- in those who have a chance to criticize. that what you are seeing as a choice before the american people -- >> i look at obama out there and the person i feel most sorry for his joe biden. because he pales by comparison. the fact that biden is not there, and obama's. that tells you a bit more about how this white house is linking and what's its internal polls look like. i come back to obama and he is -- i've got to say, he's a likable guy. i see him on screen and i want to go have a beer with him until he starts attacking
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republicans and then i start backing off. but he's an incredibly effective communicator and i think he highlights just all of those challenges the biden white house is dealing with. >> he's the criticism justified, kirsten powers? of republicans? >> which one? >> on the failure in absence of a plan? >> -- i think the republicans have been very, very good at fearmongering, about saying, here are the things that are wrong and a lot of the things are legitimately wrong. some of them they are exaggerating. but they are focusing on things that are scaring people. but obama is right, they are not telling you they're going to do anything different. it's not like they are going to solve that problem. they are just pinning every problem in the world on joe biden, whether it is his fault or not. you can't really blame joe biden for inflation. it's not something that just happened because of something joe biden did it. happened for a lot of different reasons. he's the president. he will be held accountable for it. but i think what democrats are starting to argue and that i
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think obama has been arguing is, basically, what are republicans going to do about it? because that's not really what they talk about. they just attack democrats. >> let's take a quick timeout here. because democrats control the white house, the senate and the house. they drove the inflation driving legislation through the last year. >> that's debatable. that's debatable. >> that's not debatable. >> -- if you go back to what economists say caused inflation, it's not -- >> you can ask larry summers. >> i don't think larry summers would say that one bill is responsible entirely for inflation. i think it would probably say that there are other issues that contributed to it, supply chain issues, the fact that we had a global pandemic -- >> fuel prices. >> -- plenty of criticism to go around. but it's not -- snap their fingers and -- >> the point i think you are -- make probably, as well, is, -- talking point is to be
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reductive. the idea of trying to condense and synthesize in a way that is eliciting an evoking of additional reaction. and that's part of what is happening. the midterms are a test for the party in power and democrats, by the thinnest of margins, are the party in power, through a global pandemic that has driven malaysia and major entrenched economic problems and all of those right now are overpowering what democrats were hoping could be a debate about women's rights or reproductive rights or democracy or any of these other things. anytime we fill up the gas pump, you are faced with the implications of this and anytime you are pay or your grocery bills you are facing the implications of this and whether or not it is democrats fault or whether it would have happened to a republican president and marginally republican-led congress doesn't matter because right now it's a referendum on the party in power. so, that's where we are. but i think when we are making the closing arguments for the democratic party, you are trying to do two things.
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and what is, you are trying to convince persuadable voters that they should care more about certain issues and less about other issues. and then you are also trying to turnout your base. you try to turn out people who may believe very strongly in the democrat's case that the democrats are better representatives of them but may feel deflated, unenthusiastic, may feel that it is already over. and so it is two different groups who are trying to turn out. obama, to your point, is a very effective communicator. >> i want to hear him one more time here because he is actually speaking about an issue -- and i appreciate the civility of this conversation -- he actually addresses the idea of under the rhetoric. it's not what is happening at this table. >> and then you have got this erosion of just basic civility. and democratic norms. you've got politicians who, instead of wanting to bring people together, do their best to step division. and make us angry and afraid of
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one another. all three for their own advantage. and all this gets amped up. it gets hyped up. 24/7 on social media. because they find it more profitable to stir up controversy and conflict then to lift up the truth and facts. >> this idea of divisive rhetoric and what's happening -- i mean, there's a lot of truth to the idea that there is something, there is some form of an appetite for the rhetoric. and it's being exploited. who, though, is the question -- who is to blame for that incitement? >> everyone. everyone is to blame for that incitement. i don't know about you, but when i surf on social media, i have to check myself because i'm always looking for things that reinforce my own views, right? and then we all get into that feedback, and the next thing you know, we think our neighbor is the antichrist. but at the end of the day, it
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is a little bit hard to swallow that the white house has clean hands here when you look at just, what was it, two months ago, joe biden marched out in front of that big red backdrop and was beating the snot out of maga republicans? for a guy who campaigned as a great uniter, it's a little hard to swallow? >> what do you think. >> i have to say, i think joe biden, as far as politicians go, runs pretty highly on the civility test. he is somebody who does speak kindly about people in the other party. it's something he ran on. i think that in order to unite a country you have to have people who want to unite. and i'm not sure that there are people who are really buying what he's selling. and criticizing maga republicans is not criticizing all republicans. there are lots of republicans who don't necessarily agree with that. and i think there are some highly problematic things that have happened. i think that donald trump, i
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guess you would disagree with me, despite an outsized role in creating this more divisive environment in the way that he spoke as president and there are a lot of people that follow his lead. but i also think that you are right that we are all responsible for what we do. and we can't use that as an excuse. we can't say, because someone -- >> i've been wondering to see, alisyn, with the former president obama had to say about this vicious, brutal attack on the speaker of the house, nancy pelosi's husband, and actually he weighed in on this point tonight, speaking about the civility and the rhetoric and the consequences. listen to this. >> a friend of mine, mr. paul pelosi, was attacked viciously -- somebody broke into his home, looking for his wife, nancy. nancy pelosi, the speaker of the house -- and thankfully, i spoke to paul a couple days ago. and he's going to be okay.
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but even as investigators do their job and find out what, exactly, motivated this person, one thing is clear. this increasing and a bit of demonizing political opponents creates a dangerous climate. and elected officials who do not explicitly reject or participate in over the top rhetoric, if that is what they are doing instead -- if they just ignore or make light of that kind of violence, or if they encourage their supporters to stand outside voting places armed with guns interest in tactical gear, if that is the environment that we create, more people are going to get hurt. >> alison alisyn, obviously,
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it's for repeating, he talked about this earlier today, because we know this is in perpetual motion, the idea of the consequences of this rhetoric. >> i also heard him say something interesting there. he said we. he said we are locked. i think that's a device that you use when you are trying to unite as opposed to saying they, they, they always do this. he was just saying, if that's the climate we are creating -- and just so i think that in that little way there is that way to not demonize and put someone into that other category. >> the great orator, for many say, for those reasons. -- acknowledged the all in together. but will it actually be appreciated by the electorate in the endgame? how many days from now, alisyn? seven days away, still. >> i think you are really going to enjoy this next segment. because i know it's something you and i have bonded over.
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and i think every human being has some frustration. and we are about to talk about it. because from grocery stores to pharmacies to airports, we are all doing our own check out. why? whatever happened to humans? i miss humans. [laughs] our panel has a lot to say about that next. >> oh my gosh. with new chapter multi-vitamin gummies, you get so much more than just... mmm. ... more nutrients. more research and more organic ingredients. yoalso get less sugar and that means less ndy posing as vitamins. new chapter. that's wellness, well ne. in the next second, fourteen families will decide... that's it. we're getting a bigger house! finally. but we got to sell this place. before we buy the next place. and then, in the meantime. so, how long are you staying? emily no! ooh a little cramped. i am cpap man.
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i d d so my y quesonons eouout hicacase.y y son, ♪ call one eight hundred, cacalledhehe bars s fillion ♪ i d d soit was the best call eouout hii could've made. call the barnes firm and find out what your case all could be worth.uld've made. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ >> have you gone into a
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supermarket or drugstore lately, laura? >> yep. >> if so, you have probably been asked to scan your own items at the self checkout. and if you are like me, that makes you want to run screaming out of the store. well, how about that machine actually -- it can also make you want to scream. it happened to me this morning. >> indeed it does. and what about when you are checking your bags at an airport? wouldn't it help to talk to a human? to put it plainly, i miss humans. >> -- before getting on a flight. -- but if all of this sounds like you, out there, well guess what, you are not alone. washington post columnist rick riley is out with a piece today titled, the grocery store owners, i don't work for you. he says, why do i have to bring up my own groceries? >> why do we have to beg my own groceries? why do i have to get yelled up by the robo nag or -- the bagging area isn't big enough to fit a roll of
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lifesavers. i want to bring back my panel s.e. cupp, maria cardona, and john avlon, who have had this experience. i was at a mcdonald's last week and had to bring up my order on this keyboard. it doubled the time. -- >> i'm not trained in this. >> i'm not trained. >> i'm not trained either. >> and why is this concept never any were useful, like the dmv? i'd love to check myself out of there -- >> or somewhere fun, like the bar? i love to get behind there and check myself out. that would actually be helpful. >> furthermore, i'm not trying to steal stuff. but i am stealing stuff inadvertently because, i don't know if the thing is working, if it is actually registering it. and we've just putting it in my back in just waltzing out. >> exactly, and then the robo nagger --
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is that what they call it? >> it's not only put the item in the area, it's double check the item. maybe it's in there, maybe it's not. how many bags are you using? you gave me tiny bags. maybe zero. i'm sure they're losing money on this. >> it's certainly done in the name of vicious unsee, and obviously, decreasing the number of people they have to employ. but it's not more efficient for their customer. and it's a great humor column. >> it's what we all were thinking. >> exactly. i don't work at grocery stores. apparently i work at american airlines to, cvs, target, i've checked myself out more than a seventh grade girl on tiktok. that's a good line. >> i wonder if it's generational. because my kids love it. >> they love it? that's a big word for this. >> in fact, when i'm in the middle of it, trying to figure it out, they are like, mama, they grab it and they do it. >> that's their way. >> i'm trying to bring humans back. >> that's what i want. >> okay, it's time for you to all sound off. we will read your tweets on this next.
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incredible right? what's more you get all the support you need all from here. sitting right here. >> all right, time to sendoff. let's see what you are seeing out there tonight. this one on self checkouts's from paul white. shouldn't we get an employee discount for self checkout? >> yes, yes laura. -- the self checkout lines take longer because nobody knows what to do. i agree with you, i miss humans. there you go. >> here we go, also in self checkouts, it's very popular one, from sara manson. i don't you self checkouts. these machines have replaced cashiers, who don't make much money as it is. i'd rather have a human catcher back by purchase and get paid to do so. >> me too. we are all in agreement.
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i hope that cvs and walgreens and albertsons and everybody who is listening -- everybody's unanimous. we want to deal with human beings. >> until we don't. and of course, you know where to find a stew human beings, alisyn camerota and the laura coates. >> thanks so much for watching, everybody. >> our coverage continues. pe. that's certified head turns. and it's all backed by our unlimited mileage warranty. that means unlimited peace of mind. mercedes-benz certified pre-owned. translation: the mercedes of your dreams is closer than you think. in two seconds, eric will realize they're gonna need more space... gotta sell the house. oh...open houses. or, skip the hassles and sell with confidence to opendoor. wow. request a cash offer at opendoor.com
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i have people come up to me all the time and ask me, "does it really work?" and all i have to say is, "here i am. it works." my advice for everyone is to go with golo. it will release your fat and it will release you. good evening. we begin tonight with breaking news. according to authorities, the man charged with trying to kill paul pelosi and separately cues of planning to hold how speaker, nancy pelosi, captive and break her kneecaps, told officers on the scene, quote, this was a suicide mission. david depape was in court today in san francisco. thos
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