tv CNN This Morning CNN December 14, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PST
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texas tech. >> the thing on the screen there is just a little too sure for my taste. me personally, expect sun. go out there, expect sun. have a good time. if you run into the bad stuff. don't let that ham p your day. don't be a coward. enjoy your day. this weather report here, what do i know. i'm a football coach. go out and get out of bed, go outside. do what i do. the then you know. >> christine, that was at my old station. interviewed leach many times. amazing person. he will be missed. >> think of the impact he's had on so many lives. >> thanks, andy. nice to see you. thank you for joining me. i'm christine romans. "cnn this morning" starts right now. ♪
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we got in the shower, like i said, and by the time we got hunkered down, it was gone, the roof was gone. they always say you hear a train coming. this was a big train that come through here. >> that is the truth. man, that was a woman in farmerville, louisiana, talking about the damage the tornado left behind overnight. we'll take you there live in just a moment. good morning, everyone. >> good morning. >> first, top congressional negotiators say there's been a break through on a sending bill that would keep the government funded for a full year. also ftx founder, sam bankman-fried now being held without bail after being arrested in the bahamas, despite asking a judge to release him due to his vegan diet and add. why the biden administration is preparing for a surge at the southern border. medicines disappearing from
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store shelves. what is causing the shortage. good news on capitol hill. negotiators announcing they have an agreement on a framework of a spending deal that will keep the government funded for a full year. lauren fox joins us from capitol hill this morning. a deal and it's 10th hour not the 11th hour, i guess. >> reporter: exactly. this is a significant step forward after being in a long jam for several weeks. they announced last night they have an agreement on a framework, they have to negotiate hundreds of pages and dole out millions and billions of dollars for the u.s. government. but obviously this is a significant break through, development. and senator roy blunt, a republican aprop rater told me yesterday they were getting down to the final seconds it was going to be physically possible to move the bill through the house, the senate, and get it signed by the president before the christmas holiday. >> one thing that's so notable,
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this is reporting from you and your colleagues overnight, the divide between mitch mcconnell wanting to get something done and kevin mccarthy, soon maybe to be house majority leader, and i -- i guess i can say this at 6:00 a.m., hell no, that's a quote from him on supporting the agreement. what does that mean for all of this? >> reporter: there's a group of people in washington who are lawmakers who we like to refer to as a vote no, hope yes group of people. i think that's where kevin mccarthy is right now. he knows getting this bill passed before he takes the speakers gavel, if he takes the speakers gavel is going to be a huge break through for him. because he knows he's looking over his right shoulder for the months ahead, and he probably couldn't get a deal with democrats because there are so many concessions he has to give
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to conservatives. kevin mccarthy telling his caucus yesterday he was a hell no on the spending deal, this gives you a preview of what it looks like with a democrat senate, the house led by republican kevin mccarthy and the democratic white house. >> great. vote no, hope yes. a crisis at the southern border. biden administration sending additional border patrol agents to el paso, texas amid a surge in illegal crossings this comes as a trump era policy, known as title 42 is set to end. now these 19 republican led states is asking a federal appeals court to keep title 42 in place. straight now to priscilla alvarez, live for us in washington d.c. this is being called a federal crisis, situation on the border
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right now. >> reporter: that's right. simply put this is a challenge of too many people and not enough personnel and resources and it's unfolding in el paso, texas, which is seeing 2,500 migrants per day. this is a city of about 700,000 people. it's a strain on their infrastructure, transportation, shelter and city officials -- >> you say we have new reporting on growing concerns as title 42 comes to an end? >> reporter: homeland security officials tell me they're worried. lawmakers are calling the officials on a more frequent basis as the termination looms. we learned about a call with senate majority leader chuck schumer and president biden's chief of staff ron kline about those concerns and what is going to happen along the u.s./mexico
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border and it speaks to what is a very complex policy and political moment for this administration. >> thank you very much. kaitlan? also this morning the so-called crypto king, sam bankman-fried is waking up call ceo of ftx a flight risk as he awaits extradition to the united states to face fraud charges. what instruct me was hearing the u.s. attorney for the southern district saying you can commit fraud in a t-shirt and shorts. >> reporter: that's exactly right, kaitlan. as for the 30-year-old, throughout that entire hearing he kept his head down for most of it. as you said, he told the judge that he was going to go ahead and fight the extradition to the u.s.
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and you can understand why. because if he is convicted of the charges out of new york city, he's facing a possibility of up to 115 years in prison. now during the hearing, sam bankman-fried also told the judge that he's been taking medication for some time now to treat insomnia, depression, as well as attention deficit disorder. it's a point his attorney wanted to convey ahead of the judge's decision that he was going to be denied bail. the judge of course made sure to tell him that that medication could continue to be made available to him while he is in prison here in nasau. >> i understand his parents were there when he got arrested and now they're also facing scrutiny. what's going on? >> reporter: so both his parents have been in the bahamas for several days now, at least that's what we're being told. his mother and father were in court yesterday, they sat behind
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me throughout this entire hearing. the two of them did not want to talk about the allegations made against their son and they did not want to talk about the fact that ftx's new ceo said the two of them are being looked into, the role they may have played in the company. >> carlos, thank you so much. if you have been dealing with a sick child lately, you've probably had trouble finding over the counter medicine, tylenol, motrin. it's happening all over the country, children's painkillers, fever reducers are in high demand. dr. tara narula joins us now. >> the shelves look like that? >> they do. >> so many pharmacies. they all look like that. this is not just the brand names. it's the store names, too,
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ibup ibuprofen, the generics why is it happening? >> it's a demand issue as we were discussing. the combination of covid, rsv, and the flu, it can be unsettling to open your medicine cabinet and not have them there. we talked about drugs like apox sill lin and adderall, but for something like this it's a staple. the fda is not labelling this a true shortage but you see the pictures, there are issues. manufacturers say they are working 24/7 to resolve this issue. hopefully in the next couple weeks the shelves will be restocked but for the time being it's tough for parents and they may have to go to different stores to find what they need or try different brands. >> was it last week that poppy asked -- >> it was a good question, ask it again. >> she's a parent and you're the
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doctor. i said, can you manage -- can you split the pill? like an adult-sized pill? >> it's not a great idea. there are ways to do it but the recommendation is if you are going to do that talk to your pharmacist and doctor to walk you through how to do that. there are other no noes, don't give your child aspirin under the age of 18, it can cause a condition known as rye syndrome. you also don't want to put them in a cold bath. you feel your kid burning up, if the temperatures rise too fast it can cause a seizure. parents may have other ove over-the-counter drugs, but they may have things your child doesn't need. so don't give them those. but there are things to do. it's important to remember if you can't give tylenol, you may be able to give motrin or advil,
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if the child is over 6 months. you can give the generic versions or chewables if the child is over two. and not every fever needs to be treated. if they're over 3 months and they're able to eat and drink and active, it's not necessary to treat -- the fever is the body's natural response to fighting infection. cold compresses work. keeping the kid -- a lot of times i remember my parents put a lot of clothes on me to make me sweat. actually you want to take the clothes off and let them cool off and keep the room cool. there are other things to do. >> good reminder. you can switch off ibuprofen and motrin and tylenol. they work different. four hours is tylenol, six is
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motrin. >> exactly. read the time. >> appreciate it, dock. it's hard to believe that ten years marks a tragedy striking connecticut. a gunman entered sandy hook elementary school and killed 20 elementary school students and six adults. >> coming across, connecticut state police responding to reports of a shooting. >> heartbreaking news from a law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation that close to 20 people have been killed at a school shooting and among them, at least 10 are children. >> it was when they told the parents all these parents were waiting for their children to come out. they thought they were still alive. there's 20 parents that were just told their children are dead. >> the majority of those who died today were children.
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beautiful little kids between the ages of 5 and 10 years old. >> they had their entire lives ahead of them, birthdays, graduations, weddings, kids of their own. >> very, very emotional moment for the president of the united states. dare i say for all of america. much of the world right now. you don't often see a president of the united states showing such emotion, wiping away tears as he speaks of these little kids, 5 to 10-year-old kids, the majority of the victims were killed in the mass shooting in connecticut. >> later on in the show we'll talk to a sandy hook survivor, she was a second grader at the time, she is now 17 years old.
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> . >> it's the worst day. >> yeah. it's the worst day. when you do this business for a while. there are things you remember, stories that change your life. >> this one. >> this is probably the one that changed me as a person, being -- reporting the breaking news and getting off the anchor desk and rushing there and seeing those people. i hate to share this story but i think it's important. i remember being there, ten days i forget what it was, funerals were going on, and it was my last live shot. and i was -- i was like, i don't know how much longer i can do it. it's my last live shot, a little coffin, there was a dad on one side and a mom on the other side with their heads on the window. and i remember them saying after the live shot, you're clear, you can go home. and i thought, i can go home,
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but these people can't go home. that they are going to have to live with for the rest of their lives and for me it was ending and i was happy to get in the car and go home but for them it was just beginning of their lives without their children. it changed all of us, don't you agree? >> i didn't have kids yet. but i went days after you guys, i was up there a few days later because i was away when it happened. and sat down with the coroner and the funeral director. the only funeral director in the town. who had to bury 11 of the 26. and from that day forward, i knew that everything that matters -- that's everything that matters is your kids. we'll be joined by a survivor later as you said. >> not just the fact that she's 17, i think that's so striking to people. my little sister was their age
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when this happened, she was in kindergarten. she's 16 now. it was something i drove home from college that day and we just -- >> because of it -- >> we were going home anyway, but it really changed the perspective. i think for everyone. to see the parents of those children how they used the last decade to speak out. they used that in a way to honor the lives of their children. >> they keep going. i can't wait to hear from her. thank you for sharing all of that, everyone. we move on now. after president biden signed the respect for marriage act into law, i sat down with the survivors of the mass shooting at the lgbtq nightclub. we're live on the ground after a tornado ripped through louisiana. you can see the destruction here. >> it was sitting over here in the wood.
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love is love. right is right. justice is justice. these things are fundamental things that america thinks matter. >> that was the president of the united states, joe biden, speaking at the white house as he signed the respect for marriage bill into law. the landmark legislation will provide new federal protections for same sex and interracial couples. the signing comes three weeks since the deadly shooting at club q in colorado springs last month, where a gunman killed five and injured many more. i spoke with club q owner matthew hanes, shooting survivor james slaw, on the importance of
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this new legislation. how are you doing, james? it's been three weeks now since the club q shooting. >> yeah. i'm doing better relatively speaking. i know we did an interview back when i was in the hospital. bullet in my arm, rod through my arm, that surgery. luckily i have a lot of mobility. it's coming back. i still have to go through p.t. most likely. but, you know, better relatively, seeing all of this, this is it. this is like they said, inspiring. that's the best way to put it. >> as the club owner, did you ever think, in a million years obviously this would happen? >> no. >> you've spoken about that. >> i can go further back, as a gay male coming out and struggling when i was coming out, everyone would i imagine i would be here at the white house actually seeing that our right to marry is now protected by federal law. and then, of course, then you
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throw in all our little club in colorado springs that never did we think it would have a voice. and, of course, for the wrong reasons is why we're here, is because we were attacked. and our community was invaded. but again, this is -- we'll use our word, inspiring. inspiring. and it gives you hope and it's actually probably the most uplifting thing, certainly, that i would say all three of us have experienced since the incident happened at club q. >> when i spoke to you right after it happened, you hadn't had much sleep but you were like having trouble putting words together, i am now because i'm exhausted and i'm also overwhelmed by being here, and it's hard to put this into context. did you think three weeks later you'd be standing at the white house with the president of the united states after such a horrific event? >> i did not. but i'll tell you this moment
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today stands alone as something historic that we're all proud of, but with the backdrop of what just happened it shows love overpowers hate a month ago. a month ago i was telling them we never imagined we'd be in washington d.c. and particularly the white house, but we are here. >> does this help, do you think? when you have the president of the united states and the -- and it is now law and people see, you know, families that are part of the lgbtq plus community, do you think it helps bring down the temperature? should we feel hopeful about this? put this into context. >> i think this is a great step in the right direction. we need a lot more, though. it's a lot going on in terms of the negative and rhetoric that's happening right now that we continue to hear that is not something and is amplified by social media.
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and that hate on social media has turned into action. and that's what we saw at club q. and we will continue to see that until we turn that down. today was a great step in the right direction. but we need many, many more. >> so give us some words of encouragement or hope or however you're feeling right now. >> so i'm feeling hopeful. i got into the hospital and my first thoughts were i'm not going to let this beat me. bullets will not stop love. bullets will not stop our community and the majority of the community around us , our allies. we're going to prevail. love wins. >> what was it like? >> the -- let me say something. james has a sister, she was shot five times and she is recovering. she's doing better. there was another young man there who was shot and didn't want to be on camera. >> sorry to jump in. i caught tim and don on with jake yesterday from there.
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>> yeah. >> just to be there what it was like. >> jake tapper, pull tim in. kaitlan, you know what it's like when everyday people come to the white house. you're in awe. it gives it -- people feel how important it is. the whole country is behind you. you have the president of the united states who's saying you are legitimate. basically. that your marriage and your love is legitimate. you know that in your heart but to have it recognized by the president of the united states and the leaders in washington, it just -- you know, it just says that okay, i'm just like every other american. and just -- and having those people there who have been shot and injured in the club was an added thing on top of it that said maybe we're moving in a better direction. >> especially with the rhetoric and what we talked about around the shooting. to see them having a moment is really nice. >> i thought about you. >> why?
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>> you knew me before tim, and previous relationships and all that stuff -- >> >> we've been on a juourney. >> we've been on a journey. this is how we grew up in america, girls think about when i get married, i'm generalizing here, i want this princess wedding. it's normal, right? i never had that. i never thought i'd be married. i never thought the state would legitimize my relationships. but going to your wedding and now going to same sex couples, people are growing up saying i can grow up to be a prince, you can have two princes, two queens. whatever. i'm going to be joining you soon, lady. >> we're going to be with you. >> flower girl?
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>> ring bearer. >> that's a lot of pressure. >> we're really glad you were there, what a day. >> thank you. it is in more ways than one. turning the page to something really fascinating guys that is happening from republican governors across the country calling it a national security concern, they are banning tiktok on government devices on their states. and dr. sanjay gupta is going to join us to fact check governor ron desantis on his latest efforts to cast doubts on covid-19 vaccines.
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morning. coming up on the show in the next few hours we'll take you to farmersville, louisiana where a tornado hit of tvernight, injur at least 20 people. and how john lewis is going to be honored soon. a big debate before world cup ckickoff is lionel messi th greatest of all time. but first, bipartisan legislation to ban tiktok in the united states. citing fears the app could be used to spy on americans by foreign adversaries like china. a tiktok spokesperson responded writing it's troubling rather than encouraging for the administration to conclude the national security review of tiktok some members of congress decided to push for a poli politically motivated ban. this legislation comes as a wave of republican governors in at least ten states have banned
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tiktok on government own dead vices. joining us to talk about this audie cornish and sarah fisher. great to have you. i want to clarify something here. the china concern is because bite dance owns tiktok and that is a chinese -- >> bite dance? >> that's what it's called. that's a huge chinese tech company. tiktok's argument -- they're reviewing it, that's what they mean by congress is reviewing it, the administration. but can you explain here the facts about where this data goes, vis-a-vis china? >> tiktok is owned by a chinese company. when you're a chinese company you're controlled by the state. they have two versions of tiktok, the u.s. and chinese version. what tiktok has tried to argue is that the u.s. version sends no data back to china. however over the past few years there's reports that suggest that maybe the data security
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isn't as tight as it needs to be. as a result tiktok has struck partnerships with oracle, a u.s. data company to ensure those leaks don't happen and the data is secure in the u.s. the problem is people don't trust it. so right now as you mentioned tiktok is under going a national security review. the reason marco rubio and others are taking action outside of the government is they're arguing they're moving too slow. the investigation started in the trump administration in 2020 and it's 2022 and it's still not resolved. >> there's context here, the chinese government mandates potential access, should it choose, to the data for any of the companies that are basically chinese owned. so it's not an unfounded fear and there have been reports about the chinese government's attempts to get access when and where it wants the the broader context is that's all apps. there's been no real attempt
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over the last 25 years to try to regulate data privacy and security. in part because silicone valley and the innovation that our economy is based on is derived from that lax legislation. so there's a broader conversation to be had like how do you control something that is also the engine for innovation under which a lot of the creations of our modern apps are built on, which is us. we're the product. like our data, our privacy. >> i'm really struck by how we talk about tiktok now bassed on how we talked about it in the trump administration. trump tweeted great one night he was going to ban it, it freaked everybody out. but he had a real pursuit saying it needed to be sold, the concerns about what they were sharing, and now it's something that's widely accepted as it is a threat and what to do about it. you hear the treasury secretary
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talk about it, fbi talk about, the way the biden administration says they have concerns about it. it's become a bipartisan concern about the threat it poses potentially. >> one of the reasons for that, in 2020 when tiktok started to buy a lot of advertisering, a billion dollars on meta, facebook, and snapchat. so in 2020, donald trump was waving a flag saying this could be a concern, of course for political reasons him and other republicans want to seem hawkish on china. now fast forward, tiktok has cemented their dominance here. it's the most widely consumed app by young people. it's become a much bigger presence in our lives. >> people use it as a search engine. there's a lot of research for people using it to get their news, look up information they want the answer to. so it has an almost infrastructure like kind of role in some people's lives at this
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point. >> over the age of 30, too. my sister who is five years older than me is obsessed with tiktok. every text thing she sends is like a tiktok link. >> it's algorithm driven and gives you what you want. there are nerd dy concerns we can get in the weeds about, what can you do with the data, how it can form your development with artificial intelligence that people are talking about now with the ai devices we're playing with right now but they have real implications going forward. >> i'm in the happy mood this morning. but i have to share something my mom says. she says audie cornish is beautiful, her skin is flawless. she's always so knowledgeable and beautiful. i responded love her. she said me too. >> love her. what's her venmo?
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i thought your mom sent a tiktok or something. >> no. if i open my sister's text it's all -- >> the problem is it's fun. you can't tell a bunch of people addicted to this thing because they think it's fun that it's a security threat. that's a difficult cell. >> let's see if they can with the oracle deal which is big. see if they can make it as secure as they need to be. >> if they can't, that's why all these competitors are launching rivals, instagram and facebook launched reels. snapchat created spotlight. they're waiting for this app to get sanctioned or banned so they can get in. >> they need to pay for the show. get to commercial. agree with all sentiments, feel the same about you, sarah fisher. ahead an exclusive on the advanced weaponry, the u.s.
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plans to send to ukraine. and we are live in storm ravaged louisiana. >> reporter: i'm located in northern louisiana where a devastating tornado ripped through this community behind me. i'll have a live report to show you around the damaged area and talk about the specifics of what's ahead. that's coming g up after the break. you spend the holidays making everyone else smile, but what about your smile? it needs care too, and when it does, aspen dental is here for you. this season, and every season, we offer the custom dental eatments you need, all under one roof, right nearby. so, we can bring more life eatto your smile,, and more smile to your life, affordably. new patients without insurance can get a free complete exam and x-rays, and 20% off treatment plans. for adults with generalized myasthenia gravis
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closet because it's destroyed. we opened the back door, dog in the wind. tornado about to take the dog. trailer sitting over there in the woods. all this stuff you see here, all this rubbish, everything that y'all see over here -- >> what you just heard that was one family's account of some very scary moments after a deadly tornado barrelled across northern louisiana. officials say one child was killed and a mother is missing after the tornado struck kato parish. and at least 20 people were injured after it hit farmerville, that's where we are now. so much devastation just before the holidays, what are you witnessing, seeing there on the ground? >> reporter: don, it's heartbreaking considering that it's right before the holidays. and that this particular community in northern louisiana
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took what appears to be a direct hit. we are still in the shroud of darkness we'll reveal more once the soun comes up, but hearing the sound bite from a survivor a moment ago, it's incredible to think that someone can survive what i'm about to show you. i'm going to try to tie this together for you. you're looking at the piece of a roof. we've seen a lot of the tornado damage that moved through kato parish. we're in union parish as we speak. but the tornados when it makes contact with the ground, it literally takes that vor text, spinning up anything in its path, including roofs of houses we've seen destruction from tornados before. but what is likely the top of the roof i just showed you came from the building that's directly behind me here. and this is part of the union villa apartment complex, this is actually the office for the apartment complex.
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the apartment complex you cannot see over my left shoulder here, we're blocked by a heavy police presence within this area, was completely flattened. and the devastation there is catastrophic. and just hearing some reports from the local sheriffs within this area, there were 20 to 25 injuries. some critically injured as well. when you're talking about taking buildings and wiping them off their foundation, it's a miracle that anybody would be able to survive something like this, don. >> derek van dam, be careful out there. a lot of things blowing around, a lot of debris. straight ahead. comedian jay leno giving his first interview since his burn accident. what he remembers from that day. who is the g.o.a.t.? the greatest of all time.
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the debate between ronaldo and messi when sam joins us next. ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪ at adp, we understand business today looks nothing like it did yesterday. while it's more unpredictable, its possibilities are endless. from paying your people from anyere to supporting your talent erywhere, we u data driven insights to design hr solutions and services to help businesses of all size work smarter today. so, they can have more success tomorrow. ♪ one thing leads to another ♪ trelegy for copd. ♪ birds flyin' high, you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ breeze driftin' on... ♪ [coughing] ♪ ...by, you know how i feel. ♪ if you're tired of staring down your copd,...
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star forward, lionel messi punched his ticket to the world cup final this sunday renewing a debate in the soccer world, this has been happening for a decade now, who's better, messi or ronaldo and who's the greatest player of all time. joining us to answer that question is sam, a staff writer at the athletic covering soccer. what's the answer? >> i think it's messi, and i think it's pretty clear. >> a lot of people disagree with you. >> the world cup has put it in stark relief. you've seen ronaldo go out in a little bit of disgrace is strong but it wasn't a great tournament for him. he ended the tournament on the bench for portugal. not a starter. was publically almost feuding with his coach about that. wasn't a great look. messi, on the other hand, has been at his peak, five goals, four assists in four games. yesterday against croatia in the
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semifinal we saw the penalty that you showed, drove that one home. but more impressive was the assist, he took one of the best defenders at the tournament, drove him the length of the entire half, rounded the box and set a teammate up for a tap in. what he's able to do not just scoring goals but setting up his teammates is remarkable. that's the difference between him and ronaldo. >> poppy is -- >> after crow atia lost i don't care. >> do the stats actually show that messi is the greatest? >> ronaldo has more goals but a per game basis, messi has more. and when it comes to assists, messi has more, period, total overall. really the world cup is the only thing left on his list. we'll see on sunday if he's able to cross it off.
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>> am i right, messi became the oldest man to score five goals in the world cup? >> that sounds right. it's early for me. >> it's 6:53 in the morning. >> you guys are used to it, i'm not. >> what about greatest of all time, even compared to, you know, the greatest of all time? you know who i'm talking about. >> the others in the conversation would be maradona, messi's argentine countryman and pele, the brazilian. maradona i think messi outstripped him. and pele, it's difficult to compare because he was playing 50, 60 years ago, it's different to compare a different sport, landscape. for me messi, maybe because i get to see him in person and never watched pele. but for messi, for me it's him.
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>> what's going to happen today? >> france is the favorite. but morocco has been pulling upsets left and right the whole tournament. being on the ground in qatar, their fan base has been extraordinary. and they have the power of the arab world behind them here. which, you know, they're the de facto home team so the crowd is going to be off the charts in favor for them. i think france will win but morocco has been excellent defensively. it'll be a tough game. >> we'll be excited to watch. poppy especially. >> i'll be tuning in. >> what time is it? i'll be sleeping. >> it's at 2:00 p.m. >> i'll be sleeping. let me know what happens, text me. >> we'll watch to see if your prediction is right. >> thanks. up next, the crisis unfolding on the border, how it's getting worse in recent days and how the biden administration is preparing for what could be a surge of migrants.
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