tv CNN This Morning CNN February 2, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST
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veo qqq, a fund that gives me access to... nasdaq 100 innovations like... wearable training optimization tech. uh, how long are you... i'm done. i'm okay. good morning. just days after an american general warned of a pobls war with china, the u.s. making a provocative move as fears grow over a chinese invasion of taiwan. >> the ukrainians say the situation is reminiscent of some of the worst times in world war ii where they are not only fighting a strong adversary, but elements as well. >> on the front lines in ukrainian, the vicious battles of the feared offensive by the russians. president biden on capitol hill this morning as he is
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facing a classified documents investigation and battles over the nation's economy and police reform after the death of tyre nichols. lesson plans with hitler quotes. one state investigating a nazi home-schooling network, putting white supremacy into the coverage. curriculum. is it the smoking gun? the evidence putting alex murdaugh at the scene of the murders contradicting his alibi. "cnn this morning" starts right now. we begin with the breaking news out of ukraine this morning. our cnn crew was nearby a twin missile attack targeting creme torres in eastern ukraine coming less than 24 hours after a missile struck a residential neighborhood killing at least three and wounding eight. crews are searching through the rubble of apartment buildings searching for survivors.
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fred pleitgen is in ukraine for us this morning. i appreciate you joining us. you narrowly missed this heavy russian missile strike? what happened? >> reporter: yeah, certainly was a close call. we were going to the scene of where that missile strike took place last night, the one you mentioned on that residential building that killed several people because there is a big rescue operation going on there and we had just arrived at the scene, left our vehicles when the house in front of which our vehicle was parked was hit by a missile strike. it was a heavy explosion very close by, i would say maybe 40 or 50 yards from our location. so we then went trying to go into a sheltered building. as we were doing that i turned around and you could see the second missile hitting the exact same area. we already know there were people who were severely wounded on the ground there. unclear if and how many people were killed. right now there is a rescue operation going on there. it's important for the viewers to understand this area this was
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in was an active search and rescue operation in a residential area and today the russians targeted exactly the same area with two very heavy missiles. this was as there were a lot of civilians there on the street, we didn't see anybody in the way of military on the streets or any sort of military installations. it was right in the heart of the town. of course, we decided to leave that area as fast as possible as we realized the coast was clear. >> talk to us more, fred, because you have been on the us front lines in the east, what more did you see? >> reporter: this is really part of in general this area heating up a lot. the town i talked about had been quiet for a while, now getting hit by strikes. the front lines is the same. the battlefield is heating up. we went to a trench and saw severe winter warfare. here's what we witnessed. all-out winter warfare on the eastern front.
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we are in a trench with ukrainian paratroopers using aks and a u.s. supplied browning heavy machine gun. they are searching for weak spots, says the commanders. call sign ghost. they want to see if we fight back. if we show strong resistance, they don't advance. and this is what strong resistance looks like. the russians are only about 400 yards away. hidden in the snow and fog, but constantly firing at the entrenched ukrainians. the enemy uses all kinds of weapons, he says. small arms, heavy machine guns, artillery, rocket mortars and aviation as well. but so far the ukrainians say they haven't lost an inch of territory here. the ukrainians say the situation
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is reminiscent of some of the worst times in world war ii where they are not only fighting a strong adversary, but the elements as well. the snow, the mud, and the cold make fighting here even tougher. and ukraine's leadership believes the russians will soon escalate more after mobilizing hundreds of thousands of men for a likely spring offensive. but this gunner who goes by the name "deputy" says the paratroopers are ready. it will be hard, he says. it will be tough, but we will hold because we stand here for our land. if we don't do it, nobody will. there is a visceral hatred towards moscow's leaders among these men. in russia they have a terrorist dictorial regime, he says, so now the civilized world is fighting against this wild medieval dictatorship. as we leave, incoming grenades explode above. the men say this is a relatively
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quiet day. they expect worse in the months to come. their metro i motto is, if not who else? we have witnessed that on several places on the front line that things are heating up. the russians put a lot more soldiers in this area. as far as that spring offensive is concerned, it seems as though while this may not be that offensive yet, it could be the prelude to that offensive taking shape. don. >> fred pleitgen, thank you. also new this morning, the u.s. military getting expanded access to paces in the philippines as part of an effort to counter china's aggression towards taiwan. in the deal, american forces get access to four more bases in the philippines giving the u.s. a greater strategic footing in the south china sea less than 200 miles from taiwan. mark stewart joins us in hong kong. this is significant and follows
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a series of moves that have been made to shore up support around taiwan. >> reporter: indeed, poppy. and it's also drawing a sharp and strong response from the chinese government and we're hearing that in the government spokesperson in their words. i want to share with you what was said earlier today. a spokesperson warned that this move has escalated tension in the region and endangers peace and stability. those are the exact words. very firm from a government spokesperson. to give you some context here, the u.s. has had a presence in the philippines on its military bases since 2014. this just supplements it. but as you said, it puts american troops potentially about 200 miles south of taiwan and it fits a broader narrative we have seen recently in the pacific region. we have seen a new military base, a new marine base in game as well as a build-up, potential
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build-up of marines helping with the japanese islands. all of this comes as u.s. secretary of state antony blinken prepares to make a visit sometime soon to china. it will be interesting to see if this dominates the conversation. >> what a significant visit that will be. thank you. kaitlin. >> if you heard helicopters buzzing around, maybe sirens earlier, president biden just arrived on capitol hill a few moments ago. he is attending the national prayer breakfast here. this moment on capitol hill comes as we saw all that meeting that lasted over an hour yesterday between president biden and speaker kevin mccarthy at the white house where they were talking about something that matters to every american, which is what they are going to do with the debt ceiling. sounds like a washington issue, but it could affect so many people when it comes to the economy and what it's going to look like with mortgage payments, interest rates. our cnn congressional correspondent lauren fox is here. i think it was so fascinating to
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watch them going into the meeting kind of jousting about what mccarthy would accept, the white house saying they wouldn't accept and they came out and mccarthy had this optimistic tone. >> i think the posture was interesting. and i think the intention of sort of the good, happy vibes of mccarthy coming out of that meeting was to settle the markets a little bit, make it clear we are working, we are talking. i am optimistic at some point we could find a resolution. let's be honest. that resolution is months away, kaitlin. there is so much work that still has to happen. and you are starting to see on capitol hill some of mccarthy's rank and file members getting a little frustrated. this came out yesterday during the conference meeting that there aren't more specifics from leadership. here are the cuts we are eying, the areas where we think we can make changes to try and move this negotiation along. the republican study committee that includes more than 100 republican members, they came out with their own guidelines yesterday because they feel like leadership still is not taking
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the wheel and making it clear what specifically they are going to cut. of course, there is a political liability to laying out where you want to make the reductions. >> the white house is like, yeah, let us know where those cuts up because it opens them up to attacks. the reason they are frustrated because they need to know what they should be saying publicly? we had rick scott on, a senator. where do you want the cuts to come from and no republicans are really saying exactly what that loo week like. >> rick scott is interesting because he laid out some spending cuts and a plan for that and the rest of his party was looking at him like, what are you doing? req why are you saying publicly this before an election? it's always an election season in washington. i think what republicans are grappling with right now is those who are the hard-liners, conservatives who believe them an opportunity to make a stand on this issue and the reality of even if you want to make cuts, every lawmaker is going to have to turn around to their
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constituents and say cuts mean a bridge isn't going to get built or something isn't going to happen and that is hard for lawmakers to stare town as they know they are running for re-election. >> one other thing happening on the hill today ilhan omar is expected not to be on the house foreign affairs committee. it seems like republicans would not have the votes. seemed unclear. do they have the votes? is this going to happen today? >> yes, but it's significant it so long to lock town the votes they needed. if you talk to talk to the leaders they say this is the blessing of a diverse republican conference. mccarthy defending, ousting omar from this committee assignment saying she can serve on other committees, but not this one. >> of course, this one is a critically important one as well. great reporting. thank you so much for joining us. don, poppy. >> thanks. a new study that followed more than 2 million women who gave birth between 1973 and 2015
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finds complications during pregnancy could be linked to a higher risk of heart disease in the mother. talk to us about this because you are quoted in the cnn.com piece about this and i thought it was so interesting that you said being pregnant is sort of like a stress test for future cardiovascular risk. >> i am a cardiologist. i run our women's heart program here. cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of ma term mortality. what happens in pregnancy can predict your future risk and so many women are unaware of this. this study, a big study, took over 2 million women and followed them between 1973 and 2015. they had no history of ischemic heart disease and they looked to see when they had their first birth and what kinds of complications happened during those births. and they looked at five particular ones. preeclampsia, hypertensive
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disorders, early pre-term delivery before 37 weeks, babies that were small and gestational diabetes. they followed them over a long time to see did they develop ischemic heart disease. they found those complications during pregnancy raise the future risk of developing ischemic heart disease out to 40 years and even ten years. if you look at hypertensive disorders, it doubled. gestational diabetes 30% higher. pre-term delivery, something we don't often think of. 70% increased chance of ischemic heart disease in ten years. it's like a stress test. it's uncovering, underlying issues that a woman may have or it's changing the biology of the heart and the vessels and causing these events down the road. >> women in the united states more at risk, right? why is. >> carbon dd it's the leadi
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cause of maternal mortality. women are tending to give birth later in hive. the average age in the study was 27. many of them by that time have developed things like depression, obesity, hypertension, diabetes. and so one of the things we talk about is having a healthy delivery starts preconception. we also talk about the fact in this country we have high rates of maternal mortality in general. what happens to a woman after she delivers. ufl, what i see and many cardiologists see they may have one of these events in pregnancy and nobody tells them they are at increased risk. nobody plugs them in with a cardiologist so they never get screened and on the road to prevention. that's what cardiology is, finding things early to prevent things from happening. this is important to raise awareness for women and ob/gyns and other doctors that this is great moment in time to capture
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a woman and get her on the right road. what a tragedy. a new life, a new baby, and the mom could die. it is just heartbreaking and it's not necessary that it happens like this in this country. >> tomorrow we have, speaking of women -- >> my favorite kday of the year wear red day. we focus on women and heart disease. so, hopefully, we will talk a lot more about that. >> we will be in red. >> thank you. the fbi searching president biden's delaware beach home, finding no classified documents. why did they take some handwritten notes and other materials? we will discuss that next. and the g.o.a.t., tom brady, retiring after 23 seasons and seven super bowl rings, six of those, of course, he won as a new england patriot. the owner of the patriots, bob kraft, is with us next. >> what? every day, millions of things need to get to where they're going. and at chevron, we're working to help reduce the carbon intensity of the fuelels that keep things movin. today, we're producing renewablble diesel
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ask about ubrelvy, the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine. as president biden is already here. he has got a national prayer breakfast a he is attending. this comes at a moment where he was holding meetings on the debt ceiling yesterday and we learned that the fbi was also conducting a search of his delaware beach home. that comes after his personal attorney bob bauer said in a statement later that that search uncovered no documents that had classified markings. agents took handwritten notes and materials related to biden's time as vice president. this is the third private location that agents have searched in this investigation. joining us is the author of the president's book of secrets about interactions between presidents and classified intelligence information. forme former cia intelligence officer
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david priest. thank you so much. you are kind of the perfect person to be talking about this with. we learned that the fbi was at biden's home and then we got the confirmation from his attorneys yesterday. what was the first thing you went through his head, why they are searching a third property? >> it felt like groundhog a day early. site after site, again and again, classified documents here, there, everywhere. we found out not jquite everywhere. that tells us two interesting things. first of all, the biden team is cooperating and dozen these without warrants. that's worth noting. secondly, it's enough of a concern that other properties are being looked at voluntarily or not, which makes me wonder about other properties of past presidents, past vice presidents and other senior officials who had access to classified materials. >> the other properties -- >> i think it would be the reasonable thing to do because we have discovered we do have a
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consistent issue with at least recent administrations, with co-mingling some of this material going out. and it's serious material. so it's worth looking at the sites to make sure that the material is all put back into the system the way it is supposed to be and in the left out there. >> they said no classified documents were found but they took handwritten notes they said was related to his time as vice president mike pence. why would that be of interest to the investigators? >> the bob bauer letter said no material with classified documents were found. but there can be material classified that's improperly marked. for example, a high-level conversation with a foreign leader, there could be notes from that meeting that deal with matters that have been classified by the u.s. government but they weren't marked in the traditional way. they are probably just double-checking to see if that's the case. this points to a much larger issue when it comes to white house in particular meetings, which is conversations can be
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held that seem unclassified, but depending on the content of the conversation as it goes along, those conversations can be classified and the notes can become classified. so you wonder why it is that archivists have a hard time determining what is a presidential record and not in the chaotic months in the transition, this is why. thousands of papers -- >> it's not a plaque black and issue. something that james comer said about the process of classified documents, what that looks like. this is what he said. >> one of the things that i hope happens, and there is no hurry on this right now, this just needs to happen prior to this administration going out of office and before the next administration comes in office, we have to reform the way that documents are boxed up when they leave the president and vice president's office and follow them into the private sector. this is something i think will be bipartisan legislative fix. i think we agree there is a
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problem. >> what did you make of that. >> its there is a need for refo here. when we have seen that the past two former vice presidents, biden and pence, and the past former president trump at least have this materials issue, then there is a problem in the system. so he is right about that. he is quite wrong about the fact that there is no hurry. it is possible we could have a transition as soon as next year. there is no time to wait if you want to reform this. archivists don't grow on trees. you have to find them, recruit them, hire them, train them for this kind of work. that's not something that they can delay until next year and hope it all comes together by november or december if that happens to be an issue by then. >> fascinating insight. david, thank you. >> thank you. we are very excited about what is next. tom brady spent 20 years with the new england patriots and he
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and bob kraft won six super bowls together. so there is literally no better human on this planet to ask about brady's legacy than the man himself. mr. kraft will join us next. >> hey, bob, see you after the break. as i was saying, new fanduel customers get up to $3,000 back if they don't win their first bet. get upgo ahead.0 back gronk, kay adams, fanduetv. so you're kicking a fid goal, kick of destiny! yl d you're not nervous? please. [reporters chatter] get up to $3,000 back if you don't win your first bet! fanduel, america's number one sportsbook.
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. anything that really scares you, intimidates you -- >> the end of my playing career. big time. when i'm playing football during those seven months out of the year, it's easy. you are focused. you have got a goal. you have something you are trying to accomplish. when that's done, you don't have 8,000 people screaming your name. what's it gonna be? >> that was -- that was baby brady in 2005 reflecting what the end of his career could look like. well, here we are. 23 seasons in the nfl, 20 in new england. he won six of his seven super bowl rings while he was with the patriots. few people had a better vantage point on brady's astonishing career than the owner of the patriots, mr. robert kraft.
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he joins us now. good morning, bob. how you doing? >> good morning. great to be with you on this topic. >> hey, bob, have you spoken to tom? >> actually, we have talked a lot and he facetimed me yesterday. nothing about this. just, you know, it was the first day and he had his two younger children with him. he really seemed happy. and they were happy. and i loved it because his little daughter -- well, both of his kids, they call me rkk and they say, we miss you, we haven't seen you. and, you know, it's just tommy, he is a fierce competitor, but
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he brings love and a great warm feeling to everything he does. here he is in his house in a time like this and his kids are exuding love to someone else and warm feelings. that's what he did and does even in the huddle. as fierce as a competitor as he is, he gets people to come in and be connected as part of the team and feel very special. >> just with that, we could end the interview there. we told our viewers no one had more insight than bob kraft, right? >> that's true. you really loved him like a son. that is how you described the relationship between the two of you guys, right? and i wonder if you could take us into -- because, remember, you are the owner of the patriots. you draft him. he is 199th draft pick and look what he turns out to be and look what he does for the franchise.
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>> yeah. i think the good thing for us as the patriots is when he played at michigan, i don't think they realized how special he was because he should have been the number one pick in the draft, not 199 in the sixth round. and when he came in to us, you know, i never -- i'll share a story. it was near the end of training camp and i was driving out and he was coming down the steps of our little building. he had a piece under his arm from the food service. he came up to me and said, hi, i'm tom brady. i said, i know who you are. you are a sixth round draft pick from michigan. and he looked me in the eye and he said, i'm the best choice
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your franchise -- i'm the best decision your franchise has ever made. and i looked him in the eye and, you know, he just said it in a way -- now, you've got to understand, we just gave 100 million, the biggest contract to any quarterback to drew bledsoe just before this, a few months before. and he was number four in our depth chart. he came down and he really believed what he said. >> he certainly did. >> and he was right. >> you took the words out of my mouth. i was just going to say that. bob, did you want him to retire before? did you think he should have come back this past season? >> you know, there are certain decisions in life that i always believe in giving counsel and trying to be supportive, but
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only an individual on his own can make it a decision like that. they can ask -- no one knows the different pressures, what alternatives are open to them in this game, how their body feels physically, whether there is something that's dysfunctional that won't allow them to perform the way they want, because in the end the real competitors in this game are playing to win every week. and if something's dysfunctional in their body, you know, that can take away from it. >> you know, we are a little bit -- less than two weeks away from the big game, the super bowl. you guys got six super bowl rings together. i wonder, was it brady, was it belichick, who was more responsible, do you think, for all those super bowl wins?
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>> well, this is our 29th season we just completed. >> yeah. >> and we were privileged to go to ten super bowls. and win six of them. and what i learned is, it's a lot of things. it's probably the sport of football and winning in it requires team effort like nothing else, which is so important for our society. and you need great stars like belichick and brady. but you need a lot of other people pulling in the same direction. in the end, though, to answer your question, you can't win if you don't have a good coach and a good quarterback. >> amen. >> i was blessed to have both of that, probably the best in the history of the game. you know, i think back whether
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there is over 25,000 or 30,000 players who played football, how lucky are we up here in new england to have the greatest that's ever played. and really played for us for 20% of the history of the league, in 100-odd years. i don't think there are too many quarterbacks that played for one team. >> you are so right about having a great coach. and then tom needed good people around him. we talked to, yesterday, to john berman, you know, tom brady's super fan. he didn't have the support he had around him when he was with you guys. my question, though, is are there any plans, bob, to make sure that he retires? i mean, are you going to sign him to a one-day contract? >> do you want him back? >> to retire a patriot. >> i'd do it tomorrow. >> for him to retire a patriot, is the question.
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>> not only do i want it. our fans are clamoring for it. and to us, he is, always has been, will be a patriot. and we will be bringing him back after i have -- i don't like to make a commitment for him. but we will do everything in our power to bring him back, have him sign off as a patriot and find ways to honor him for many years to come because he did so much to bring life and good cheer to our community, and he is a beloved figure. he has earned the respect and love that people feel for him like no other athlete. in our town. and we have had some great ones. >> if you could spare, poppy, call that breaking news? >> absolutely. well, it's so nice to get to hear from you, bob, this morning. >> bob, before we go, though, i mean, look, he is like a son.
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so while you have this audience here on cnn, i know you are going to miss him. i know you missed him when he left the patriots but you were still in contact with him. you love his family. what are your parting words? because i know you love him like a son. >> well, tommy, i'm always here for you. you are part of our family. you know, he was blessed having great parents. his mom and dad are super people. he's got three great sisters. i was thinking about it. he was the baby, you know. so to have four great women like that and then a role model, and for him not to be super spoiled, i don't know how it happened. you know, out there in california area where everything is a little different than it is here in the northeast.
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i tell you, i just love the guy so much and there isn't anything i wouldn't do for him. and i think he can do a lot of good things for america and reach out to a lot of people, and thank you for the time you gave us and everyone here in the new england region loves you and respects you and wants happiness for you in your life. >> so nice. >> so well said. bob kraft, we frappreciate you. >> thanks. be well. >> great to talk to you both. >> that was great. >> that was pretty awesome. we'll be right back. that was awesome. that's all we'll say.
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ultimately be displaced when this technology takes over their roles. experts say it means brand-new employment opportunities. >> so we all saw chatgpt explode on to the scene in the last couple of months. people were really intrigued by it, thought, wow, this could help me at work. that quickly turned to, wait a minute, can this platform, this a.i. platform, do my job better than i can? so a lot of americans are asking, is artificial intelligence here to help me or to take my job? >> which jobs is a.i. coming after first? >> if you are a middle manager, you are doomed. any kind of commodity salesperson. report writers, journalists, accountants, doctors who specialize this things like drug interactions. >> reporter: out of a job or do you mean that part of your job -- >> that part of your job. >> reporter: okay. that's the relief a lot of americans are looking for right now. the explosion of chatgpt and
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a.i. platform showed us it could do a lot of what we humans do at work and faster. will it take my job? >> yes and no. it's not going to replace you. someone who knows how to use it well will take your job. and that's a guarantee. >> reporter: by 2025 the boulevard economic forum predicts 85 million jobs will be displaced by automation and technology. it is also create 97 million new roles. we've seen it before in the auto industry. >> while the auto worker may be displaced because they are not as good at welding or painting than the robot, 35 people have to be involved in the creation and maintenance of that device, that welds better than a person. >> reporter: and that's what happened at carbon robotic. former auto workers now building an a.i. laser weeder in detroit for farms. >> it's a direct result of the history of the auto manufacturing that we have that skill set available in one place. >> reporter: the laser weeder
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still operated by a human but run by a.i. can do the work of between 40 to 80 people, says the ceo, filling roles that are hard to find humans for. >> labor is harder to find every year, particularly farm labor, and in a.i. system like ours that can do that job automatically saves a lot of time, money, effort. >> reporter: this music is composed solely by artificial intelligence called ava. it even has an album you can stream. a.i. music is more affordable. there is no producer, composer or artist to pay. >> it's taken away opportunities from song writers, producers and artists. the people are trying to feed their families. >> reporter: something similar is happening in the art world leaving artist kara ortiz and others to file a class-action lawsuit against three a.i. art companies for copyright infringement. she claims they are using her name and art to train the a.i. >> it's feast and famine for
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most of us. we go job by job. and what happens when there is a little bit less work to go around? >> reporter: stability a.i., one of the companies named, said the suit misunderstands how a.i. and copyright law working, adding it intends to defend ourselves and the vast potential generative a.i. has to expand the creative power of humanity. the two other companies did not respond. >> i never thought we'd be here. like straight out of a sci-fi movie. >> there is a scene in the movie "i, rob bot". >> can a robot write a symphony? >> the robot goes -- >> can you? >> every one of us is not mozart or rembrandt or by cause owe oh, choose a famous artisan.
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we are just people. this is not coming to kill us. it's coming to help us. >> and sfoiler alert. if you haven't seen irobot, the robots, the artificial intelligence ends up working with the humans to save humanity. that's what a lot of a.i. experts think will happen. we are going to be working with artificial intelligence. since i gave you at the top the top five jobs a.i. is coming after first, here is the top five jobs that a.i. is coming after last. preschool, elementary school teacher, professional athlete, politician, judge and mental health professional. that is because these jobs really need a human element. judgment, emotion, a preschool teacher giving a child a hug at the end of the day. so listen, it's interesting. >> get ready. we love these stories. >> thank you. it's coming for all of us. people are saying embrace it. >> it's better that is saves
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humanity. not like 2001 space odyssey. >> your favorite movie. outrage in ohio over a nazi home-schooling network ro reportedly using hitler quotes as an educational resource. we will tell you about that. qui. and kicking the cans. and feeding theieir dogs dog food that's actually... well, food. developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food. (vo) if you've had thyroid eye disease for years and the pain in the back of your eye is forcing bad words from your mouth, or...the bags under your eyes are looking re like purses, it's not too late for another treatment option for thyroid eye disease,
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whoo! we gotta go again. only pay for what you need. ♪liberty liberty liberty♪ ♪liberty♪ welcome back everyone. new this morning ohio's education department is investigating an alleged nazi home schooling network that distributed lesson plans reportedly with lesson plans based on hitler quotes. omar jimenez is here to explain. do tell. >> reporter: for starters the state education official told me they're reviewing compliance with statutory and regulatory policies in the state. because it's not clear how much they can actually do about the curriculum of home schooling. this is an example. this is a group they believe operates out of upper sandusky,
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ohio. this is a copy of an assignment you're learning handwriting, elementary school age and you're using hitler quote to work on that handwriting. another lesson posted leading up to martin luther king jr. day. this is a user named mrs. saxon it's up to us to ensure our children know him for the deceitful, dishonest, riot inducing negro he was. he was the movement that ethnically cleansed whites out of urban areas and precipitated. the anti-white regime.
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>> i wonder what they can do to stop it. >> there's an annual check to show that you are teaching. what you are teaching is out of their purview, and the upper sandusky superintendent said this is egregious, we don't support it but said parents are responsible for choosing the cr curriculum in home schooling. the parent chosen curriculum is not endorsed by the district. the group has more than 3,000 subscribers. tried to reach out to the owners didn't get a response, obviously. but something the state is paying close attention to. let's go back to d.c. kaitlan. >> i want to highlight this moment that just happened during the national prayer breakfast on capitol hill. president biden was attending, a tradition for presidents to attend. he was talking about how norms have changed, not just here on
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the hill and in washington but broadly across the united states and america. talking about how americans treat one another saying don't see each other as competitors and whatnot. he had the remark about kevin mccarthy, we'll show you that. that's next. and it's designed to help make aches and pains a thing of the past... by relieving pressure points and supporting your bobody in a way no other mattresess can. experience the mattress ranked #1 in customer satisfaction by j.d. power, f four years in a row. here, is cvs health. here, we'll never be told our concerns are all in our head. here, we don't think we should pay more than men for the same thing or pay taxes for period products. here, we can ask tough questions, y or night. and here, we're actually heard. and because of that, we can focus on getting healthier together. together. here, healthier happens together. cvs health.
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we start treating each other with respect. that's what kevin and i are going to do. not a joke. we had a good meeting yesterday. i think we got to do it across the board. doesn't mean we're going to agree. we'll fight like hell but let's treat each other with respect. >> an olive branch there from president biden to kevin mccarthy after the meeting that lasted over an hour at the white house. you know, it was a meeting where the expectation of what was going to happen, and it wasn't
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very high, but you saw kevin mccarthy walk out, he spoke to reporters in front of the west wing yesterday striking a more optimistic tone saying the meeting went better than he expected it to go, they found common ground but i think there are questions about what that path forward is going to look like. this is a refrain we heard from president biden saying when he was on capitol hill he believed lawmakers would argue with one another on the senate floor, house floor, then go and break bread, put their differences aside, and he was lamenting saying that does not happen anymore in his view. >> it was the top of the show. when kevin mccarthy walked out he said the conversation i had with the president of the united states i'm going to keep confidential. i was like, wow, something is different. >> civility might be gone but it can come back, right? hopefully that time is now
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