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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  February 24, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PST

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friday edition, top of the morning. top songs streaming on spotify. ♪ number one, ice spice with boy is a liar. and here is number two. ♪ ♪ ♪ buy me some flowers, write my name in the sand ♪ >> miley cyrus. and number three ♪ that is kill bill. and thanks for joining me. i'm christine romans. "cnn this morning" starts right now.
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well, today. today marks one year since the russian invasion of ukraine and the fighting rages on. good morning so glad you are with us. today grief and defiance in ukraine. the country is bracing for an attack as vladimir putin makes a push on the ground. we are live. plus this -- >> do you honestly think that ukraine can win this? >> his answer next. that was an interview as i sat down with defense sent lloyd austin. what i thinks will change the
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tide on the battlefield in ukraine. and now we are looking for answers how the classified documents moved around mar-a-lago, and what delayed the discovery. it seemed like all was lost a year ago as russian tanks moved across ukraine and moved in on kyiv. but the out numbered and out gunned ukrainians stunned everyone. they stunned the world. and kyiv still stands today as putin's bloody invasion continues. the cost has been great. the ukrainian people have suffered unimaginable at trosities. and it has killed hundreds of children and thousands of refugees have fled and thousands of suspected war crimes have been reported.
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that is ukrainian president zelensky delivering a speech to his troops this morning and promising victory in 2023. >> translator: it is you who decides if we are all going to exist. whether ukraine is going to exist. every day, every hour, it is you, ukrainian soldiers which will decide it. >> so take a look at that. that is a live look at kyiv on this grim anniversary. ukraine is bracing for potential russian strikes and attacks to mark the occasion. we have seen a show of solidarity around the world. this is the eiffel tower and the empire state building. they are lit up in blue and yellow the colors of the ukrainian flag. we begin with our colleague on the ground. you were covering the worse since it began. here we mark one year, alex. >> reporter: that is right,
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poppy. we were here before the war began. what will always stay with me was so few people we met that thought this war would happen. they did not think putin would invade. and then of course, everything changed in an instant. we were if the city the first day of the war outside of that famous theater that was destroyed several weeks later. and we saw all kinds of people lining up for medicine and to take money out. it was just an extraordinary scene. i think to myself all the time where are these people now and are they still alive? and that city is now decimated and firmly in russian control. countless lives were upended and displaced. or leaving the country all
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together. many have come back to ukraine because of how well the military has done. there are cities in ukraine like kyiv and odessa, where you can live a relatively normal live. you can go to work and you can go to school. but there is the constant reminder of the war with the air raid sirens and constant fear of a missile or drone attack. guys when you move farther east to the frontline, it's impossible to overstate the level of destruction. town after town, and village after village, that have been absolutely destroyed. they are largely quiet except for the large boom that pierces the silence. they are largely empty except for a lot of old people that stayed behind because they can't or won't leave. and of course there is an immense level of pride with the ukrainian people and the strength of the military. and there is also a lot of anger and sadness about what has
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happened in the past year and fear, of course, fear of what could happen today and in the future. because people recognize that this war is not ending any time soon. >> you know what, alex, you have been all over. you have been there for a long time now. and folks have not gotten used to it but they have internalized the war. behind you it looks like any normal city. but you have visited one of the towns that has been the focus of russia's destructive campaign. >> it lies at the intersection of the southern and eastern fronts in this war. russia is making a push at that town for the last several weeks because they recognize it's a jumping off point to jump into
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-- and at the same time the russians are failing disastrously and they are attacking that town from open fields and getting hit by ukrainian artillery and ukrainian drones. we were with an international unit and they expect the russians to do something around this anniversary, because it's such a strategic goal of taking o over. straight ahead lloyd austin sat down for a one-on-one interview. you'll hear from him and her. here in the united states we learn more about the toxic train derailment that happened in east palestine, ohio. the ntsb says it was completely preventible. and he says there is no evidence
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that the train's crew has done anything wrong here. the preliminary report found that an alarm went off and warned the crew that a wheel bearing was overheating where the derailment that caused the disaster and the engineer tried to stop the train but it was too late. miguel, i think one of the biggest questions we have seen is, if they had an idea that something was wrong, why didn't they catch that sooner? is that not something they were paying attention to? >> that will be the focus of the investigation. what caused the wheel bearing to fail and how long had it been on the tracks. was there some other way the technology could change so they could have seen this coming earlier. >> this was 100% preventible. >> nearly three weeks after a toxic train derailment in east
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palestine, ohio. >> we call things accidents. there is no accident. every single event that we investigate is preventible. >> the national transportation safety board released a preliminary report on the incident. >> we know what derailed the train. we have a lot of questions. >> questions that have investigators focusing on the overheating of one of the car's wheel set and bearing. >> the temperature of the bearing increases from 30 degrees farenheit above the temperature that at the time was 103 degrees farenheit. >> the temperature increased as it passes two sensors on the tracks but not enough to trigger an audible alarm. it was not until the train passed a third sensor with a
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temperature of 233 degrees farenheit above that triggered the alarm and alerted the engineer. >> it was braking to slow behind the tram, so he increased the brake application to further slow and stop the train. we have no evidence that the crew did anything wrong. >> in all, 38 cars derailed including 11 tank cars carrying hazardous materials that subsequently ignited causing fires. they will investigate norfolk southern's use of the sensors. >> if there was a detector earlier that may not have occurred. >> secretary of transportation pete buttigieg visited east palestine on thursday. he said he could have come
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earlier but did not want to disrupt the investigation. >> we will be here day in and day out to make sure they meet their obligations. we take this seriously. >> this comes a day after president trump criticized the handling of the derailment while speaking to residents. the ntsb chair asking that politics be kept out of this. >> enough with the politics. this is a community that is suffering. this is not about politics, this is about addressing their needs. their concerns. that is what this should be about. >> reporter: and the ntsb says it will hold a rare field hearing here in east palestine in the months ahead and the mayor who has been critical of the biden administration met
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with pete buttigieg one-on-one and after that he feels the town will recover from this fwu will be better than ever. >> miguel marquez thank you for that report. now, to california, sunny los angeles, bracing for snow. seriously. in l.a. a slow moving system preparing to bring white out conditions. they could get up to 8 feet of snow in the san bernardino mountains, spillouts calling pileups along the highway. >> it's like a blizzard down the hill. and then i came up going northbound i saw a hit and run in front of me off 138 and then there was a white suv that looked like it slid over two
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lanes. i was not going to work in this. >> this is a driver in portland, oregon struggling for traction on icy roads and obviously fails. look at that. that is in portland, oregon. more than 828,000 customers without power, mostly in michigan. chad meyers is here with what is going on. that scene in portland and beyond. two day storm there wreaking havoc across so many states. will there be any relief soon? that is the question chad. >> not for california, not the next 48 hours. the biggest storm that california has seen in decades. not like the 40s and 50s where it snowed on the beach. but there was flurries near and on top of the hollywood sign. about 1,000 feet below sea
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level. there is the snow, it's raining in california along the coast. but you get above 500 to 1,000 feet and it's all snow. the snow is actually a good thing. it will take long toward run off. but not good if you are driving in it. and the blizzard warings for the mountains and ventura county. there are 120,000 people in this red zone for the blizzard warnings. you see l.a., it will not snow but there will be heavy rainfall. some spots could see flooding rain rather than the snow on top of the mountains. people are saying pretty much no matter where are you in california, you will be able to see snow on top of the mountains. >> on the hollywood sign, chad, come on? >> i saw it from my helicopter, they were flurries but they were there. >> proof. >> you can't make a snowball but
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okay. >> it's hollywood they can do anything. they will cg it. thank you chad meyers. >> moving on the justice department wondering why it took some long to find classified documents at mar-a-lago. we have more on that. and the judge that testified before the january 6th committee last year is criticizing former vice president mike pence saying he is flirting with a spectacle if he tries to avoid a subpoena.
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new reporting the justice department wants answers on a chain of events that delayed the finding of the classified documents at mar-a-lago. they were copied and emailed and moved to an off site location before returning to the former president's office. former president trump i am talking about. the fbi had searched just weeks earlier. paula reed is live on capitol hill with more. what is this what is going on here? >> well, don, the special investigators want to know why classified documents keep showing up at mar-a-lago that is nearly two years after trump left office. and the big question, is this just the result of carelessness or part of some part of
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intentional effort to obstruct their investigation? we learned that they are interested in a box that was uncovered by trump lawyers in december. this box contained what was described to us as a handful of classified documents. but complicating matters in 2021 a young staffer was instructed to scan the context of this box. she scanned it with her phone and put the documents on a laptop. we learned that after she scanned them they were sent to an off site storage space and only recently returned to mar-a-lago and found in december. in a closet. and now they have the laptop and the box of documents and a thumb drive and we learned in recent weeks they sat down with the staffer to ask what exactly happened here? how did they come into possession of these classified documents. they want to know why the box was not given to the justice
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department and how it conveniently eluded the department. >> and now to mike pence. not only defying the subpoena but calling it unconstitutional and unprecedented. >> this judge is a long time pence ally and helped him to work through the electoral results and called him a hero of democracy. and now he is coming out and saying that pence doesn't have a chance in the world to not appear for this subpoena. he says that the clause is suppose to protect legislators from law enforcement activity that covers their actual work in
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congress. pence says he should qualify. and the person in the op-ed, he says that the subpoena was not designed to strengthen the political hand. and thus the characterization of it, it's mr. pence that has chosen to politicize the subpoena and not the doj. they argued because of what pence did on january 6th, he should be given the benefit of the doubt. people can debate the subpoena but this will come from the courts and this issue could go all the way to the supreme court. >> you need a treasure map. >> tell me about it don. are you telling me? >> paula reed, great reporting and thank you for explaining that and breaking it down. thank you. i promised that is house
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speaker kevin mccarthy's defense for sharing footage from the insurrection with tucker ca carlson. >> the president bears responsibility for wednesday's attack on congress by mob rioters. >> he should have immediately denounced the mob when he saw what was unfolding. these facts require immediate action by president trump. >> but now mccarthy tells "the new york times" i was asked in the press about these tapes and they should belong to the american public. democrats are condemning mccarthy for the move on that it creates a security risk. here is what jaime raskin said last night. >> we have security concerns about turning over the location of security cameras in the u.s. capitol that the police used. and we have concern about the escape and evacuation roots that were used on that day.
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we don't want to just throw our h hands up and let the insurrectionists go. >> chuck schumer says that mccarthy's actions show that it's the pandering to maga election deniers and not the truth. >> they are pushing him to do it and that is why he is doing it. but the risk you hear from other republicans they don't want to talk about january 6th. that just relitigates it. and that does not work in their favor. >> and relaying it to a person in the media who the courts have deemed not a legitimate news and it's just basically editorial and not a news program. i can't say whether it should have been released or not have been released. but if it is, release it to all the news organizations.
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>> when people have a foyer request, everybody gets the information. if kevin mccarthy wants to release it to the media, then you release it to everybody and everybody get a bite at the apple. and as he says, sunshine. also, coming up on cnn this morning. >> when you look at this and you make your assessments do you think this ends in negotiations or ends on the battlefield. >> that answer next from defense secretary lloyd austin one arer later. next. you've evolved. you've changed. so have we. that's why new dove body sh now has 24-hour
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sign of slowing down. the u.s. has provided billions of dollars for weapons and training for ukrainian forces. new this morning the u.s. has just announced that they and nato allies will put new sanctions on russia. and the question is if ukraine is getting enough military aid to win on the battlefield. i sat down with lloyd austin outside of the pentagon yesterday. >> do you think there will be a surge in attacks from russia around the anniversary of this? >> so what we are seeing is very contested battlefield in and around the area. russia has continued to pour in new recruits into this fight. the recruits are ill equipped
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and not well trained. so russia has the casualties that they have taken are incredible. i think you'll continue to see them experience those kinds of casualties going forward. >> reporter: do you ultimately think that ukraine can win this? >> the their goal is to take back as much of their sovereignty territory as possible. and i think you'll see in the spring is a counter offensive. right now they are holding in the east. they are building combat power. you hear us talk about providing them with bradley fighting vehicles. it's a very capable platform. and providing them with a brigade worth of striking
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vehicles. that is another infantry fighting vehicle. and the germans are providing mortars and the swedes providing infrantry fighting vehicles. and we are pulling all of this capability together and it's the not just platforms, we are already training troops on the platform as we get them into the country. and training them on combined arms maneuver, that will help them be more affective. >> one thing we keep hearing from the president when he was just in ukraine and we were in poland with him. is that the united states is with ukraine as long as it takes. can you define that? as long as it takes until they win or what? >> as long as ukraine continues to conduct operations and works
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to take back their sovereign territory we'll be there with them. and that is what it means. >> so as long as ukraine is fighting. >> yes, and you can see that the international community will be with them. >> the things we are doing and the capability we are providing again, capability not just a platform. i think it will enable the ukrainians to begin to change the dynamics on the battlefield. and so rather than having a stalemate, what you will probably see is ukrainians shaping this fight so they can create opportunities for themselves. >> what specifically do you think will change the dynamics on the battlefield that the u.s. and nato allies are providing? >> we are training and equipping several brigades of mechanized
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inf infantry. and additional artillery, so they will have the ability to breach russian defenses and maneuver and that will create a different dynamic. >> i want to talk about the weaponry in a moment but when you look at this and make assessments does it end with negotiations or end on the battlefield? >> most likely it will end with a negotiation and what the ukrainians are interested in is getting the russians out of their sovereign territory. that will be their going in point but i'll let the ukrainians speak for themselves. >> they seem like they want to get all the territory. earlier you said as much as possible which one is it? >> that will be defined by the
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ukrainian leadership. >> if the u.s. says it's as long as it takes is that until all russians are out of ukrainian territory? >> again i don't want to define things for president zelensky and the ukrainian people. >> on the weaponry we heard president zelensky say they want more sophisticated weaponry. is the u.s. going to ultimately provide those to ukraine? >> i don't have an announcement to make on f-16s. i am focused on they have the capability to be successful in this next fight. and what they need more is the air defense capability. and we are trying to get as much into the country as quickly as possible. you know, i meet with ministers of defense from nato and from
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around the globe, quite frankly, on a monthly basis. >> and that is remarkable. >> it is remarkable. and what is remarkable to me is that all of these countries remain focused and united in their desire to support ukraine. >> it enabled me to get to know my counterparts better than any other secretary of defense in a long, long time. we meet every month either virtually or in person. and this effort, this working together has really played a big part in maintaining the unity as we go forward. >> you said no announcements on the f-16s are you discussing providing them to ukraine? >> i have not common on f-16s. >> if there is still no decision on sending those, training
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ukrainian pilots on them so if you do decide to send them, they will not have to train on them? >> what we did with the tanks early on we provided tanks to the ukrainians early on they knew how to use. and other pieces of equipment they were familiar with. and it's not as if we started from zero with tanks two weeks ago or a month ago. that what's what enabled the ukrainians to be successful until this point. we have to take troops out of combat and train them on the platforms and that is what we are doing. >> when it comes to it's long range missiles. some members of congress say they need them. and there are critics that say that the u.s. and allies are providing enough for ukraine to
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survive but not enough to win? >> first of all the united states has provided $30 billion worth of security assistance to ukrainians. and worked with allies and partners to continue to get as much to ukraine that they need as quickly as we possibly can. i think that the allies and partners in conjunction with us have done a really good job in that endeavor. you look at the affects that the ukrainians have created on the battlefield -- putin had his best forces committed to this fight, and the ukrainians have chewed up a large portion of them. they have destroyed a significant number of his tanks and mechanized vehicles and artillery, so they have been successful. beyond anybody's imagination. >> ammunition can you produce it as long as they are using it?
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>> we'll make sure they have what they need to be successful on the battle filed. this is not just the u.s. but the entire international community. >> they will not have to decide to narrow who they are targeting because they will run out of ammunition? >> well, commanders have to make choices throughout. we are providing them with significant quantities of ammunition to not only be successful, but in some cases dominant. you take a look at what is going on in places, they have destroyed a lot of russian forces and a lot of that is with artillery. so projecting forward we continue to -- we have increased our production lines and allies and partners are doing that as well. >> he seemed to make quite a bit of news in that, especially when you talked about the ability of ukrainian forces to push back russian forces. >> and breach defenses.
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if that is what is expected to happen in this, that is pretty remarkable. we'll see if that actually happens. >> he thinks there will with be a negotiated end to this war, that to me is surprising considering president putin's posture during this entire time. >> the one thing that he has done that is remarkable, they do this meeting almost on a monthly basis with 50 other of his counterparts to talk specifically about about ukraine. i don't think anything like that has ever happened at least in the history of the united states. >> and on a personal note. what a nice guy he is. a family guy. >> family guy. >> right. we'll see more at 8:00 a.m. >> more coming up on china. and next, a man experiencing homelessness in detroit. wait until you see how one
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police officer went beyond the call of duty to help him and then this -- i did lie to him. >> a lot of tears yesterday. it's alex murdaugh admitting he lied to investigators the night his wife and son were mumurdere. what was he trying to hide ?
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welcome back, a chance encounter with a police officer and homeless man in detroit leads to a special bond of friendship and brotherhood. adrian has who on this call of duty. >> reporter: in the shadows of downtown detroit. >> i have my sleeping cot i slept on and i had a bag of clothes. >> adrian hughes says that this abandons gas station is where he slept for months. >> i was at my lowest point and was about to give up. i didn't want to live anymore.
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and then marcus turns up. >> that is corporal marcus harris ii. he responded to the call from the deputy mayor of homeless people sleeping here. he runs the responsive unit to help address homelessness. >> he told me he is from cali. i said do you wants to go back to california? i scrolled my phone and looked for the greyhound tickets. >> it's sold out today. >> but hugh declined the bus ticket and instead he chose to stay in detroit and use the city's resources. harris also helped hugh replace his stolen documents. >> he has his birth certificate and his michigan i.d. and his social security, he is staying in the shelter ready to get
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settled with housing. he got his resume set up so he can work. >> and hugh, a former forklift operator says he is waiting on a background check to clear. after an interview with the detroit airport to serve as a ramp agent. >> you need employment, whatever you need let me know? >> and he has support from the man that made the call, the deputy mayor, a former police officer. >> that is the key thing we are suppose to do as police officers, give them hope and give them another chance in life. >> reporter: now they talk weekly and share inside jokes. >> wam a police officer because of my dad. my dad is currently 25 years on the department. he is a role model to me. he was like a superman. >> i will take this friendship of the bus ticket home any day. >> that is real man. >> i don't know what i would be
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doing now? needed that on a friday morning. coming up cnn gets rare access on board of a rare military flight over the china sea. we'll take you live there. plus aaron rogers has emerged from several days at a darkness retreat. >> a what? >> that sounds nice. why was he there? did he see the light? >> hello darkness, my old friend. >> i love that song. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliablele 5g network in america? (vo) when it comes s to your busines, not all bars are created equal. so switch to verizon business unlimited totoday. (voya mnmnemonic.) there are some things that go better...together. hey! like your workplace benefits... and retirement savings. with voy considering all your financial choicetogether...
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rogers emerged from his darkness retreat in oregon. the four time mvp spent time in isolation to find peace of mind. and this is serious and i hope it helps him seriously. rogers is under contract with the packers for nearly 60 million guaranteed if he played in 2023. he spent his entire nfl career in green bay. he has how many? 18 million reasons. >> 60 million. >> to do whatever kind of retreat he wants. >> do you know what a dashness retreat is? >> it's like a 300 square foot room and it's a partially underground structure with a bedroom and a meditation like mat. maybe we'll send you there to do a report. >> i would go. >> okay.
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ukraine, a very grim anniversary today. innocent children slaughtered and millions displaced. but the country is still standing strong as we mark the brutal assault one year later. we are live e in moscow ahead. ever leave your clothes in t dryer and find a wrinkled mess? try downy wrinkle guard fabricoftener! wrinkle guard penetratesdee, leaving clothes so soft, wrinkles don't want to stick around. make mornings smoother with downy wrinkle guard fabric softener. big pharma has been unfairly charging people hundreds of dollars, making record profits. not anymore.
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my blood pressure is borderline. garlique healthy blood pressure formula helps maintain healthy blood pressure with a custom blend of ingredients. i'm taking charge, with garlique. well, former president jimmy carter is now in hospice care as
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age 98. he built his legacy as both president and post president. he met rosalind. she spent a lot of time at the carter's house because she was friends with the sister. and he said she was the woman is he would marry all the way back then. she says he was persistent and here they are on their wedding day, this is 1946. look at the smiles. she was by his side through his political year. here they are dancing at the inaugural ball in 1977. >> how has your long and vibrant marriage enriches your life and
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work? >> i don't know. i've been married all of my life. i don't know how it could have been enriched more if not nor jimmy carter. >> the best thing i did was marrying rosalind that is the pinnacle of my life and we had 69 years together and still together. that is the best thing that happened to me. >> the carters share four children together and combine 22 grand and great grandchildren. i love their love story. almost 80 years. >> the perfect couple. >> he invited her to sit in on cabinet meetings. it's amazing. the influence on his president

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