tv CNN This Morning CNN February 28, 2023 3:00am-4:01am PST
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formula and we are up the creek if they don't come and plow us. just thinking about this. can we send them some baby formula please. we are glad you are with us. back to back coast-to-coast winter storms spreading misery and growing more dire and as you heard baby formula is running out. >> piles and piles of dirt dug up and east palestine in ohio. where is it being shipped to? we will take it their life. an american shot and killed and we have our live report
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from jerusalem. we begin this hour with the dangers back to back winter storms wreaking havoc from california to new england, nearly 50,000,000 people under winter weather alert north east. out west the situation is going dire. a live look in san bernardino where another barrage of heavy snow has left community stranded. residents running out of gas and baby formula. the sheriff says food and grocery supplies have reached critically low measures. let's come back to new york. athena jones is tracking this where it's nothing like that but it's the first morning i walked out and there is no sticking to the ground. >> that's right. this is the end of february and the first significant snowfall in new york city has seen. up to now they've only had 1/2 an inch. it's a messy commute for drivers but they are more fortunate than elsewhere for the extreme weather left some
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people stranded. snow and freezing rain falling from coast to coast and do your getting the most significant snowfall of the year. >> we had 70 degrees weather and it's not cold. >> reporter: enough already. the storm system hit the midwest earlier monday where snow and freezing rain were reported across the region. milwaukee saw 2 inches of rainfall on monday breaking the daily record of 1.17 is set in 1948. some areas in wisconsin sought more than 1.5 of rainfall in six hours. >> you can't see everything and it is really insane. >> another storm system barrel through the state causing more rain and high elevation snow leaving several residents in the san bernardino mountains
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stranded. >> we are out here on our own. usually by now plows come by and we are being forgotten about. >> wideouts in the sierra mountains causing interstate closures. >> if you don't have the right tires while driving don't go. >> reporter: presidents left shocked by the amount of snow they have seen. >> 22 years old and i have not seen this much snow hundreds of students are returning home after they were left stranded at science camp due to heavy snowfall. >> the plane states evaluating the damage from 14 tornadoes sunday, nine of which touched down in oklahoma. and norman some homes destroyed while others barely touched showing tornadoes little past. one family is lucky to be alive after a tornado ripped through their home demolishing everything.
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>> how did we survive it. everything we have is gone. we have each other. i have my kids. that's all that matters to me. >> kimi. kimi. winter weather advisories will remain in effect in parts of massachusetts and maine. here in new york city we are under a winter weather advisory until 3:00 p.m. right now it looks like freezing drizzle or missed but we will see. be careful when they step out this morning. >> adina lost communication there. what a pro. we move on to talk about ohio. crews are working to clean up the taxes trained disaster and east palestine. working that waste go? that is a question and what will he do wherever it ends up. the e.p.a. has approved four sites.
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miguel marquez joins us live from east liverpool in ohio in one of those sites. miguel, you were here yesterday talking about this pool of water but there is so much to deal with beyond water. what are you seeing on the ground there? >> reporter: they have both water and soil that is contaminated and this is one of the locations where the soil will be dealt with. east liverpool heritage thermal services and part of a big conglomerate that have plans all over the country that deals with ways. everything from pfa firefighting foam to the stuff in the vinyl chloride that was filled in east palestine. they have removed thousands of cubic yards of soil so far. some of it has been treated in michigan, some of that has been set back to east palestine. in the rest of it will be brought here and these other plants that they are going to start shipping it to the e.p.a.
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saying that this was a plant that was out of compliance with e.p.a. regulations back in 2015. there was a settlement in 2018 and today it is in compliance with the e.p.a. and they will bring that soil here to be processed. it has raised some concerns in town but this is a plant that processes a lot of waste and all sorts and has been since 1993. >> there has been all this consternation about who is visiting and e.p.a. administrator heard michael regan heading back to open a community center. what we know about the resources they will have? >> they are bringing everything they can. the e.p.a. the state of ohio and pennsylvania and columbia county were east palestine and has coordinated pretty heavily. they are not only drilling
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those holes and they can chart if and where the groundwater is moving but they are monitoring the air on a constant basis and monitoring water on a constant basis and he's meeting from business owners and students to bring the community into this and there is a lot of concern and east palestine and certainly a black eye on the community. businesses are concerned and even high school sports been canceled with other teams coming into this area. i think they want to get back to life as usual and they are curious as to whether that will happen. they were hoping to have some answers for him. >> miguel, thank you. straight ahead in the 8:00 a.m. hour we will talk more about this with the transportation secretary pete buttigieg will join us live. that we go to the west bank where an american israeli cyst
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has been killed. israeli officials say the 27- year-old man died at the hospital after being shot at what is being called a terror attack. the state department condemned the violence and we learned new details about the 27-year-old man. we are live there. he was there visiting for a friend's wedding. what more do you know about this man who has been killed? >> reporter: we've been talking to islam's friends. he grew up in connecticut and moved to israel and joined the military before returning to the states. it just last year graduated from columbia, university, he was living in the states. he came back and what happened last night he was driving along this road that connects jerusalem to jericho and out to the dead sea it is usually a
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pretty quiet route and a lot of tourists use it to reach places like the dead sea. attackers began shooting at passing cars. elon was shot and killed. the attackers fled and burned their vehicles. there is a manhunt underway for these attackers. it follows a violent day on sunday that claimed the lives of israelis and palestinians in a different part of the west bank. >> what is being done in response. what does the investigation look like right now? >> reporter: right now is really authorities and israeli military are trying to search the area to find the attackers. they have yet to find the attackers and the attack on sunday the claimed the life of two israeli brothers and a similar attack where they were shot and killed while they were driving in their car. after that attack there were revenge attacks by israeli settlers. they set fire to palestinian homes and cars and claimed the life of one man. others were injured. all of this happening in the
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wake of an unusual summit between israeli and palestinian leaders. while they issued a communiquc about trying to find ways to calm the situation. on the ground, the situation is not ground. extra battalions of israel will and to try and keep the peace and keep israeli separates from palestinians. >> just so awful. we are thinking of this man's family and as you continue to learn more let us know, thank you. fox chairman rupert murdoch and what he said, about his on air host and the election lives they pushed. and we know 80% of couples slsleep too hot or too cold. introducing the new sleep number climate360 smart bebed. the only smart bed in the world that actively cools, warms, and effortlessly responds to both of you. our smart sleepers get 28 minutes more restful sleep per night.
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pay attention to this. it has a lot to do with our democracy. billionaire owner, fox news exposing the depth of the dishonesty thanks to the dominion lawsuit. rupert murdoch said, his host were pushing lies to his audience and the portion of the deposition compared to what the host were saying. and i quote here. question. you are now aware that fox endorsed at times this false notion of a stolen election. murdoch says not fox, no. but maybe lou dobbs or maria as commentators, meaning maria
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bartiromo. we went through fox o's maria bartiromo. murdoch says yes, come on. >> sydney, we talked about the dominion software. i know there were voting irregularities. tell me about that. >> that is to put it mildly. the computer glitches could not and should not have happened at all. that is where the fraud took place. >> actual evidence from the air. then murdoch is asked by kfox host jeanine pirro and he says, i think so. >> the president's lawyers are alleging a company called dominion that started in venezuela to and with the assistance of a smart medic software it's capable of flipping votes. >> foxbusiness host lou dobbs? murdoch's answer, a lot.
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>> this president has to take i believe drastic, dramatic action to make certain that the integrity of the selection is understood, or lack of it. the crimes committed against him and the american people. >> okay. next question. kfox host sean hannity. murdoch answered, a bit. >> it will be impossible to ever know the true fair accurate election results. >> in a statement to cnn and fox news person said, dominions lawsuit has more about what will generate headlines than what can withstand legal and factual scrutiny. okay. let's talk about that. cnn legal analyst allie and
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sarah here as well. good morning to both of you. i know we have been following this murdoch travel a lot. this murdoch trout not quite to travel yet but i am interested in. sarah, i will ask you this. some of fox big names called out by their boss in this filing. as someone who was followed the case, what was your first thought? >> i thought this was damning because if you look at the dominion lawsuit but it is alleging is that fox knew intentionally that lives were being disputed and they did nothing to stop them. what they say fox, is not just the personalities but the people who govern the network. it's rupert murdoch and suzanne scott, the ceo. this testimony, this definition testimony gives the lawsuit a lot of weight. legal experts will tell you it's a compelling case. typically with media and
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defamation cases the first amendment covers them broadly. in this one i think the plaintiffs have something going on that could be strong. >> she invoked your name. >> and we ask you about that? she makes a great point. the bar is high for defamation in terms of a media organization. this takes it further and this is the minion asking for a summary judgment we think the evidence is so compelling here we do not think this needs to go to trial. >> they are asking a judge to rule in their favor. the first amendment is very broad, especially for media organizations, the line here, the legal line is called actual malice and we get that from a supreme court case in 1964 with the "new york times." palm bay it seems like you went to lawsuit. >> it is the basis. the plaintiff have to show alive was told and think about the words we seek fox news anchors and executives using
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two describe the claim. ludicrous, crazy. it doesn't get much more clear than that. >> against the perception of the we were saying, the lawyers are arguing it did not amount to defamation because they say the host did not endorse the falsehoods. rupert murdoch said, yes, some of them, the ones we just played the clips from did endorse them. he said, they did indoors. how does that work based upon what they are arguing in court? >> it is a weak defense, caitlin. i have sources they say they think they will lose this case. is this discrepancy. they might say there was a newsworthiness covering what donald trump was saying there is a clear difference in newsworthiness versus peddling and have people peddling those lives on your show. you saw jeanine pirro in the
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fact that they booked her to let her spew these lies knowing that is what she would say. i am not a lawyer in this case. it seems like an absorption and observing what he is saying and reporting the news. >> they think they will lose this? >> i am hearing that. rupert murdoch's deposition which was unsealed concedes that. and when you look at what foxes chief policy officer said, yesterday, the plaintiff asked and the lawyers asked, do you think fox had a responsibility to tell the truth here and he said, yes. you have your own executives admitting there was a discrepancy and what the hosts were saying and what was being aired and the responsibility and i don't see how any person in their right mind can look at this and say this will be easy for fox to win.
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>> couple of things here. there was another lawsuit with tucker carlson. they were saying it is not a news program and no one should believe it is facts. then you have rupert murdoch, the tippy top. at the sort of, he is the tippy top. then you have paul ryan now saying that he will not attend the republican convention and this is based on donald trump selection lives saying he will not attend the republican national convention if donald trump is the nominee. i want to get your response. >> come 2020 for the republican national convention in milwaukee, where will you be? >> i will be here if it is someone not named trump. >> him, being a board member wants to move on. they are saying he will possibly lose this case. what does this mean as it relates to this lawsuit? republicans ready to move on. this is a big deal when it comes to fox news.
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not just the money they will lose but credibility as well. >> paul ryan is begging some sort of restraint here. rupert murdoch's testimony is disastrous. what the defense was going to be or what i thought it would be as we were covering this because it was newsworthy and we were endorsing it it. in this testimony he said, we did endorse it but he tries to draw this artificial line. it's all our anchors but not outs. what is fox, if not it's anchors, it's not going to work. >> big picture more conservative justice mark to revisit times versus sullivan and the malice standard trying to potentially change where the boris. could this case to change that president overall? >> it is possible but i don't think that will happen.
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the movement and the chatter has been why don't we make it easier to sue media organizations. i don't think ultimately the supreme court will want to go down this path. the bar is high and it has been high for 50 years and frankly i think right, left, conservative and liberal the supreme court wants to keep it hot as well. >> they were trying to get them not to put too giuliani on the air. about platforming election liars. >> and without pushing back which leads to endorsing. >> thank you very much. the department of energy says a lab leak was the source. china pushing back. our own david culver reported from wuhan, china, and shows us what china's response is looking like. so no hiding under your pillow. or opting for the couch. your best t sleep. alall night. every night. for a limited time, save up to $500 on select tempmpur-pedic adjustablele mattress sets.
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leak offers little evidence. it accuses the u.s. of politicizing the issue. david coulter reported from the epicenter of the outbreak in wuhan at the beginning of the pandemic. watch this. >> reporter: wuhan, china. you know it is the city's covid first numbers. how it first started depends on who you are asking you believe. >> we have to push china to be more honest about what happened three years ago and wuhan with the origin of the covid-19 crisis. >> [ speaking non-english ]. >> reporter: the foreign ministry calling on the u.s. to stop smearing china and politicizing the origin. our first of three trips was in january of 2020 when covid-19 was still a mystery illness. security outside the original
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epicenter told us to leave. chinese officials linked some of the first cases to this market suggesting it may have started naturally jumping from animals to humans. if it went global the u.s. and other democracies further questioned its origins. >> china is a sophisticated country and they could have contained it. >> reporter: the claimed a lab leak. the wuhan lab a 30 minute drive from the market. the bio lab, a four story structure and at the top a sophisticated air purification system and at the bottom underneath the lab decontamination that allows for safe sewage disposal. the research takes here on the second floor and some have questioned the lab staff training. the chinese raised concerns in 2018. at the time the director cooperative paper pointing out safety issues across all
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biosafety labs in china. he warned, in part, that there was a lack of operable technical standards. there is another lower level biosafety lab in wuhan. research was conducted here including bats and coronavirus is located just a couple boxes from the seafood market. the chinese government denied the claims that it leaked from a lab and its state media unleashed a relentless propaganda campaign. using digital articles, tv reports and documentaries and even a rap song. the aim come to sold out and deflect blame. monday's response from the foreign ministry said, in the world health organization. in january, 2021 the w.h.o. sent a team of international experts in two want to research origins. but that was more than 1 year after the initial outbreak. the team initially considered
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the lab leak theory to be highly unlikely. when the w.h.o. requested a second field visit from our research china said, no. >> and they are sticking by that. they do not want international experts going back into china and into wahkon. as china sees it the investigation is over and they are fine with an inconclusive result. it is interesting, as you point out, the majority of the u.s. intel committee believes it is a natural origin jumping from animals to humans or there is not enough evidence. chinese state media is looking at it as u.s. gathering as much as possible and they link it to the surveillance balloon and the suggestion that china may be providing russia arms when it comes to the invasion of the
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ukraine and this is just the u.s. doing it another thing to potentially smear china and they have politicized the whole issue at this point. >> the reality is to understand how to avoid another crisis. david, good reporting. thank you. any moment now we will hear from russian president putin as he is speaking out with his federal security service and is expected to address last year's operational activities and lay out his priorities for the coming year. the west and european allies will be listening closely. all this comes as prudent tries to have defensive strategy. he may address plans for a spring offensive. something officials do expect to happen. all of this is coming as prudent and the entire russian government was not invited to the munich security conference. they did not feel it was appropriate to invite them and it remains to be seen whether the dialogue will be possible in next year's conference even
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a new book out today and a new campaign style video appeared to be paving the way for an expected run by ron desantis. inching toward a white house campaign and expanding his political coalition. meeting privately with donors and starting a book tour with stops in texas, california and beyond with several spots in key presidential state and using the levers of his office signing a bill that gives him control of walt disney world's
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formerly independent area. jeff joins us. jeff, we heard about the florida blueprint and he is using this time and office now to pave the way for what his presidential run might look like. >> good morning. he is and we've been leafing through this book since yesterday and i been reading it and you get a sense of what a campaign might look like. importantly he has a bumper sticker message and that is to make america florida. this is what he writes. this is the take away. he says the battles we have fought in florida from defeating the biomedical security state, covid and to fighting indoctrination in schools strike at the heart of what it means to be a floridian and american. it's a sign he wants to use the agenda he's been signing into law and use these laws he has been proposing as a calling
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card for a presidential race. he signed into law the disney bill which has been at the heart of this parental rights act. he talks about this and republicans and corporations. he said, corporation is a major protagonist over battles of culture. they find large publicly traded corporations lining up behind leftist causes and adds old guard corporate republicans in some and is not up to the cat task at hand. he's talking about his party. big business has been a long ally of the republican party and this is a big difference of his stand when he talked about limited government only one decade ago. now he's talking about using government to control corporations. then he talks about the former president. he is gentle as he talks about
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him. something interesting he says about the governor's race and the former president talked about how he created the governor and how that endorsement back in 2018 set him on the way. the santa says not so fast. he says i do not think republican primary voters are sheep who follow an endorsement from a politician they like without any individual analysis. he said, it was his debate performances that set him on his way to come from behind victory. he praises it in some respects and he says it was his own debate performance. republican primary voters are not like sheet. this is a blueprint for how he would like to run for president and that is not coming today but coming soon. >> is the only talk about the positives of what he perceives because if you look at florida being the state of freedom and having the third highest number of covert debts and taxes according to cnn johns-hopkins data in florida has the 13th
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highest covid death rate over the pandemic. 402 deaths per 100,000 people. does he talk about what he could have done better rather than florida is great and come to florida and we are the state of freedom. >> this is a campaign book written by ron desantis. this is not an independent look woodward and bernstein deep dive into his first term as government governor. he is about big business and people coming to florida. this is only half of the story. republican primary voters will get a chance to rebut this interestingly he is set to announce not to announce until may or early june. he does want an imprint on the race now and that's why he's going out with this book tour to freeze other candidates out of donors and attention, et cetera. >> it is just starting. thank you very much.
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to learn more visit treatted.com. that's treatt-e-d.com. it is coffee time. as you prepare your morning cup of coffee or tea there is a serious new health concern about a popular 0-calorie sweeteners. according to a new study it is linked to an increased risk of heart attack, stroke and even death and a range of foods, especially quito diet products
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but it is hard to identify specific drinks for foods that contain. according to the sunny there is no rule requiring the sweetener to be named on a product label. why as that. let's discuss at cornell. that's where i go to medicine. dr. drew is also a contributor to the new yorker. thank you for joining us. good morning what are the health concerns and why isn't this listed? >> an artificial sweetener that a lot of people use and it has gained popularity in the last couple of years. it looks like sugar and tastes like sugar but doesn't have the calories and it doesn't affect our blood leukosis level. people with diabetes tend to use it. people with higher levels of erythritol in their blood had much higher risks of cardiac problems. they think the mechanism might be it activates platelets and
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causes our blood to clot and causing all kinds of downstream problems. >> and ask real quickly. excuse me. i use a sweetener in my coffee. how is this different than those sweeteners or is it different. i'm sure people use those different sweeteners as well. >> erythritol is mixed in with splenda, trivia. these sweeteners contain this because it helped spoke up and add to the sweetener and give it that sugary feeling. >> got it. >> didn't the fda prove this? >> the fda approved this in 2001. this is new research and preliminary research. one thing to keep in mind is that this is the first pass and there is a lot of limitations as well. they found people with higher levels in their blood tend to have higher risk. correlation and not causation and focused on people with
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diabetes, people with heart disease and it's not clear that this has the same effects for the general population. >> i want to switch subjects for a moment. we've been talking about the mental health crisis in this company and artificial intelligence. you have a new piece where you talk about this idea that artificial intelligence could be used to address the mental health crisis. can artificial minds heal real ones. what can we gain or lose and letting them try. there are huge risks and we talked about what can wrong and you think there can be some upside here. >> we know america is going through an enormous mental health crisis. one in five has some kind of mental health problem and a lot of that is due to our use of technology and we have these more powerful technologies like ai chad fox. you think it's a bad thing but
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there are real risks and real potential. these things can help us scale treatment and before everyone needed a one-on-one therapist and this is the way we can automate that. these ai rhythms can look through our medical records and social media use and sleep habits. put all these things together and give us a view of our personal mental health. while there are many, many risks, there is potential and we need to think about it going forward. >> we will see how it goes and how it develops. dr., thank you for joining us here at the table. also this morning. a live look of the steps of the supreme court. it will be a big day for the supreme court. oral arguments will get underway for president biden student debt relief program and joined by the official who's been pushing to get this relief sent out and that is miguel cardona. >> how did the sun come up so fast. the supreme court is laid out there and her grandfather's
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aaron frank murphy who is the late grandfather of cnn's own chloe. the story details and writes about being shot down out of his b-17 aircraft and surviving months in a german prisoner of war camp. here we go with our reported chloe now live. >> what an honor. >> what an honor to be part of this. the story has been out there and this is a rerelease and it will be a miniseries. it has to be an emotional thing for you and your entire family. >> i don't want to cry. i was just saying my grandfather was a great human being and i grew up listening to the stories about my grandfather in world war ii but
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i assumed everybody had a grandfather who went through these experiences. many of us do know someone who served in world war ii. >> the greatest generation, right? >> he spent almost 10 years writing this book and publish it for our family. it was with a small publisher and he paid for the print run and he would hand them out to anybody. it has been out of print essentially from the moment it came out. we knew tom hanks and steven spielberg would be making a show called masters of the air and that's when we decided to release the memoir. grandfather flew 21 missions over occupied europe and shot down on his 21st mission, two of the men and his crew died that way and he was a prisoner of war in incredibly tough conditions for 1 1/2 year. the same place where the great
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escape took place. >> you have such praise from david pretorius, tom hanks was a blurb on the cover there. i wonder what that feels like for your family. >> tom hanks. i will never forget the e-mail from him. is this real and he says, how did those boys do such things? it's not just about my grandfather. it's all the young boys who took to the skies. they were barely 18, never face combat and they are open these b-17s that are like tin cans and freezing cold and they are watching these planes go down all around them. this is when we did they like strategic bombing to hit our targets. we would do it during the day and have a better likelihood of being successful. the jury is out on whether that was a good idea or not. we were just targets in the sky waiting to be picked off. again, so many men died. my grandmother's group known as the bloody hundreds.
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he talks about a death march from one prison camp to another. my grandfather wrote they knew that the russians were advancing on starlight. as they marched through the snow the men were collapsing all around them and my grandfather writes how they carried each other on their backs. they made make shift slides and i have one of the shoes my grandfather wore on that march and it sits in my office at home. my little boys, leo and luke, three and five. we talk about him like he is still alive today. >> it is so amazing he wrote this for your family. it's so important and i know it is really meaningful for you. >> everyone will learn more with the miniseries and is starring austin butler. everyone will soon learn that these young men did during world war ii. >> you do travel with an entourage and whe
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