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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  March 14, 2023 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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>> tensions in the skies, a russian fighter jet forcing a u.s. drone over the black sea. the u.s. air force calling the encounter reckless and unprofessional. it's at a potentially dangerous escalation at a crucial time in russia's war against ukraine. joining me now from the magic wall is cnn military analyst, retired air force colonel cedric leighton. i'm so glad you're here to help us unpack. what happened in this moment? now, colonel, officials are saying that this drone was over
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international waters on the black sea when a russian jet dumped fuel on them and bumped into the drone? i mean, it sounds incredibly dangerous. >> yeah, it really is, laura. and it's good to be with you tonight. and where this happened is probably about in this area right here. so, all of this is international waters that you see right here, just off the crimean coast. and of course, the southern coast of ukraine. so, this area is one in which the united states of course has a lot of interest in trying to figure what's going on. and one of the reasons to fly an aircraft like the mq-9 reaper is to make sure we understand what the russians are, doing what the ukrainians are doing. and what other people might be doing in the black sea right here. >> so, if this collision is concern -- confirmed, as your talk, about this would be the first real collision between the u.s. forces and the russians in this conflict. is this possibly risking escalation? >> i could. and one of the things to keep in mind when you look at
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something like this, you see the different pieces that are a raid on the chessboard of the world right here. and when the key things is that when you use weapon systems like the reaper, you've got something that is really known for not only its weapons capability, but also as an intelligence collection platform, which is what it was most likely doing. because what it does is it takes signals intelligence and imagery intelligence, depending on the package it has on board, and correlates that data and sends it back work be processed by command centre. so, when you look at the area that we've got around here, there's a lot going on. and the tensions, given the fact that you've got systems going up in this area, you've got fighting all along here. and in the bigger map, you have all these different areas right in here. so, anything that could happen here could clearly spill over into other areas. >> but why are these u.s.
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drones, as you are explaining, one was called the report, why are they in the black sea region? >> so, they were in the black sea region because we're keeping an eye on everything that is going on in ukraine. so, we use this area because it's international waters. if we take a look at everything that is going on in the southern part of ukraine, and when the key things is, right here at the port of odessa, we've got the grain shipments that are going through this area. and we want to make sure the russians are not interfering with a grain shipments that are keeping ukraine alive, basically. so, that's one bag. think the other thing we want to make sure that nobody is sending arms into the russian controlled areas right here. and that becomes an important part as well. plus, we also want to see what the russians are doing in this part, crimea, which they annexed back in 2014. >> now, we don't actually know, officials are saying they have not yet recovered this downed drone. so, what is this due to any possible intelligence it might have been able to collect in a case like this? >> while, the intelligence that
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collected is sent in realtime back to a processing center, either in europe, or in some cases, back to the united states. so, all of the things that are going on here with this, if it -- you know, once it goes down, the intelligence collection stops. and then it becomes a situation where you're trying to get the pieces and parts that made up the reaper, and make sure it does not fall into enemy hands. what you are looking at here is trying to pull it off, probably off on the floor of the black sea, which is pretty deep in some of these areas right off the korean coast. >> colonel, thank you so much for explaining it all to us. i appreciate it so much. i want to turn out to trouble in the skies here at home. because on the eve of a crucial safety summit, the faa is investigated, get, this a now they're close call on the runway. on march 7th, the united airlines flight at reagan national airport was cleared for takeoff, when an aircraft controller noticed an unauthorized plane was crossing
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the runway. the tense moment was caught on tape. >> united 2003, [inaudible] >> start takeoff roll at 2003. >> 2003. cancel takeoff clearance. >> a boarding take, off a boarding take off, 2003. >> i want to bring in cnn aviation analyst miles o'brien. i have to tell you, miles, this is apparently the seventh incident that is like this, just this year alone. we're only in march, by the way. i mean, how is this possible? and what is going on? >> yeah, laura, it's almost like an explanation point on the need for this safety summit, that administrator nolan has called for. it's hard to figure out how to connect the dots, except to say this appears to be a system that is blinking red, flashing red lights, indicating there is a system that is on the edge of something much worse. you know, there is an
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expression in aviation, the rules are written in blood. it's kind of a morbid expression, but the idea is that accidents lead to rules, which make things safer. let's hope in this case, we're talking about a series of near misses that ultimately lead to making things safer. bottom line is on the runway is a difficult place to be. it's a very challenging place to be. it's always been very dangerous. the faa has focused on it for years. but it appears that people have gotten a little bit lackadaisical. >> i mean, speaking of runways, we know that a republic airways pilot crossed into this runway without authorization. i mean, how does that happen? we're not talking about something the size of mosquito. we're talking the size of an aircraft, crossing over runway. how is that even possible? >> there's really no excuse for a pilot to do this, period. a pilot in attention, it's not really understanding where you are in the runway environment, it's perhaps not just paying close enough attention. being on the ground, among
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other airplanes on taxiways, some airports are very complicated with the way the taxiways and runways intersect. but there's plenty of technology and warning signs built into the system to try to keep pilots from straying onto the wrong piece of concrete. but this point out an important thing, laura. we talk about improving the technology of the system. what we don't have the capability of doing in this country is adding concrete, making new runways, making more space for planes to land at these very busy airports. that's kind of a nonstarter in most locations. and that is where the choke point is right now. let's hope that pilots, air traffic controllers, and for that matter, the ground crews redouble their efforts to make the safer. >> now, there will be for the first time since i think 2009, there will be an faa summit. it's happening actually tomorrow. do you think that is going to be the substance or the crux of the conversations, not only
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addressing what has happened now seven times this year, but also trying to figure out ways to, when the rules are there, how to ensure their followed and to prevent any of these near misses? >> well, we can only hope there is a constructive tone in all of this and not a lot of finger pointing about who is to blame here. because if you look at it, we've had cases like you just saw, where a pilot is to blame or flight crew is to blame. we've had cases where air traffic control gave clearances which were not a good idea, and pilots have saved the day. we've had situations where ground crews and -- planes and other planes. it appears to be a system that's become a little bit complacent. and let's face, it puts covid, the airline industry is still running absolutely at the max, trying to recover a lack of personnel and full planes and capacity everywhere you look. so, when you are at capacity, you really need to be on your
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toes. you need to be on your toes anytime you're flying an aircraft. but particularly now. >> i hope the passengers are going to be on their toes as well. miles, sounds like a lot happening in a short amount of time. thank you so much. nice talking to you. >> you're welcome, laura. >> you know, when we come back, what voters think about diversity in america. nearly 40% of republicans apparently see it as a threat, according to some polling, which may tell you a lot about the laws that are being passed as we speak across this country. let's try the tissue test. ooof, still yellow. there's toothpaste white
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♪ upset stomach, diarrhea. ♪ pepto bismol coats and soothes for fast relief... when you need it most. >> well, there is new data out semantic why 2024 republican hopefuls are focusing on culture wars, as they say. a new cnn poll shows 61% of republicans and republican-leaning voters feel the country's increasing racial, ethnic, and national diversity is enriching american culture. but then there's the other side. 38% consider those changes to be a threat. that's about twice as high as
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four years ago. jessica washington from the root and cnn's own john avlon join the conversation, along with joe pinion and josh barrow. let me begin with you, jessica. the troubling nature of them, you find it to be problematic. tell us why. >> i think it's incredibly troubling. what we're seeing is -- and this is always existed in american politics in american society, is this growing idea that it's a threat to have a multicultural society. that is terrifying. and i think we're seeing this fear that if we acknowledge that the world has not always been perfect for everyone who is not white or cysts or straight, that that is somehow a threat. that what you would lose things as a culture. i think that's what people are afraid of, and that's what we're seeing pushed by the republican party right now, to some of the rhetoric, including from folks like nikki haley and tim scott, who tend to kind of toe that line. i think they're still saying words like the drug of victimhood. i mean, that's intentional language. i think we are really seeing
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that be pushed at all levels. >> to give some numbers here, you mentioned the idea of legislation. since january 2021, 42 states have introduced bills or taken other steps aiming to place restrictions on issues of how race and sexism are even taught. and 18 states have imposed such limits, according to an education week analysis. how do you see? this >> well, look, the positive sign is that 61% of republicans don't think a more diverse america's the threat. the problem is the nearly 40% who do. and are polarized politics means people play to the base, especially the trying to win primaries. i actually respectfully disagree that tim scott and nikki haley are focusing on the most divisive edges of the culture war. i think they walk, allowing the bill from south carolina. but obviously, the fundamentally differs. they made a case. tim scott and i want to talk about the country doesn't need -- to we don't need to whitewash the past. but that doesn't mean we need a more optimistic view of america. but what i think is troubling, obviously, is that 40% in a primary, that is real weight.
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and that accounts for the disconnect we've got in our politics between the primaries and the general elections. it accounts for a lot of these more divisive policies. the good news, if you go across, taps the younger the republicans, are the less likely they are to restore this. but this is still a big number for american 2023. >> it's a big number, and the idea of culture war more broadly being talked about, the idea of, you know, governor nikki haley, former ambassador, began her campaign talk about that she was not white, not black, known allowed the impact of race. two larger, point senator tim scott, oftentimes spoke about and referencing even in iowa the idea of what he called a more optimistic view of america. but also there is the element of the impact of race, the impact of how it's talked, about the so-called wokeism we've talked about in the past. what's your take on where things are in this poll? >> i think there's a lot of enthusiasm to talk about things during this frame, especially in republican primaries. we saw this even with the silicon valley bank failure, where you saw so many republican politicians,
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including ron desantis, eager to blame that on diversity and equity and inclusion and wokeness. i don't think there is a woke way or an on woke way to scrub your interest rate management to cause ear -- to be consolidated. but that's the first thing these republican politicians will reach, for partly because it's easy to talk about. math is hard, it's easier to complain about dei -- >> is a red meat? no >> and partly because it's red meat. but you saw the way republicans read the congressional elections in 2022, where they managed to take back control the house. and the senate, they obviously had candidate issues. but the way mitch mcconnell a top by the way they ran a campaign is they were trying to talk about inflation, energy, the border, crime, really substantive issues that voters care a lot about. now obviously, these issues can have cultural elements, negative elements that relate to racial divides. but they're not made-up issues. they are really core issues that people care about. and i think when republican candidates ran on those things, they tend to do pretty well. when he's instead had weirdo candidates that ran on weirdo
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ideas, you saw them lose, especially in senate races. i think this really is republicans being out of touch with the general electorate, in some ways, being out of touch with their own strongest issues are that are available. >> for some reason, the comment weirdo really made to champ at the bit. wait a second, we are no, what about them? >> we can talk about the election denialism that is at tass. but, look the backdrop to all this is resistance to multi racial democracy's has been one of the defining features of american history since reconstruction. so, it's not a surprise that that note is being hit. the problem is the word threat, right. threat is all about fear. fear leads to hate. that's the danger that number. >> look, i think we need to be honest about the fact that raised has been weaponized in american politics, period. it's been weaponizing this, polk is quite on sleep to your, point the poll is missing contacts, whereas the other side politically on this, and it's been weaponized specifically because we don't even know what people mean when they hear that word,
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specificity of language being the issue. >> even the word threat? >> the more diversity. i think even your threat, you bring out the word threat, threat is important because we have,, basically a majority of americans across the political spectrum, and said there was a threat to our democracy as the top issue on their mind in 2022. and yet, if you ask republicans, you asked democrats, the nature of that threat was very different. >> that's a very good point. >> so i think again, if you just talk more broadly here, is there and has there always been pushback to telling the whole story about america, people who don't want to acknowledge that deepest, darkest stain on the soul of this nation, slavery and racism and the like, yes, we have to acknowledge that. i have often said racism goes work and find the most oxygen. sometimes it finds oxygen on the left, sometimes it finds oxygen on the right. but overall i think, again, we have to be honest about the fact that both political parties in this two party system, in a four party nation, have been able to use the pain and suffering of communities. and even as something as basic
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as education. people talk about the issue of education, the vast majority of the richest districts in new york state are places where liberals live. and yet somehow, when we have this conversation, it's never conversation about saying how has the left weaponize the pain and suffering of black? people so, i just think in general, we have to be able to have the broader conversation with the fact that it's not one party weaponize race, it's all parties. >> jessica? >> yeah, i think it's really -- one thing i've said to talk about is this idea that liberals in new york city are part of the left. i think that that is part of a misnomer. i think there are plenty of people who are liberal, and also can partake in racism in the same way you can say people on the right partaken racism. but i think generally, left-leaning ideas are anti, kind of, a lot of that racist rhetoric that we're seeing. and i also think there is something to be said about ignoring the modern-day racism. i think it's so easy to say racism exist in the past. i think when i say that, nikki haley and tim scott are kind of
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playing into that. that's what i mean. they want to pretend like racism existed. and now, we are here. and i think that is part of that kind of fear, that if we acknowledge that racism is still an ever-present part of our democracy, a part of this growing multi racial democracy, then we are going to be moving in a dangerous direction. as opposed to saying, hey, what if we acknowledge what's happening is not great? what's happened is a great, and let's move forward together. and i think that's what we're getting on when i say tim scott and nikki haley are playing into that. >> i think that's a fair point. what they are doing in simply acknowledging america's original sin of racism and slavery, tim scott telling the story of his grandfather and how it affected him, itself stands out from a lot of the rhetoric you hear from republican politicians, particularly the south. it is important also to make a distinction. you can argue they're waiting it incorrectly, about the progress that has been made well these gains we still need to make as a country. >> i've a really sharp point, i want to come back to this point, jessica, i think is a really sharp point, the idea of so many people think about this
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clear delineation between then and now, as opposed to the civil rights era, we talk about as if it's finite, opposed to an ongoing movement. it's important things in the context. more on all this in a moment everyone. another area and topic that's going to war in this country, well, president biden visiting monterey park, california, two months after the deadly mass shooting there. he is laying out details of a snooze executive order to combat gun violence. we will tell you what he says, next. ♪ ♪ no two dreams are the same.
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president biden, calling on congress to pass legislation to curb gun violence. speaking in monterey park,
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california, where 11 were people were killed in a mass shooting in january. the president, detailing his new executive order, directing the attorney general to enforce existing laws on background checks. pushing congress to pass even stronger universal background checks, and assault weapons ban. listen. >> ban assault weapons, ban them again, do it now. enough. do something. do something vague. >> back with us now, jessica washington, john avlon, josh barrow. -- not the dirtiest of words, but asking to increase background checks.
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>> this executive orders where they try to use the power they don't, have this executive orders where they're trying to do something a little bit better. this seems to be in that category, basically a number of existing policies said, can we tighten up on this? but fundamentally, it doesn't really change our policy towards guns. look, we're a country with an enormous gun ownership rate, a constitutional right to gun ownership, and with political culture that strongly supports policies that allow for a lot of governorship, even if you have an assault weapons ban, and increase background checks in that sort of thing, it still will be generally permissible to own a handgun united states, it's not a countries where that's not the rule, where it's much harder to get a gun, we have much lower rates of gun death. phenomenally is that the case, here can't be the case, people don't want policies or someone to japan, the united kingdom, either places where that's the case. so those things we can do at the margin, if there isn't a willingness to do certain
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legislation. we see some of this in the states, i think there have been some moves in red flag laws in recent years, they think improve things at the margin. but honestly, it's all stuff the margin, are not gonna have large effects. >> the supreme court is weighing it as, well and they have a big role in the second amendment. i want to show for you guys, a table that was made by clarence tuf thomas, on the issue in particular, what it takes to be really able to prove and evaluate, sort of gun cases that came before the court. we hold when the second amendments plane techs covers an individual's conduct, the constitution presumptively protects that conduct, to a larger point josh. the government must demonstrate the regulation is consistent with this nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation, so the case back in june of 2022, first of all the language in and of itself, reminds you something for the historical conditions, in echoes back to conversations around jobs.
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the conversation now, he realized, the best courtroom experts nowadays, are not lawn for, us man are not, coughs it, are not even manufacturers. it's now historians, john, whose job it is to try to figure out what this historical context really looks like. we think about this? >> well first of all i love when historians get involved with contemporary debates. it's clarifying, it gives us necessary perspective. this decision by clarence thomas is fundamentally far flood, and five different ways. first of all, the original historical context, that's we always remember the other part of the text, -- text of the second amendment that is not apparently applicable current days. second of all, and historic balance between gun rights in the public interest which was the historic context we see over and over in american history. you can take your guns into town in the old west.
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there's a number of reasonable restrictions that have been apart american history from the very beginning. let alone compare muskets to what we have today. -- as scientific fact. this law, the redefinition of, it needs historians come in and say, is what is the context, judges don't, here it is not ecological, it's historical. >> a lot of things are gonna be completely absurd, you try to test, because some things are never contemplated, there's a few real world examples here. as virginia striking down prohibition ended ghost guns, and 1771 fire mr. natural numbers. taking us from domestic abusers, when he looked exclusively a
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history to go every hour now. with a technological advances and what you think about congressional today, is this still appropriate to be so backward looking? >> i think it's a little bit absurd to try to go all the way back in time and figure out exactly what they would've meant especially because obviously we move forward in our society, decided domestic violence is a crime which wasn't is all these things so i do want to say that if someone does one of eight originalist. you have to look at the fact that guns were completely different. i mean, if you had a musket, that's not the same as an air 15 they want to be originalist if that's really what they want to have to think about the context she did not account for the mass murders were seen today against gun violence. >> you made a point the idea of almost selective contextualizing threats today. i wonder how you see that plane? >> justice thomas, he doesn't speak in the heart of the court
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or even all what is considered the conservative block. we go back to why we're having a conversation biden with fact the leading cause of death's children of gun violence. people want to do some of that issue. i think to your point, given when we go back to what the individual said about the faa. you should be passing laws save lives, the problem we had in guns overall in, lee's illegal guns that become illegal for the black market, not up in the hands of criminals, have no respect for a lot of. so until really gets about passing laws, we have to try to prevent a crime so we're trying to stop and there's gonna be people who agree that constitutional women that are not gonna engage in good faith, because of her been honest, people on the other side of the aisle are not engaging in conscious debate. >> after, ask what laws do you think you would support, they could reduce gun violence? because i'm with you on enforcing existing laws, with
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you on hurdles don't respect laws in the first place. what laws would use support, would reduce gun violence, because it sounds like we should, pastime which is not a political will. >> christian foremost, i say this, there's just certain criteria i think can be applied. thank most people -- >> i think we should be sitting here, and trying to the same time we were purchasing guns legally, should have overall mean obstacles placed in their way, so thing for me, my focus is trying to figure, out from experts, because i'm not one. where is that critical inflation, plain where legals got guns, are ending up on the black market. one of these guns coming up the iron corridor, and an up and up in places like illinois? what is that mechanism, because i think that's what we should be focusing on. i think too often, we talk about everything that surrounds that inflection point, and not the actual fact there's a real problem there.
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>> i think the idea that people are experiencing a mental health crisis, should not be able to get a gun, common sense idea, the problem is when you have a legal regime starts with the presumption you have the right to own a gun, any other burden on the government show that somebody has a particular reason why they cannot be trusted with again. especially something as subjective -- it is difficult to have a truly effective enforcement around that. can work all the time, because you start for the presumption a person is not how management of crisis, and is entitled to again. some inherent in her, system who are allowed to own guns that they want. them >> i think the point, is we're gonn a --
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>> county is. which was awkward and it's all open span? >> now. >> i want to hear both your points. >> hold, on i won here at this point, i want you to respond. as the plane or trying to raise? >> would you swear to assault weapons ban. because when it was in, places degrees mass shootings. it, argue it's incomplete, but there is something that congress has, done could do, would you support that? >> i wouldn't support, because the same actual data that you're citing. -- michigan is not the elk, we're not here talking about the constitution right to hunt, dynamo people who put in place as the second amendment right at the first one is our
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constitution right to free speech, we should be honest about that. when we're talking about a well regulated militia. >> i wonder if this can all be resolve the same evening. >> oh no, and, what i guess will have to end it there. look, there is new data showing fatalities on our highways, we are going up, could the reason be in your pocket? maybe in your hand, on his desk, as desk. ooof, still yellow. there's toothpaste white and there's s crest 3d whitestrips white. whitestrips safely work below the enamel surface for whiter teeth in 3 days, guaranteed. a zillion times whiter! crest. ♪ma ma ma ma♪ [clears throut] for fast sore throat relief, try vicks vapocool drops with two times more mthol per drop*, and e powerful rush of vicks vapors for fast-ting relief you can feel. vicks vapocool drops.
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we highway fatalities are up
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22%, compared to just 2019, this is all because of distracted driving? well the national highway traffic safety administration estimates that in 2020 less than 10% of auto accidents were from distracted driving but the national distracted driving coalition says the numbers are closer to 25 to 30% so it can be done about this back with me now my panel listen i know some of you are new yorkers i'm hoping you will drive and think about this. think about this a survey finding a 56% of drivers, read a text or an email while driving, 27% of drivers check social media, and this figure, 19% were shopping online. i mean, my kids are too young to drive, but i'm always skeptical of the ideas, thinking how is it possible that people are doing this
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behavior on the road? do you feel more or less safe here in these numbers? >> this is terrifying. i'm good honest, i really drive that much, and terrified to drive on the highway and this really has my argument. i think i did say that i don't really want to learn to drive. but it is also terrifying, and awful. it is awful, i think part of what's happening here is we're so addicted to her phones it's not our fault. they're making money off of getting as the constantly be swiping and instagram. -- you have to have some self restraint and discipline and not saying you, society. idiot thinking about it is the onus on the companies stop us from enticing, or is it up to us to stop doing it.
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>> so tough to stop doing it, but it's also up to the government for for so long. at an uber driver about a year ago who had an ipad set up, trying to soccer game as you driving, at the ascham play started off. and he literally said to me, why? that's a because you're driving. >> but i don't buy this is the dreaming reason, fatalities are. i think it's happened is, the police have stopped enforcing the laws. new jersey, the given about is half as many moving violations as they used to before covid, a similar new york city. the nypd is any of us may take us as a used to. they're not getting in trouble for speeding anymore, the drive more recklessly, there's also been a player liberation of cars that either have obscured lights displays or inspired temporary license plates, so the government can't track people down through speed cameras, of a car, i drive a lot between here in long island, and people drive like maniacs out there, i think part of it
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is just because the government is not enforcing laws like it used to, you and then supposed, to so i think a key part of the solution here is people need to be afraid that they're gonna get a speeding ticket, they drive like an maniac. >> i think speeding tickets have anything to do this. first of all, i love driving and you could be a new yorker and, drive embrace the great american road trip this is about distracted driving in particular fatalities, up sometimes you don't know the exact context. -- you guys expect costa do within their own party. now because that's not gonna have eyes on the dashboard all day long nor should they, i will have something for people using their phone as a gps in effect. that shopping, that's just a darwin award thing, we are not at a self-driving car, yet you're shopping? of course is not hurting yourself, it's hurting other people, it's inexcusable.
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this leads from been sonia, had you get distracted every second. and you feel you impulse most important thing in the world. >> notice shed we could get get rid of the iphone. >> it is some people are losing their lives take it to tim cook. >> it's ian android user? is that's what's happening right now, no judgment either way, i'm just saying. >> people at favelas, it is tight, there is not to blame but, us also poor people still have cars with cassette players and, cannot bless them, you just have to realize the fact that people can't for the new tests, people i didn't antiquated technology, paired with new agent technology. >> protesters are driving themselves, but people can't afford the tests have started phone in their, hand -- >> are some amazon about devices you could use, but point well taken, and again i
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wonder, i mean we can have self-driving cars and everything else, is there a way to maybe make the technology keep what we want to murder drivers? food for thought everyone. everyone stay with me today, when we come, back if artificial intelligence rights here cover letter bolsters your resume, is a cheating? >> we'll talk about it next. even if you got ppp and it only takes eieight minutes to qualify. i went on their website, uploaded everything, and i was blblown away by what they could do. getrefunds.com has helped businesses get over a billion dollars and we can help your business too. qualify your business for a big refund in eight minutes. go to getrefunds.com to get started. powered by innovation refunds.
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(vo) when you love the environment, you work to protect it. the subaru solterra electric suv. subaru's first all-electric, zero-emissions suv. (man) we've got some catching up to do. (woman) sure do. (vo) built to help you protect the environment as you explore it. love. it's what makes subaru, subaru. so it is a question, can chatgpt find your job? bosses are catching job applicants, using artificial intelligence to bolster the resume, is a cheating or just a boost? let's put the ball to the test. asked chatgpt, try to cover
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letter for yours truly, a primetime tv host role, canada's name is laura coates, who's also an attorney. here's the automated response. it reads in response, do your hiring manager, i'm excited to apply for the primetime tv host role at cnn, even read this before people, by the way, as a highly experienced attorney the passion of engage with audiences, i believe i'm the ideal candidate for this position, a lot of great experience in minnesota, and political commentary, i developed a strong understanding of complex legal issues, and track record of delivering informative and engage in content viewers. as regular contributor to cnn's news programs, of longmire your clinton impartial and comprehensive news coverage. i believe in my experience and skills aligned perfectly with commission sincerely laura coates. now, i did not write that, although i put that out there
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are panels back, is it shaken by the way? the idea of using it for a cover letter? >> i think for cover letter, it's a little different, i think if you're doing it for a resume maybe not but a cover letter that is supposed to be you shine or they are a good writer. but i do have to say is it's interesting that, you know, people who are wealthy or send their cover letters out, where the resume is to get checked, may get them created for them, we all know that wealthy parents have college applications, written by professionals for the kids. so it is a little bit weird, if we're gonna focus on the kind of a eye level cheating, and all this other stuff, where if you have a professional network or rich parents, where you are independently wealthy, you're gonna get all this extra help. >> a cover letter, is in many ways a summary of what's and resume, and the fact that the computer can write a cover letter it reflects there's not really creative exercise, it's basically a descriptive, here's who i am, here is a bunch of oil played about why i love your company so much, so yes
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you can have somebody else write the letter for you, i also think that cover letters are kind of a dumb antiquated practice, and think they contain a lot of information, i don't think employer should be asking for them, as we resume, it's a purely factual document, so i wasn't accurately describes what it is you've done, doesn't matter whether you wrote it or computer, out or some other person. >> i disagree, look, the world is changing, schools are now starting to have to catch, up i think employers are gonna have to catch up again the chatgpt is only as good as the prompt rate. they could've said please write my cover letter in the sovereign robert muslim. so your point yes it is a creative exercise but increasingly a.i. is doing all those creative exercises on our half better better by the day. this is why it's gonna be the crisis of our time, and, yes i think the cover letter in some ways, at least of our worries as it retains the long term impact on our workforce and ability to discern who's actually capable, who's not. >> i wish robert la la would
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good evening. ever since the start of the cold war, the u.s., russia and before that the soviet union have had confrontations in the air and at sea. and although dangerous for all concerned and nerve-racking, these encounters have rarely blown up into serious incidents. that's because to really some extent there are routines that are followed to release some degree, partly less so for russia. everyone involved acts professionally. that was not the case today above the black sea. an american reaper drone like this one was int

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