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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  March 27, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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takeaways were, since this is the kick off for the final season. we would see well, first . thank you for that humble, brag that you got to see it a week early. alright pick that name up that you just dropped. okay you know it's nice to have privilege but the reason that we love this family so much is because they make us feel better about ourselves because we're not as slimy and we're not as smarmy and we're not as dysfunctional as this family or at least we hope we're not right . like we're not as neurotic as shiv. we are not as calculating as low. logan. roy we're not. you know, we're not as messed up . speak for yourself. she goon are yeah, well, like i said, we think that we're not. but it is. it is. it is great theater. it is theater of the absurd, but it's like watching a car crash. you can't help but slow down, and then you feel that much better that i wasn't in that crash. oh my gosh, i'm not as bad as this. i guess it's like watching reality tv and watching
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people debase themselves. and then you get to say, oh, my god. look at them doing that. i would never do that and you get to eat your popcorn and enjoy it. yeah i can't wait to see what the evolution of what happens with tom. this season. we will stay tuned shotgun. thank you so much for joining us this morning. my pleasure. y'all be safe out there. have a good week. you too, will and see it in this morning continues right now. protests engulfing the streets of israel prime minister benjamin netanyahu's plan to weaken the supreme court he fired a key minister who opposed the move this morning. well, netanyahu pushed forward with the overhaul is terrible. it feels as if the prime minister has lost control. it feels as if this country is going down a very dangerous road. it was like no notice. we didn't know what was happening. mississippi cleaning up from a devastating tornado, at least 26 people are
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dead. there's very little of this community that was untouched by the storm city is gone, but resilient and we're going to come back. grand jury in new york. is that the reconvene as district attorney alvin bragg ways indicting a former president for the first time in american history. prosecutorial misconduct is their new tool. we believe this is a political stunt by mr bradford. it's not for me to tell the district attorney who to charge or what charges to break. what putin said is that russia is planning to station a number of tactical nuclear weapons batteries. ukraine has reacted angrily with the foreign ministry here. colleagues for an extraordinary meeting of the u. n. security council, in fact, seen no indication that he has any intention to use nuclear weapons period inside ukraine. we can't allow that to be a cause for delaying critical weapons system that we need to deliver to the ukrainians. march madness has been wilder than ever, diego state miami. four.
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i'm sure there were people doubted we could do it. but we never doubted for a minute. good morning. is your waking up today ? israel has been engulfed in turmoil. there is a live look right now in jerusalem as massive protests are rocking the country. now a huge nationwide strike is grinding israel to halt the prime minister benjamin netanyahu is under intense pressure to back down from his controversial plan to overhaul the nation's court system yesterday, tens of thousands of protesters blocked a highway and tell aviv after netanyahu fired his own defense minister for coming out publicly and criticizing the plan, saying that he opposed it. those protesters were blasted with water cannons as they were blocking that major highway. look at all of that and listen to it. believable israel's
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largest union has called for historic strike. flights have now resumed israel's israel's main airport after they were grounded for hours at a live shot at the top of the last hour of someone just getting into place and taking off workers at the country's biggest seaports have joined the strike. even mcdonald's is closing all of its restaurants in solidarity there . israel is one of america's closest allies in the white house says it is deeply concerned about the political crisis. so you see the president, the first lady turning to washington last night, the world is watching, and they're waiting to see what netanyahu will do. we were expecting to hear from him earlier this morning, but that did not happen, perhaps will happen a little bit later on, so let's check in now, with cnn's harris cold. she's among the crowd in jerusalem, and she joins us now by phone. any sign of his netanyahu going to speak ? is this forcing him to change his position? you guys i'm joining by phone because there are so many people here at the protest outside of the supreme
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court that our signal for our camera is just so weak just because just a massive of people . as you noted, the country has ground to essentially screeching halt because massive general strike this is the largest general strike, i think ever announced in israeli history, even affecting the airport, and the last time the this way. it was during war in 2021, with rockets flying in the air. but today has come to a halt over these protests against this massive judicial overhaul that i'll remind everyone essentially would allow the israeli parliament to overturn to clean court decisions with a simple majority. that's according to the legislation, as it's currently being proposed. now all of this started saturday night when the defense minister, the first minister in the eurozone government, came to come out against this reform, calling for a whole. he was severely fired 24 hours later that sparked massive street protests. you guys were showing videos of police using water cannon. protesters in the middle of the night on the main highway. and now we're just waiting to hear from the prime
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minister from benjamin himself. so far, he has not made any sort of statement about this. there are reports that he was going to call for a halt, make a big speech to call for a recent legislation. so far, we have heard absolutely nothing from him or from the prime minister's office guys. i mean, just watching this play out and how this is impacting daily life in israel. i mean, when the strikes with what we saw at the airport earlier, the flight tab now resume. the fact that this is even reaching to places like mcdonald's, i mean blocking the highway. the pressure is so intense on the prime minister here. i mean, what is the expectation of what he's going to do? well i mean the pressure for him to at least announced for greece. legislation is absolutely massive, and now we're even hearing threats of violence from grow. netanyahu groups. some of these are far right wing extremist groups. some of them have vowed to come out on the streets later tonight. that is incredibly worrying because this is
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something the israeli president had been warning about. now for weeks, he is warning that there could be blood shed on the streets between israelis he is warning about a civil war. and so there is an incredible amount of pressure on benjamin. it's even hearing from other members of his own government. saying they will support netanyahu if he announces a free. there are some israeli media reports that he's currently in consultations with members of his right wing government. these are the people who used to be the fringe politicians in israeli politics . now they are sitting ministers . there are some reports that some of them are still pulled out and want him to push through the legislation, but i honestly cannot see how we could stand it just the way the state of israel as i'm seeing it today. i've never seen anything like this. wow never seen anything like this gold. thank you for being there again had, as noted she can't actually appear on camera because given the size of the protest that you're seeing on your screen right there, it is blocking cnn's camera signal from being able to go live. we will continue to check back, though, but there's live updates you're seeing on the ground and david miller on just a little bit later on. he's a former
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middle east negotiator and former for the u. s. state department. it's gonna be interesting to hear what he has to say about that. in the meantime, back here at home more than 20 million people across the southeast or under threat of severe weather today comes after a deadly tornado outbreak tour through mississippi and alabama , killing at least 26. people are nick valencia is i've in the hard hit town of rolling rock, mississippi this morning where there is devastation. that's what you're seeing this morning. i'm sure nick. good morning, dan . there is grief here. a lot of it. more than two dozen people were killed by that powerful ef four tornado that ripped through this portion of the mississippi delta on friday night and just look at the force of the winds here. the power of this storm that came through here, wedging this car, picking it up, turning it on its side and wedging it right between this vehicle. just behind that. there's a semi that's crashed into a tree, the roof of this home. just entirely gone. this community a lot of many of them here. don't have home insurance. many of them here are poor. it's a predominantly black portion of the mississippi delta. but what's really striking to us in
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our time here in the last several days, it's just even those who have lost their homes chipped in to help out people who were worse off. madonna seizes the vice mayor of rolling fork, mississippi. we'll hear more from her in just a little bit. she was telling us over the weekend that her home was just destroyed. and yet she was out over the weekend, delivering hot meals to her constituents. we also met antoine jones. he's a hometown born and raised here and rolling forward has been on the police force of the last five years. he was in a bathtub with his girlfriend picked up literally floating in the air crash down, survived with just a few scratches, put on his uniform and then went to work. it's stories like that that are really standing out here in this community last night, more salt in the wounds is another round of severe weather. tour through here, many people here holding each other extra clothes and you could tell scenes like this. it's gonna be a long time before things get back to normal. here. don valencia in rolling fork this morning. thank you, nick. appreciate that. also new overnight. first citizens bank has now officially purchased
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silicon valley bank after svb collapsed and the largest u. s bank failure since the two tells the 2008 financial crisis. first citizens bank is now going to take on all deposits and loans of s v p. that means it will operate the 17 branches that previously, said svb. they will now be first citizens bank. cnn's christine romans joins us now she's been tracking all of this morning. good morning. and you know this was the big question of when a purchase like this would have happened. what does it mean for people who were formerly customers of svb means when they wake up this morning will have a new bank name for citizens bank and everything stays the same for now, while first citizens from raleigh, north carolina, integrates this bank. look it's really interesting here because first citizens says that it has these innovation hubs and there'll be leveraging silicon valley's strengthen. private equity venture capital and tech services. so there is some overlap here. that makes sense for both of these companies. it's also super interesting because tomorrow you're going to get a hearing at the senate
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about what happened with svb and may 1st will get the first look at what the federal reserve's own internal investigation into what happened at silicon valley bank. so we're learning more about what brought this bank to its knees. even as we find a new buyer here. i think this is good news for the stability of the american banking system. no question. this is the healthy way to do it. but when you have a weak bank, you have a stronger bank that buys it, so we'll closely be watching to see what happens next. but you have stability and banks really around the world. deutsche bank is up in europe. european shares are higher, so there is some feeling that the worst is behind us in terms of the banking sector, so this is just the latest in that sort of banking threat here. it's hard to keep track of the names was first republic and then sbb. and now it's first. citizens. that's right. that's right. who cares about the name? as long as your money is safe, right when you go to there's those silicon valley banking customers. when they go today, they will have a new name on their bank. but everything should work their cards, their their their access points, their digital banking. all of that
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will still be working. great nice to see you guys, so let's get back to the turmoil happening in israel over the government's controversial plan to overhaul did you just judicial system there. aaron david miller is a former middle east negotiator for the state department and senior fellow at carnegie endowment. he spent decades working on american efforts to broker agreements between israel and its neighbors. good morning to you, erin, we appreciate you joining us, much of israel is at a standstill right now. the options for netanyahu at this hour first of all, don kehler. thanks for having me. look, we're on terry cognito and president you now have a general strike, which hasn't occurred. i think since the british mandate period of this size, we've been waiting for three hours for mr netanyahu, the prime minister to make an appearance is justice minister was out earlier, basically saying that he would accept any decision that the prime minister made and mr levine just minister is one of
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the hardest line on its of this judicial reform. i call it a judicial coup, actually. so i think benjamin netanyahu risk ready on trial. bribery fraud breach of trust, wanted this judicial reform to neuter the court, and i think he may have no choice. given the pressures that we witnessed, which are extraordinary, basically least to push for the leg. yeah it's remarkable to hear from the justice minister coming out and saying that given he was part of the architect of all of this, but you know, one thing that i've been thinking of in the bigger picture of this is how much does this have to do in your view with netanyahu himself because you can't ignore that all of this is coming as he's fighting his own corruption charges and part of this new package, the courts would no longer be able to bar politicians who were convicted of crimes. from serving in top government jobs. how much do you think this does have to do with his own recent trial? you know, tip o neil's famous shows, he said that all politics are local when it comes to benjamin netanyahu, particularly given the fact that he's under
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indictment with a trial in jerusalem district court that's now three years of consuming to run. politics are personal for him. i think this is existential , and i think it explains the risk readiness, the abandonment of caution and prudence characterized so much of his career. one step forward one step back back where he really needs this judicial reform and i think he now has been has been under understand that he's not going to get it. i think five elections the israelis have had in almost four years, driven by the fact that mr netanyahu not agree to the formation of any government in which he did not have a majority in large part because of his trial. yeah listen, it's not just gallant there at least two more israeli ministers both of the same party as netanyahu, they suggested halting this controversial plan as well. the former prime minister, jawaharlal peed, called gallants dismissal and new low and i think what what he's saying is what's happening.
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now he's rerun on twitter that netanyahu may be able to fire the minister, but he cannot fire the people of israel who are standing up to the insanity of the coalition. that appears to be true. you know, that is such a crucial point. and you know that. what's the takeaway for us, israel and the us are fundamentally different countries, and it's hard to compare. there are circumstances but you know the reality is indictments. impeachments investigations. all of that, notwithstanding what is happening in the streets of israel struggling for what many israelis believe is the soul of their country. yes, people part. and it's extraordinary. it may well. it may well be one of the takeaways despite the differences that divide us and israel type of system, we have largeness and smallness of this country. um one takeaway that maybe americans ought to consider what do you aaron? what do you think is gonna happen? i know you don't like to predict things. do you think he's going to have to back down or at least
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freeze it for a moment? ah i don't you know, don and i think the work with delphi probably couldn't make a prediction right now. but i think if i had to predict it's just seems to me to be straining the bounds of credulity to the breaking point that he won't push for some sort of delay. the country is in the verge of a crisis and mother hasn't been violence. that's always a real possibility, the longer than this yeah. aaron david miller. thank you for that. i mean, just the fact that the justice minister is saying that he'll accept whatever netanyahu decides could be an indication that he may he may back off it. even if it's temporarily delays it. we'll see. we'll be watching president trump's legal troubles back in focus. this week, the grand jury hearing testimony about his role in a hush money scheme is expected to reconvene today. where things stand in the investigations next, tracking russian president putin now claiming that he is planning to move tactical nuclear weapons and deploy them to belarus. we have the former trump national security adviser john bolton here to weigh in ahead. tax
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imprint dot com and finds him wow now imprint for certain in new york, and this is cnn. this
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morning, the manhattan grand jury in the trump hush money investigations expected to reconvene and it's possible they could hear from an additional witness. that is, according to cnn's latest supporting trump railed against the investigation during a campaign rally in waco, texas, this weekend. afterwards he told reporters that he thinks the case is being dropped. didn't give any evidence to back that up. it's still unclear, though the grand jury will bring any charges of joining us now to untangle all of these lingual legal entanglements, the ones facing donald trump, cnn senior legal analyst, mr elie honig. good morning, ellie. so let's start with the manhattan here because there are a lot of them. the grand jury is back in session today. what should we expect at least this week on so many different legal issues swirling around donald trump. now the grand jury is back in session. 3.1 miles from where we stand right now down at the courthouse in lower manhattan, looking at this hush money
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payments scheme. of course, this focuses on the $130,000 that donald trump paid through michael cohen, his attorney at the time to stormy daniels in hush money really important to understand. paying hush money is not a crime. so what could the crimes be here that there potentially looking at? we are in state court here? manhattan d. a alvin bragg is in charge of this case. so under new york state law, there's a potential misdemeanor crime here for falsification of business records, the thought would be if they falsely classified these hush money payments as attorneys fees that could satisfy the misdemeanor. also this could become a felony if they falsified those records in order to commit some other second crime. so what could that be? what second crime. it could be a violation of campaign finance laws now. to that extent, donald trump's team has been saying they may use a defense like the one used by john edwards. john edwards was charged federally with a similar offense back related to his 2008 campaign. he was acquitted in the federal
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courts. the case was then dismissed. he beat the case by arguing the payments were not related to the campaign. they were related to him, avoiding personal embarrassment. now here's what the process is going to be when alvin bragg has done putting his witnesses in the grand jury, he can decide whether to ask the grand jury to vote on an indictment. if they do vote that will happen quickly . this is not a trial jury where these things take days. if the grand jury votes, it'll be quick. if they do vote yes, we will have an indictment. that's a sample indictment from another case, but that indictment will be under seal, meaning we won't see it in the public until the time of donald trump's arraignment in court. that's typically when these things get unsealed, so there could be a brief period of time here where we know there's an indictment. but we can't actually see what's in it. we've been here from trump once they find out that the indictment has happened, so there's the other side of this where we might like, just like with the search on mar-a-lago last before you get too could just real quickly. can we go and not understanding the argument with john edwards? are they arguing for it to be adjudicated
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because john edwards was adjudicated, and then he was and then he was acquitted. so why are they making that comparison ? it seems like it's doing exactly the opposite of what they want to occur. john edwards defense was these payments were not campaign related. they were nobody had to go to court. he had to go to work prove that trump if he has to go to court and defend himself on a similar campaign finance charges would be state instead of federal. you can see that he's gearing up to make a similar. don't want to go to court. right but if he i mean he can't avoid going to trial on that. that's a trial defense, ultimately, okay? okay well, that's what's happening here. we're still going to wait to see what the grand jury does today. there's the other investigation that is the special counsel's investigation into january. 6th what's happening so big this ruling from a federal judge that the people you see there? mark meadows, stephen miller, dan scavino, the others they basically can't cite executive privilege to not go and testify. that's really significant for someone like mark meadows. this is a big deal. you're right, katelyn polantz. relating to all of these high level former white
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house officials. most importantly, mark meadows so that that ruling came from a u. s district court. now this may be appealed up to the court of appeals. i don't think there's any real chance of success here. the courts generally reject executive privilege claims when it comes to a criminal grand jury subpoena and what this means, as a practical matter is that mark meadows and all those other people you just saw they have to testify in front of the grand jury. now they can take the fifth amendment. everyone has the right to do that, if they want to say their testimony might tend to incriminate them. if they do that, though, prosecutors. jack smith has a potential countermove. he can immunize them saying you have to testify. now we're not going to use your testimony against you. that's not optional, by the way, if they do that, meadows has to testify. all right. l a on a lot of investigations. keep track of thank you for doing so clearly we appreciate that. alright. also this morning, the white house's responding to russian president putin's plan, he claims his plan to deploy tactical nuclear weapons to neighboring belarus. we have not
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seen any indication that he's made good on this pledge or moved any nuclear weapons around . we've insect, in fact, seen no indication that he has any intention to use nuclear weapons period inside ukraine. we've seen no nothing that would cause us to change our own strategic deterrent posture. that's john kirby from the national security council. this comes as putin has escalated his rhetoric several times since he invaded ukraine has warned of the increasing threat. of nuclear war. ukraine believes that these plans show that russia is not making progress on the battlefield and is instead trying to distract a top ukrainian advisor tweeting that putin is meeting his afraid of losing, and all he can do is scared with tactics. joining us now is former national security adviser to former president trump. john bolton. good morning , ambassador and thank you for being here. do you think putin is bluffing when he makes these comments? well i think he's been bluffing when he's trying to rattle the nuclear saber before he may not be bluffing here. in the sense he may actually move
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tactical nuclear weapons into belarus, which is its own separate problem, something i don't think we're paying enough attention to, which is the potential re absorption of belarus into russia. but militarily even if he did that it really wouldn't make that much difference. in my view, because of what we know our extensive nuclear supplies missiles, cruise missiles. drones and warheads in kaliningrad exclave piece of russia that separated from russia itself by lithuanian poland. that's a place which has long been basically a russian military facility going back to soviet union days, and it's had missiles there which were actually in violation of the treaty, which the us withdrew from some years back. so the capabilities russia already has in the kaliningrad enclave are the ones that that could be most threatening. i don't think the idea of moving some tactical nuclear weapons into belarus changes that balance. we'll see
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if he actually follows through with that. i also want to ask you about what we are seeing these remarkable images coming out of israel this morning in the massive wave of protests. against this attempt by the prime minister to overhaul the judicial system. i mean, what do you make of what you're seeing on the ground? well i think this is really an ethical clash between the left and the right. in israel. there are huge philosophical differences here. i think it goes beyond judicial reform goes beyond netanyahu himself. the one thing i must say i cannot understand is how people believe that netanyahu's effort to change the judicial nomination process is a threat to democracy. i think the way israel has its judicial nominations set up now is undemocratic. it's the new judges are picked by a panel of existing judges and lawyers. so it's a self perpetuating oligarchy accountable to elected representatives. it seems to me
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to be about as far from a democratic way to pick judges, as you can imagine some of the other proposals i think are more controversial would certainly be controversial in our country, but the idea that the judges select their successors i just think is strikes me as fundamentally anti democratic. maybe somebody can explain how it's consistent with democratic theory as we know it in the west as a whole, but but i don't see it. well i mean, that certainly are the argument you're hearing from netanyahu himself. he's arguing that with these changes that aligns them more with with western governments. but do you expect that he's going to have to compromise on this? given the outrage you're seeing? i mean, they're shutting down the highways. planes were temporarily halted from taking off stores are closing. even the justice minister is saying that he would accept whatever decision netanyahu would make here. that's significant because it could say, give him some space to back off of what was pushing ahead with. well certainly the speculation in
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israel this morning is that that's what he's going to do, and i assume he's going to speak literally almost any minute now, and we'll find out ambassador bolton. obviously you worked for former president trump. we were just talking to ellie about the investigations that are happening here. you made a comment recently that stood out to me. you said that if they indict and failed to convict trump here in new york, you think historians will look back and say it helped trump get reelected. right obviously right now, everybody is focusing on the potential for the indictment , and i fully understand why that is. but i think the more important question is what would be the outcome of the trial if and when we ever get to a trial if trump is acquitted, all of those who have said this prosecution in new york over stormy daniels is political, it's selective. the prosecution . it's really highly partisan in nature would be vindicated, and i think that would have enormous political consequences. sadly
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all of them favorable for trump . that's why i think there are conspiracy theories on the right. people believe they worry that the trumps want trump. the democrats want trump to be the republican nominee next year. because they think they can beat him so having his base stirred up by an unfair prosecution from that perspective is not bad for the democrats, but i think if trump were actually convicted in this case, then i think it would be something significantly different that whether it was selective prosecution or not, a jury had found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. so there's a lot to go here. i don't i don't know of anybody who looks at the plethora of criminal investigations of trump, who doesn't think this one in new york should come last in a long list before it, but it's not under central control. you've got three different prosecutors in three different jurisdictions looking at four different cases, obviously uncoordinated. yeah i mean, even adam schiff was critical, saying he thought the justice department moved too
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slow on the january 6th investigation with the timing year, but on the attacks that we've seen against the district attorney here in manhattan, alvin bragg, a lot of them lead from the comments. trump has made untruth social. do you think he should denounce the rhetoric around alvin bragg and what's happened to him and instead, you know, say he should be able to do his job. well i think republicans ought to stand up number one for the principle of federalism. he even though alvin bragg is not the person i would select as the poster child for that. i just think it's a mistake for federal legislators , federal authorities to be questioning what's going on in a , uh, a municipality in effect prosecution, the defense itself will be able to challenge the indictment. if it comes down on many different reasons, this is this is a state prosecutor investing investigating conduct that essentially took place in new york before trump became president, and it may be unfair
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. it may be a lot of things, but i think it's we begin to bend almost to the breaking point. principles of federalism that republican conservatives believe in when they go after alvin bragg, republican chairman, not only not backing off of it, they're doubling down on saying that he needs to come. and testify. john bolton. thank you for joining us this morning. glad to be with you. the quote is my city is gone. that's from the mayor of rolling fork, mississippi after a deadly ef four tornado completely flattened entire streets of homes. we're going to talk to the vice mayor who lost her own home. that's next. if you have diabetes, it's important to have confididence in the nutritional drink you choooose. try b boost glucose control. it's clilinicay shown to help manage blood sugar levels and contains high quality protein to help manage hunger and support. muscle health. try boost today, my most imptant kitchen tool, my brain, so i
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online to gotham set .com. i'm gonna roger on capitol hill. this is cnn. oh man, it's devastating down south. more storms hitting mississippi overnight as the state faces the devastating aftermath of a deadly tornado that hit on friday, killing at least 25 people. the f four flattened much of the small town of rolling fork. with homes forced just reduced to piles of wood and vehicles tossed and destroyed their the mayor said. this city is his city is gone.
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so joining us now rolling fork vice mayor loredana see us uh huh. and her own home was destroyed in the tornado mayor. i'm so sorry. thank you. thank you. how are you holding out? um we're holding up as best we can based on the circumstances that we're in. how do you even begin to recover right now? from devastation like this? i'm looking behind you. and this is just a small portion of what happened. right it's really hard . um it's really hard. you're you're trying to keep it together, um, for yourself and for others. but when you think about what has happened when you have an opportunity to drive through. walk through, you know you're looking at neighborhoods were homes have been totally demolished is heart rating is overwhelming. at times, you have
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your moments. you know where you breakdown, but then you have to, you know, get yourself together . get your bootstrap back up. get your feet planted solid and you got to keep moving on. but the hardest part is having to witness someone that has lost a loved one and then having to talk to people that were residents here but have been displaced due to this disaster. it's hard, it's overwhelming in its heart wrenching do you? did you know any of the people who died. yes i did. i, um i'm actually waiting on a list. i have asked my counterparts of other albumin and he's actually willing to meet will meeting this morning. sometime this morning here, and i, too. i've asked for a confirmed list. that's what we need a confirmed list. of people that were killed
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during this tornado, so i will be meeting with out um and stuart this morning and so we'll be trying to get a confirmed list of those people that were killed in the tornado. and yeah, i did know quite a few of them. we all did. yeah it's a close knit community. i'm sure. where were you when this happened? yeah. um actually, i was at home . um my husband. he was home and he was constantly telling me you know, you need to get up. let's get dressed. um and by the time i got up and was trying to get dressed, he pushed me in the closet in his closet and he was able to close the door. and the minute he closed the door, the force jm the door and he was just constantly trying to hold the door so it wouldn't come open and you could literally hear the house ripping apart. so we were. we just hid in the
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closet until the sound stopped. and like i said earlier, it appeared to be forever to me. i'm sure it was a small time frame, but it sounded like it was forever and you could. it sounded like a tornado or trying to train it sounded like a train was coming through and at that point, he said, it's hitting. and we could hear the pavilion coming apart. we could hear the house coming apart and when we were able to get out of the closet um, after the you know, from undamaged the door and we walked down the hall and when i was able to see highway 6 to 1 and all of the lights. i knew then at that point that that the house was gone, you know, so the only thing you know the closet that we were in and then we were trapped in the garage because the garage door was jammed and we couldn't get out and it was. it was terrifying. it was
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terrifying. when you look around right now, your community i know you're standing there, but when you look around, what do you see? holmes. there. we're home structures that are totally demolished. totally demolished everyone on this street on this end of the street that we're on has been been displaced. i mean, there's nothing here. there's nothing here, but a lot of wood bricks and rubbish. there's nothing here. homes have been totally flattened a lot of limbs down a large debris. trees pulled up from the ground on top of rooftops and windows, broken out vehicles. totally shattered. chart upside down. it's horrible in in where i'm actually standing. this couple that lived
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here. knew them very well. the next family people lost lives on this street, you know? and how can you how can you rebuild or come back from that? you know from a family. all of the materialistic things can be replaced, but to lose a life that's under applicable. you can't replace that and it's totally it's devastating. it's devastating. vice mayor. we're thinking about you, and we hope you get the resources that you need. and you guys, please take care of yourselves. okay well, and we appreciate you joining us. thank you so much. okay. thank you. you're welcome. thank you. well you know, no motor state. we'll be right back. we'll be right back. sunday nights. we're trying somethihina little differerent. one whole story. what's startling is the sheer number of migrantss on ths track. our world's best
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there of airports across the u. s. is millions of americans are taking their spring breaks. this year's travel rush is expected to go over pre pandemic levels and topics. the surge in demand has raised concerns, though, because as this is going on the industry's continued to struggle with staffing shortages in a number of aviation incidents that we've been tracking recently, cnn's pete mountain is live at reagan airport outside of washington, d. c pete, i think the big question that a lot of people who are preparing to go on these trips are wanting to know how the industry itself. has been preparing for this. katelyn polantz a says we're in the middle of the spring break travel peak right now. the faa anticipates handling 46,000 flights today, even more tomorrow, but travel groups say the numbers could be bigger and there is already concern beyond just this rush. spring break, travel is soaring back to normal and renewing worry that your flight could be canceled. meltdowns plagued the faa in january southwest airlines over
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the holidays and industrywide last summer air travel system is under great stress. federal aviation administration is already warning of a shortage of air traffic controllers that could cause increased delays at new york's three major airports this summer. they're a key air traffic control facility is that only 54% staffing. we're seeing it with delays. seeing with cancelations and that is leading so travelers to say you know what i would travel more if we could fix that air travel experience. the latest figures from travel site hopper show many travelers are concerned about flight disruptions. 20% of hopper spring break, travelers are buying extra trip protection that's on top of rising air fare up, 4% hopper says. compared to 2019. quite pricey this time of year, i guess due to spring break and due to what's going on in the economy up one day they go down the next day. just be diligent beyond point when you see that good price you want hit the button. even still, industry figures say 158 million
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americans will fly for spring break. that's an average of 2.6 million travelers each day, expecting this spring break to likely break records for number of travelers who are getting out there and how much they're spending, given the huge demand coming out of the pandemics, destinations. las vegas, orlando , phoenix, los angeles and miami , where the airport says demand is 20% higher than 2019 so high that officials are asking you to show up three hours before a domestic flight. instead of the typical two hours. there are very few off peak times right now. for us, we have been the best alternative to leaving the country since covid. top tips from travel experts book your tickets now, if you have not already if you pick a day like tuesday or wednesday, could save as much as $150 on airfare, according to hopper, and also book the first flight out, that is how you minimize the chances of delays and cancelations, caitlin yes, that is always my
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entrepreneur and founder of a startup called way or weekly advice for young entrepreneurs. she's here to weigh in on just how viral this photo went. and thank you for being here. i saw this paper. picture on twitter over the weekend. i saw people were responding to it. you know, it's not real, but it looked. pretty realistic and i think the thing it raises concerns about is how soon before we're just drowning in these deep fake images that aren't real. right yeah, i think that it went so viral, not just because it was funny to some people, but because most people couldn't tell that it was fake. so in terms we've known for years that ai generated imagery, it presents quite a looming threat on on democracy and on society's world where we can't distinguish what's real and what's fake and what this weekend's viral images show of the pope is that that that world is here? that world in which images video may not longer be synonymous with the truth, and you know there's many social implications for this,
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but mostly how accessible this technology has become to anybody with a smartphone. it's we're moments away from just being swimming in a sea of information that we can't really distinguish what's real and what's not. yeah is frightening. remember those images of trump that went viral of him getting arrested? they were obviously real, but some people thought they were real. so how would well then how even even, um what is it? chrissy tegan, who thought it was real lot of people were fooled by it. so is there. what do we do? then? how do we safeguard against this? and how do we know what's real and what's not, janine? right. so i will say that there isn't unfortunately, a single solution. there isn't a switch that's going to make a lot of this. go away, and it is going to be a cat mouse game with trying to keep up with the technology to be able to flag things as fake, but there is a multi stakeholder approach we can take to try to minimize these harms and this requires tech companies, policy makers. social education. journalists have a role to play in this, so i think that on the technical
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front tech companies that are building these systems also need to equip journalists and newsrooms. rooms with the tools to be able to detract. a i generated imagery and content and maybe we see a new role evolved a. i fact checkers in newsrooms on the policy side of things, and maybe we require a i generating image systems to have a watermark on them. not to me that rooms the quality of the image, but something that could be detected by by system, so to speak, and maybe on social media posts. we always flag when something is a i generated, but we also need a societal conversation as to what do we want the boundaries of this technology to be going forward? and then, of course, educating deciding work broadly on this educated education classrooms on this yeah, that last part is so crucial for people themselves to be able to spot it. not just the companies. i mean, i don't think anyone on planet earth would confuse, don or i with astronauts, but our producers did have some fun with this and put into this to this generator , don lemon as an astronaut
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katelyn polantz as an astronaut . you can see our pictures here. we don't think they look very realistic. but that's i think the danger of when you could obviously tell it's fake. and when you you can't really tell and you know what? i think the biggest risk with deep fakes and a i generated content. it's not even that we'll start believing what's not true what's fake but that we stop believing what is true. we become so disoriented and all of this information that we last shared to the facts assured set of truths, and that's the fabric of our democracy functions. it is just built on a shared story. yeah i am a model. that's a piece titled that you wrote in vogue. i am a model and i know that artificial intelligence will eventually take my job likes something shiny that you're inside. it is really interesting on this. so thank you. thanks for joining us this morning on such an important topic. thanks for having me. all right. i
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mean, the astronaut photos are pretty good. can we put the astronaut photos of just for a second? i think it looks nothing like either of us. but i mean, come on. we can't do it. yeah, maybe. maybe after i've been like sunning for a couple of days and hanging out who knows katelyn polantz and makeup? no. yeah, i don't. i mean, i think it kind of looks like me. not exactly, but i could see the resemblance. part is as as who is that person? that's up, okay. maybe i should do this. that is done. no, no, that is lan demon , in the scary part is, as the technology gets better, though it is like when it's more realistic. like the pope. all right, anyway, we'll move on from our astronaut photos this morning continues right now. words can't express feeling broken'm

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