tv CNN Tonight CNN April 13, 2023 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT
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don't wait. scan the code now and ask about the bosley guarantee. i'm priscilla alvarez at the white house, and this is cnn. closed captioning is brought to you by audiobook network. others tell your story produce an audio book with us earn more profits and find a new audience for your published book produced an audiobook. we handle narration, production and digital distribution 38559. bye everyone. thanks for tuning in for this hour where we bring you tomorrow's news tonight. we have our great lineup of reporters to share their scoops. we've got shimon protopapas are let signs harry antin and zain asher. great to have all of you with me here tonight. okay, so let's start with the suspected leaker of a trove of classified pentagon documents who is now in
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custody tonight. the fbi arrested 21 year old national guardsmen, jack to shera. outside this massachusetts home to share a was reportedly the leader of a tight knit online community of gamers, many of them teenagers with whom he shared these military secrets. octopus has been covering this story for us to shimon. this 21 year old is now in fbi custody for disseminating top secret national security documents. so what's going to happen tomorrow? here i mean, they're just sweetie. look at these pictures of the fbi going to his house, and that way it wasn't supposed to go down like this. it's significant when we see some things like this. how was it supposed to go down? i mean, they weren't planning to get him at that moment, and they never make arrests during the day like that. you never get to see them make arrest. you know, six in the morning, they come to the house. either they knock on the on the door or whatever if they have to take more aggressive measures, but you never see activity because they thought he was going to leave. i mean, what happened was his name got out
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there, right. there was a lot of information and then the new york times went ahead and published his name and that just set off a chain of events that we're seeing here today. indications to us is that perhaps they were planning to arrest him later today. ah when he got to work or that maybe they were going to wait a little bit. they were still working the case. but look, this is a very significant leak case. the allegations are very serious and that this 21 year old who had access to all this really sensitive sensitive intelligence just decided, you know, because he wanted to be cool. decided he's going to share it with people on this social media platform discord. and that's what he did. and you know, when you listen to his friends, this group of people describe what it was like and why he was doing it. it's really raises some interesting issues. take a listen to one of those friends describing those events. he was a young, charismatic man who loved nature. god who loved shooting guns and in racing cars . he did have sort of a bossy
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attitude at some points, but it was more of a fatherly bossy. he did see himself as the leader of the scrutiny. ultimately he was the leader of this group, and he wanted us all to be sort of supersoldiers system degree informed fit with god. well, armed stuff like that. i mean, they looked up to him when you look at the reports out there and people who have spoken to other people, other people who are part of this group. i mean, he was their leader. he was the guy that was coming in and giving them all this information. it's not entirely clear that they understood what they were getting. but certainly this was a person who they looked up to. who's coming into this check group, giving them information. but at at times what's really interesting is that they weren't even interested in what he was saying, and he would get so angry at them. and he would say, come on, guys. you gotta pay attention to what i'm saying. i didn't understand the acronyms. so he was typing. he was using a lot of the acronyms as they use in the military and his friends and they were like, what's this? you know, it's all gabi got to them, and he had to start to kind of educate them on that
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kind of showing off. you know, he's like, look what i know. look what i have, and, you know, look the concern here is that there are indications that you know he had anti government views that this group which you know he would talk about racial issues and racist things, and he would talk about guns and they would talk about obviously video games. this was all on discord, and the whole group got together because of video games. yeah isn't it incredible that he could access these national security secrets? he's 21 years old. i mean, he was described. i know that you said that it was deeper than just an it. guy but they've sort of downplayed his role in this. it doesn't sound like something somebody who should be able to be able to get their hands on this. you know, there are so many thousands of government officials who go through the security clearance processes so that they could have access to this classified information. but it does raise questions about what exactly those reviews are like, and how someone could just so easily take these types of materials and documents into 78. then with
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the public now i know the pentagon, you know, has already started to limit some of the sharing of classified information as they're going through this review at this time to see how to try to prevent christ crisis is like this from happening again. but it's just we've seen this over and over again when you think about edward snowden and chelsea manning. can i just say one thing on that point, you know, one of the things that came after 9 11 was this view that the intelligence agencies needed to be better about sharing information that that would make the us much, much safer. after 9 11, more people got access to classified information, and i think there's a worry now in intelligence community that because of this leak, they're now going to restrict it. they're going to say okay, who absolutely absolutely needs to know this information. how can we limit the number of people have access to information in order to prevent leaks, but the fear is that that ends up making the us less safe. so then you have to walk that very fine balance. that's really good
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point. and i think so other intelligence agencies or whether it's the cia and the nsa, and then you know, parts of the fbi. um sort of treat this information. more securely. that's what you know people who cover this issue and cover intelligence say the pentagon, in particular, has a problem a bigger problem than any of the other agencies because they have to disseminate disseminate this to so many different people. this air base where this 21 year old work is an intelligence. collecting part of the military . they deal with drones. they deal with cyber security. he's a systems engineer. he's the i t guy. he's got to make sure that all those computers and all those systems are running. he has no business looking at this stuff, but he has access to it because he has access to the systems. so that's the problem like snowden similar, but you know snowden, and the motive is so different. different different motivations. yeah ramona. sorry harry. let me just move on to this other crime
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story that we want to get, too, because there's a elopement. so this, uh louisville, louisville , mass. shooter his family is saying that they want to have his brain examined. why so they're concerned. look they're looking for answers. they're trying to figure out is there something that led him to do this right? and no idea when we heard on the 911 call, his mother said he's never been violent. he's a good kid. he doesn't have a gun. all of that turned out to be true health issues, but so now the family is saying when he was a kid when he was in eighth grade, he had some concussions he had to at some point in the eighth grade. then he had one in high school. he was an athlete was playing basketball. so now they're concerned, and they're asking questions that could something as a result of that have led to this this kind of mental health issues. cte right. it's a chronic traumatic and that felt like the right and so, look. we see this in football players, right? how are you know? and so
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this is what they're now looking at to see if that in any way contributed to what he did here. you know, i think this family is just desperate for answers for why their son would behave like i mean, i could i can only imagine what a parent has to go through in this type of situation, right? we oftentimes look at it from the side of you know if your child dies at the hands of something, so what could i have done? you know, and you just think you just all of these things you know, parent is supposed to out is supposed to die before the child. but on this other end, right? what could i have done differently that my son might not have done this and just going? how do you live with that? i almost have to feel like there's sort of this guilt that's going on here. i'm sure i'm sure. mean that the family, particularly they had no warning sign. other than that he was struggling with mental illness. i mean, we heard that you know that phone call last night, right where it was like he won't harm anyone. he's a good boy. clearly not, but maybe she knew a different version of him before whatever it was that
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happened that caused him to do these things. but i just have a larger question for shimon here. you know, we were talking about this last night and we were speaking, you know, i couldn't have thought we were coming in and we're going to talk about nashville and said we're talking about louisville and these things happen week after week after week, and i'm just wondering if someone who covers this. you know how the heck do you keep your head on straight like, i think, certainly the last year, right? so we're talking from last year to now there's been a lot of mass shootings and i've covered almost. i think all of them at this point, nothing bigger for me personally than you've all do, right. i've invested a lot of time in that we're approaching a year. it's hard because when another mass shooting happens, it brings me back. to the time when i was in your body, and when i talked to those families it brings back that horrible day and part of it as a reporter. this story has been very different because i've been closer to a lot of the families and i have ever been on
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anyone involved, and also because i have seen things that no one should ever see. and that's stays with me. body camera footage kids that were shot kids that sadly died in horrific injuries. um bloody, messy hallway, seeing officers reacting to once they get inside the room and seeing the kids who died and how do you keep your sanity? well i mean, talk a lot about it, you know, i mean, i have moments where i'm i'm very down and i get sad and sure i cry and i feel terrible for these families because it's so unfair. this should never have happened. it should never happen to any of these families. um it's hard because you know, i want to. i wish there was more i could do right as a person. i just wish there was more i can do, but there's really not much more i can do. and you have all the thing is. i'm still living with that every day because the family is still call me every day, and there's still things going on. that really are not right that are unjust and i
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can't do everything but i do live with guilt sometimes honestly, because i feel like you know if i'm not there if i'm not covering this story, i feel bad. i'm like something happens . it's sometimes it's very small, but i feel like maybe i can make a difference if i was there and you are doing by continuing to report on it, and i just went to vivaldi for one day when president biden went and i just remember people saying we don't want to be forgotten. we don't want people to move on. and what you do ensures that it's not forgotten because you continue to push and you continue to share their stories. yeah, it's been, you know. the there are nights when you know i think about it a lot , and i think about the families, but it's harder when it keeps happening because it just comes back and then like last night, listening to those 911, causing nine, listened to all the 911 calls in your body and the screams from the teachers who couldn't do anything to help these kids. and then when i heard the woman screaming yesterday it's kind of brought me back to that moment.
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um hammond is somebody i don't know. i speak for all of our viewers as well. who's watched you this whole year, particularly all the time you spent in your body. you have brought accountability to that story that wouldn't have happened otherwise, you have chased down local officials to demand answers and you didn't leave as our let's says you didn't leave. like so many other cameras did after that, and you have brought them accountability that you can't you can't solve it all. but you know, i have a team that i do this with. but i also think as an organization would cnn has allowed my team to do here. is what made this, you know, kind of happened and why? i think this is what journalism should be. and why. i think, um why it happened, you know and why we we've been able to have such success and people who trusted us there and you validate as a journalist. they allowed us into their homes. but the sources and the people that we made friends with opened up to us and gave us information that really put their lives in
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jeopardy. but they felt that justice needed to be done. allison's right. sorry. i know we have to move on. allison's right. i mean, the fact that you focused on that story, the fact that you brought it so much attention to it. the fact that you really thought for accountability i mean, i got emotional with. you know, i'm not from the us. i actually just became a us citizen, but just thank you, but just sort of being in this country and seeing what's happening in a place like you validate. i mean, it brought tears to my eyes and just thank you so much for all the work that you have done, especially when it came to you know, making sure you've got answers about why those police officers waited one hour why they waited one hour, which is just i can't even think about it. it's going to make me emotional, but you've done great work. yeah thanks for explaining all of that shown. alright, we're going to be right back. many more stories to cover. reinventing ourur network with smarter, more efficient routes so you can deliver more value to your customers. fast
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supreme court has until midnight, central time tomorrow to rule on an emergency filing from the justice department over abortion medication overnight, a federal appeals court froze parts of a texas judge's ruling from last week there would have suspended the fda approval of an abortion drug or that science has been reporting on all of this. so tell us what happens tomorrow? yes. so really, the clock is ticking. and these next really 24 to 26 hours are going to be critical. the justice department wants the supreme court to intervene. they do not like this decision that came out fifth circuit court of appeals, which said that they're keeping that fda approval of mifepristone in place, but they're issuing and following through with some restrictions from that federal judge down in texas. i was talking to people at the white house today, and they are very troubled by the fact that these restrictions could go into effect in essentially what this would do. i think we have a graphic with some of these items. one thing it would do. it would stop any, um ability to get mifid kristen through the mail that is going
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to severely impact telehealth services, which is increasingly away that some people are trying to get access to this medication abortion. secondly it really narrows the window of one. exactly you can use this from 10 weeks to seven weeks. all of this is of concern to the white house as they are just thinking about the potentially i don't want to put a number on it. but like how many women and girls this could affect who wouldn't have access to? this medication abortion pills, so justice department is hoping that the supreme court will move quickly to they want them essentially to freeze this whole thing while this appeals process plays out, but i think what the supreme court we all know it's hard to predict what and when. exactly what happens. let's say if they don't i mean, look what happened. you know roe v. wade, right, like so what happens? what? what? what is the justice department? what is the white house ultimately going to do you know one of the things with with this story that i have found very interesting is that states are kind of taking action now about the governors of the
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states who are who are stockpiling this drug just in case they're ordered to stop making it so they're now stockpiling it. um all of all across the country. um the other thing is that i don't understand. this thing has been, you know, was approved what? 20 plus years ago, all of a sudden, some judge comes in and says, yeah. this disapproval process. yeah something's something stinks here, sort of and says i'm no, we're not doing this. that's the argument you know, from the government is this has been approved for 23 years at this point, and there's this big question that they're raising that says. well if you're going to question this approval of a drug from 23 years ago, it's completely opens the door to people questioning other problem. that could potentially be a big problem for the fda. all right? i mean, that's just talk about the potential, or maybe it was intended consequence of overturning roe v. wade, right. i mean, that was the law of the land for 50 years . you throw it out the window. who knows what might exactly happened next, and i think we're kind of seeing that right now, right? yes, but furthermore, not. i mean, not just in terms
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of abortion, correct in terms of all of the other medications totally, and medications like medications for, for example, covid 19 medications for people who are transitioning they could come under fire as well. but i think what's interesting is that um, the person who has done more to limit women's rights to an abortion in this country in terms of the makeup or the supreme court, donald trump has been the most silent on this issue. i think it's i think that is fascinating whenever whenever he's asked by reporters, he just sort of ties themselves into knots, trying to avoid talking about this because he understands that this is a losing issue. for republicans. there absolutely is. i mean, we got polling on this. you know about the idea that a federal court would ban this abortion pill from, you know, going to effect. what was the opposition to this ruling? look at this. 70% oppose a ruling like this, and it's the rare time in which a majority of republicans and a majority of democrats agree on this particular issue. donald
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trump may be a lot of things, but he's not a moron. he understands what's going on in the politics of this. this is a losing issue for republicans. they just had a midterm election in 2022, right, in which job biden, the incumbent democratic president approval rating in the low forties, and yet it was perhaps the best midterm election for the incumbent party since 1934. so republicans realize what this is politically , democrats realize what this is politically and we're gonna see what happens. focused on the primaries, though they're focused on the primaries. that is the goal right now, and that's why they're trying to rally the base. so you see what's happening with ron desantis. he's about to sign that legislation in terms of six weeks. tim scott is coming out talking about potentially supporting a federal ban 20 weeks they're focused. on the base and on the primaries where they don't understand. i guess they do understand that, but they're not focused on it right now. is that of course, after the primaries comes the general and that's where they're gonna be punished and how many very conservative republicans lost very winnable seats last year,
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especially in senate races. right, pennsylvania, arizona. the list goes on georgia on and on and on in florida. i mean, governor desantis signed six week ban. i mean, it's really gonna make florida one of the most restrictive states in the country when it comes to abortion, but ron desantis can go and sell that to people in a primary. it will be interesting because people are looking for ways. days for donald trump and ron desantis kind of differentiate themselves from each other. this might be one of those issues. but as harry and saying what we're talking about it's going to be a troubling issue for republicans heading into a general election when we saw the way that abortion rights really helped. democrats prevents the red wave that so many people had been predicting in these past midterms. you have suburban women, you have many men who are speaking up in saying, this is a right that women should be having. so it's going to be interesting to see how the republican party
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positions himself as they come out of the primary. that's what i was. i was in my head. that's what i was thinking. what's going to happen as we get closer. to the general election are more republicans going to come out? and i mean, they're gonna change their tune. are things going to is anything going to be different? the one thing i'll note is when donald trump won in 2016. he was seen as more moderate than hillary clinton was. but the percentage of americans who see donald trump as quote unquote very conservative, has risen 30 points since then, he's seen his far more conservative, in part because of what he did as president, so i'm not quite sure that his tries to sort of tacked towards the middle will necessarily be sort of bought by the american culture. but of course we'll wait and see. right thank you all very much. all right. so how many of us define ourselves by our jobs? harry has some new reporting on how the number of americans who say their job gives them their identity is changing. mm. he's gonna explain all of that. mm hmm. so many migrants
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ever ingredients to help you lose fat get lean, absolutely free, rugged 321321. i'm pete montini at reagan national airport. this is cnn. like you're talking to each other, all right? well done. uh so what do you do? do you get that question? whenever you meet someone new? what do you do? well the wall street journal is out with a new article titled stop telling everyone what you do for a living cnn terry engine loved this piece so much that he started digging into the numbers and he found that 45% of people say their job gives them a sense of identity. but that number has steadily declined since the 19 eighties. okay so harry tell us who still define themselves by their jobs. i feel like you do.
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no i know who everyone who lives in washington, d. c. that's why i had to get out of that town. right every time i lived there for a couple of years. it's the biggest thing right. it's like, what do you do? who do you? you know, it's like the first question any social question right to sit like this and yes, thing. and you know all we all shop at the brooks brothers store together. it's fantastic. where you shop that's existing. no i don't shop. i have my girlfriend shot for me now, at least because otherwise i would honestly just wear the girlfriend. otherwise i just wear the clothes that my mom got me when i was in high school, so definitely definitely upgraded since she's been in your life absolutely, absolutely traipsing around the office with a blanket and you're basically like, uh, sweatsuit, although i did use berman's blanket earlier today to take a nap either way, um, let's just say that it's the people who have the highest education levels who have been defining, you know their lives by what their job is so post graduates are far more likely than, say high schoolers. some college grad college grads are
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near post gradually, but it does seem the longer that you've been in school. the more likely you sort of say that their job gives you a sense of identity. and i think that kind of makes some sense right? because you sort of invested more time in school to get that degree. and maybe you spend more time at work in all, honestly, like my mother, like right pediatrician. how much time did she spend at work? my goodness, gracious. thankfully she did because she was able to give me a good education with with the money that she made, but still, i think that when you look at the numbers, there's no doubt the longer you spent in school. the more likely you are that you say that your job gives you a sense of identity. as in, don't you feel like all of us here also define ourselves by our working solely but you know what? i don't actually think there's anything wrong with that. i think it's fine to take a little bit of professional pride in what you do. i have, um i have a bit of a strange trajectory to coming to cnn. i mean, most people who end up as an anchor reporter at cnn usually work in news. local news, perhaps not everybody, but they may work in local news for
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about 10 years or so, um, two years before i got the job as a correspondent at cnn, i was working as a receptionist for about four years. 4.5 years, actually, in what kind of office it was a production company, i job was obviously to answer the phone and then also to validate people's parking and i can i can tell you first of all, can i just say you can learn a lot about someone based on how they treat the receptionist? some people would come in and they would make conversation with me. um and i would be so touched, but other people would just literally teach me treat me like i was invisible. and so i learned a few things from that whole experience. and also, you know, when i would go out, he would ask me. what do you do for a living, and i would say i work at a production company, and then they would say, well, what? what do you do with the production company? and i would say i'm the receptionist. and often times i would notice that their reaction towards me would change. you know, they wouldn't be as i was not as useful to them in california where everyone was. obviously it was another one track town. exactly
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everyone's in the movie industry . and so it was really tricky. but i think that now after you know, having that job for four years, and of course, there's nothing wrong with being a receptionist. i just think that for me personally, i wanted something different now. coming to this particular job i take such prior takes such pride in what i do i remember you know, for the first i mean, still now , but certainly for the first few years of my time at cnn. i used to be so happy on sundays because i get to go to work on monday, you know, and when you have your dream job and i'm not just you know that. thing. but it is true. so i think there's nothing wrong with taking a little bit of i don't think you should like, obviously, i think it's journalists. you know, we take a lot of pride in what we do course. but you know, i could see where in some situations, you know, people sometimes feel oh, you're you're talking about work again. why are you talking about work again? you get these situations like okay. can you put your phone down? can you
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stop working? you know we have very demanding jobs, so it's much so it's much different people do like to hear about our job, so i mean, that's part of it out in public. we do talk about our jobs. people ask a lot of questions about it and are like sometimes i'm like, i don't want to talk about work all the time. so i'm not going to ask you about work either, but i don't know. i remember going out to dinner a few months ago with someone for the first time. they're like, what do you do for fun? and i like literally was blank. i hate that question. it's a really hard question, and after the fact i'm like i'm an interesting person, right. you feel like you have to come up with something that yeah, i didn't think i was just like i work a lot, but like i also enjoy hanging out with friends. ends and i like working out and i like wine, and like you, and i need to work on a hobby, right? you need to come up with something. you need to have an elevator hobby. you haven't. that was two months ago, and i haven't come up with them like a hobby pitch. i'm gonna work on it. that's great. alright thank you all very much. so thousands
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of protesters in france are angered by the government's plan to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. zain is going to explain what happens tomorrow when a french court weighs in on this battle. we'll be right back. pretty major. my god. when you're the leader, disaster cleanup and restoratation. how o you make like it? never even happened happened. fire it up, randy. being prepared for anything. whatever comes your way, there's a pro for that serve pro like it never even happened. i'm livy done all american gymnasts and view every athlete. when you travel and train as much as i do you find happiness where you are. on the
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find me at hotels .com. so many migrants complaining about how this was nothing like the easy route they were promised one of the world's most dangerous journeys, people clumping together, perhaps fearing for their own safety. men women children, risking their lives for a better life reminder of the violence faces migrants here every day. the whole story with every day. the whole story with anderson our customers don't do what they do for likes or followers.
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their path isn't for the casually curious. and that's what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it's what they were born to do... it's what they live to do... trinet serves small and medium sized businesses... so they can do more of what matters. benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter. eva longoria searching for mexico, sundays at nine on cnn. violent protests breaking out across france for 12th straight day, demonstrators venting their anger at president macron's plans to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. tomorrow is the big decision day. zain tell us what's going to happen
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tomorrow. i wish i could look into my crystal ball for you. but um, the constitutional council has a couple of choices in terms of what they're going to decide on. one is whether or not there should be a referendum, but the key decision on the constitutionality of the bill. um there's a few scenarios that could play out. one is that they could just say yes. you know, this is constitutional. macron thumbs up. go ahead. or they could say yes, it's constitutional, but we're going to tweak it slightly, or they could reject it in terms of what i think is going to happen. i would say the likely scenario is that they accept it, but possibly they tweak it. so you're going to see these protests continue for the time being. i think what's really interesting, especially for an american audience is how the french view work. we're just talking about work. how the americans you were how the french view work. it is so different tell us how is it different? i think that for a lot of i mean, i would say that it's the polar opposite in that in france, work is a means to an
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end. you know, your quality of life is so much more important than making money. and even if you don't necessarily have that much money if you even if you aren't rich yeah. you still deserve a healthy and good quality of life. that is what the french believe. and i think that the reason why people are it's actually interesting because i have a very close friend who's american who works in paris. and she always, um, talk to you about the typical french work day. you know, you get into the office at 9 30 10 30. there's a break. there's a coffee break. is there a result? i hope so. you can't eat at your desk. you know, it's frowned upon to eat at your desk. right? so then there's a lunch break here now you can still work. like what? and then you're having a lunch break from 12 to 2. and then there's another coffee break at 3. 30 you know what i mean? they just really value the quality of life. that's not a bad thing. i think that you know is delicious. harry what about in the u. s.
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you have research on how americans feel about their retirement age? the french don't like what's happening over there. they should come over here and see how they like it. all right? i mean, my goodness. we've seen the retired lots of protests. exactly you know, we've seen, you know americans retiring later and later and later. and what do we see here? you know, americans take on raising the retirement age in when you know you get full social security benefits, raising it from 67 to 70. look at that. 78% of americans oppose it. just 17% support it now that has not obviously stopped some politicians from offering that up. but the fact of the matter is americans don't like the fact that the retiring later but they're not at this particular point going out on the streets and causing a lot of trouble for the incumbent president. we're working to art to go out. that's right. no croissants for us. harry's never retiring. i mean, i think what's also interesting is that this goes this goes well beyond just the retirement age. this is a about i mean, a lot of people loathes emmanuel macron and the other thing i was
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wondering if this is more about him than totally. they see him as arrogant. you know the way he went about trying to shove the legislation through and it's also i think quite interesting how differently he was perceived. when he first came into the office, he was seen as this breath of fresh air. he's basically created a political party from scratch. which is very hard to do in a country that's divided, you know, based on left and right, he created a centrist party from scratch. not only did he win, but he won twice, but he also especially right before the second time he won. he promised everyone listen , when i tell you now, if you vote for me, i'm going to do pension reform. i'm just letting you know by voting for me. you cannot say that you're surprised when i raised the retirement age, so i think there are some people who say look everyone saw this coming. everybody saw this coming, but i think a lot of people on the ground in france will say we didn't actually vote for macron. we voted against le pen. that was exactly what i was. i was like i was watching the footage today. the protests. i mean, there was something you know. it's just it's violent
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like this for weeks. yeah is it effective? like do you like do people there feel like this is gonna really well yes and no. so the thing about social unrest in france is that generally i think compared to other we're looking at some of the images. right now. generally it actually is more effective in france and other countries. you think about the history 17 89 storming of the best deal? you think about the fact that social unrest led to the collapse of the monarchy in that country and the people who live and work and who are educated in france are taught that history from such a young age that listen, you can go into the streets and you can actually change. the entire country. i think it was about 15 years ago or so they were. the president at the time in 2006 was trying to change the law to make it easier to fire french people. french workers. i mean, that's that's a big thing. how difficult how easy it is to fire people. he was trying to create a law whereby anyone under the age of 26. we've been working at a company for less than two years could be fired without any
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reason whatsoever, and people went out into the streets. i kid you not. it was bad and very quickly. he said. okay, you know what? i'm not gonna do this, so they're used to that they're used to getting their way. that's really interesting context. and then arla, there's our congress, which let's remind everybody what happened during the state of the union address when president biden sort of seized on republicans starting to express their i guess dislike of his plan, but this was about social security during the state of the union. listen to this. some republicans want medicare and social security sunset. i'm not saying it's a majority. let me give you anybody who doubts it. contact my office. i'll give you a copy. i'll give you a copy of the proposal. that means congress doesn't vote. i'm glad to see you and i'll tell you why i enjoy conversion. ah so that
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was that they were objecting to how he characterized their position. and then you know, he kind of go to them a little bit more to say. okay are you going to commit to not putting social security cuts on the table? and they say yes. and so it's like, ok, great like, but i mean, this issue of social security is going to be a huge issue in the coming years. i think that the trustees of social security said that they're going to face solvency issues within the next decade, but there's certainly different ideas about how to go about handling social secure. you know you had the republican study committee more conservative group in the congress that said that you should be raising the age from 67 to 70 or 67 to 70 for retirement. that's not something that they're pursuing at this time, but i don't know. like i think about social security and like when i'm going to get to a period that i'm ready to retire , what social security and it looks like a very good question , but that's the level of unrest we have in our country. what do we just showed? right now? between all right? everybody standby because up next on the lookout, our reporters are going
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to tell us what developments they'll be looking for on the stories that they're covering or anything really that they want to talk about whatever they're looking forward to, even in life. that's really good. yeah. our hopes are great. i can't take my e eyes off my eyes. go o islam. if i drops dramatically reduces redness in one minute. look at the difference my eyes, the brighter and whiter eight hours. it was love at first sight with bloom. if i see for yourself, always bn prone to hair thinng, getting olr w under a lot of stress started taking neutral. fall fall is the number one dermatologist recommended hair growth supplements. i am back to good. start your hair growth journey at neutrophils .com.
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whether he would do that without 100% knowing what he was going to find. i think that the royal family got a lot of flak for their treatment of meghan markle. and i think this is their way of showing that showing some humility showing that they are listening to all britons. i do think in terms of the outcome. obviously you get the information. what do you do with it? i think in terms of the outcome, it could open up a can of worms for him in terms of reparations. um so that's what i'm watching. we've got a few weeks to the coronation, so that's really interesting. but you're right. he must know something before just waiting into this sticky wicket? yes. okay. thank you very much, ma. so the dominion trial. obviously this is the fox news dominion trial. jury selection underway. you know, i think the judge had hoped maybe you'd be wrapped up by tomorrow, but it looks like it's going to head into monday. so that's you know, starting next week. certainly it's going to get really interesting. once testimony there start so we'll continue with jury selection tomorrow monday. we'll see. we can see our first witness, and that's going to be significant
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and then that that's going to keep us busy next week, i think, and the other thing i think we need to do is start looking for new pillows. has been a thing for me the last two days. not comfortable. okay very uncomfortable, but thank you. this has been a great two days and thank you. so it's been great. you find better pillows, harry. uh, the tampa bay rays. god bless him, have not lost a game so far this year in the major league baseball season, if they win one more game they will infect set the record for most wins to start out of season since the beginning of the 20th century, and as a person who hates the new york yankees. i love seeing their chance of winning the world series ever so slightly help himself excellent. okay are let understand. this has to do with lady gaga. president biden made a very important appointment today. and that is that he named lady gaga as the co chair of the president's accounts commission
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on arts and humanities. this is a group that advises the president on all things cultural . there's a host of other celebrities like george clooney , jennifer gardner, shonda rhimes, carrie washington who are all part of this group, it actually was disbanded during the trump administration because people who were on that committee we were really upset about the way he handled those clashes down in charlottesville . but what's really interesting is that joe biden and lady gaga actually, like been friends for some time they have come to the white house. well she performed was going to perform at the white house. i wouldn't rule it out. but you know, he introduced her at the oscars back in. i think, 2016 they worked on. um i'm trying to combat it's fantasy. it's an amazing tastic . little monsters just like that. she that lady gaga is an adviser to president biden. i like this. that's amazing. fantastic thank you for alerting us to that everybody. be sure to tune in to cnn this morning. tomorrow new york city mayor eric adams will be there to respond to gop congressman jim
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