tv CNN Tonight CNN April 14, 2023 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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the trade unionists and i did not speak out. because i was not a trade unionist. then they came for the jews and i did not speak out because i was not a jew. then they came for me. and there was no one left to speak for me. for the dead and the living. we must be written this that has been my motto. i'm not speaking about myself. i'm speaking. as a representative of my parents. my grandmother. my cousins who have died. i am playing umpteen schoolmates. they are unable to speak. it's my responsibility to speak on davey. i. the tour begins with a cramped elevator ride into the dark corridors of the rise to power. but it ends with this striking room. the hall of remembrance. to remember
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the witnesses. to remember their stories. remember them like i remember my mom and my dad every single day. we must never forget. so this never happens again. yeah i asked this question to a lot of people. do you always think of yourself as a survivor? alright still a builder builder money, wonderful wife or do i have no pizza hut?
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mhm. good evening, everyone. i'm alison camerata. welcome to cnn tonight. the supreme court is on the cusp of making monumental decisions that could change life as we've known it for decades, starting with whether to restrict access to abortion medication that's been used for two decades. next to come, affirmative action and voting rights. all of this amidst new revelations today about clarence thomas. it was not just luxury trips that he accepted from a republican mega donor. he also allegedly took cash in exchange for real estate. our panel tells us if that's unethical or illegal or both. plus we know
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how dangerous concussions can be for athletes and how they can lead to brain damage known as cte. well now the family of the shooter in the louisville bank massacre wants his brain examined for c t. e. after he reportedly had multiple concussions in high school. and a lots changed since the olden days of father knows best. many women now make as much money or more than their husbands. so why are women still doing the lion's share of housework? we'll get our panel's perspective on a new study and stay tuned for our friday night news quiz. see if you know more about what happened this week than our panelists. but let's start with the supreme court. we want to bring in our panel. we have former watergate prosecutor nick akerman, jessica washington from the root jay michaelson, who clerked for merrick garland and was on the supreme court beach at the daily beast for many years, and former senate candidate joe pinion guys happy friday. great to have you all here. so j with your credentials , your clerking for america. garland, your supreme court
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beach. let's yeah, changes looked at the watergate prosecutor. yeah course. miss civically. just tell us what you read the tea leaves for us of what's happening right now with the supreme court. well you know, this is this supreme court has jumped the shark so many times, you know that they're normal sharks left to jump but certainly tear hearing the abortion medication. uh appeal on an emergency basis makes sense. this is very time. sensitive matter. it's going to go to the supreme court anyway, so they should that it's appropriate. take this case. justice alito properly granted review paused for a short period of time. that doesn't mean anything in terms of what they're going to do. ah but certainly when we look at the dock it this is what you get when you have a court process that's really been taken over by an extreme edge of one of the parties, the republican party and all of these are certainly the abortion medication pill case, and the voting rights case should be slam dunks. but anything goes in terms of the
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conservative leaning of the court. is it a conservative position to do away with an fda approved drug that's been around for two decades and is considered safer than aspirin. look oh, there's a lot to unpack there. i think that at the end of the day the court's going to review this go through their process. i don't again just want to reiterate. i don't think we have conservative judges or liberal judges. i think we just have justices do their level best. certainly there are more conservative thinking and their ideology or liberal thinking in their ideology. i think overall again what we are witnessing is not, i think a function of a radical right wing. i think it's a breakdown of our politics. i think that we have left. too much up to the courts to the side. i think that we have politicians at the state level at the federal level at the local level that have decided that they want you effectively passed the buck. leverage whatever influence they have to blame the other side and not roll up their sleeves and do the due diligence on behalf of the good people. um next. just say
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this. there are five justices that were put on the supreme court for one purpose and one purpose only, and that was to overrule roe versus wade. that was their job. they accomplished that job. now they're in a bind . they've got this case involving this pill that is approved by the fda. it's been around for 23 years. no one's ever raised anything about this before the district court that basically put this on hold is a guy who is totally anti abortion. has i don't know if he's conservative, liberal or whatever, but he's definitely anti abortion. then it goes up to the fifth circuit. and of course they take off the order the restraining order, but they still say you can't send it through the mail. i mean, how crazy can you get? you get all your medications to the mail. the only thing you don't get through a mail these days is a heart operation. i mean, you just get all your medications through the mail, and now it's
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up to the supreme court where all of these the five justices who overruled what roe versus wade, all of whom our anti abortion are now stuck in a dilemma. what do they do? two of them have written opinions where they say the fda is. expertise is by far the best out there. doesn't that tell you that they will that they will keep this. i think so. i think that's what's going to happen to keep the fda approval of this abortion medication just to just to show that they had at least some kind of basis to overrule roe versus wade, and to at least say that they're conservative. reasons for doing it because there was no right for abortion in the constitution. that's why they did it, but they're going to go along with the fda if they didn't jessica and they blocked access to this. i keep reading about how it has all sorts of implications for other medication. important medicines . certainly no, i mean this could have a lot of damaging effects on other types of medication that this is their medical uses. this is used for.
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i mean, like everyone here has said, you know, this is something that has been on the market for 23 years. it is incredibly safe. it is safer than thailand. all this is a medication that does have other uses. but also i mean people need to be able to access if they want to have self medicated abortions. it's not 100% necessary, but it is helpful in that process, and one thing i do want to mention is as we're talking about this in the media . i do want to be careful not to make it sound like where if the supreme court goes the other way, we're about to have abortion access completely illegal in united states, i think sometimes when we talk about abortion access, we talk about kind of roe v. wade. we have a tendency to scare people into thinking that abortion is completely illegal. i've heard that from multiple people on the ground that that was something that happened in the wake of the leaked draft opinion, and that can be really damaging to your point is that if it were to go this way, and if they were to block access, there would still be states where you can get this medication. not so it's kind of complicated with where it's a little unclear exactly where we are legally with which states
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would be able to access it because there's just so many different court cases going on right now. now i think they might want to, like, sort of warmly disagree. actually i think this is really different from dobbs right so arguably from a sort of conservative jurist, jurisprudential point of view, one could argue that that dobbs and overturning roe versus wade was allowing states to have different regimes and we could have different different rules in different states. but this is taking a federally approved medication off the market completely. this is not allowing states to do their own thing. this is saying not, and this is not again. this is not about the constitution, having or not having a right to privacy within it. this is just judicial activism, and this is exactly what conservatives decried liberal judges and justices for doing for decades, and now this is about to happen. i want to suggest that i think this is a huge cell phone from the conservative wing of the republican party. most americans are not on board with this radical agenda, and i think that's also true on voting
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rights and also on some other issues, also on guns. that we're seeing the results of a very concerted effort. you know just exactly what nick said to put justices on the court to overturn roe versus wade, and that is having consequences that are really going to have political ramifications in the next quickly. we have to talk about the news about clarence thomas. so as you remember last week, we found out that he had been accepting for two decades. these luxury trips from a republican mega donor. he was going on a super yacht. he was going on a private plane. some of these trips could cost half a million. $10 if he had paid for them now, today again, according to propublica, we find out that he's sold three properties in savannah, georgia, too. harlan crow, same mega donor for 100 and $33,000, you know, accepted cash for it. and now harlan crow's pays the property tax on it, which is what clarence thomas had been paying. so what ? what? why is he doing this? what's what is he thinking, joe?
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look i think that we have to be very careful here about basically starting to cherry pick the personal dealings of supreme court justices. i think that at the end of the day the optics are terrible here, so we have to acknowledge that it's about disclosure. i mean, you're right. he has personal dealings, and that's why we didn't disclose it. i think there are many people who would say that the lack of disclosure is the troubling part of this. i'm going to give clarence thomas the benefit of the doubt the same way. i think that we should give all the people that we have entrusted. to sit on the highest court in the land the benefit of the doubt that somehow that his vote is not for sale to the tune of $133,000 minus the property taxes or that somehow you know, i've i've nice drink with no umbrella in it is going to be the difference between him not a mega yacht, so there is no other justice that we know of. in history that has this record of misconduct, right? i mean, first of all, you've already labeled this misconduct, so i just think again we have a had before conduct. we don't know of any justice in history that has
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accepted this contact was against the law for starters against the law, just unethical . it's not only unethical, it's against the law. it's against the law not to report this as he should have. and that only did he sell this property for values that look like they're higher than market value. he has his mother living in one of the properties after for the buddy solve the other two pieces of property to develop those to make more money and to fix up the neighborhood for clarence thomas's wife and then untapped my mother and then on top of it , he's fixing up the house. he's completely renovating the house . put more money into it. as far as we know she's not paying a dime in rent. and this is somebody that is tied in with a lot of political donors. trying to influence what the supreme court is doing. i mean, this is an absolute outrage, and people should be outraged about it. and he should do the same thing that 84 just did back in the sixties , resigned from the u. s supreme court. i mean, well, no, he's actually done things worse than a bad fortis closed. lock him
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up. oh, but basically there isn't locked him up suggesting design. i think that there are a lot of questions that need to be answered. as i said, the optics are terrible with this, but i think at the end of the day if we're just going to go, tabula rosa, we need to have a clean house in dc lack of ethics need to be put to the side. great but if you're going to start with clarence thomas, i want to know who you're moving to. next one phrase where you and i might agree is that this is really shame on all of us for not having a code of conduct for the supreme court that we have for other courts. other oral courts. it is ridiculous that there are not clear rules and that the government, the supreme court justices, and that is on all of us, that is on the fact that the court hasn't set them. congress hasn't asked him to force them to set them and we're this is lawless court. i mean, we do have the rule of law that he violated common sense. i mean, where is this guy coming from this common sense about insider trading in d. c. that's a different day for different court justices is holding them
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to a higher standard. i would agree in the highest degree, everyone that sits on that court should be held to a higher standard. i would agree that everyone that takes an oath and raised their hands on behalf of a grateful nation should be held to a higher nation. i think the reason why you have so much pushback from republicans like myself, who agree that the optics are terrible is because people are selectively deciding when they want to be outraged by the lack of ethics that exhibited every single day down in that place called washington d. c i. still i can't select another supreme court justice named them liberal liberal conservative. anywhere only one is they afford to justice, and he and his conduct was much less severe. this is this is blowing them out of the water. i just i can't accept that this is selective selecting thing. there's no one else to select a democrat to the 10th degree. thank you all very much for that stick around everybody. in the wake of the most recent mass shooting in this country, the gun 25 year old man used to kill five of his colleagues at that louisville bank is required in that state to be auctioned off.
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for sale to be used again. who would want that gun. and what does it say about our gun laws? we're gonna take that up. you found the rigight model for sur. now h how can you be susure youe getttting the right deal? i have to talk to my bestie. hey, girl. this one's like your last boyfriend. it's got issues. let's ask the experts for the right used car. just say, show me the carfax value. you'll get the most active priced based on the vehicles, accident history, look for me and stop over paint shop at the all new carfax .com . julian is about to learn that free fd is a personal eating trigger. no, it isn't. y, it is. and that's just a bit of psychology. julian learned from noon. wait sign up now at noon .com. susan with pay com
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that killed six people, including three children. former vice president mike pence, spoke today and offered this suggestion for stopping mass shootings. while the assailants in the most recent attacks were taken out by law enforcement on the scene. too many mass shooters languish in prison for years. men and women. i don't have to tell you. justice delayed is justice denied? i believe the time has come. institute a federal death penalty statute with accelerated appeal to ensure that those who engage in mass shootings face execution in months, not years. our panel is back in. patrick mcenroe joins us now, patrick, i'm i'm i guess. i'm confused by his suggestion. we're trying to stop mass shootings before they happen. not a speedy execution for the shooter after they happen, right? this this is
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hardly means is a topic that we should be joking about, but aren't most of these mass shooters dead before they get out of there. i mean, this is just asinine to make this the point was that before? i guess that was before he got booed and then after he got booed as well , because, apparently get booed both at the beginning for this. not for this. i understand that, but it seems it's so ludicrous. to have to bring this up this type of thing up in a in a situation where this is so serious and all these shootings continue to happen, and that and that i guess the n r a liked it. they cheered for it when you that's delicious. started to my point earlier this week about these mass shootings met pete the people that have guns want guns more than anything else. and they're gonna stop at nothing to make sure they can continue to have whatever they want thing, joe that i found confusing about what vice
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president, pence said was it's the republicans who say this is about mental health. this isn't about guns. it's about the people. it's about mental health , and we need to fix that. so he's suggesting a speedy execution for mentally the mentally ill mass shooters. well look, i think respectfully you're given the vice president a little bit too much credit. i think that it was an applause line that was inserted to make sure that there would be something for people to talk about. in between the booing respectfully again. we were talking about what happens with gun owners in general. look if you're of the opinion that we should get rid of the guns, get rid of the ar 15. and that has a solution. then there is nothing anyone could have said on this stage. except for that there's nothing anyone who believes in the second amendment can do other than showing up at their local precinct and surrendering. the guns, but i think if we're going to have an honest conversation about what is required to end gun violence, what is required to end children being shot in math class. it was a missed opportunity for republicans to put forth a robust plan about what are the best practices that exist to ensure that we don't have the children of heads and state
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being killed. that we don't have the children of dignitaries being killed because again i will remind people the children of power the children are privileged or not finding themselves gunned down on a regular basis. i guess we used to be to say that, but you know, in the latest ones in nashville and in the friends, i mean, i'm talking about people who are people living at 1600, pennsylvania avenue. i'm talking about the people who are the children of dignitaries. i'm talking about the people saying that suddenly it's touching so many different walks of life that the governors lost both people close to them. in the latest measures. i think that leaders are having talking about what are the best practices for gun violence is very different from rescuing or trying to push aside the very really valley of the gun violence is touching us all. yeah this is such a i mean , i also would like to keep the focus on the inra is bizarre fetishization of an extremist position that's way far to the right of what the supreme court said in d. c versus heller, where they expressly said when
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they did find a second amendment right for individual carrier possession of guns, which i think also was not founded in constitutional law. but they did find that they said specifically that automatic and semiotic weapons could be regulated almost certainly within the within the bounds of the second amendment. now, the term second amendment seems to cover everything, and that's not what the supreme court has held. there is a lot of space, there's a lot of daylight within the supreme court's precedent. we just talked about the supreme court in the last segment. this is not a liberal court. these aren't liberal precedents to take some of the most dangerous guns out of the hands of the most dangerous people. here's another interesting thing that has happened in kentucky, it turns out that there is this law that requires guns using crimes to be auctioned off, so not melted down, not destroyed, auctioned off. there's a word for this called murderabilia. people buy tokens of high profile crimes. we saw this in the murdoch murder in south carolina. people wanted a piece of that. and so the mayor in
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louisville is trying to get this law change. there are eight states that ban sales of murderabilia. um, but not kentucky. i mean, not most states right there. so that seems like something that the mayor would like to change. but there is a law preventing him from changing that. yeah i mean, i think it's horrifying. the idea that you would have these guns that were used in mass shootings and that people would then go and buy them. i mean, it just feels so icky, but i'm not surprised that there are people out there. who would do that because we've seen this before. i mean, i think about the trayvon martin, the gun used to kill trayvon martin that sold for a quarter million dollars. someone knew that that gun was used to shoot. you know this young man this child and they went ahead and they bought that. so i do think i mean, this is horrifying. it feels so icky. and yet what's terrifying is that there are people out there who would buy it? how could how could that possibly happen? i mean, we were you know, people like to watch crime shows and they like to watch stories about killers, and so on, because you know it makes for an interesting story. but the idea that we're allowing me meaning we like our
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government actually allowing this to happen. that's insane. you should be. we talk about the guns all the time. common sense gun laws, right? how about common sense? yeah i mean, that's what the ahead. i'm i'm really a cheery guy. i don't want to be the contrary in all friday night, it's friday. it's 90 degrees outside, but let's be very clear, right. i would agree with you right that we have this unintended consequence here where we have what i would call the equivalent of the postcards at the lynchings that have now been proliferated here in modern day society, but the reality is if you look at that map places like new york places like illinois. they don't have of these laws on the book that prevent this murderabilia from being sold, because the average person you have his lawmaker never thought that you would even need to actually like that on the books, so i just think at some point, maybe it's not here can vilify the individuals who like guns. maybe it's just here to say there is a sickness in
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society that we need new laws to address as relates to these people who want to have some attachments to the sick and grotesque and that is something that we should all be able to get around and agree on. not trying to pit ourselves against one another once again when it's really unnecessary. that did sound very sure, joe. thank you. thank you for that. we'll end on that note. everyone stay with me. after a string of high profile concussions, the nfl is introducing what it believes may be a solution to protecting quarterbacks. but it raises a lot of questions, and we'll ask the panel would they still let their kids play football? knowing what we know? today? we'll discuss. so many migranans 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
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get the buildings. um, you need delivered this spring. that's 1855 64 steel. i'm pete montini at reagan national airport. this is cnn. zero to build on approving the nfl, announcing new quarterback specific helmets to combat the league's concussion problem. apparently improves them by 7% panel is back. okay so let's talk about concussions in the nfl, and this helmet is first quarterback specifically because it is a helmet that works best on when the impact with the ground instead of another player's
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helmet, so that's why it works for a quarterback. but let me just quickly read because i didn't know about associate ee is the brain injury that happens , but i didn't know all the characteristics of it. so let me just read it for you. in case you don't so it starts after repeated hits to the head. it's believed it leads to degeneration of brain tissue and build up of tout eau. this is that's a brain protein. the symptoms of cte can be memory loss, confusion, impulse control problems. aggression depression impaired judgment, suicidality. as the professional athlete at the table, your slightly different sports, okay, tennis, which is maybe mentally can be a little difficult, but no, in all seriousness. i mean, i'm i'm a big fan of football. i love the and i love watching football. uh if i had sons, which i don't have three daughters, but if i had no, they could play football, too. but don't want to. um i would, i would veer them away from playing football. actually, you know, now that my
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parents when my older brother, who you know, ended up being number one in the world as a tennis player, he was a great athlete in every sport and he was a quarterback, and when he was 11 or 12, my parents and they knew he was could be a great tennis player. and they put him into soccer. so we played a lot of soccer growing up now again because they were afraid of him being injured injured. absolutely so this but again for the people that play it, of which i know many people. i know a lot of pros and a lot of college guys that play organized high level football. most of them are okay. most of them are okay. this is and that they're doing this helmet specifically for they. they've done enough to protect the quarterback already in the nfl. that's one of the other things that the purest or upset about in the game. they've made it too protective of the quarterback, so it's a violent game. and not surprisingly, it's by far the most popular game in this country. i wonder why they're connected. and joe, you used to play football. did you know lots
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of pop warner and high school football in college football? but look, i think there's a lot of merit in that argument. i think if i were having children today, my mother is probably saying hurry up. um that i would probably not want my five and six and seven and eight year olds running around like bobble heads. running into each other school. i think that i love the game. i think there are a lot of people who love the game. i think that there are a lot of precautions that we need to be taken and better protocols for how do we manage those injuries? i think it is inevitable that if you play the game of football at a high level, you're going to have some type of brain injury. that's just i think the inevitable reality of where we are. what is the extent of that brain injury that comes down to the science that surrounds that? but i think ultimately, at the end of the day, this notion that we're going to ban the game of football, i think isn't realistic, but we should have 7% increase on not having concussions. i would take those ads, and i think that's a step
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in the right direction. one of the reasons that we're thinking at least i'm thinking a lot about cte this week is because the parents, the family of the shooter in the louisville bank, mass shooting wants his brain examined for cte because he, apparently according to them, had three significant as they call it concussions. in his i guess high school days he was actually believe it or not called in high school, mr concussion by his classmates, and he wore a soft helmet, but he had when he played basketball in high school because people knew that he had so many concussions. and so they're wondering if there's i mean, now that we know that one of the symptoms is aggression, depression suicidality, they're wondering about the connection. yeah no, that that's understandable that they would be concerned about that connection. when we certainly have seen this with professional athletes. i think it's been talked about a lot more, but the idea that it could be even people at this younger level, even in high school. i think that's particularly concerning and you know, i've decided that i'm not going to come out against football tonight, but i mean, we do have to look at
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this. i mean, if people are coming out with these traumatic brain injuries if they're changing their personalities, if potentially people are, you know , being aggressive afterwards, even to that level of this kind of shooting. i mean, obviously, there would have to be more under lying that most likely, but it is pretty terrifying and it does kind of make you think about the sport. yeah you know, i think they've been violent sports as long as there's been human civilization, and this is part of what it is to be human for some percentage of human beings. um i'm probably not in that percentage as the gay kid who definitely didn't play football and high school, but ah , i think this is part of human nature and for me that that requires us to think about what society we can try to build. that makes sure for example that there aren't power differentials in who gets to play and who doesn't get to play and who gets access to the equipment who doesn't get access to make sure that there's not that that doesn't track lines of oppression that are already in our society that we do everything that we can to enable people to have the information so that they can make a choice. they can make a decision. you
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know, i'm pretty privileged myself and i feel like i have a lot. have access to the information to make a decision as a parent. and a lot of folks don't have that. so for me, it's more about recognizing this reality that this is something that human that many human beings really enjoy. and how do we create a just society around that? thank you all very much. alright new research shows that nearly a third of women now make as much or more than their husbands, but the division of labor at home is far from equal. why we discussed that next. own a small to medium sized bususins . you may qualify for the employer retention tax credit up to $26,000 per employee, not alone. the money is yours if your business suffered during covid was revenue drops or government shutdowns, time is limited to refunds. pro .com now takes five minutes, and the average refund is $247,000 with refunds pro .com no refund, no
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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. to save up to 50% over real stone and even more during our pre spring sale. i'm lauren fox on capitol hill. and this is cnn. listen holding down a job. it's a lot more difficult than lying around the house all day long. is that all you think we do now? let's be fair, rick every once in a while they get up and play canasta er who do
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you think does the housework and who do you think cooks all the meals? oh anybody can cook and do the housework just like to see you to try it for a week. and hilarity ensued. i can tell you after that, so we've come a long way since a woman in the workplace was a joke. a new pew research study finds that in roughly a third of opposite sex marriages, husbands and wives make roughly the same amount of money that's up from 11% in 1972 . despite the shared financial contributions, women still take on more of the household work. my panel is back with me now. what's up with that patrick had when i get to stay out of trouble on this one. um first of all, never a bad idea to show some i love lucy. good. 25 years . i'll be married later this year, so thank you have twins like you all girls? my wife likes to say to me she's very busy working singer actress writer, so she's running around.
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i'm running around. she likes to say when we're trying to get things straight, who's making dinner? who's getting it? my wife says to me, we need a wife good, like we need a way but look i get up every morning. make my girls breakfast. we try to. there's probably a few more things that she does that i don't do. there's probably a couple more things i tried to do, but it's about time. that's what i said. it's about time things have changed. as we've said, changed. some things are still ingrained in certain people. i'd say, jessica, you're cohabitating living in sin. and that's real. so how is it giving up power? the chores divvied up . i think we do it pretty evenly. i mean, he's i mean, i'm very busy, but he's even busier than me. but we do it evenly. i do the most of the cooking. he cleans up after that, he does most of the laundry we share deep cleaning on the weekend. i mean, the thing is just doing things when you have time so because he's slightly busier, he's gonna do laundry because that's something you can do and
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then do your work and kind of, you know, go about your business. but this reminds me. i think that your generation is doing it differently. i mean, obviously in each generation, like does that that i love lucy thing? obviously, it seems totally foreign. i'm sure to you. but each generation has made some progress. and i think yours is obviously the furthest along. yeah i mean, i hope so. i think that that's definitely true. i mean, i definitely have seen my own parents had a very equal marriage. both of them worked. my boyfriend's parents the same thing. you know, his dad is actually the main cook in the household. but i mean, i do think we're getting even closer to equality. you know, it can still be hard to get out of that mindset of oh, i have to make sure the home is clean, and that's my responsibility. but i know that i have an equal partner and so that it just makes it so much easier thoughts. well i'm just a spectator to this like opposite sex marriage scenario, so you guys all figured i'll get the memo. you know, whenever everything is completely even in your household, it's really varied. you know, my daughter is five years old, so obviously before it was pretty, like, straight down the line, and now my husband does more of more of the unpaid housework. and you
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know, we can certainly talk about sort of the injustices around that and what work our society values. and what work? it doesn't i remember when my mother who was a feminist, you know, back in the 19 seventies and eighties, people say, oh, you don't work. she's like, don't tell me i don't work. you know, i'm raising this child. i'm doing this house and that that is work of value. and so yeah, it's strange to me. i feel sort of sad for folks who don't at least do some of everything and taste some of what it's like . and you know, i don't know if i really would have said that when my daughter was still in diapers, but looking back on it. i'm really glad that i had that experience that to be, you know to be that part of part of her life. look i think the more things change, the more things stay the same. i think that we have long undervalued the work of the second shift them tending to the home the raising of the children and i think to your point things are changing. the nature of work is evolving. and i think that this next generation is finding out that next, i guess common equilibrium , whatever that's going to be,
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but i think also don't throw out the baby with the bathwater. so to speak. there's a lot of good things that happened before we can. celebrate the progress that has been made to make sure that we get close to women being paid equal, equal pay for equal work, but we can also ensure that we can understand the value of the time and the effort that is spent in the home making sure we leave the world with good children. yes excellent. thank you all very much for that, and we'll be right back. future is herere. we've been creating it r more than 100 years. putting the most advanced technology into people's hands. generation after generation. tool after tool. again and again, bringing you the broadest and most reliable network of service dealers always moving forward. we leave. others follow. hi i'm lauren. i
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entire hour. in sunday's first episode, cnn's nick paton walsh and his team trek alongside thousands of migrants as they make the dangerous journey on foot from the tip of south america into central america. desperate to seek asylum in the united states joins us with a preview. nick. alison it's really the volume of people doing this that is so staggering . there was a record year last year of a quarter of a million, but only the first quarter of this year. there's seven times as many who tried it the year before, so they're on track at the same rate to get over a million people making this track this year, and so many of them are children already record breaking numbers this year. he is part of what we saw football shirt, porter's each numbered, charging to carry bags, even children uphill. but it doesn't always work out. wilson is
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? 1000 unaccompanied children were found on the route last year, the u. n have said. now that little boy wilson was reunited joyfully with his parents a couple of days later, something we thought frankly was impossible, given how disparate people can be on a track as hazardous as this, but they face extraordinary perils, not only those of the jungle, the dehydration, exhaustion, lack of food, they carry themselves. the snakes also and made motors occur on this track. we found three bodies with signs of a violent death. allegations of sexual assault robbery as well. it's exceptionally perilous. and so you have to ask yourself, allison. what really causes people to put their families themselves even through risks like this, and it's the countries that they hail from that they're fleeing. haiti venezuela, ecuador, china, the top four nationalities so far this year seen on the trek countries in collapse that fuels
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people to undertake these extraordinary risks, but you see something kind of beautiful too. on this trek. yes it's a cynical operation of voluntary trafficking operation run by a cartel milking people for their cash as they move, but when they meet strangers in peril. they seem to be bound by some sort of glue of the old deal that they're going through, and they help each other, often just carrying six children for days to be sure that nobody is left behind. that's something quite wonderful to watch. despite how depressing the motivation why people are making this trek and the scenes that they're enduring through that particular journey are there's something incredible about watching them pull each other through. alison nick. what an incredible window you're giving us into that journey. thank you. be sure to watch nick embark on that journey for the very first episode. of the whole story with anderson cooper. it's sunday night at eight only on cnn. texas governor greg abbott
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is pushing to pardon a man convicted of killing a black lives matter protester but now newly revealed racist and violent social media posts by the killer. could change the thinking in just a moment we're going to hear from the murder victim's fiancee and mother. 1500 purchase allowance on a 2023 cadillac xt five and six visit your local cadillac dealer today. tommy lost £30n new wait. i'm tom use psychogy to lose weight. mindful aspect made me feel. more conscious about
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to 50% over real stone and even more during our pre spring sale. eva longoria searching for mexico, sundays at nine on cnn. closed captioning is brought to you by christian faith publishing right for a higher purpose, published with us christian faith publishing is an author friendly publisher who understands that your labor is more than just a book called for your free author. submission kit 804 551827. newly unsealed court documents in texas raised questions about the influence of right wing media on our criminal justice system. governor greg abbott announced plans to pardon a convicted murderer just one day after the conviction. the
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documents just released show that convicted murderer daniel perry compared the black lives matter movement to a zoo full of monkeys. and talked about his desire to kill someone, and that's exactly what a jury found him guilty of the murder of 28 year old garrett foster at a black lives matter. protests in 2020, you'll hear from garrett foster's mother and longtime partner in just a moment and we'll dig into what could be motivating governor greg abbott to take on this case, but let's begin with cnn's ed lavandera on the shooter's vile messages, which were not shown to the jury. black lives matter. protests erupted around the country in the summer of 2020 newly released court documents reveal daniel perry intensely watched the chaos quickly becoming angry in a social media post. he described the protesters as a zoo full of monkeys. the unsealed documents include 76 pages of social media postings and text messages. most
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of these details were not shown to the jury that convicted the army sergeant of murdering protester garrett foster and raises new questions about why texas governor greg abbott is rushing a push to pardon this convicted murderer. foster's family and longtime partner have called the governor's call for a pardon. disgusting this has been a complete nightmare, court documents show, perry talked about killing people and shared racist memes and comments on social media, including a 2019 message saying too bad we can't get paid for hunting muslims in europe and in a facebook message in may 2020 just months before the deadly shooting, perry wrote. he might have to kill a few people on my way to work. another text said. i might go to dallas to shoot looters. perry's attorneys called the release of the documents of political move by prosecutors and said foster also made posts advocating violence in this 2020 post. foster praised the burning of a minneapolis police
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