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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  April 19, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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people still have me. some people might say that coming back to play might not be the best option. um but that's their opinion. and like i said, i've been being statistics my whole life. certainly has a 25 year old already back at the team's practice facility participating in voluntary offseason workouts . those begin on monday. and can you write the whole new look on life? i am sure it feels like we were just here reporting on the tragedy, waiting for him to wake up to wake up to see what was going to happen. and now your mom my mom. i'm sure the mom is really happy. all right. cnn this morning continues right now. there is a settlement a settlement in the high stakes trial between dominion and fox $787 million and change. this is not over for fox. this is probably just the beginning. all of those decisions will have a huge bearing on those other
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lawsuits as they play out. today's settlement represents vindication and accountability lies. consequences if you're a fox news viewer, you won't even know this happened. the 84 year old white homeowner charged with shooting ralph ural turned himself into authorities and was released. we don't want him out, but we understand that's part of the process. this is a standard ground state combined with completely unfettered access to firearms and implicit bias. you have a recipe for disaster. this was heinous. it was evil. it was criminal. one person dead and several others injured after a parking garage in lower manhattan. quote pancaked using the necessary technology, we're able to get a clear view of what's happening inside the building. we believe that we have everybody accounted for going to take awhile to make it safe for the public. senate republicans blocking democrats temporarily replacing california senator dianne feinstein on the judiciary committee. that's
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ridiculous replacing the infant . no she'll make her decisions. this is all about four judges that they can't get republican votes for. i don't know any other job where you can not show up for a year and expect to hold your job. sexy as a tortoise. that's netflix company that rents movies on dvds. netflix is officially saying goodbye to its red envelopes that made it a household name in the tortoise and we were the tortoise. the hair got ahead and then they're all bankrupt, and we're now cash flow, positive and successful. good morning, everyone it is thursday, wednesday wednesday. good try. uh god, i need some sleep. i need some sleep. you know who else is getting probably resting very well. this morning, the attorneys for dominion and i would imagine some of the folks folks folks are really relieved that they won't have to go to court or appear in court and testify this morning. they know what day of
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the week it is a good day for democracy. good day for democracy. we're talking about broadcasting lives. we're talking about broadcast conspiracy. period about the 2020 election has come to an enormous and historic costs for fox news. wait till you get a load of the number here. in a last minute deal. fox agreeing to pay dominion voting systems more than 887 million to settle defamation suit. it happened right before the trial was about to start watching. truth matters. lies have consequences . dominion needed justice. we got into this case with two goals, accountability and justice and we achieved accountability when we exposed everything that had been going on at fox news, so this is the largest known defamation settlement ever for an american media company. under the agreement, dominion tells cnn that fox news will be will not be required not be required to go on air until its viewers that it spread lies. so let's bring in our cnn media analyst and
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access media reporters sarah fisher and attorney 10 kent turkel. he represented sarah palin and her failed defamation suit against the new york times as well as hulk hogan, who successfully sued gawker for invading privacy and was awarded 115 million. so glad to have both of you on thank you so much, sarah, we're going to start with you. you were in the courtroom for this last minute decision. what was that, like? it was not a total shock, don because we were waiting for opening statements after the jury selection was finalized for many hours, and they kept saying , oh, this is just a five minute bathroom break. but here we are 2.5 hours later, we knew we also are watching the dominion attorney justin nelson walk over to the facts. attorney dan webb . they did not look flustered. they looked very calm. they look kind of happy. and so when you're watching two attorneys interact that way, you know something is coming. at that point. every single reporter in the courtroom is sort of pre writing this settlement decision. we kind of knew it was coming. but it was still a shock
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because we had gotten all the way here. you know, we've had months of pretrial testimony and hearings, and we had figured that at this point, you know they had done everything they needed to do to allude to the fact and prepare for possibly going to trial. so this was truly an 11th hour decision. can you take us into the scenes behind the scenes of what? you know a settlement discussion like this is after a jury has already been selected seated. you're about to do opening statements because notably missing in here. it's a lot of money, notably missing. it is a requirement which dominion wanted initially. for the fox news personalities to publicly apologize on air. um it's always interesting to me when cases settle. at these moments, right when a jury's picture right when they're about to open or on a mid morning break. i like to say if i've gotten ready for trial if i prepared the trials, actually the fun part, but, um, the you know, you can never put a finger on what's going on behind the scenes. it could be
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the non monetary conditions somebody could be hung up on some of the monetary confidentiality, which, obviously, at least in part, is it happening here? because we know the number um, the i thought i'd heard yesterday. i haven't seen a hard copy. even the settlement agreement. i thought i heard yesterday that there was some apology components someone non monetary component. but at the end of the day, you know these high stakes cases and i think one thing it's easy to lose sight of in the public eye is the idea that there's no risk let's say on the dominion side trying a jury. there's always a risk. there's always some risk. okay, you lose certainty you lose. you know yourself determination of the closure of it and you start with your client's goals, and they had monetary goals, obviously large monetary goals that were predicated on lost profits. business valuation, uh, issues that diminished the value of the business. they're achieving their goals at that number, okay , and it's reckless to a degree
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did not settle a case under those there. so i wasn't that surprised. i really wasn't you weren't um, it's not really no. um listen, we were sort of monitoring the papers here. it is in the wall street journal, which was looking at above the fold above the fall for you know, the murdoch owned papers, not in the post and all looked through it. look i can't be 100% i went to new york post. i went through it like two or three times. just sort of went through it. i did not see it the thing here, though. i think sarah is. people are disappointed not about the amount because i think it's a it's a it's a good amount, but that the people who actually need to hear this. the fox news viewers won't get to hear it because it's monitored. we looked at, say we checked the facts news website last night. um there was no mention of it on their homepage. the article they do have written doesn't even say how much money fox is paying so who actually wins here. it's
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interesting. i actually was sitting next to a factions reporter in court, and i was watching them diligently take notes and just having them be in court. to me felt like a little bit of a level of accountability. their media analyst howie kurtz, did end up covering it towards the end of the trial, he said. in the beginning, he wasn't allowed to, but to your point about not making an apology, you know, the thing that actually makes me more upset is they don't have to issue any corrections or any right traction in a journalistic entity. if i get something wrong, i have to correct it. that's the way that it goes. but to your point about what are the broader implications here. you have to remember. fox is facing many defamation suits. it's not just a million. they have a suit from smartmatic. they also have a suit with one of their own producers that's suing them, claiming that they misled her during testimony. and so what happens is when you settle a case like this, you're setting a precedent for how you legally are going to likely need to handle all of the other chances in this case, we know that what they're willing to do is pay up in order to make sure their exact never have to face a trial. you can best believe
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leave that smartmatic who's by the way, their lawsuit is much bigger than dominions. yeah you leverage the discovery that they found during the dominion hearing to strengthen their case , and they're going to leverage the fact that facts just made a huge payout. to a different competitor when they're trying to negotiate for their settlement. if they do all been here before, and i mean, not a lot, but where you've had to. we had to go on air and say even if we didn't do it, we start. we regret the mistake. we apologize, whatever. and we correct it and move on there. they don't don't care by the way like viewers don't care if you get something wrong, it builds credibility to own your mistake . a great point. ken, just can we talk about smartmatic toward $7 billion defamation lawsuit to sarah's point, their attorney essentially said yesterday we got all this discovery from dominion. we're gonna use that. so what is it? you think this case settles as well? mhm. oh i is a smart maddox lagging behind . they were appealed. i think there were new york and you get
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intermediate intermediate, appellate right immediately on any motion there, so their discovery i think it's just starting. but there's no way they're not going to capitalize on what's out there and interesting point because sarah brought up the abbey grossberg tapes right there, producer right and think about this because this deuteronomy when you ask what's going on the special master appointment occurs yesterday afternoon. i believe judge davis rules on this. shortly thereafter, we get the settlement announcement and i'm wondering how deep those tapes going, what's in there? so they've got a treasure trove here. now listen, whether it's admissible in their case or not two different issues. but at the very least, it's going to give them a very broad set of boundaries to design an attack on their own discovery, uh, front and there's just no way that it doesn't help them immensely. it's honestly like having a peek behind the curtain . it makes your job a lot easier. i can't see in the context. i don't know much about smartmatic in the sense of how they designed their damages. you
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know, um geminis was a pure breakdown of business damages. right resident hogan. i got like 60 million. uh non monetary, right. so at the end of the day , we'll see how valid the numbers but i cannot see fox in the wake of this protracted that and not trying to resolve it doesn't make sense, right? yeah. sort of clean the house up completely, uh, put it all the rest. um but who knows? maybe smart medical won't let him listen. we're discussing all of this, but that is what settlements do you negotiate? we don't have to do this. we're going to pay you this in order for us not to do that, then that's that's how it happens. i think you can. thank you, sara. appreciate it. thanks for having me. absolutely thank you. you as well. next hour. we're going to speak with justin nelson, the lead counsel for dominion. we're gonna ask him why his team ultimately settled with fox news. stay tuned for that. we do have new details this morning after a gunman reportedly opened fire on a car full of elite texas cheerleader, sending one of them to the intensive care
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unit and injuring another. police say the suspect started shooting just after midnight on tuesday morning after one of the girls says she accidentally tried to get into the wrong car at their carpool meet up spot. after practice, so when less than a week just step back for a minute, right unless than a week. simple mistakes by these young people. three young people have turned them into victims of gun violence. ralph barrel shot and injured after just ringing the wrong doorbell, or he thought his siblings were in kansas city. kailyn bilis shot and killed after turning down the wrong driveway in upstate new york and now peyton washington shot and injured after her teammate tried to get into she and her team mate tried to just get into the wrong car by accident in texas. she's in critical condition this morning. here she is just a few days ago. in washington. i wouldn't believe generals come tumbling down with us at world test this saturday. the they're like me to another place. just wow. i just
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want to look at her few days ago, bridging grasses here covering this all. now she's fighting for her life like i used to. let's step back for a minute. what the heck is going on? i mean, like i was just here yesterday, talking about a different incident, which we'll get to in a minute. but, yeah. so this is something that happened just out of the austin, texas area, guys. it's with a competitive cheerleading group, as you just saw, and what we're learning is that these teenagers were in an a parking lot of a grocery storage is basically used as a carpool spot because they travel hundreds of miles round trip just to have these practices to compete nationwide and one of the cheerleading of girls got out of her friends vehicle. there were four of them in the car got tried to go into what she thought was her car opened the front door in the passenger seat as a person she didn't recognize you kind of freaked out, went back to the fronts car and i want you to hear how she describes what happens next. she talked about it with her cheerleading team. her squad at their gym. um and
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we have this from our affiliate. ktrk, take a listen. we're backing up. i see the guy get out of the passenger. door and i rolled my window down. and i was trying to apologize. and then here. just halfway. my window is down. just throws hands up, and then yeah. hold up a gun. we just started shooting at all of us. tried to apologize, and he's just start shooting at the car hitting grazing a bullet of that woman, heather roth but hitting her teammates here, peyton washington, who is now in the icu should be actually air flown to the hospital to receive care . and so now there was a go fund me page. these cheerleaders are we're gearing up for a huge competition. she may not be able to do it, which won't be able to do it because she's in the hospital, but it's so sad. i mean, what is going on? yeah. i can't even i can't even, um can
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we talk about what happened in upstate new york? now with kailyn gillis shot and killed in upstate new york. we're learning more about what happened before right just before the shooting, so i had like a very lengthy conversation with the defense attorney for the suspect. in this case, kevin monahan. he's actually waiting for bail hearing interestingly enough, it's been delayed because the judge is his neighbor. so he had to recuse himself from this case. so we're waiting for that. but what this attorney says, is that monahan actually did feel threat. and it wasn't just one car that pulled into his driveway that evening 10 o'clock on saturday in this upstate rural area of new york, but it was actually another vehicle and motorcycle. he says. his client says he didn't know what was going on engines were revving. these cars pull up, and according to the sheriff's department, they all turned around quickly. now the sheriff, i brought this to him and he said, listen, that that's just not the case. there were no reports of engines revving from not even this suspect or any of the neighbors and ballistics and witness accounts show that the firing happened as they were actually turning around, but i
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wanted to hear more from the sheriff about what he said about the suspect. he has not made any statements. he obtained a lawyer before he came out of the house. many has not made any statements and, quite frankly, it's not shown any remorse in this case. and as far as the extra remorse. i also asked that to the defense attorney, he says, listen, his time. didn't even know what he was actually having deputies come to his door because he didn't know he actually hit someone. but again, don. you just said it just they're revving your engines. you're feeling threatened and you start firing a gun. at the end of this listen, a 20 year old is dead dead because of this, and i want to make sure that we talk about her. kalin gillis 20 years old. she had huge aspirations for family gave me a statement and said kaylin that talented artists and honor student a disney fanatic. and loved animals. she was looking forward to starting college in florida to pursue her dream of becoming a marine biologist. she was taken from us far too soon, and we are devastated, and in fact, she actually had a boyfriend who
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was in that car with her and remember, she passed away on the side of the road as they were calling that 11 to get help. it's just awful. thank you. appreciate it. thank you. so this morning, the 84 year old white man accused of shooting a black teen who accidentally rang his doorbell in missouri set to be arraigned. andrew lester's his name. he turned himself in tuesday and was released on a $200,000 bond. he is facing two felony charges in the shooting of 16 year old ralph yaro. lester told police that he did not exchange words with y'all before he fired at him and that he was scared to death. charles size. was shot in the head and arm after he went to the wrong address to pick up his siblings. shocked by the news. charles community came together this week to hold a unity walk to voice their support. girl is now back home from the hospital with
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his family, and he is beginning his long road to recovery will continue to follow that story, and we'll check in with the family as well. and the man accused of leaking top secret military documents set to appear in court today, as senators are expected to learn more about what classified information. was exposed. senator angus king will join us live with the biggest questions he has ahead of the briefings. that's next. for people who are a little intense about hydration neutrogenena hyo boost lightweight, clinically proven 48 hour hydration for that healthy skin glow neutrogena for people with sn . wh you're a small business owner, the's no such thing as days a longer in business hours. well, they're anything but predictae, especially when you have clients like ours when i consider payroll providers from my business, i looked for a
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well, i could switch us to xfinity. those smiles. that's why i do what i do. that and the paycheck. has to be easy. that's why i love time. join me on time at chime dot com. i'm jessica dean on capitol hill, and this is cnn. interest a few hours to suspect in the leak of classified pentagon documents will appear in federal court in boston for detention hearing 21 year old massachusetts air national guardsman jack teixeira is charged under the espionage act with unauthorized retention and transmission of national defense information and also unauthorized removal of classified information and defense materials. those leaked documents have exposed so much they exposed a blunt u. s assessment of the war in ukraine as well as details on u. s intelligence collection on allies. they also revealed advancements that we've just
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learned about the washington post today. serious advancements in chinese spying military operations, including according to the post that the chinese military could soon deploy a high altitude spy drone that travels at least three times the speed of sound. let's talk about this hearing and what questions he has with senator angus king of maine. he serves on the intelligence and armed services committees. he and other senators will receive a classified briefing on these leaked documents today. will senator good morning um, i bet you have a whole lot of questions, and i wonder what the top ones are. well, first let me with two disclaimers. one is i haven't yet had any classified briefings on this, so i'm not talking about anything that's not in the public domain. secondly this young man has been charged. he hasn't been found guilty, so we got to be careful about, uh, assuming guilt. however having said that my principal question is how in the world did a 21 year old national guardsmen have access to this
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level of top secret information ? one of the classifications is called the s s. c i. that's just about the highest classification t s stands for top secret sc. i secure compartmented information . that means they're people. for example, in the cia that can't even see it. you're only supposed to be able to see that information. if you have a need to know it in some operational sense, so this there's no way to sugarcoated this this is a really serious breach, and it's also shows a serious gap in the structure of our intelligence organization. do you think that an incident like this or this much access to as you said tss see such highly classified information could be changed through legislation. well i'm not sure it's legislation. i mean, there we may have legislation as a result, but you know, you can't legislate common sense. i mean, this was really the responsibility of the
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military. and it was just not a responsible way to handle this material. it's important to also to realize this yes, young man allegedly apparently. was not an intelligence analyst or or a member of the intelligence community. he was a technician running the network. so the question is, can you keep the network running without having access to the content on the network? or are there ways to secure it? and that's really it's a it's sort of a mechanical problem in terms of how this information is shared. there's one other interesting aspect of this popular if you go back to september 11th, one of the problems that was identified, was not that information wasn't shared across the united states government about the impending possibility of september 11th. so there was a lot more sharing going on. well okay, now it looks like you know, in this case, it was too much again. uh
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this young man shouldn't have had access to these documents. so you obviously have a lot of questions. we heard the same thing echoed from democratic senator kirsten gillibrand on cnn sunday morning, saying, you know, why were these documents lying around? why did this person have access to them? what was the custody? a lot of questions you both have for the right administration for the pentagon, so i wonder. as a member of the armed services committee. are you planning a hearing to question defense department officials directly on all of that? yes absolutely. but that's going to begin this afternoon. we're having a classified briefing this afternoon with members from the pentagon and the intelligence community. so uh, that's an important part. why is this so important, poppy? well ah, that remains to be seen. i think we need to determine what can be public. i think we should have a public hearing. but again here here's the here's the real danger here. the term is sources and methods. information that's become public is bad in in many
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ways, it's not a good thing to have this out in the public. uh and among our adversaries, but the other problem is it can compromise how we got the information. uh in other words, if we learn something they can, they can take the fact that we know and reverse engineer and say, oh, here's how they got that, uh and that's can can compromise people's lives. it can also certainly compromise our ability to obtain critical information in the future. are you saying you believe this leak may have put american lives at risk. i think that's entirely possible. as as i say, if the if the people are adversaries look at this information, and they say, well, how did they get this ? and then they trace it back. i think that's one of the possibilities. that's why, uh, they're sort of two levels of problems here. one is the content itself. but the second is compromise of what's called
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sources and methods, which can put lives at risk, also, leading to a rare rebuke from the spokesperson for the united nations secretary general about how this spying on him not surprised by the spying, but that it calling it malfeasance or incompetence that allowed private conversations to be distorted and become public. you agree with that? yes i do. and again, one of the problems is, uh, we don't know what this if. assuming this young man did this, we don't know what he chose. and how he decided. what would what? to what to release and one of here's another problem. how did this fellow get a security clearance? he had to have some level of security clearance. uh the question then is we've done a lot of work on security clearances. the question is would this should this have been his proclivity to do? this should have have should it have been picked up and that's really hard hard to determine if he was just showing
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off for his buddies, which is what it looks like. i don't know that any kind of security clearance process would have picked that up. usually, they look for things like financial compromise. other ways you can be you can be compromised. senator angus king. thank you for that. as you said, you cannot legislate common sense. please come back and let us know what you can. after you have this briefing. we appreciate your time. absolutely thanks, poppy. thank you. don okay, we're breaking down the president's new executive order that expands access to child and elderly care what it means for you and a new warning from doctors about teens abusing drugs. t the only thing i regret about my life is that i did what everyone else d did at the timei hired local talent. if i knew about up work, i would have hired actually talented people from all over the world instead of talent, less people from all
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united states america. we should have no one if she no one should have to choose between caring for the parents who raised them, the children who depend on them for the paycheck, every lying to take care of both president biden signing an executive action on tuesday, issues more than 50 directives in an effort to expand access to both childcare and long term care. so joining us now cnn's chief business correspondent, christine romans, good morning morning in aviators, no doubt he did it. is he doing it? look this has been a week, part of the american economy for a very long time in the pandemic, really put it into stark focus here, right? i mean, and this is the federal government. what the president is doing is saying all of the heads of 50 different agencies. you scour your grants . you scour your federal programs and you find ways to draw copays, for example, for people who might have childcare
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through the government. you find ways that if you're giving grants to different industries, you make sure that they know that they are required to find ways to provide quality health care. also supporting family caregivers. this is a big deal in military households where you have veterans have one spouse, maybe or somebody, the family who's taking care of a veteran. they're not paid for that finding ways to relieve some of that financial stress stress there and advancing workers, right domestic workers' rights. we've lost a lot of these workers during the pen. chemically have fewer childcare providers now that we did before the pandemic, and they're not paid very well. i mean the best case they're talking about $18 an hour. so what from the from the consumer point of view. what are we talking about here? we're talking about childcare costs one kid, one kid, depending on where you live 5300 bucks to $17,000 a year we're talking up to 20% of take home pay for families. they're paying for childcare, and these numbers have gone up faster than almost anything except college tuition child care of the past decade 26% up over the past 30 years
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200% and long term care up 40% so this is a problem for worker productivity for the economy, that's all. overall growth of the economy, and i talked to the economist neil richardson this morning about just how important the childcare piece is. the overall recovery of the labor market in the u. s. economy post pandemic here's what she said. we know two things when it comes to the care economy first, we know that the jobs have not completely recovered from the pandemic. this was a hard hit industry. there was a lot of people who left this industry during the pandemic and the second thing he knows that the care economy has gotten more expensive. so i have a cousin who is a highly skilled, highly trained nurse. who has dropped out the labor market over the past few years for two small kids because the daycare in and around this is around the d c area that suburban d c area, the daycare is more expensive than her take home pay. and you just think about that the quality day care how hard it is to find and that's we have a nursing
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shortage by the way, right? so there are a lot of pieces here that we still have to figure out to have a truly efficient a condom e market labor force. kids aren't cheap. no i know that the best piece of financial advice that you would offer. well, i mean, i call them my cost centers cost center 12 and three but cost center three is almost going to go to college. and then he's going to be cost center three believe it. that's the nation marks a disease. christine thank you very much. this morning. a new survey from the journal of american medical association open network finds that at some of the nation's middle and high schools. one in four teens. 25% of teens report they have misused or abused a dhd drugs. doctors are calling it a major wake up call our chief medical correspondent, dr sanjay gupta, is here. we're talking about things like ritalin, etcetera. yeah that's what we're talking about. and you know there. there is a significant amount of these drugs being being abused. i mean, this was a survey. so you
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know, this is what people actually conceded. they admitted to in the surveys. it's the numbers are probably even higher . the challenges this these prescription drugs these stimulant drugs for 88 can have very legitimate purposes about 10% of kids. at some point i've had a diagnosis of a dhd and about 75% have been prescribed in medication, but what they found what really struck me about this study was that in those places where these medications are prescribed the most, that's where you're seeing the highest rates of abuse as well. maybe that's no surprise. i mean, if you look at where the medications are coming from they are typically leftover medications, people getting them from the medicine cabinet asking their peers and just as you said , the most common ones are ritalin, adderall concert and violates those are the ones that were the most likely to be abused. what is also interesting is that this is a relatively new phenomenon. people may not realize this, but ritalin was
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approved in 1955, but adderall was approved in 1996, and by the way just to give you some context in your own life. dan lemmon graduated from high school 12 years before adderall was even approved and poppy five years after it was approved. so this is this is a relatively new phenomenon that we're seeing out there. what i have to put my age up for every time right there behind you. 2001 of 1984 remember a lot of my friends in high school graduation, just your graduation. but the question is, who is when you're looking at the types of this medication? whatever. who's more likely, you have an idea who is more likely to abuse these drugs. it is almost the exact opposite of what we're seeing with illicit drugs so much more likely to be abused in suburban areas and as i mentioned in areas where the medications are being prescribed a lot because they're just getting them from their friends and their peers. what was interesting as well is
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if you if your parents are college educated or one or both of your parents are college educated those school districts tended to have the highest rates of abuse as well. that's what they're saying. what about long term impact of abuse of these drugs? well, you know, i mean, part of the reason i put that time line up is because i just want to be fair here. what is the long term here? some of these drugs like adderall was only you know, it's only been around for 25 years. we don't have super long term data on this yet, but there are some concerns, you know to be fair. you know, when you look at this overall, the idea typically, people will take these medications and combine them with other medications, and that can lead to a stimulant use disorder where you you need an increasingly escalating doses of this, but the things that you might expect anxiety and depression can be associated with this, but also tangible effects on the heart, irregular heartbeat for a set for, for example. keep in mind. i mean, these are stimulants. so in people who have 80 hd, it can
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have a calming effect that raises norepinephrine and dopamine levels and people who don't have a dhd. it can have a much more negative effect. long term to be fair. we still don't know, but in the short term, there's real concerns. i'm glad you raised this very interesting study. sanjay what are you 84 85 86? no that wasn't part of the timeline, guys. thank you three years old when i graduated high school f. i'm glad he also didn't compare the degrees we have compared to sanjay. thank you. thank you. good to see you. you got it. thank you. this morning. netflix is ending a service you probably didn't know still existed. why dvds? remember those are no longer going to be mailed out normal. no more red envelopes, and aviation officials are warning of a quote tsunami of pilot retirement of this could impact the already struggling industry. today history in the making
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beginning today we're bringing you the news, disturbing new details way questions still, stories at the center of your day all coming in right here is central today at nine eastern isn't it time trouble? i'd like come and save the world with us. welcome to the lazarus project project premieres june 4th on tnt. shane angel changes happened so fast. for the life you're making has it so my daughter tells us you're in television only $40 a month, unlike that last overpriced package be happy i can stream my favorite channels for less family has values value the live tv you love brought in ensure max protein with 30 g of protein
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eight on cnn. sexy as a tortoise . that's netflix, a company that rents movies on dvds. cosmo had squads of bicycle messengers and web band had a fleet of shiny trucks. netflix found a simple, low cost formula free trials and unlimited rentals delivered by plano u. s mail. i remember when that was such a cool new thing. that's a cnn report from more than 20 years ago, when you could order netflix dvds online getting right in your mailbox after 25 years of companies ending that dvd, direct rental service and goodbye to the red envelopes on september 29th netflix reporting a miss for a second quarter earnings after the market closed yesterday, shares fell by 6. don't discount netflix is what i would say. oh, my gosh. 20 years ago, a cnn this morning exclusive first look at the new hbo feature film . reality of the film is based on a former n s a contractor
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named reality winner who was sentenced to five years behind bars for leaking classified documents to the media documents on russian interference in the 2016 election. here's a first look at reality. we are with the fact that the russian reality. i don't think that you're some big, bad masterminds by kind of thing. i think maybe you made a mistake. are you hacking elections? have you ever taken anything outside the facility? i don't want you to go down the wrong road. because telling a lie. fbi agents. is not going to be the right thing. why do i have this job of anchoring to be helpless? you have everything
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you guys you should pull reality is set to air on hbo reality set to air on hbo on may 29th 10 p.m. and will be available for streaming on max. we should note hbo is owned by cnn's parent company, warner brothers. discovery can't wait to see that first peak that anyone has gotten at the film and so timely. just talk about the name reality winner. what a name name the name. make sure you tune into that. yes so we'll have more perspective on this settlement between fox news and dominion voting systems coming up. we're going to be hearing from dominions lead lawyer and a free also ahead of frequent guest on fox republican presidential candidate vivek ramaswamy. he joins us at the table next. why are there two extra seats? are we getting a dog? a grereat dane. two great danes. i know china. dana, whose
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to celebrate. i ordered new branded gear for the whole team . everything was so easy to make with custom design lab. i just chose my products, added our logo and placed my order. our new gear really helps us look and feel like a team. bring your own team together with custom gear. get started today at custom inc .com. our stocks tanking. you need a holistically re optimize revenue streams for pre emerging markets, not to mention the integration of cloud service, functionalities and, of course, synergy. people with all the answers get all the answers. ask markham accountants and advisors. the truth matters lies have consequences. today's settlement of 787,000,005. represents vindication. and accountability. yeah that was just in nelson. by the way, he's going to be on with us a little bit. later on in eight o'clock
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hour. he's the lead counsel for dominion voting systems. i was after a last minute $787 million 7870.5 million dollars settlement that was reached with fox news. this is the largest publicly known defamation settlement in u. s history involving a media company. the deal was announced hours after the jury was sworn in. box put out a statement admitting to lying about dominion rigging the 2020 presidential election writing well, sort of acknowledge the court's rulings finding certain claims about dominion to be false. i'm not exactly sure if that means lying, but they are saying that's what they that's what they are acknowledging. i should say so, joining us now a frequent guest on fox news, republican presidential candidate and tech entrepreneur vivek rama swami, so we are happy to have you. i'm going to talk to you more than just about fox news, but good morning to you. thanks for joining us this decision to settle this case seems strikes me as a cost of doing business. if you're going to be a news network, i think it's happened to cnn. i think it's happened to a lot of news networks that has been doing business happened to cnn. this
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never been sued for defamation never been never been actually settled. large definitely large box appears to have the largest viewership in the market capitalization. so i'm not familiar with the details of this case. i'm actually more interested in issues relating to this country. then disputes with media companies. but i will say that it strikes me that from cnn. well you're honest. you're not familiar with the case. you're not familiar with the lies about the 2020 election about the election being stolen. that dominion was somehow you know, fixing the votes. i mean, that's why they $787.5 million. you're not familiar with that. and you're running for president the details of a private dispute between a commercial dispute in the details of what the dollar figures are really not where i spend my time, but but what i will say is look there's defamation cases, people settle business is settled. business disputes facts settle this one. it's actually not. i think the pressing issue for the nation of what fox news is settlement is i disagree with that, because you just admit it. you said fox is the largest viewership one of the largest fewer ships among television networks, especially cable networks, considering the eyes of the american people who
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are tuning into fox news to get their information and to get it accurately. i'm surprised that you would say that you're not concerned about this, and this is not a something that is hugely pressing for the american people. here's the way i look at the press is the first amendment in the constitution. exactly you nailed it. the freedom of the press. so we have cnn. we have fox. i'm here with you guys. i go on fox news. i think that that's great that we have a marketplace of ideas in this country. what i worry more about don is the trend that we see in this country to controlling what different parties are actually able to say. the american way, too bad speech is more speech. and so i think we need to actually embrace that culture and a more diverse marketplace of ideas with all of that. we haven't done well enough in this honesty. you're not answering the question. you're giving us platitudes about what your question is done. do you want somebody to bash fox news on cnn favorites and i'm happy to do that basketball. i wouldn't. i'm asking you to be honest about what happened on fox news about the lies that were told and then having to admit the lies and paying the largest defamation settlement to immediately open e
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and history and you are frequent guests on that network. are you concerned about the credibility ? are you going to continue to go on that network? even with those credibility? i have far more concerns with the credibility of what we will call the mainstream media than i do with the credibility of fox news, but boxes the mainstream media of the day. what i say is look, neither you nor i know the details because they settled it before it went to trial. i think the obsession obsession over this is a little weird. listen to want to get into that real issues to talk about. what country are we talking about? fox news is this is a very big and important story. i'm not gonna we have much more that we want to talk should about, but we will get there when we're ready to get there we have you want to talk about these issues? this is a very important issue, and it should not be downplayed. this has to do with american democracy and americans learning the truth about what happened. in the 2020 election. you hear this? i hear a lot of comparative to cnn is not this apples and oranges. it's not the same thing. you know different networks? yes, apples aren't the same as oranges. you get one
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view through cnn. you get a different new through fox news. i think it's good in our marketplace of ideas that we have media that offers diverse perspectives, and you're talking about threats to our democracy, one of the threats and i, and that phrase is an interesting one threats to our democracy. i think one of the biggest ones is the chilling effect and speech in our country. more broadly, where if somebody says something that a broad segment of the population or certain people in the government disagree with there's an increasing trend in our country to silence that and the answer to bad speech and alleged misinformation is not less speech is more speech in the marketplace of ideas. that's actually what a free press really means. we're going to move on. but let your answer was good. but it's not about what's actually happened. it's not relevant to what's happening. i think the answer to what happened at fox news is to tell the truth. media companies are tasked with telling the truth that did not happen in the situation and that's why we're asking these questions. but let's move on. talk more about a diverse exchange of ideas. that's what i'm in for. thank you. glad you're here this morning. your campaign slogan is a new american dream, and i was
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reading through your platform. last night. i wonder what you would do specifically to actually bring us together, not just republicans and democrats. what is unity look like to you, the back for rich and poor for rural and urban for republicans and democrats. that is the right question to be asking, and i think the main divide in this country and i say this to conservative audiences equally is not between republicans and democrats. it is between those of us who are pro american embracing the ideals that set this country into motion, and i think an increasing strain in this country that is anti american that wishes to apologize for a nation founded on those ideals, but that's not a 50 50 split. i think most people are in the pro american camp and i think one of the ways they would say we get to national unity. some people think is by showing up in the middle and compromising i respect that view, but i rejected you reject compromise. reject compromising our principles. i think the right way to get to national unity. and i mean this to unite this country is by embracing actually
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the radicalism of the american ideals themselves. we celebrate our diversity and differences. i'm glad we have some three different shades of melanin on this set right now two different genders. that's fine. but what i say is so what? that diversity is meaningless unless there's something greater that binds us together that unites us across that diversity, and i'm running for president to revive those ideals that bind us together across our diverse attributes to get into a few issues, one of them being china before i get to china. i just want to better understand something you said this week, speaking before the audience at the nra here. here's what you said, referring to back to 18 65. here it was. i want you to raise your hand if you know when the first anti gun laws were passed in this country, raise your hand if you do. 18 65. you want to know when
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it happened? we fought a civil war in this country to give black americans the equal protection under the law that we failed to secure them in 17 76. but then you want to know what happened. southern states passed anti gun laws that stopped black people from owning guns, the democrat party then as and now wanted to put them back in chains. then as in now, that's quite an accusation about the current democratic party. who and what were you referring to? i was referring to joe biden and his expression of wanting to put them back in chains dating back to lyndon johnson. i think lyndon johnson's so called great society was one of the greatest misnomers in american political history even back then, in the 19 sixties, 70% plus of black kids were born into the two parent homes. today. that number is less than 30% in the opposite direction, the very policies that we implemented in this country in the name of helping black americans have actually been disastrous for black americans and all americans, and i think that that'som

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