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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  April 20, 2023 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT

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perfect products at four imprint dot com. print for certain natasha chan in los angeles, and this is cnn. closed captioning brought to you by garlic cholesterols natural enemy. my blood pressure is borderline garlic. healthy blood pressure formula helps maintain healthy blood pressure with a custom blend of ingredients. i'm taking charge with garlic. busy night
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of news and good conversation. thank you so much for joining us. cnn tonight with alison camerata starts right now. i alison. pam, we'll keep that going. thank you very much. good evening, everyone. i'm alison camerata. welcome to cnn tonight . sources tell cnn that joe biden will formally announce that he's running for a second term next week team. biden will reportedly put out a video on tuesday. which happens to be the four year anniversary of his 2020 campaign launch. his announcement will come a week after a spate of young people getting shot for innocent mistakes. today it's a basketball rolling into the wrong yard. they got a six year old and her parents shot in north carolina in the past week, there's been a 16 year old shot for ringing the wrong doorbell. a 20 year old shot and killed for pulling into the wrong driveway and two cheerleaders shot for opening the wrong car door. is this uncontrolled anger or widespread fear, author and presidential candidate marianne williamson is going to be on our panel to share what she thinks is at the root of this sickness.
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also, i sit down with a group of dedicated fox viewers who share their thoughts on fox's historic $787 million payout for spreading falsehoods about dominion voting systems. the audience is not looking to be lied to. it's looking to give context to something that we know is true from a certain perspective, and that's that's gotta value. but there is a line not to cross. and once you know that something is not true. you need to let them know. okay but let's start with president biden's announcement we have on our panel, alexia johnson, who was a senior adviser to the biden 2020 campaign, also dug high former rnc communications director my on again off again work husband lz granderson and legal eagle. elie honig. third wheel. you could say it about ellie as well, you're also i love work bigamist, so i'm glad i believe this, actually. no judgment. thank you. alright, alessia. what should we expect on tuesday? what is president
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biden going to say in this announcement? listen. i was advisor on the 2020 campaign well enough to know what he'll say he's going to talk about the policies that have been working. he's gonna give a great speech. he's also going to be give a stark contrast of what we will see on the republican side and what they are not doing for the american people and how they are chipping away at democracy and on the wrong side of these issues like abortion, gun control. all of these issues that so many young people, people of color women, the base of the democratic party, the rising majority are four and so you'll see that in his in his speech doug as republican hand for a long time. what do you think he needs to say? and what do you think? um, his weaknesses . it's a very nice way to call me old timing on this is very interesting because he's also the subtext is going to be with four years ago today that i launched the campaign that got donald trump out of the white house, so that's going to be a unifying message. for democrats. clearly he's going to make distinctions with republicans, but we don't know if he's going
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to do it on really the number one issue that he's facing right now with republicans and that's the debt ceiling, and he needs to address this not only in a video but also moving forward with a lot of unknowns, and it goes to what his campaigns about the uncertainty around the debt ceiling and what that's going to create and tying in that the fact that even though the economy is in a better place, and inflation is falling. voters aren't feeling that way is numbers are in the tank when it comes to his handling of the economy, and that's going to be as big driver for his re election. republicans also responsible for this debt ceiling. hold up, sure, but there's only one president. there's only one person who can be elected president. he's trying to make that distinction right now between house republicans will try and throw mitch mcconnell's name around there as well. but we have to. we have to find out what's going to happen in this and we're still in such a period of unknowns on this, and even the unknown or even the known unknowns are still unknown at this point, so problems here for this for both sides. risky business. um. l z. here's his president biden's approval ratings that there the latest
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that we have, i think, 42% overall 57% disapproving of the job he's doing. what do you think he needs to say? well, it's not a safe thing at this point is to do things right, and i think the important thing for him to do is just say what he's done, you know list the accomplishments remind americans where you were four years ago where you are today, and if you want that same sort of stability , then you may want to continue on with the same person in the white house. and if you want to go back to where you were four years ago, when you consider the other side, i think that's a very powerful argument. you consider the chaos that's around everything but also it's smart for him to announce because a lot of oxygen been sucked up by trump because of the indictment and the beginning to see republicans rally around him and build momentum behind him. this is a good way. make this announcement so that you have democrats now in your circuits, being able to talk about your presidency and the things to accomplish that you get back from that momentum that seem to be going towards trump. it's interesting if i can pick up on that i'll if i if i may ask some
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questions because these are political expertly, actually curious if both of you has democratic strategist and republican strategist just in terms of winning. do you want in an ideal world? would you want biden as the nominee and doug would you want to face biden as the nominee? look president biden. he was the president that ushered end what you know, i say it was a dehydrated, dehydrated red wave in 2022 right, like his policies and his agenda that is winning for a lot of these voters, and that's what they want to see. and so you know, i think sometimes when we talk about our politics, folks are used to the obama type of candidate. that's a once in a generation. get somebody in the office that you can agree with on certain issues. you know you can push on certain issues, and a lot of people see that in president. biden he's also got vice president harris out there on a lot of these issues. she's really strong on voting rights, abortion rights this whole week. she's been talking about it. and so yeah, look, i want him as my candidate. yeah i'm gonna give you the honest answer. i don't know what this point and the two reasons for that one. biden's argument is i can beat trump
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because i'm the only one who has is both true and unprovable. and so for republicans, they're trying to figure that out. they certainly like where his poll numbers are want to keep them there. but the question then is also who they have that's going against donald trump. so with biden's core argument, i can beat trump because i've beaten trump if the nominee is trump well, republicans are still concerned, regardless of where trump is in the polls right now in the primary valencia one of the weaknesses that keeps coming up in polls, when you ask americans is that issues h, and what he has said is watch me. watch my watch what i do, and you tell me that you don't think that you know i have the energy for this job. so does he need to say more about that? does he need to address that in a different way? i don't think so. i mean, he literally said it. let's take it head on, he said. it's a legitimate question. so just watch me i can show you better than i can tell you and he's out here again, telling people about the policies that has administration has put forward talking about who's blocking other policies that would help the american people.
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he's talking to labor unions about the economy. you know, the republicans are talking to wall street executives. and so you know, i think the age conversation if and when donald trump is the republican nominee , you kind of can't really have that conversation anymore. right i can understand why the age or his age is a constant conversation. obviously of trump is the nominee has aged as well. but i'm more interested in the age that we're in, right. there are conversations that we're having now that no other president has had to deal with before starting with artificial intelligence, so i think a lot of younger voters are going to be asking themselves. which of these candidates can actually navigate through some of those trickier things. some of the technology issues not just the culture wars, but climate change is real. and more and more young people are talking about and not in a hypothetical but in a definitive sort of way. the way that we talk about the weather. you're totally right. i mean, i teach college undergrads, and they're doing presentations on existential threats to us and climate change is one of them.
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speaking of conversations that we've never had to have before we're gonna have a major party candidate or potentially front runner who's under indictment as you mentioned, and i thought it was so interesting before l z talked about it as almost a political asset, right? you're saying biden is smart to get out now because people are coalescing? around trump. i wonder how that will play. i mean, i can give you all you want on the legal nuances of the indictment, probably more than you probably heard enough from me on that. but i'm curious how you all think that will play politically? you know, i think it helps helps. it helps the biden campaign. it's going to help democrats because again we know who the enemy is, and not just trump. but the trump maga republicans. it's not just him doing the bidding. it's desantis is of the world. it's the carcass of the world's all these people. in addition to that, he's an indicted crooked criminal who is running for office. and this is just one case that we've seen in new york. there are others that we're waiting to hear how they're going to address it as well. isn't it strange if it helps biden and it helps trump america is really get engaged. when there's an indictment, he's
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indicted. and he's crooked. he's not a criminal, yet. that's up to obviously a bumper sticker. yeah might work. but this is the interesting thing is with trump . it's there's a long term in a short term, the short term short term it's been a big benefit for him. we saw the money that he raised. we saw the party coalesce around them. but if there were more indictments, that long term problem is bad for him. in the in the general and in the primary in the primary. if we see more and more indictments, it's easy for a desantis or any of the other candidates say there's too much drama. hey donald trump even was a great president. but we have to move on and that might have some serious general easy, though not to cut you off. but you're making a sinus of all you need is proof that he's not electable. he's been already impeached twice, and they're still afraid to say his name. but i think these indictments actually sure his base coalesces around him. but these indictments so riled up a base of folks back to your earlier question. whether or not they want biden as the candidate. they just don't want trump and
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the more that we reveal about trump, the more that these indictments come down. that's going to wrap up the whole base to vote against him. i just think there's a difference between this. this indictment that we've seen that does have politics attached to it in a way that say, georgia and potentially doj wouldn't even a lot of democrats have said this is not the indictment that we want under donald trump. well, we're keeping an eye on what's going to happen next with the indictments. thank you friends very much really appreciate that conversation up next democratic presidential candidate and author marianne williamson is going to join our panel with her thoughts on her plans on how to heal the problems and the soul of america. here she comes. welcome great to have you, you, alison. nice to see you again. cnn tonight. brought to you by chevalier critics are raving chevalier is an epic tour de force that will leave you breathless. chevallier told true story onlyn theaters tomorrow
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you can focus on the present and extra gazing ahead from where we sit. the future still feels good x chair .com to find out how you can own an ex chair for only $20 a month. x chair dot com more vibrant flowers, step one. feed them with miracle gro. shake and feed. that's it. miracle gro o to grow. yeah, totally agree. the suspect in the latest senseless shooting. robert singletary surrendered tonight after being accused of shooting a six year old and her parents because a basketball rolled into his yard in north carolina. yet another insane shooting of a young person this week, leaving all americans grasping for answers to this epidemic of fear and violence by panel is back with me and joining us is marianne williamson, democratic presidential candidate and best
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selling author. it's so great to have you here. it's always good to see you. thank you, too. we have you booked for many weeks, and it's just perfect that you're here tonight. thank you so much. um i'll just run through every night this week. we have reported on yet another i mean, truly insane shooting. of for ringing the wrong doorbell for pulling into the wrong driveway for a ball a child's ball rolling into the wrong yard. um how do you explain what's happening in america? and obviously as a candidate? what can we do about this? well there's no rational explanation for such an explosion of that which is not reasonable, but i think that the possibility of something good here is that so many americans on both left and right. recognize that something has gone too far. i do think i think something people are. that's what i'm sensing in the country. people realize that something has gone too far. i think we're ready to go beyond the quite sophomore debate of agriculture , or is it policy? it is so
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clearly both. our policies are definitely on the side of wanting an assault weapon ban of wanting stronger red flag laws. federal flag red flag laws. the bump. stocks are high capacity magazines and so forth. but it's also true. we have to ask ourselves what is happening in our culture. our culture has lost any sense of reverence. our culture is not centered around humanitarian values any longer were centered around economic values. short term profit maximization for huge corporate entities has become our governing principle. this has been going on for decades. it's like left so many people in economic despair, economic anxiety, and this is what's not being addressed on the level of cause. it's not being addressed on the left. vel of policy or of attention and focus, and i think all of us have our part to play in doing what we can both in our own hearts and in our own relationships and in our own communities and taking care of one another and on that. what can you do? what can we do some easy things to do or policy
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things policy things. i think we people recognize this. the issue centers a lot around the easy access to guns. we know we have more guns than people in the society. also there's a lot of conversation as you've already covered here tonight about how there are people on television, making a lot of money breeding fear. we have a culture where people are actually making money breeding fair and it's not just gun manufacturers. it's journalists and journalists, corporations. we need to come back from the brink here in terms of what all of us can do as individuals. i think everybody in their own life can ask. who am i not forgiving, loving? where am i not showing up? kindly how many times when we see something like these young men, for instance, and others who have who have committed these these mass shootings and you ask yourself what happened in this person's life. what one person might have made a difference, and i'll tell you something. we have the sociological experts who have explained that to us, but our lawmakers are not listening to many people in america are falling through the cracks. too
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many children are falling through the cracks. we have children who are traumatized before preschool. now we have elementary school students on suicide watch. we have millions of american children who whose daily life is a level of post traumatic stress, so until we are ready to get down and recognize the level of irreverence that is at the center of how we are organizing our society today, all of us need to get off our smug high horses and stop pointing the finger at other people and asking in our own lives and in our own attitudes, where both politically and personally we might become more harmless, more loving, more compassionate and don't leave politics out of that either. because when you neglect a child you are adding to the petri dish. to the patriots of societal dysfunction. we do you think we have a mental health crisis now? alison look at what we're going to have 10 or 15 years from now, having raised a generation of children praying every morning. i won't be shot
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at school today. not only that, but little children who know that the adults aren't doing anything about it. absolutely because of multimillion billion dollar profits for gunmen. you even those who have it with the amount of kids who have lived through or somehow a school shooting has touched. their lives is incredible. and even those who haven't they still do active shooter drills, active shooter drills. doug, what do you agree with? what do you disagree with? well, i think there's a lot that can be done. but we can't do everything at once. and it and part of that is the fractures that we have in washington but also in state capitals. and there are things that do you give me hope. i've been involved with some of the efforts in tennessee right now, and tennessee republican governor, republican house republican senate, but there's a possibility that they can get gun legislation through go. governor li supports it. you have the former the two previous former governors, republican democrat have written school shooting. that's what's galvanized them because of this, and the louisville polling and national covenant school, shooting the polling shows. the poll came out yesterday that
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voices for a safer tennessee put out from donald trump's pollster , breezy oli that show that gun owners and trump voters as well as democrats and independents, support things like safe locks. locks for guns, support things like extreme risk a 70 to our waiting notice. if you had told me three weeks ago that we would see 70% of gun owners in tennessee say that i'd say you're crazy, but we're seeing that now we're not going to be able to do everything. but if we can do the small things if politics is the art of the possible doing what's possible now will go a long way into preventing some of these tragedies. you know? i grew up in detroit, and so my relationship to gun violence might be a little bit different than you know some other people because i don't want to say that i'm used to these crazy shootings, but drive by shootings don't make sense either, and that's what i grew up in. you know where little kids would be outside playing and someone would drive by and just spray bullets because
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someone they think is standing near the child is there so i grew up and gun violence and seeing senselessness and deaths for no reason. almost my entire life and i can tell you because my therapist has told me i'm not okay like that has an effect on people. and so i believe it. 1000% correct that the toll of gun violence not just on children. but the parents and the family members who the friends who didn't get shoppers survive. having survivor's remorse. we're just beginning to talk about the mental weight of what gun violence is doing to us as a nation and even compound the fact that come on. we haven't begun to flesh out what 2020 did to us in terms of the isolation from covid. so when you look at those two things added in with the economic stress at an end with the racism and the hate that's coming up. i can see why it feels as if the world is falling apart. but i do believe that once we get to a point in which democrats and
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republicans are saying enough is enough that we can get passes as a nation because we've been here before time and time again, and we worked our way through it, but i think right now we're just in a dark place right now because everyone is under a lot of stress for a lot of different reasons, and mental health is just beginning to be taken seriously by this nation. culturally i want to believe that's going to pass. i agree with all three of you that it's about. it's about culture, and it's about policy and one of the things that i think gets overlooked policy. we talked about red flag laws and limits on semiautomatics. but there's also a legal element of this, which is a lot of these shootings are happening in driveways on streets and yards. you hear people say standard ground laws. can i please make a public service announcement? i mean you because i think there is a miss a vast misunderstanding of what these laws do and do not mean stand your ground laws do not mean you get to shoot anyone. they do not mean that even if you're in your own home and someone on your property, you get to open fire. that is not what they mean. in all circumstances. you can only
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use lethal force shoot a weapon if you have a reasonable belief that somebody is about to kill or maim you or somebody else and a basketball or pulling into a driveway or pulling open a screen door does not get you then i have a question for you. why was trayvon martin's shooter ? not convicted so well that that was based on the totality of the circumstances, but you're right. that's a great example where standard grandmother main differences. standard ground law makes is you do not have a duty to retreat, so understates that don't have those laws. if you can get away safely. you have to do that. in in florida, where she von martin happened. they do have standard ground laws, which enabled robert zimmerman to say, i don't have a duty to retreat. so it does change the calculus, but it does not mean it's open season to just start shooting. that's really helpful. yeah it's really good to know that so beyond gun violence, what do you want to say? what what are your priorities for running for president? i think that one of the things we've talked about here already is that things are not okay. we have 39% of americans who now report 44% of
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millennials that they have skipped meals in order to pay their rent. we have one in four americans who live with medical debt. we have 64% of americans who are living paycheck to paycheck 60% of americans who could not absorb $400 unexpected expenditure. look at those facets that i just talked to you about. and you talked to me about mental health. we talk about the mental health crisis. we need to talk about what's at the root of that and to talk about how much of that comes from chronic economic anxiety. we have a political class. we have a political class. that is not planning any fundamental economic reform and i'm running for president. i'm running as a democrat because incremental change is not enough when you have a lack of universal healthcare, although we have it in every other country when we in every other advanced democracy, every other advanced democracy has, uh, tuition free college. you know which we had until the 19 sixties. you know, i'm old enough, alison. there was a time in this far away land called the 19 seventies, when
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the average american there was a thriving middle class. the average american worker had decent benefits. afford a home could afford a car could afford a yearly vacation could afford to send one parent to, uh, to keep one parent could stay home if they wished, and they could afford to send their kids to college, so no people are not okay. and i'm running for president because we need a fundamental economic u turn not just incremental change. people need to have health care in this country need to be able to go to college people need the bandwidth to thrive and all of politicians. i can say is i will help you survive an unjust system in the richest country in the world. something is wrong. we need someone from outside that system to say the system should not be unjust. we need an economic u turn and that's what i will do if i'm elected president france thank you very much for this great conversation. okay next. are you offended by the word ladies? our next guest. our next guest says
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he lost a great job offer as a school superintendent because, he said, ladies he's here to explain next. i'm eva longoria, born and bred in texas with mexican american roots. i don't know if i've ever been this excited to eat anything. i'm exploring mexico to see how the people their lands, and their past have shaped a culinary tradition as diverse as its 32 states. artista. eva longoria searching for mexico, sundays at nine on cnn.ompared with other choose one vdict. o ceu prects from fleas and ticks for 12 weeks, nearly three times longer used with caution and dogs with the history of seizures or neurological disorders. protection that lasts longer. bravo bravo, ecto! bravo first time your sales reached 100 k with go. daddy was also
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cnn. a candidate for school superintendent in easthampton, massachusetts, says his job offer was rescinded because he used the word ladies in an email. the man is vito perrone. he joins us now with his attorney, james winston. gentlemen thank you for being here. notice what i just did there. i said, gentlemen, and sometimes i actually say, ladies and so, mr perrone, is it really true that you lost this job offer because you addressed the board chair and her executive assistant as ladies in an email. we have that email. let me just pull it up. you said ladies. good morning, and then you went out to spell some of your requests in this job negotiation . so was it really the ladies part or was it what you were demanding in the job negotiation that that lost you? the job offer. yeah the reason that was given to me was because i used ladies as a greeting. it was
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considered offensive to the chair and she called it a microaggression. we never had an opportunity to really negotiate at all. they voted in an executive session to rescind the offer, and that was really where things ended. and what did you think when she said that she was offended by ladies and it was a microaggression. well, initially , uh, i was apologetic said i'm sorry. i didn't mean to offend anyone. it wasn't my intent. you know, i grew up in a time when ladies and gentlemen was where we're terms of respect, and that was what i meant them as uh and i was hopeful that we could kind of move forward from there. but unfortunately, the chair and the mayor were pretty adamant that the apology didn't matter. at that point they had already voted and they had rescinded the offer for me. and so that's really where things left off. hmm okay, so she has a slightly
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different, um explanation now, um, so the board chair cynthia kaczynski. i hope i'm saying that right? um says now that the general feeling was that there were too many concerns before we had even begun negotiating the rest of the contract and alarm bells were going off. each item that i have mentioned by itself would be redeemable. but taken together, it was becoming clear to most members that we would not be able to come to terms or work together effectively with the applicant. so were there other other things? they cropped up. uh none that they made me aware of. in our executive session. the executive session agenda was one item and negotiation with me. we never got to negotiate. there was never any mention of anything other than the fact that i said ladies, which was a microaggression, um, after the fact it seemed like there was a misrepresentation and there was some communication from the chair, saying that those things that i requested were
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unreasonable. oh, however, um, asking for four extra days of vacation doesn't seem unreasonable to me asking for cost of living increase on my salary for years two and three doesn't seem unreasonable. and starting with the sick bank doesn't seem unreasonable. when i had worked in the district for six years, and i had over 70 days banked up before i moved on to another placement. so uh, i never intended to use all that sick bank in a year. it's just it gives you a sense of assurance. it's when you start a position if you have a sick bank mr winston. i only have 30 seconds left. but what's the recourse here? really the reasoning. they're giving you the pretext they saw the original firestorm that that the reasoning caused and this is nothing more than a pretext the reason they didn't hire him as the reason they told them is because he used the term ladies as far as required, um just less
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than two weeks ago was the meeting where they actually rescinded the offer. there was another kennedy that the offer to that withdrew late last week this past week, even on vacation. there's another meeting, so this is a very fluid situation more considering our options, but we're hoping this is a teachable moment for everybody in the community doctor probably deeply cares about the students and the teachers and the community in east hampton. and we hope everything works out for all concerned. then we want to thank you for having us here. thank you both for being on and please keep us posted. veto brown. james winston. thank you for your time. thank you. thank you so much. the panel is back with me. marianne williamson. doug! hi lz. granderson and eliana. marianne. are you offended if somebody calls you, lady? absolutely not. absolutely not. i think what that gentleman said medford i just called the madonna was a sign of respect. when i said it was a sign of respect, i think like he said, he grew up in a time, as did i, by the way, ladies and gentlemen, as a sign of respect,
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i think today because of the gender issues often say ladies and gentlemen, and everyone else, you know that that is today's language. i think his having the offer rescinded because that's considered a microaggression. uh by someone is terrible. one of the things that she had said was that he didn't address her formerly with her name's instead of miss williamson, he said, and whoever her executive assistant and her name, he said, ladies, he had no idea that that was showing any less respect. i believe him because that would be true for me. i could see starting a letter if i was speaking to a couple of men saying, gentlemen this morning we should discuss any thoughts. i mean, that says it all. my feelings are this if . if the employer says this is offensive to the culture. then that's the offensive to the culture of where he's applying. like, i don't know if i can from a distance, decide whether or not someone should be offended or something, so i can certainly see how someone of authority
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could see that being a little too familiar. i can't see that. but i can't see that being the sole purpose of with scent of recently and also to the gentleman at the table ever used the phrase ladies one, yes, but in washington if you're in congress, and you will refer to the female members is the gentle lady. and one of things i worry about is we we've talked earlier about all these issues that go on. we heard the word microaggression so often and so often in america. we focus on the micro aggressions when there were a whole lot of macro aggressions that we ought to be paying more attention to cover for not absolutely what we're talking about the little microaggressions rather than talking about this more serious issues of genuine aggression and oppression of people in our society that are this more serious issues. this is like a cover. i agree. bracker aggressions, though, can be serious. i mean, if we don't they if they go untreated. and they happen on a daily basis. the accumulation of that could be just as powerful as one
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singular major aggression. but don't you have to with a micro aggression? i mean, i know i'm speaking broadly, but couldn't you just have said i'd prefer you address me by my name? thank you. yeah, i mean, like, like i said, i wouldn't have gone for a nuclear on that, but that's again. that's not my culture. i'm not in charge of developing the culture of that work environment. i think intent school. he's not. if you look at the full email, the tiny print it's pure business. he's not trying to condescend to them. i think we have to be reasonable and asked, what's the entire context here? yeah i mean, it is a little old timey. i'll grant them that and we even when i say, ladies, i know i'm sort of harkening back to a different time because i think most women like to be called women, but not ladies. but you don't say hey, women i know that i don't recommend that. what's funny to hear doug say that you know on congress. it's a good point. do you say the gentle lady was one of the conversations we actually had as prosecutors, old timers would address the jury they
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would stand up and say, ladies and gentlemen of the jury today, you will hear. i didn't like that. it felt maybe a little too old time information. my trick with the jury, i would say we are going to learn because then you're part of the jury. cool little little lawyer trick out there for all the law lawsuits, but ladies and gentlemen, is the formal thing that some people use in congress and in courts, ladies and germs still work. that's a lot of the kids every time. that is a geographical issue, though to different parts of the country and the south. yes and in fact, some people say gals, which is very old timey, but it's still meant. i think as a lot, actually, that's all sort of can't believe we're having variance. thank you very much. be sure to tune in at the top of the hour. some of our favorite reporters will join me to talk about the big stories that they are covering today. but first i speak with fox viewers. will the defamation lawsuit with dominion? stop them from tuning in. will they see the network differently? i asked those questions and they answer next.
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we do begin with breaking news this morning. fox has to pay dominion voting systems. $787 million for making false statements about the voting machines. it was a huge story for the past two years in the media world, but very rarely mentioned on fox. so what do fox viewers know about what happened ? i sat down with a group of them to find out here is our pulse of the people. show of hands. how many of you have heard about this two year legal battle between dominion and fox before our producer called you? two of you have heard about it was aware um, of the claims that it made against dominion and you know the allegations of voter fraud. more broadly, i just wasn't aware that dominion had filed it. essentially a defamation suit against box. how many of you are surprised by the $787 million settlement that fox
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agreed to pay to dominion for broadcasting false information about the voting systems. none of you, reagan. your thoughts was to fox. um so at some point , you have to make a business decision on both ends, and i thought, you know it would probably be in boxes. best interest to subtle. obviously box made those claims in some capacity. and dominion took issue with it, so okay, they shoot him, but i came away from the court filing with was a lot of this is a matter of opinion. this has been over a year correct so for them to come to the table with no evidence to back up their claims. that's really frustrating because it's quite frankly, we've had millions of americans that have been doing their homework since
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2020. it's pretty easy to find some, uh funny stuff. i'm wondering how you feel. knowing that one of the things that came out during discovery was how different the hosts felt behind the scenes than what they were saying on the air. for instance, when tucker carlson said behind the scenes after the election on november 23rd 2020, he says, i had to try to make the white house disavows sidney powell, which they obviously should have done long before. laura ingram text response. no serious lawyer could believe what they were saying. well i lost. i lost trust in them prior to that, anyway when? when the fox was calling out the election. i know a lot of people felt this way they were calling out the election prematurely for arizona . and then after that, you know , there's been a lot of talking out both sides of their mouth. the audience is not looking to be lied to it's looking to give
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context to something that we know is true from a certain perspective, and that's that's gotta value. but there is a line not to cross. and once you know that something is not true. you need to let them know because then they can move on. move on and accept it. they lost. the conservatives lost this last election, not because of some nefarious deep state. shadowy think so. you know, alison, you spoke about um, well, you know, certain fox hosts knew about this, but they went forward with it anyway. one. i'm really happy that that they have. divergent opinions in private, and then they say, gosh, you know, i'm not really sure about this. i think they're going to learn a lesson. this has this lesson has happened to cost them $787 million, which is a number i can hardly imagine. and what is that lesson? ryan? i mean, but but what is that lesson? well, i think that lesson is that the news? it should be based. wholly
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on truth. there's a certain level of willful blindness, but people see what they want to see. and that's true on the left, and it's true on the right. but i don't look to any of the networks, including fox. as the ultimate arbiter of truth. one more question show of hands. how many of you will still be devoted? fox watchers. i mean, not sure of his devoted but three of you the odd man out. that's okay. so guys of the three who are still going to be fox watchers in will you take what they say with more of a grain of salt now? as i stated earlier, i take everyone with a grain of salt. reagan. what about you? will you be? will you be listening to fox with through a different lens, taking it more with a grain of salt, or you should always look within when something you know big like this
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happens a big case like this, so , yeah, i think there's going to be an extra filter on that lens . when i watch tucker, will you be watching through a different filter? as reagan said. i think i'm going to be expanding my net. some more alison, you might be winning a new future viewer, but also, um, you know, the things that fox news is showing is not necessarily the things that cnn is showing and expanding. my net will be, i think helpful so that i don't see these. i don't have these blind spots like this dominion case. thanks to our panel there, and if you want to comment on it, feel free to find me on social media at allison camerata . okay. big news tonight for alec baldwin. prosecutors have dropped the charges against him for that fatal shooting of the cinematographer on rust. we'll tell you why next. with every
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make an appointment to ask your doctor for first sika for chronic kidney disease. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. prosecutors announcing that alec baldwin will be cleared of involuntary manslaughter charges in the fatal shooting of the on the rust movie set, a source tells cnn. the decision was made after new evidence emerged that indicated the gun used in the shooting had been modified. helena hutchins, the film cinematographer, was killed by a live round fired from a prop gun held by baldwin while rehearsing a scene in 2021. the film's armorer hannah gutierrez read was also charged with involuntary manslaughter. the charges against her remain in place. baldwin posting on instagram after the announcement, thanking his wife and attorney as part of a wrongful death settlement with hutchins husband production on rust has resumed filming began today at the yellowstone film
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ranch in montana. the church scene where the fatal shooting occurred will be cut. from the film. ok, so coming up. we have some of our favorite reporters here to talk about the stories that they're working on for tomorrow. they're joining me right now. i'll be talking to that momentarily. that's next. like that. looking. how to grow more vibrant flowers. step o on. feed them with miracle gro, shake and feed. that's it. miracle gro o to grow. that's a great delicious herbs. step one use miracle gro potting mix. that's it. miracle growth or you need to know to grow. iyou're happy, and, you know, have your hands if you're happy, and you
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sore muscles. absolutely free text g a r d n +2231231. priscilla alvarez at the white house, and this is cnn. closed captioning brought to you by meso book .com. we offer a free book on mesothelioma call for the free book and receive so much more call 1 808 31 37 100. fantastic. hi, everyone. thanks for tuning into this hour where we bring you tomorrow's news
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tonight we have our great lineup of reporters to share their scoops here here with me tonight . we have harry antin, elena train athena jones and brynn gingras. great to have all of you. okay so plans are officially underway for president joe biden to formally announced his bid for a second term. elena is following this story for us, elena. how will this unfold next week? right so i think the big question that everyone has been asking now for months is will president biden run again and the answer is yes, he is, and it's going to be announced as early as next week. we're hearing tuesday that will be rolling out a campaign video . it's also i mean in classic biden fashion he's going to be, you know, he's very fond of anniversaries. fond of being sentimental, and it's going to be potentially on tuesday. like i said on the four year anniversary of when he launched his 2020 campaign, so, um that's what we're all paying attention to, and i think it's really interesting. there's been a lot of debate behind the scenes about the timing for this, and i think one

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