tv CNN News Central CNN July 6, 2023 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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tempering expectations about the visit, saying they don't anticipate specific policy breakthroughs. congressman matt gaetz is pushing to end cannabis testing for members of the military. both when enlisting and accepting a commission, according to "the new york times," nearly 33% more recruits tested positive in 2022 then in 2020. thank you for joining us. inside politics starts right now. now. welcome to cnn news central. president biden is speaking at a manufacturing plant in south carolina. let's listen in.
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>> anyway, also want to thank the leadership for hosting us. you know, i'm here to talk about what we're doing to invest in america and i mean invest in america. all of america. starting here in south carolina. the talk about the progress we made in building an economy from the middle out and bottom up, not trickling down. w that trickle down economy not a lot dropped on my dad's kitchen table growing up. i came to office determined -- to change the economic direction of this country. to move trickle down economics and get rid of it for everyone from the wall street journal, financial times called the program bidenonomics.
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our plan is working. one of the things that i'm proudest of it's working everywhere, not on the coast and big cities, this time investments is working in plants being built. communities that have been left out and hollowed out, this is what it looks like across the country. over 13 million new jobs since i've been elected to office. more jobs than any other president has created in the first two years. including 14,000 in this state alone, this state alone. again, that's more -- that's more in two years than was created in four years under any administration. unemployment below 4% for the longest time in 50 years. inflation is less than half than
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it was a year ago and we're continuing to work on it. you know, i know we have more to do to bring down inflation. remains one of our top priorities. job satisfaction nationally, nationally, is at a 36-year high, share of working age americans in the workforce is as high as it's been in 30 years, remember they used to say biden spent all this money to keep people from working, people are off the sidelines, 20 years, 20 years high. higher than every single one of my predecessor. folks, it's not accident, it's bidenonomics in action. it means slashing public investment on things that helped lead the world in innovation. we used to invest 2% of our
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entire gross domestic product in research and development. you know what it is now.7. we used to be ranked number one in the r and d. we're number 9. china is number two. other countries are closing in fast. this is the united states of america, we used to have the best infrastructure in the world, rated number one. now we're rated number 13 in the world in infrastructure. how can you have the best economy in the world and not have the best infrastructure in the world? under my predecessor, infrastructure week became a punchline, every month, anyway, i won't get into it. on my watch, we're making infrastructure a decade headline. yesterday, we announced that since i took office we've attracted a half a trillion
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dollars, $497 billion in private investment in america manufacturing both here and around the world. it's historic, it's bidenonomics in action. we're creating jobs here. we're exporting american product. product, not jobs. that's the story here in south carolina. earlier, we heard the leadership say $60 million they're investing that, that's 18 million jobs across the country. all a district result of the so-called inflation reduction act that we wrote and passed. that's the legislation that passed, so much money is coming in to make all this happen. by the way, i want you to hear about the deficit, i cut the deficit $1.7 trillion in two
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years. nobody's ever done that. cut the debt 1.7. this generates income. it generates growth. it converts solar energy into electricity. >> president biden speaking in south carolina. pitching his bidenonomics and really trying to convince americans that the economy is turning around, that inflation is turning around even for those folks who aren't seeing it that the numbers are working to their benefit and that they are going to be feeling it soon. turning now to the former president, we have some new details on the classified documents case that involves former president donald trump just a couple hours ago, walt nauta, trump's personal aide pleaded not guilty to helping his boss hide classified
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documents after a judge unsealed more of the mar-a-lago search warrant affidavit. that justification for searching mar-a-lago last summer and it reveals that prosecutors have surveillance video showing someone moving dozens of boxes before the fbi search. cnn's carlos suarez is out of the federal courthouse in miami. what can you tell us about the arraignment? >> reporter: well, that arraignment lasted about five minutes, 40-year-old walt nauta didn't say a word as he left the federal courthouse here behind me in downtown miami after pleading not guilty to obstruction charges and lying to federal investigators, inside the courthouse he was joined by his d.c.-based lawyer as well as a new south florida-based attorney, we're told that she's former public defender in trying cases across south florida.
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with knowledge of the situation, nauta is being accused of moving several boxes with classified documents from a storage room at trump's mar-a-lago resort to other parts of the property and lying to federal investigators about it. prosecutors say that all of this was in an effort to keep some of these classified documents from a trump lawyer who had been tasked to find them after a grand jury subpoena, prosecutors said they have surveillance video of nauta moving these boxes around the mar-a-lago property. before the fbi searched the property and the feds said that nauta lead to them about the whereabouts about these boxes and he lead about not moving them. >> carlos, thank you so much for the very latest. very important developments today, jim. a tale of video tapes. let's focus on what we're learning about the new surveillance video, taken out of
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the storage room showing a person moving boxes to an unknown location. to be clear the affidavit, the search warrant affidavit doesn't explicitly identified nauta as the person who moved the boxes. do we have any details of who else it could be? >> they're talking about someone who moves these boxes multiple times. returns with only 30. now additional details in these documents suggest this individual was interviewed by the fbi multiple times. we're moving the boxes was a significant issue, jim, and we know from our reporting all that suggest that yes this was walt nauta. what's remarkable in this less redacted affidavit is how much investigators knew, in early august 2022 before they searched mal how much information they gleaned from photos.
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>> so, nauta and trump, co-defendants here, both have been indicted. possible that their legal interests will diverge. >> not only possible i'd say it's highly probable at some point that walt nauta is going to have to make a decision if he wants to stick by his boss, the former president, continue to fight this together. his legal fees is paid for by a trump pac. if you flip on the former president that legal representation is going to go away and the resources that it takes to go up against the justice department that's a significant adversary, at some point you have to ask yourself whether you'll possibly willing to go to jail if this doesn't go their way. these little delays like his arraignment being postponed twice. it's unclear when this will go
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to the trail. >> of course raises the question whether that financial legal support has an intent behind it. i know you'll continue to follow. paula, thank you so much. let's discuss these threads further with the two lauras. let's start on walt nauta, so many trump aides have come and go, he's stuck around, talk about your reporting. >> he has stuck around. what really stands out is the fact that he really waited in tell last minute to have this arraignment, he delayed for about 28 days saying that he needed to find a local lawyer to represent him. he's represented broadly by the same lawyer as former president trump. but really waiting, dragging this out as much as possible and that delay is a tactic that i
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think we're going to see repeatedly not just from walt nauta but from the former president, because it's a part of the political strategy broadly as well, the former president wants to delay this as much as possible to go beyond the 2024 election cycle, he could potentially pardon himself. >> the iowa caucuses begin very early in the next year. delay is the name of the game. >> he's collected, what, 30-something million dollars since being indicted. it's not hurting his campaign. the rnc pledge about trying to support whoever the eventual nominee. it bodes well to keep it going. however, in the real world with the rest of us live, where you can federally indicted, you get 30 days behind bars at the onset for trial, i mean, this is a
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really astonishing moment in time. you got the former president of the united states, affidavit that shows probable cause why this entire began down in florida. it includes surveillance footage before they had an indictment and everything else they were aware they saw boxes moving. . the boxes we're seeing behind the screen of course, put in one area, not put back in full. this is part of the evidentiary basis. >> the boxes of being moved before the fbi ever went into mar-a-lago. how does that boost smith's case in. >> remember, affidavits are for probable cause not for beyond a reasonable doubt. what it does it suggests that i were looking for an eye towards grand jury item, witnesses they were going to call, they already knew what they wanted to know,
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whether you were credible when you spoke about it. in terms of which witnesses to call. who would corroborate other aspects of it. you can work backwards to fig you out how to get a time line to build your case. >> you can see how who's being dishonest absolutely. >> notably, laura, she mentioned the agreement among republicans that whoever 's the nominee we're going support them. not too many republicans even as donald trump is the front-runner going after him. they're defending him in. >> yeah, speaking of earlier when i said the former penalty that he would potentially pardon himself we're seeing a number of republicans hint saying they would do that as well if they were elected to president. a litmus test among republicans in the primary, they would p
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pardon the former president or others involved. we've heard from former congressman hurd he's not going to say yes to this rnc pledge, he would support whoever is the ultimate nominee. the rest of the field they're not going after the former president. >> they might tried something different. laura, a question about nauta's relationship with trump, because from our understanding trump aligned entities are paying his legal bills yet the judge in this case has said that the two cannot communicate about the classified documents case, who's verifying that? how are they being held accountable for that? those conversations that could have been had in private. >> of course the power dynamic
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and the leverage one has is unbelievable to thick about. imagine spouses who may be prosecuted together, people who are in same reason for some respect. not unheard of to have that. the point you heard, how do you police that. it also when you're thinking about how this will play out in an actual trial, at some point defendants found themselves with the realization their interests no longer align because of the leverage or one may be viewed more favorably. they can be fearful of that proposition. two different attorneys will be at odds about trying to figure out how to best represent their individual clients. >> the other aspect of this to me that's fascinating is that
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while republicans are defending the former president the white house and joe biden theoretically who trump would face, president biden hasn't said much about all of this. >> he's not going to say much more. at all. because of fact that he wants to demonstrate that he's treating the justice department as a totally independent branch, they're doing this on their own, he hasn't spoken to attorney general garland or any of the prosecutors working on these cases even the ones even the one being brought against his son hunter biden. because of course we've seen that the former president as well as a number of republicans have tried to argue that this is some political persecution, why trump jumped into the race so early to say, i'm a candidate and i'm being politically persecuted and to refute all of
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the evidence what it's clearly showing. when it comes to special counsel, the potential for this indictment in this case to be delayed further because we know that's a tactic that trump is going to deploy, potentially looming all over this that jack smith is pursuing more evidence, he's not done investigating this at all. there could be future charges looming. there are still a portion. >> important points. great to have you with us. please come back. there will be no shortage of news on the donald trump front. appreciate you. he failed to march on moscow and now he's out in the cold. why mercenary boss yevgeny prigozhin appears to be losing friends after the challenge of power. now, zuckerberg versus musk.
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new signs today that mercenary chief who led a weekend mutiny in russia against putin may be in perilous limbo. y prigozhin threatened to march his private wagner army on moscow two years ago until a deal allowed him to enter in exile in belarus. today, our matthew chance asked l h luke shen koe where is. an update on whereabouts of the wagner leader yevgeny prigozhin,
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is he in belarus or not >> translator: in terms of prigozhin he's in st. petersburg, or maybe moscow or elsewhere, he's not on the territory of belarus now. >> st. petersburg where putin came from. russian state media did show raids on his home allegedly uncover multiple passports, gold bars, wigs and wads of cash. in ukraine russia has exacted one of the most devastating attacks on civilians in lyiv, ukraine a cruise missile struck a residential area, it left five people dead, several dozen wounded. lyiv is the largest city in western ukraine. quite close to the polish border in fact. ben wedeman is in ukraine.
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an orphanage among the buildings here. they've struck lyiv before but this is a considered a relative safe haven from russian strikes, tell us how devastating this one was and what that does to any sort of calm or safety in the western part of the country? >> the city, jim, was woken at 2:30 in the morning by these blasts and of course the blasts were caused by caliber missiles, those are russian cruise missiles that have a payload of about 1,000 pounds of high explosives causing massive destruction as you can see from those pictures, at least five people dead nearly 40 wounded. and it does shatter the feeling in lyiv, that even when we leave ukraine, we usually pass through lyiv, there's a city if you didn't know there was a war
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there's no sign of it around it. this is going to change. as a result of this sense security there, ten bomb shelters were locked shut, those who were rushing to the bomb shelters when they heard the alarm couldn't get in. the local prosecutor is now conducting an investigation. >> i spent a lot of time in lyiv, i want to talk about another issue here, because it does appear now that the u.s. has made a decision to supply to ukraine cluster munitions in the upcoming aid package, this of course a highly controversial issue, because cluster munitions, e more us now international criticism because they have a high risk of impacting civilians, can you explain the decision-making here, why ukraine has pushed to this and why the west is now accommodating? >> reporter: well, one of the
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reasons why this counteroffensive, jim, hasn't moved forward as quickly as many were hoping or expecting is that the russians have made months to dig in, they've dug in deep with multiple layers of trenches and bunkers, cluster munitions are aept-personnel weapons. if you want to clear trenches in a quick and efficient manner they're certainly the weapon of choice. what i have seen myself in front line towns and in the trenches the russians use them quite commonly and for the ukrainians who are already struggling with a lack of proper air power, the russians really beat them when it comes to their presence in the sky, these cluster munitions might be able to provide the ukrainians with the ability to
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knock through, to shove through those trenches and finally make some significant progress. jim? >> provide risk after the fact. final question, even in the midst of war there are discussions between the warring parties particularly on prisoner exchanges. >> reporter: it's actually completed. the 47th prisoner exchange since the war began between russian and ukraine, today each side handed over 45 prisoners we understand that from the ukrainians most of them were sergeants and priefvates we don know the identities of the russians handed over. we had an opportunity to speak to some russians, convicts turned soldiers and they described the conditions on the front lines as really grim.
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>> when they put me in prison i heard they were recruiting, serve six months and they pardon you he tells me. very different from what i saw on tv. i felt fear, disappointment in my commanders. >> reporter: what we understand that the rush is shans in these prisoner exchanges aren't interested in these convicts turned soldiers, they're more interested in pilots, officers and professional soldiers in these exchanges. jim? >> shows you the disdain they show for some of their fiefrts. ben, please keep yourself and your team safe. thanks so much. still to come, so-called forever chemicals in nearly half the nation's tap water. coming up, how you can make sure what you're drinking is safe. and what you should do if it's not later with twitter in
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turmoil, instagram launching a new social media app, could it be a twitter-killer? this is cnn news central. we're back in just moments. i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase,
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contaminated with forever chemicals. the u.s. geological survey conducted the most comprehensive research to date to find out how widespread these chemicals are and scientists may believe they may be even more hazardous to our health than previously thought. what exactly are these forever chemicals? >> boris the chemicals we're talking about are pfas chemicals. they're called forever chemicals because they take some time to break down. they break down very slowly. pfas chemicals can be found in everyday items in fast food containers. what researchers did for this new survey they looked at more than 700 sites, they got tap water samples from these sites across the united states, you see here private wells where some of the sources as well as public sources and they found
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that in the tap water, at least 45% of samples contained pfas chemicals and they noted many of these samples came from large urban areas or big cities, we should have map here of the hot spots. where some of these samples were found. now this should not scare people, as you see here on the map the hot spots where some of the samples were found, boris, as i was saying, this shouldn't really scare people, this should raise awareness about how prevalent the pfa chemicals are and how widespread they are and research is ongoing about the public health implications here. pfa chemicals have been linked to certain canker, thyroid disease. this is ongoing research. this new data puts in the importance. >> what is doing to address this? >> well, number one we know that
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the epa is doing a lot of work in this area, public utilities are doing work. these are forever chemicals. it takes time and resources. something we can do individually use a carbon filter on your tap water at home and make sure to change it regularly and a test that you can purchase online or from certified labs to test your tap water. so those are some things we can do individually on our own boshgs ris. >> thank you so much for the reporting. is mark zuckerberg trying to kill twitter? meta's new threads app has already 30 million signups. we'll discuss that, plus the private sector saw a big hiring spike last month, what that says about the state of the economy ahead.
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facebook's parent company meta officially launched a new social media platform that's being called a twitter-killer. it's called threads. it links to your instagram account, mark zuckerberg said 30 million people signed up in the first day. let's talk about what this means. is it going to live up to its hype? that's the question. which brings me to my first question, is it going to scratch that twitter itch, the same as twitter, how is it different? >> well, on the surface level it looks and feels very similar to
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what twitter is, you can post things, favorite things, you can like things, you have follower list and a following list. but i do think it poses a serious threat to twitter, because the adoption has been expl explosive. i have signed up for every twitter alternative whether it's parlor or truth or mastodon, never had my phone blow up in the 24 hours, with people liking my post, definitely momentum behind this app. context, that 30 million number you referenced is extremely important. yesterday i posted a story on axios.com of all the copy cat features that meta has introduced in the past two years, all those features they were killed because they only had a few hundred thousand followers. the fact that threads has 30
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million people signed up already, to me indicates that this is not an app that gets killed, not going to be short lived. a product that meta will likely invest in in the future. there's the question of how you can look chronologically, maybe you can't at the threads, when you do on this and i'm on it now, people are very happy to have somewhere else to be and people who have been having those twitter conversations are now having those threads conversations. how vulnerable is twitter in. >> they're pretty vulnerable and i think you hit on something very critical. mark said yesterday in a thread that he wants this to be a friendly place, kind conversations, any time you get into a text based public square app hard to retain that level of
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happiness you're going to get things into political speech but for now i think users are looking for a place, a reprieve if you will from some of the nastiness on twitter since elon musk took over and pulled back some of those content rules. you mentioned direct message. there are things that come with threads that don't happen on twitter. for example, a ton of content med ration policies. everything that exists for content med ration on instagram gets imported into threads. that's something that users are craving on twitter that they're not getting. >> so, i notice as well that if you for instance click to follow someone who has been posting out conspiracy theories it evening going to alert you to someone
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who traffics in disinformation. maybe it's something people don't want or certainly he doesn't want but it seems like that is a selling point for threads, right. >> i think so. also by the way on the other end it's a selling point for twitter if you're not somebody who wants to engage in thoughtful, moderated conversation, but you know, the big thing that i think threads has going for it's launching a at really important time. twitter has lost about 60% of its value. advertising is done 59%. the company is struggling to roll out new products that's thoughtful. mark zuckerberg is coming in when twitter is down and that's different in the past when he's introduced new features like stories it was when those apps were on the rise, this is different because it's when the app is on the fall. i think twitter is going to have a real run for its money because of threads.
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>> interesting to see how it moderates its behavior in relationship to this. thank you. what do you think threet instead of tweet? the private sector witnessed a big hiring spike last month, adp said companies added nearly half a million jobs in june, that's double what economists had predicted a big jump as well from may. consumer-facing industries, leisure and hospitalities drove those gains. tomorrow's june jobs report also expected to defy expectations. . the economy is still strong. yesterday's average global temperature tied with tuesday's as the planet's hottest day ever at nearly 63 degrees fahrenheit,
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that's average across the globe including at the poles. the warmest temperatures in at least 100,000 years, you heard that right. warn the record could be broken again and again. that's bad news for a warming planet. if you're a honda driver, the company just recalled thousands of models because of a brake issue the recall affects certain pilot, acura muhl mdx models made from 2020. drivers can have their cars i inspektsed and repaired at honda dealerships free of charge time to crank up the pressure on moscow as military and economic failures confront vladimir putin. we'll find out what that pressure could look like when we come back. and our techno wizardry calculates your cacar's value and gives you a real offer in seconds
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former head of the cia says conditions are right for the united states to "tighten the screws on russia's economy." david pretorius cites vladimir putin's mounting problems from the ongoing war in ukraine to wagner's challenge of his authority to ongoing, thick budget troubles. matthew can join just now live.
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there are already enormous dissensions put on russia from the west. >> boris, david botrytis is saying now is the time to turn up the heat even more on moscow, he says vladimir putin is affixing a very difficult situation and the u.s. should impose a french for sanctions on russia, and for export controls. this war in ukraine is been driving on for almost a year and a half at this point, killing untold numbers of innocent people in both countries, causing millions of ukrainians to become refugees and of course casting a shadow over the world economy. i asked tran 27 flat out when will this war and? he said "it ends when vladimir putin realizes this is not sustainable not just because of the losses on the battlefield but because of the damage it is doing in the russian economy."
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yes, david petraeus is calling for washington to "tighten the screws" he wants washington to target the supply chains that power russia's economy and its war machine. he wants to make it even harder for other countries to trade with russia. and, he says the u.s. needs to do a better job of quickly responding to ukraine's request for military hardware. i do want to take a step back and address this question of how much damage as the sanctions done to the russian economy. there is a debate there. and, there is a bit of an open question. how can we possibly trust the official economic numbers coming out of moscow? i do think it is fair to say that the sanctions haven't been a death blow david petraeus's and others were hoping for. but, there has been real damage done. we know that countless western brands have left russia. everyone from american airlines and delta to starbucks and that
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has caused enormous damage. at the same time, the latest numbers out of moscow even show that their budget efforts it is storing, oil and gas revenue is down by almost 50% year-over- year. that is in large part because of these western sanctions. boris, if david petraeus gets his way and there are even more sanctions, the pressure on vladimir putin and russia is going to even go higher. >> interesting perspective. matt egan, thanks so much. jim peered coming up, where is wagner boss yevgeny prigozhin. the russian president lukashenko says the leader of the mutiny against vladimir putin is not in belarus where does he say he is? do we believe him? we will talk about it, coming up. (dr. aaron king) if you have diabetes, getting on dexcom is the single most important thing you can do. it eliminates painful finger sticks, helps lower a1c, and it's covered by medicare.
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subject 5: those donations really matter because we're not going to give up. and when you see other people not giving up on your child, it makes all the difference in the world. interviewer: when you call or go online with your credit or debit card right now, we'll send you this st. jude t-shirt. you can wear to show your support to help st. jude save the lives of these children. subject 6: st. jude is hope. even today after losing a child, it's still about the hope of tomorrow, because. childhood cancer has to end. interviewer: please, call or go online right now. [music playing] ♪ when you have chronic kidney disease... there are places you'd like to be. like here. and here.
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not so much here. if you have chronic kidney disease, farxiga can help you keep living life. ♪ farxiga ♪ and farxiga reduces the risk of kidney failure, which can lead to dialysis. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections in women and men, and low blood sugar. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may lead to death. a rare life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this bacterial infection, an allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis. farxiga can help you keep living life. ask your doctor for farxiga for chronic kidney disease. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. ♪ farxiga ♪ your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates
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