tv CNN News Central CNN November 10, 2023 11:00am-12:01pm PST
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as pleasure mounts for a cease-fire, secretary of state antony blinken says far too many civilians have been killed in gaza. in the meantime, a mass exodus of palestinians trying to escape the violence. we're live from israel with the latest ahead. and after the u.s. downed a spy balloon and encountered several dangerous military jet maneuvers over the south china sea, president biden and president xi jinping of china will meet face to face for the first time in over a year, all in hopes of breaking the ice between the two world powers. but will it move the needle? and new york appointing its first ambassador to loneliness. we'll explain why. we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to "cnn news central."
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it has been another bloody and violent day across gaza as israel's war on hamas intensifies. and a warning -- some of what you're about to see is graphic, you may find it disturbing. stunning new video showing the aftermath of israeli air strikes on thursday. people buried under collapsed buildings. scores of other people trying desperately to pull survivors from the rubble, trying to pull them to safety. but as one u.n. official put it today, nowhere in gaza is safe. case in point, take a look at this -- this is gunfire sending palestinian civilians near one hospital in northern gaza scrambling, and this comes amid reports israeli air strikes damaged several hospitals. the idf has maintained that it exclusively targets areas with ties to hamas, and that any civilian losses are unintended. but the head of al nassar hospital says israeli tanks have completely surrounded his facilities, cutting off patients
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and doctors without power, water, and critical medical supplies. in the meantime, thousands of other gazaans fled south. opening a corridor with the promise of more pauses in the future. we have jeremy diamond in tel aviv. what more is happening on the ground there today? >> reporter: well, the israeli military now says that hundreds of thousands of palestinian civilians have been able to take advantage of those evacuation routes going from northern gaza and fleeing to the south which the israeli military says it safer, but clearly they are still operating in parts of the south, carrying out air strikes there, as well. but nonetheless, today the significant development on this evacuation route run is the fact that it is not only the road which is one of the main arteries going north/south, but also the coastal road, along the mediterranean, which was also open today for the first time for palestinian civilians to flee to the south.
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now the united states is trying to take some credit for what they are calling humanitarian pauses. the israelis are referring to as evacuation corridors. either way, the united states saying that they have seen some progress from israel in terms of addressing civilian needs in gaza and the humanitarian crisis unfolding there. at the same time, the u.s. secretary of state making very clear that much more still need to be done. >> much more need to be done to protect civilians and to make sure that humanitarian assistance reaches them. far too many palestinians have been killed, far too many have suffered these past weeks. >> reporter: and israeli forces are continuing to advance deeper and deeper inside gaza city. in fact, the israeli military, we have heard them in recent weeks as they have made clear that they believe that hamas is operating inside and underneath some of the major hospitals in gaza city. we have not been able to
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independently verify some of the evidence that they have put forward. but they have made clear that these hospitals could potentially be targets should hamas militants continue to use them for their operations. and overnight we watched as several of these hospitals, israeli forces operating very close to them, engaging in gun battles with palestinian militants very near to those hospitals. at least one of the hospitals, al nassar and a pediatric hospital, the director of the hospital telling cnn that israeli forces had surrounded it. we also saw as strikes, unclear if they were from the israeli military or from palestinian militants, landed in the compound of al shifa hospital, as well, and there were tens of injured and wounded palestinians over there. so the israeli military advancing on these hospitals. calls for international assistance to evacuate patients from these hospitals now. a very, very precarious situation with palestinian civilians caught in the middle.
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>> all right. jeremy diamond, thank you for that report. boris? president biden and chinese president xi jinping are set for a highly anticipated meeting wednesday in the san francisco bay area. it's a positive sign as relations between the two countries have spiraled downward in recent years. cnn's david culver joins us with the details. david, bring us the context of this meeting. what does it signal? >> reporter: let's first say fundamentally nothing has changed between the u.s. and china. it's still a very fraught relationship, still we're looking at a couple of places where we could maybe see some agreements. one of them being climate, the other being enhanced communication effortsyies' mili that's could prevent conflict. this will be xi jinping's first visit is since 2017. since that time, u.s.-china relation vs. -- relations have been in a free fall compounded by the pandemic, and amidst the
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war in ukraine, tengsds tension south china city, concerns over taiwan and the u.s. national security. that suspected chinese spy balloon that was shot down earlier this year, that only made things worse. this is a test to see if the two leaders can stop that downward spiral. china needs this, too. its economy is suffering. they've got a housing market that's in crisis, youth unemployment at record highs, so much so they have stopped releasing official figures, and for the first time in 24 years, a deficit in foreign direct investment. international companies are now uneasy about putting their money into china. so these are major concerns for an authoritarian leader whose communist party's unofficial agreement with his people is financial opportunity, prosperity, in exchange for social stability. >> yeah. xi jinping feeling that economic strain in china. notably there were multiple missed opportunities for a previous meeting between the two leaders. they haven't met again in more
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than a year. what did it take for this to come together now? >> reporter: yeah, the fact that president xi is traveling here to u.s. soil, to california, that is significant. it's taken months to pull off. while the summit is slated to happen on the sidelines of apec in san francisco next week, there have been multiple sub national visits and meetings to make this happen. biden's cabinet secretaries from state, from treasury, from commerce, have traveled to beijing in recent months. china's foreign minister coming to the u.s., was in d.c. last month, and even california's governor, gavin newsom, he was in beijing a few weeks ago. and he had a one-on-one meeting with president xi. so no way will all of this settle the many issues between the u.s. and china, but this is happening at a time when the world is in desperate need of stability, particularly between the two global superpowers. you saw jeremy diamond's report there, no doubt one of the big topics that's going to be in discussion between the two
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leaders is going to be the israel-gaza issues. >> yeah. dialogue, hopefully the first step in ironing this out. david culver, thank you so much for the reporting. let's bring in cnn global affairs analyst kim dozier to talk about this meeting. kim, what's the importance of this biden-xi meeting? do you expect to see any significant thawing, some even little progress in this relationship between u.s. and china, and how important is it that there is some? >> for both sides having the leaders even agree to meet is a huge signal that they're willing to meet face to face. and with biden those face-to-face meetings often do lead to better united nations. but you have to remember that both sides are firmly entrenched in their positions when it comes to the issue of taiwan. while the u.s. publicly says that it supports the one-china policy, it continues to arm taiwan in various different ways as china has continued to step
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up patrols around the island, harassing taiwanese jets, harassing taiwanese ships. and that kind of behavior also has continued throughout the south china sea wherever china has decided, yes, this might be labeled an international waterway according to international law. but we consider it part of our territory, and we are going to patrol it accordingly. that's the kind of thorny issue that biden is going to have to bring up. >> how critical is it to managing this frosty relationship as the war in ukraine continues, you know, and the u.s. is countering russia. and now you have the israel-hamas war threatening to balloon into a broader conflict in the middle east? >> well, in some senses the u.s. comes to this conversation a bit wounded by having to support israel on the international stage. despite the horrendous action of october 7th, what has dominated
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at the u.n. and -- and media channels across the world are the pictures of palestinians on the receiving end of israeli air strikes. and so when biden tries to get china to stop supporting russia, for instance, in the war on ukraine, they can come back with the -- the israelis cut off various food, water, electricity, and now you're asking us to censure russia for doing the same and prosecuting its war? so in a sense the u.s. comes at this without the same moral high ground that it usually has, and you can see in the international community especially among the global south, there are no members of the global south at last check who have sanctioned russia over the war in ukraine. in a sense, china's ally, russia, is winning in the global population stakes. so it's all the more important
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that each of the two capitals find a way to keep talking to each other while they have this global rivalry shaping up. >> as we turn to israel, we heard from secretary of state blinken this morning. what was really one of the most direct condemn nations of the civilian death toll in gaza which now is in the thousands upon thousands. this comes as cnn has obtained a diplomatic cable from american diplomats in the arab world warning the biden administration that its strong support for israel's military campaign in gaza, quote, is losing us arab publics for a generation. how are you looking at this moment and the long-term ramifications as the biden administration will have to tteal -- to deal with them? >> we know that in private the biden administration, lincoln directly, has been cautioning the israelis against indiscriminate air strikes. we also know that within the
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state department there have been complaints and slowly one by one some of the top u.s. allies have lined up in favor of calling for a cease-fire, not just humanitarian pauses or tactical pauses on the ground. so blinken does have to be seen as understanding this anguish and pain, especially in light of his own diplomats reporting back to him that there is this anti-americanism rising. but note he very carefully didn't blame a particular side for all of the deaths. the u.s. officials have also been very careful in all their briefings with us to say that they blame hamas for putting its armed facilities, its hqs, its headquarters, its weaponry inside civilian areas, specifically next to or under schools, hospitals, et cetera. while cnn hasn't been able to confirm that independently, it is what we keep hearing as reporters from both u.s. and israeli officials.
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>> i mean, these deaths may be unintended, as we hear the israelis saying, but they are highly predictable and astronomical at this point as we are watching this unfold. kim dozier, thank you so much for being with us. we appreciate it. ahead, with just one week left, house republicans say they still don't know speaker mike johnson's plan to prevent a government shutdown. we're live from capitol hill on that. plus, a new court order in donald trump's classified documents case means his trial could happen before the 2024 election. and women dominating this year's grammy nominations with taylor swift writing her name in the history books. we'll have more on that ahead.
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here we are again just a week away from a potential government shutdown, and with deep divisions on capitol hill there is still no clear path on how to avoid it. new speaker mike johnson running into the same spending battles that plagued his spresdor and ultimately -- predecessor and ultimately cost him the gavel. a source telling cnn house republicans could release the text for a potential bill tomorrow which would set up a potential floor vote as early as tuesday. with the clock ticking, though, the house went home for a three-day weekend.
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yes. a senior gop congressman giving this blunt assessment of the situation saying, quote, the house is a mess. cnn with more from capitol hill. that is a pretty succinct exact description. >> safe and accurate, i would say. as of now, there is still no plan to avoid a government shutdown, just seven days away if congress doesn't act. speaker mike johnson is aiming to release things by tomorrow to put things on the floor by tuesday. as of now we are told that bill text is not finalized, with even some top republicans in the dark about what mike johnson plans to do and some lawmakers growing anxious for him to reveal his hand. some are warning that the honeymoon period for mike johnson, the new speaker, might already be coming to an end. let's listen. >> i think there's a honeymoon period here, i'm not sure how long it lasts, maybe 30 days. the honeymoon might be shorter than we thought.
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and every time the cr expires, the speaker's putting his head in the lion's mouth. >> reporter: now speaker mike johnson has been wrestling with this decisionmaking. he knows this is likely the most consequential decision he will make as speaker so far. but the problem for him is that his conference is divided. on one hand you have moderates and appropriators pushing for a straightforward clean stopgap bill, but then conservative hard-liners are pushing to extend funding for government agencies in two separate batches. essentially setting up multiple fiscal cliffs the rest of this year into next year. that is something that would be a non-starter in the senate. that is is why johnson has been torn over which direction to take. the white house says the office of management and budget already taking formal steps to prepare for a potential shutdown. a lot on the line for the new speaker. not a lot of time to figure it out, and all while critical issues are hanging in the
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balance. >> there you are, mel. i see you working, i see the tour guide behind you working as people are taking tours of the rotunda. i'm working. congress, not just like us today for sure. melanie live for us on capitol hill. thank you. as new house speaker mike johnson becomes the point person for passing trillions of dollars in government spending, he's also facing questions about his personal finances. his most recent financial disclosures show that he has no savings account, may not have a retirement account. in fact, he reports no assets at all beyond his house. cnn has the details. >> reporter: freshly minted speaker of the house mike johnson facing questions over how he keeps his own financial house in order. >> look, i'm a man of modest means. >> reporter: cnn's review of johnson's personal financial disclosures and campaign financial documents since coming to congress in 2017 reveal that the new speaker appears to be
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living paycheck to paycheck. financial records show that johnson, like many americans, does not appear to have much of a safety net. for past two years, he has not reported any assets and has never even reported a checking account on financial disclosure forms. the speaker's office says he has a personal bank account which is exempt from house reporting rules because it is noninterest bearing. meaning he does not have to disclose this type of account under house rules. while it's unknown how much is in that account, a source with knowledge of his financial situation tells cnn that account is not big enough to be leaving large sums of money in interest on the table. all this as johnson's liabilities are plenty. a mortgage for his family home valued between $250,000 and $500,000. a personal loan from 2016 between $15,000 and $50,000, and a home equity line of credit taken in 2019 for less than
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$50,000. as a congressman, johnson was making $174,000 a year. his salary will now jump to $223,500 as speaker. and he has made over $100,000 teaching online courses at liberty university since 2018. last year alone, johnson collected nearly $30,000 from the college. [ chants ] on capitol hill, to save money on steep d.c. rent, johnson is one of the many members of congress that sleep in their offices. a source with knowledge says the speaker will continue sleeping in his office for now, but did not know if that will always be the plan going forward. >> there are a lot of things on the minds of the american people -- >> reporter: johnson's financial standing in stark contrast to many of his colleagues on capitol hill. with the median net worth of his colleagues in 2018 at just over $1 million. some former speakers have done well.
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nancy pelosi is worth more than $110 million. ♪ before coming to congress in 2017, johnson was a lawyer. in 2016 he reported making over $200,000. >> i was a lawyer, but i did constitutional law. most of my career i spent in the nonprofit sector. >> reporter: and has said that much of his money goes to taking care of his large family. >> we have four kids, five now that they're very active and -- i have kids in graduate school, law school, undergraduate. we have a lot of expenses. >> reporter: that financial reality not unlike most american families. >> i didn't grow up with great means. i think that helps us be a better alleader because we can relate to every american family. that's who we are. that helps govern my decisions and how i lead. >> reporter: we don't know much about johnson's wife and her financial picture but she has income coming from a few places. a christian counseling company, her work with the louisiana
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right-to-life educational committee, as well as a general listing on this disclosure form for various clients. now lawmakers, they are not required to reveal the amount of money their spouses are earning, but johnson actually does in some of the earliest disclosure forms. he reveals she's made $45,000 to $50,000 a year, but he's not declared her salary since 2021. again, all this a very limited snapshot into her side of the earning for the family. cnn on capitol hill. >> thanks. coming up, cnn exclusive reporting on the staff at mar-a-lago that may be called to testify in donald trump's classified documents case, and it's not just those from the former president's inner circle. stay with cnn.
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these are pictures literally from moments ago, seconds ago. are you looking at northern gaza, what appears to be israeli air strikes. you are looking at this from a vantage point in israel, in sderot, from the camera of cnn's nic robertson who is there reporting on this. i want to get to nic. tell us what you have just witnessed and what is going on there now. >> reporter: yes, we think this is the jubaliya refugee cap that's being targeted. i looked over my shoulder, the flares have gone down now. what we were seeing there, and i think what you can see on your screens at the moment, is a big illumination. the illumination is coming from the flares, there's a lot of
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smoke around the bottom of the image there. i think that's perhaps the smokescreen for the troops that are perhaps going into that area. this is a tag team that the idf has been using when they -- when they go and target a particular location at night. shroud the ground with smoke, put flares up so the soldiers can see where they're going, and we've seen air strikes coming in from above. it's not quite clear what is doing -- what is firing the missiles, but we've seen the missiles come down perhaps from helicopters, perhaps these have been -- artillery strikes that have been away or strikes from aircraft. in the camp this evening there is an intense fire-fight under way. it is interesting because this is only just a couple of miles into the north of gaza. gaza itself more than 20 miles long. the idf has been in this area of gaza where we've seen this fire-fight for the past couple of weeks, and the fact that two
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weeks later they are having, again, an intense military operation there tends to indicate that there must be a hamas stronghold or fighters in there who are putting up some resistance. and that's after two weeks of the idf already being in that area. so it gives you an idea of just how long the fight is going to take for the idf in gaza there. a few miles further south, as well, in gaza city, they're going to different houses there, door to door, intelligence-led searches there. they've found weapons, caches, weapons manufacturing close to schools, close to a child's bedroom in one particular house. and this really represents the difficulty the idf faces in targeting hamas. they're not all sitting or weren't all sitting in one big army barracks. they're a force that's -- we've heard so many times, hides out in the civilian population. so they have their weapons storage in one house and manufacture in another house. so it makes it a very, very
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tough job for the idf to get, a, enough intelligence, but b, to put enough manpower in enough places to go after all of these targets. this is really i think gets the part of the pressure we've been hearing from secretary blinken today saying he feels there are too many palestinian casualties, and perhaps gets to partly what prime minister netanyahu has described that this is going a little more slowly than he anticipated. and to what many u.n. scoop -- organizations and ngos are saying at the moment that even this safe area in the south of gaza where all the people who have been leaving the north of gaza today along the humanitarian corridor are going to, there's no safe shelter for them, no safe sanitation, water, food. and the fight has yet to get to the south of gaza where there will be a greater concentration of people. so the problems that lie ahead for the idf and politically for prime minister netanyahu, this moment really do seem to be
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mounting. the humanitarian corridors are working to move people away. the idf is able to fight their battles in parallel to that. meanwhile, so many of israel's arab neighbors are right now calling for a complete cease-fire. and if there was a cease-fire you wouldn't see the fighting behind us. >> remind us, if this is, indeed, that refugee camp -- this is in the vicinity of that, remind us what happened last time there was a strike in that refugee camp. >> reporter: there were several strikes in that camp, and they were big ones. and they caused many hundreds of fatalities and injuries, as well, according to palestinian health authorities, hamas-led palestinian health authorities inside of gaza. they contributed to a huge outrage against israel's tactics internationally against -- against gaza.
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something that we've sort of seen slow off over the past week as i wouldn't say the casualty toll has gone down massively, but it has gone down a little. that said, more than 11,000 people, civilians have been killed, we understand, from palestinian health officials. so last time they went into jabaliya there were significant civilian casualties. it's accurate to say that many of those civilians will have left the north of gaza in the weeks since, but we don't know how many, we don't know how many are left. >> yeah. all right. nic robertson, thank you so much. we're going to continue to monitor the situation there. obviously very serious what seeing developing there. this was moments ago, just minutes ago there on the israel-gaza border. you are looking at northern gaza now. we're following this breaking news. we'll be right back.
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there are new developments in the mar-a-lago classified documents case against former president donald trump. the federal judge overseeing the case has decided to keep the trial scheduled for may after signaling last week that she might postpone the criminal proceedings. cnn senior crime and just reporter katelyn polantz is with us in studio. what is the latest, what should we expect? >> reporter: we should expect this to go to trial in may as of now. judge cannon did have an order today in the court saying, yep, that trial date will stay for may, but she's going to give the trump team more breathing room to do the work they need to do to prepare for trial. she's acknowledging they're very busy, they've got a lot of cases on their hands. there's -- this is a complex case, there's a lot of evidence, there's closs fide material in it -- classified material in it.
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they're going to revisit the trial date in march at a hearing. that's when we are likely to see the trump team come back into court and push again to get this moved until after the election. because as much as it's about documents that donald trump was han handling, there also is a high likelihood that a very large amount of people around donald trump will give quite a portrait of what it was like inside mar-a-lago after the trump presidency, including we're learning about people like a plumber, a maid, a chauffeur, a woodworker, people who were possible witnesses could be called to the stand and could be testifying about the documents being around the property and trump being cavalier with how he was handling himself inside mar-a-lago. that would be quite a powerful moment of testimony if we do have working class people being called in to testify against the former president at a trial in florida in front of a jury of both their peers, as well as his. >> it will be interesting to see potentially what comes out of
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that testimony. notably, the former president over and over again has repeated claims that all of these cases against him are the result of a weaponized doj. he says this really without evidence, but yesterday during an interview with univision he said that if he were to win the white house once more, he would weaponize the justice department. >> yeah. he's quite unhappy about being a criminal defendant and running for president. so this is what he said on univision specifically -- >> what they've done is they've released the genie out of the box. if they do this, they've already done it, but if they want to follow through on this, yeah, i could certainly -- it could certainly happen in reverse. >> so boris, a genie out of the box is how he phrases it. this isn't magic, these didn't just appear. these are criminal investigations that resulted in indictments that were investigated by multiple entities, not just the justice department, that he would be the president over, but also local authorities, state authorities in new york and georgia.
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and they are charges at this time, he's not convicted of any crimes, there's many charges levied against him that have gone through grand juries, so individuals were looking at those pieces of evidence and saying these cases can go forward. judges also, they're looking at them. judges are speaking up already and saying we don't believe there is some sort of political something at play here, that these seem to be valid cases. and they will have to test the law and then ultimately the jury, that is the group of people that it comes down to to decide whether the former president is guilty of crimes or not. >> yeah, you need evidence deemed worthy enough of an indictment to procure an indictment. thank you so much for the reporting. we want to get legal perspective now from tom dupree, a former deputy assistant attorney general. he actually represented george w. bush in the bush versus gore case following the 2000 election. thank you so much for being with us. a plumber, a maid, a woodworker, a chauffeur, some of the
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staffers who might be called to testify. trump is the boss, he's the one signing their paychecks, couldn't that create a conflict in their testimoni? >> potentially. there's certain a lot of tension here. keep in mind this is the same approach that prosecutors and pretty much all of the trump cases have been using. the key witnesses in all of these cases are his former or even current employees. whether it's his current lawyers or former lawyers, whether it's people that work for him in the white house, in the government, or whether it's people who work on his staff at mar-a-lago. these are the people who are going to be called to testify and will have to swear under oath and tell the jury what they saw and heard in their capacity as a trump employee. >> so tom, judge eileen cannon deciding to keep a may trial date in place for now. there's another hearing coming up on march 1st. trump's lawyers have argued that they are drowning in evidence,
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classified evidence that they have to go through. how likely is it do you think that this trial starts before election day next year? >> boris, my sense is that it is unlikely. look, i think judge cannon is going to take the opportunity if she has it to push the trial date back after the election. many of the comments she's already made in her courtroom signal that she will be receptive to these arguments that the trump team is overwhelmed with having to view all the evidence and get up to speed, they're dealing with multiple indictments on multiple fronts. and naturalof course their cliea lot of other things going on. the judge has signaled she might be sympathetic to these arguments. even though she has the trial date on the court iscalendar fo now, i believe it will move and all likelihood until after the election. >> appreciate your insight. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> of course. so dr. ruth, yeah, that dr.
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contraceptives. >> simple question. that was dr. ruth on the david letterman show back in 1982. now, 95, this sex therapist was appointed to be the ambassador to loneliness by new york governor kathy hochul to help residents with social isolation associated with physical and mental health issues. joining us to discuss is neuropsychologist dr. judy ho. this makes me think of two things. of course, dr. ruth, and also, why is she the first? because you have the governor citing studies that show individuals experiencing loneliness at a 32% higher risk of dying early. clearly, this kind of thing is needed. how is she going to be an ambassador to loneliness? >> well, brianna, the results clearly point to these significant mental and physical effects, but i do think this is a new concept for people, this idea of loneliness being essentially an attack on all of
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our systems. so as for ideas for dr. ruth, how can she be an ambassador, i think some of this is destigmatizing this idea that actually over half of americans have reported at some point that they feel lonely, either sometimes or always, according to a recent study. and that there are these impacts. i think people can't quite wrap their heads around because the impacts seem so negative in nature, it's almost like your brain can't compute it. the good news is these effects of loneliness can be reversed. it's really about prevention as well as management once you notice it's a problem that needs to be addressed. >> you mentioned a study, this recent study by the national academies, it finds a third of adults age 45 and older experience loneliness. i think when you get older you have a lot of responsibilities. some people are caregiving. some people are ill, maybe they are starting to get symptoms of dementia or they have other health symptoms. those are really isolating
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things. how do you combat that so that loneliness isn't affecting you negatively? >> a great question. i think i would also add to that list that people are dealing with existential struggles as they get older. what is my life coming to? you know, what is the meaning of everything? and that is really one of the prescriptions in terms of how to combat this, which is to live a life with meaning. we talk about this idea of a values-based life. not a life predicated all on goals, although goals are important, but it's about what do you want to stand for, what do you want to be remembered by. doing those things that are meaningful to you even when it's heart. when people take these techniques to heart, they feel more connected to people. there is a bigger purpose they can think of and it's not just them, but all these other human beings who might be having similar experiences. we're all in this together and we can make little steps every day to make our lives increase
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that meaningfulness and a deeper sense of joy. >> the same study said nearly a quarter of adults who are 65 and older, a slightly older set, are considered socially isolated. can you explain the difference between hey, i'm lonely, and i am socially isolated? what's the difference? >> yeah, great question again. you know, being isolated means that you're maybe spending a lot of the time during your day alone. you're not necessarily living in a community of people. that does happen sometimes to older individuals. maybe they want to live individually, but younger generations, they're out doing their own thing, so they're not living in the same household. the other aspect of this is what really contributes to the feeling of loneliness. loneliness is different, a perception of your connections and how you feel about them. and a lot of people can actually be living in communities, be with people all day long and yet still feel like i'm not connected. so it's that idea of meaningful
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connection that really matters. even people who are living alone, as long as you're making time hopefully every day to connect meaningfully to one person. even for a few minutes, that can be enough to move the needle. >> all right, doctor, thanks for being with us. i think this is a conversation we need to continue this, so we'll see you again soon here on cnn news central. all right, now still to come, president biden going after his likely 2024 foe while taking a victory lap for democrats' big wins this week. stay with us.
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