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you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have neizha helium will send you a free book to answer questions you may have called now and we'll come to you 800 a31, 37 100 2024. race heats up one out our from now, donald trump is expected to speak at mar-a-lago while criticism grows up, vice president kamala harris for not speaking to reporters herself and alarming new details about that terror plot to attack a taylor swift concert, a raid turns up knives, machetes, chemical explosives and detonators. the plot also appears to fit it worrying trend. isis targeting teens for recruitment online, and a group of veterans say they have been ignored despite promises from the government and some of them are dying before they get the help they need. we are following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here
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to cnn news central two presidential campaigns it's two different strategies. >> let's begin with former president donald trump, who's expected to speak at mar-a-lago in about an hour. he made the announcement this morning on truth social writing that he'll be quote, do doing a general news conference. >> the trump campaign has been pressuring vice president kamala harris to answer more questions from reporters. >> she's not held a press conference since elevating to the top of the democratic ticket we're also watching as harris and her running mate, minnesota governor tim walz push ahead on their battleground blitz. they are set to speak in detroit very soon and cnn's arlette saenz is live on the trail in detroit, or let the trump team has ramped up its attack on both harris and walz. is there any indication she will be taking questions from reporters today? >> well, jess, there are no scheduled plans for her to take questions from reporters today,
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but we will see whether there will be an opportunity the potentially lob questions here. she is about to appear in just the coming hours with minnesota governor tim walz at a local uaw union hall. this is part of the campaign's push to reach out to working class voters. specifically rank and file union members that the harris campaign has earned the endorsement of the uaw leadership, as well as other leaders of major unions across the country. but there has been some concern crn, about efforts by former president donald trump to also try to appeal himself to rank and file members. that is an area where harris will have some work to do as she is heading into this november election. now, while they are making this appeal to union members directly here today, the harris campaign and specifically governor tim walz are navigating some fresh rounds of attack from republicans, specifically plea senator j.d. vance of vance has tried to accuse waltz of ducking serving in iraq when he
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had retired, when he had left the army national guard hi to run for congress in 2005. it really highlights the latest effort by the trump campaign to try to define a relatively unknown governor. now, waltz had served in the army national guard for 24 years. he retired two months before his unit received those orders to deploy and so we will see if there's any way that he might respond to this over the course of the coming days. but i will say that even as the republicans are leveling these fresh attacks against waltz over his military service, i took some time and spoke to some voters. union members here at this event, three told me that they heard header, header for nothing about these attacks on his military service. another woman telling me that she basically thinks it's nonsense. take a listen i think there's such it doesn't even make sense to me. >> the man who has been in the national guard in service of this country for over 20 years
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or so how can anybody be that stupid? just say that because he didn't go to i grab so we'll see whether any of these attacks that vance has been lobbying towards waltz will land and sink in with voters psyches in the coming weeks and months. >> but it's very clear that both the harris campaign is trying to elevate and use or its and a push waltz military record as a way to appeal to some types of voters. while vance side and trump's side are trying to define walz on their own terms. part of the dance everyone is plane as they are now two contenders on the democratic ticket, prepare to face off against trump in november alright, arlette saenz with the latest reporting from detroit. >> thank you so much. let's go now to cnn's kristen holmes, who's live in west palm beach, florida. kristen, we're about to hear from the former president in about an hour. at this point, we haven't heard
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from him in a while. he has been pretty quiet lately in terms of speaking on camera or you what are you hearing about what he might be talking about? today yeah. >> jessica and i think that's probably why he called this last-minute quote-unquote press conference and i say that because yes, we are told that he is going to take questions, but it's still unclear if that's definitely going to happen. we are in a room where we have access to the former president's. so we are within shouting distance, but he has built events as part that's conferences in the past only to have them be him delivering remarks and you mentioned the fact that we just have not seen him in public. the campaign will push back on that. they'll say he has done a number of interviews. he sat down for podcasts. he has sat down for streaming interviews. he has been on fox news, but in terms of actual events, when you see the split screen, you can see kamala harris and now tim walz really like chris crossing these battleground states. will donald trump himself has been nowhere to be seen publicly. he has his first rally in about a week tomorrow in montana, not clearly a swing-state, but because we have not heard from from publicly that is likely why he has called this press
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conference. we are told he's going to talk about a quote, unquote, wide ranging number of issues will see what that looks like. but i'm imagining your typical kind of rally speech with a lot of donald trump rants and rifts as he goes through at this event today. again, we will be here to try to ask questions. now while i've been here in palm beach been meeting with campaign officials, with senior advisors, asking them what they think about how this race has shifted with kamala harris and now tim walz at the top of the ticket, they are projecting a level of optimism. they are acknowledging that she is still in a boost, that this is there's still a honeymoon period for kamala harris, but they point to the fact that she is inextricably linked to biden's policies, particularly the policies that donald trump pulls ahead of biden on and now harris immigration crime inflation, and they say, once this honeymoon period is over, once this enthusiasm dies down, that those it's issues will be on the table again, but talking
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to those same advisors, they do acknowledge that this has lasted a little bit longer than they would have liked, but a lot has happened since we've last seen donald trump out there in public. we have a lot of questions for him. >> all right. kristen holmes, that we will talk to you later in these hours. thank you so much for that reporting. >> brianna, vice president harris is navigating the complex dynamics of these israeli war against hamas as the party's presumptive nominee at a michigan rally, hecklers interrupted her shouting pro-palestinian messages you know what, if you want donald trump to win, then say, otherwise, i'm speaking the founders of a group that has vowed to vote uncommitted in the election to protest the war in gaza, met with harris after the rally last night and they told cnn, the vice president was receptive. >> they said, quote, it feels fruitful, were hopeful that she will age substantively with our request for an arms embargo because it stop sending bombs
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to kill people. we love. but harris is national security adviser, said this morning that she does not support an arms embargo on israel, but will keep working to protect civilians in gaza. joining me now is a doula hammoud. he is the mayor are of dearborn, michigan, which is home to a large arab american and muslim community. mayor. thank you so much for being with us in the primaries. of course, in overwhelming number of dearborn's voters chose uncommitted. it was 57 percent that voted uncommitted rather than vote for joe biden first, i want to get your reaction to the vice president's response to those hecklers last night? >> yeah, i would have advised the vice president differently. i think what you have is people who are hurting, people who feel dehumanized. and i think in that moment, there could have been an opportunity to recognize that disenfranchiseme nt that many voters, not only in michigan, but across this
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country feel as it pertains to the genocide that's unfolding on what, i'm hopeful for though, is the opportunity to have constructive dialogue. we have seen vice president harris have some tough rhetoric following or private meeting with prime minister benjamin netanyahu. and what we would like to see is that tough rhetoric paired with tough policy how would you describe how she responded? you know for me, i wasn't on the ground words i think it makes people feel or dehumanizing. then let's see. >> but again, i think what's most important here. so some of the policy rhetoric only takes you so far as we've seen with president biden, then what we really want well, i see is what is the policy conversation that we can have? >> how can we charter a new course on what's unfolding in gaza? >> because that is what a centered for so many americans across this country, you want to find a pathway to end the killing of innocent man, women, and children. and that is the value in principle that were leading the leaders of the uncommitted national movement who met with harris last night. they want her to support in
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arms embargo on israel they said that she was open to what she was asking, but then pretty quickly her national security adviser firmly rebutted that she would think of an arms embargo against israel this morning. is that the one you're talking about policy? is that the only way to change the minds? of so many of those more than 100,000 michigan uncommitted voters another meeting austin for bargaining kind of the only what i'm hearing on the ground and thought leaders across this country as well as from my constituents. >> they want assurances and an offensive arms embargo is one of those assurances that we believe have to be enacted water for us to get to a just
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palestinian state. the reality is we can no longer go back to the status quo, but no longer exist. we have to find a pathway forward in order to ensure that the palestinians have the right to self-determination. and that includes a palestinian state without that, would you vote for harris i again, i think based on what i'm hearing from my constituents on the ground that i take my lead from them there has to be assurances that how we actually move forward and force correct. >> on this issue. >> we have seen with president biden talks up ceasefire now for several for months that have not led to any outcome. >> and so we have to do something differently and we believe the only way to do so as to lead with international law. what we're asking for is for vice president harris, a prosecutor to uphold international law. this has not been litigated by the icj. we have seen the uk suspend arms sales and so i think we can follow their lead and upholding international law in order for us to take a step forward and chart a new course on what's happening across the middle
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east talking to some democratic operatives. >> i think there may be a calculation that if the option is harris versus trump and trump's policy on israel, that voters right now who oppose the biden-harris approach to israel are still going to hold their nose and vote for them. what do you say to that sentiment? sentiment but john, talking about the wrong people the majority i've been shot situation that that's the brakes people if you recall, in
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2016 20161 with less than it by less than 11,000 votes he did. people came out and fall and drove the gop you because 80,000 people in the state of michigan skip the top of the that happened the ballot and used to vote for any presidential candidate. >> and that apathy, apathy has the likelihood of any targeting of this country and simple from my perspective, reflective of many, we would like values and principles delete. and i think we should all be able well to agree that international law should be upheld, and we should do everything within our power to end the killing of all innocent man, woman, and child mirror. >> i certainly appreciate you being on. i am so sorry. we've been having some audio issues and we've been doing our best to hear what you were saying, but i'm afraid we're going to have to leave the interview there. we do hope to have you on again soon because obviously this is a very important topic. your city is very important michigan is certainly very important in this election. mayor hammoud, we appreciate you being with us. thank you. >> and ahead this hour on cnn news central police revealing one of the teenagers suspected
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of plotting a terror attack at a taylor swift concert, had a job at the venue, will have more on the investigation plus what a difference a few days makes new jobless numbers fueling market the msm after an ugly monday and we're following wall street and the government promised to help them, but thousands of military veterans exposed to toxic water at camp lejeune over debt aides have reportedly died before ever getting a response. >> these stories and more all coming up this hour on cnn news central cnn is live from chicago as democrats unite to offer their support to a new nominee and her running mate it fellow cnn for complete coverage, the democratic national convention starts monday, august 19 on cnn and streaming on back for fast sore throat relief, try v6 people cool drops with two times more menthol per drop and powerful experience for his defeat, rise sore throat pain this people
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concerts to be canceled in vienna, austria, the suspects are all teenagers. police found chemicals those explosives, and more at the home of one of the suspects, cnn's nick paton walsh is joining us with details on this. nick, what are you learning yeah, it's extraordinary how the three people either arrested or questioned by police say are all teenagers the night? >> nineteen-year-old is really a prime suspect here pictured shockingly by investigators holding a knife in one of the press conferences they found chemical precursors for a bomb detonated 21,000 euros and fake cash at his home and also troublingly, a police blue flashing light which they said that he may have planned put on a car to get himself and his explosives into the crowds around the taylor swift venue in vienna, where over the next three nights, shooting so playing to packed out crowds of 65,000, they expected tens of thousands to be hanging around the venue for a free overheard concert. and it was there they felt that he was going to detonate his bomb and use his knives to attack and what
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they're calling a suicide attack. a 17-year-old also questioned possibly for involvement in the plot here, police say he'd recently broken up with his girlfriend. that's a little snapshot of the kind of mentality investigators are having to look into that of teenagers and a 15-year-old to also questioned by police. all three are austrian born. and i think it's frankly shocking how we see how close to fruition this plot appears to be in the 17-year-old had indeed it seems got a job at the condo it's a venue itself when that may have been part of his role in all of this, the 19-year-old declaring to his fellow employees a few weeks ago that he was going to quit and plan, quote, something big. he allegedly changed his appearance as well to having pledged allegiance to isis online just days earlier. so a lot that investigators have revealed here, but the most shocking fact frankly, is the age of the people being investigated here i should point out to you across europe over the last nine months,
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brianna according to one study we've been looking at nearly two thirds of those arrested or involved in isis plots have been teenagers, many swept up by france ahead of the olympics a real concern here about what online radicalization is doing to the younger that isis reach out to and also concern to perhaps that we may be seeing more of a directed plot. the idea of somebody who's not in a western country somewhere else trying to encourage and to give advice to people carrying out an attack. most sign of that necessarily hear police. it seems stopping the man heart now with the three that they've got but it appears to have got perilously close arrest just hours they could feel yeah. >> that is it's pretty amazing. she was scheduled to play five nights at london's wembley stadium state here she is scheduled at wembley stadium next week for five-nine are there any changes there know
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the we've seen at this stage a tall and i think the message you'll hear from european officials across the remainder of swift's tour. is that obviously their terror threat in a place like london, whether it be multiple but tax over the past years, they feel that they have big events like this under control that policing for this sporting events is something that they very much have a handle on. and i think frankly to admit publicly that they are concerned but this may change the need for precautions here would suggest they're not doing everything they can every day. but i think certainly this will make people double check everything that they've been thinking that there's no public sign at this stage. the london authorities are changing their tag because of what we've seen in vienna, a shocking incident indeed, particularly given the age of those involved brianne yeah. >> nick, thank you for that report. jessica i love discuss this further with cnn, senior national security analyst and former assistant secretary of homeland security, juliette kayyem. juliette, it's great to see you. i'm sitting here and
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listening to nic's reporting and it's you so striking as he mentioned, that the suspects are 19 and 17-15 years old radicalized by the internet a mixing that two thirds of those arrested were teenagers. what is all of this say to you? >> yeah that isis is targeting a receptive audiences who are going to be able to, who are going to be responsive to what in fact, i apologize. >> is that what in fact would be the issue here in terms of their receptivity to terrorism, and that comes with age each that comes with a need for community if they feel isolated as youngest boys and isis has gotten incredibly smart as sort of trying to appeal to that group then that group or the 12 or three of them goes off and decides, what are we going to do in our country that's going to make a lot of noise so just compare this to isis ten years ago, isis is trying to get a bunch of people to move from
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their countries to syria or the syrian area to do what? to fight a war. now, they're exporting and we're seeing that throughout europe, we were worried about it for the olympics. certainly worry about it in the united states. and this is, these guys are young they were moving forward very, very quickly. there radicalization process was in no time. this was not a long radicalization process. >> so how do authorities combat this if it's happening in their home online and they're isolated, how do you combat something? i like that it's gonna be two things that this taylor swift concert is really interesting to. >> one is going to be sort of the offense intelligence searching. that's clearly what the what the government did. they they they are decapitated a real threat. it seems like it was, it was real then the other is going to be so that we don't know what triggered them knowing they knew what we do know now is that they knew one
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of the suspects that's the same suspect who was what we called the insider threat. he had a job with one of the planning groups that was helping with these concerts. that's so that's very close, right? he's in he's in the room. he probably has credentials, so he's able to have access. so this was a good arrest in the sense of that this was a real threat the others, of course, defensive, which is how are you going to prepare for these mega events? taylor swift has concerts in areas we know what happens at these concerts. you'd get support quarters and fans surrounding them. so public safety officials are going to have to look at these soft targets. in other words, outside the security zone, this is starting to sound familiar for those who followed the trump assassination attempt outside of the security zone begins, you're soft spots and unfortunately the for so many taylor swift fans those areas may be more regulated. they may
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be harder to access just to protect them because it appears that these, these isis supporters were not trying to get inside the stadium, but wanted to do a lot of harm in the sort of soft areas outside of the security zone? >> yeah. were so many fans throughout the summer, even gathering to listen to her concerts outside of the stadium. and it's not lost the irony of but of a tour that has brought a lot of joy to a lot of people. and a lot of women and girls in particular. and to see this sort of terror potentially unfold as it's scary. yeah. >> that's forget against america. i mean, she is she's our symbol. this is in the same way that the olympics targets that we worry about are really a target against sort of world unity. this, she is, she's an american icon so i view this as a, as, a sort of focus on an american target.
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>> yeah, that's a very good point. juliette kayyem. thank you so much. we appreciate it. up next former president donald trump says he'll give a quote, general news conference about a half hour from now as vice president kamala harris faces calls to talk to the press. that's yeah, please. nato. your pushing the limits of what is capable ready to share the world how good i've trained all over the globe. >> and that's what you're going to see an awol, whole different beast. three we wednesday night dynamite at 8:00 on tv in a waiver every delivery is a treat. one stash you for you, sir one strawberry place oh by waiver something minty courts. >> it's a large a. double
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you must act fast. call now closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelial, the victims call now $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> he may be entitled to a portion of that money. all when 808 5-9, 2,400. that's when 808, 5-9, 2,400 just minutes from now, former president donald trump says he'll be holding a news conference and to be clear, we don't know exactly what that entails. >> will he take questions, will just give remarks? >> we don't know. but it comes
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as his campaign ramps up the pressure for vice president harris to answer more questions from reporters. >> here is senator j.d. vance in wisconsin yesterday after him it's plane landed on the same tarmac as you're forced to i figured i come by one my plaintiff few months but i also thought you guys like it because the vice president doesn't answer questions from reporters. as that is true, bracketing kind of showing up in shadowing your opponent. there. let's talk about this further with cnn media correspondent hadas gold and cnn political commentator se cupp. she's also the host the new roundtable program, battleground. alright, hadas to you first, do we have any idea when harris will be holding a news conference or a sit down interview? >> guys, we don't even have official word on debates yet, so no, we don't have any information yet on when the vice president will be holding
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a news conference or doing an interview politico has reported that there are rumblings potentially of a joint sit down interview with her vp pick with governor walz. but so far nothing official. i think her last interview was actually the night of the cnn debate. that disastrous debate for president joe biden, where she was went on air right away with our own anderson cooper and then also with msnbc. and what was actually praised as a pretty strong showing for but we haven't senior talk to the media yet. but i think to be clear, a lot of these calls for her to talk to the me to do a press conference or coming from us. they're coming from the media. they're coming from the political operatives. because i think the average voter, they're saying i see her, i see her on my screen. i'm watching these riley, she's in my tiktok feed and the harris campaign clearly is just going to ride this wave for as long as possible. listen 8 million people watched her first rally with governor walz. 8 million people. those are pretty good ratings and that's showing them they don't necessarily need to right away sit down to do one of these interviews. they're raising lots of money. they're getting lots of attention, they're going to
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ride this wave as much as possible. however, a drumbeat is growing and it's a drumbeat not only from the trump campaign, who is going to keep up this attack line, but it's also coming from reporters themselves, the veteran white house, former white house correspondent, ron 48. he said that every day that she doesn't talk to the media is what he calls political malpractice. and we're going to see here this drum beat growing more and more until she does finally sit down for an interview and for right now, also, it's an easy attack line for the trump campaign to use and se, to hadas is points there. look, the harris campaign is on tv a ton right now. they're getting a ton of attention. she is in people's tiktok feeds, twitter feeds. they are seeing her in the past. she's run into some trouble when she's had sit down interviews. and do you think this is the right strategy and do you think that the average voter really cares one way or the other well, they should and there's a difference between visibility and accountability and being visible is, is great. >> she's not hiding their out
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there there, there they're doing rallies there, meeting with voters there, shaking hands they're delivering one liners that's great. and i think kamala harris is giving tim walz a moment as well to introduce himself to the country but they also need to be held accountable, accountable for their records hers as vice president and senator, his as a governor and a representative in the house and they need to be accountable for an agenda that they have yet to present voters do want to know, and especially those swing state voters guys swing-state voters don't want to be told by a vice presidential candidate to be afraid of childless cat ladies they want to be told i have a solution to a problem that's really important to you. and those swing-state voters, those undecideds are undecided for a reason because no one's giving them those solutions yet. so commonly harris and tim walz
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will have to explain what their agenda is. they'll have to reconcile the records. you know, tim walz in minnesota has a very progressive record some social policies that are far outside where the majority of american voters are. he laughed to explain that will have to explain what the harris agenda will incorporate of that, if anything, will they merge their policies? voters do want to know that you can, you can sort of take out of the mix the voters that are already with kamala harris and the voters there already with donald trump. but everyone else, voters that they need to win still want these answers. >> and right now also see tim walz needs to answer some questions when he would if he sat for an interview, that jd vance's raising about his military record, things that he has said about him carrying a gun in war, about his rank which has been misrepresented. what he retired with versus what he attained. and then this more questionable thing about whether he pieced out on a
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deployment to iraq. but i just wonder at what point do you think it comes in a campaign where they actually say, okay, we really need to this benefits us. we need to sit down and be seen as if we are being asked tough questions that we can answer yeah, it's not a great look acting as if you don't need the media, you don't care about answering these questions. >> that you're above it, that you can ride on vibes and you know, the writing on vibes and i get that this is a very truncated campaign. they've had to do everything very quickly. and i believe that they will sit down with reporters, but they need to do it. those kinds of personal questions. and i saw your great reporting on that particular issue with tim walz, brianna earlier they need to answer for that and these don't have to be fatal
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questions, but they need to answer for that and they need to show that they're tough enough to do that. and that they're not too scared to do that. and the longer they take to sit down, the more scared they look se hadas. thank you so much to both of you. this drumbeat will continue to your point. hadas, it certainly well, thank you to you both next optimism on wall street after what was a massive so off on monday, what is driving stocks higher today? >> and debby is not done yet, the deadly storm making its second landfall, spawning tornadoes and flooding falling sunday on the whole story, donie o'sullivan dives back into the world of misinformation no computers that are using our electors she software that was illegal will miss information cause chaos in november's election the whole story with anderson cooper, sunday at 8:00 on cnn got some great times together, but i need to like ago and it's done. i called her told you
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the stock market can probably leave the pepto-bismol, the medicine cabinets day, just take a breath after a solid report on jobless claims, some of the worries about the job market and the economy from earlier this week seem to be fading. let's discuss more with cnn's julia chatterley and julia after that drop on monday, you told us there was fear, but not panic. what would you say the mood is today better, but just to be clear, too good pieces of data shouldn't have this kind of bang for buck in the stock market. >> so please keep those tms or the pepto-bismol close at hand, but i do like being the bearer of good news and that's what i am today. so we'll talk about those jobless claims first. we saw a 17,000 person drop in the number of people in the latest data asking for help from the government. now, it's still a lot of people asking for help. let's be clear, but it's a lot better than expected. also, tech exists. there was a big drop in the number of people there that were asking for help to why do we care? well hurricane beryl hit texas
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during the collection period for friday's data. so it perhaps hints that we could get some payback on that bad number from friday if those weather affects kick out bottom line, this number is consistent with a slowing jobs market not a collapsing one. it's also consistent, i think with a quarter of a percentage point cut in interest rates in september and mortgage issuers are already listening there's some, good news for home buyers today. what can you tell us about that and this is exactly the point. >> so mortgage rates as a result of that dropped to the lowest level in more than a year for a 30 year mortgage. now, we've got rates at around just shy of 6.5%. that was a quarter of a percentage point higher just a week ago. and it's already seeing people looking at the option of refinancing to a lower rate. in fact, 40% of those applications in the recent week to freddie mac are people looking to do exactly that to refinance lower so this is good news, i think in a welcome relief for
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potential homebuyers. and final quick point all markets since the session opened on friday, by the way, we are virtually back to where we started. so roller coaster jessica is exactly the right word and to go back to that point that you were making so well, the lesson here is don't panic on those down days, just try and hold tight to something. yeah. just hold on. and write it out. alright. julia chatterley, good advice. thank you so much. brianna now, to some of the other headlines that we're keeping our eye on, a new tornado watch is in effect for parts so north carolina and virginia as tropical storm debby is lashing the southeast nearly 7 million people are on alert. >> the storm has already spawned at least 11 and tornadoes. this is some of the damage and wilson county, north carolina which is just east of raleigh, debby has dumped more than a foot of rain over parts of florida, georgia and south carolina this week, killing at least six people, the storm will move into pennsylvania, new york, and new england over
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vessel imploding the five victims died while attempting to reach the titanic wreck site last year? no comment from oceangate on the suit so far. and ahead, more than 385,000 wasn't claims have been filed over toxic water at camp lejune. the government has offered to settle only 100 of them. why is it taking so? belong to get these veterans the help they need? we'll have that next the democratic national convention starts monday, august 19, cnn and streaming on backs. no matter why you started your business your goal is to keep on growing and with the help of financing from and capitus, you can meet all of your business goals because at capitus, we finance the legacy builders the creators. the freedom chasers, the opportunity seekers had capitus. we finance small
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and we'll come to you 800 a31, 3,700 on home front today. >> a story that we have followed closely here on cnn news central, the government promised help to veterans and families hurt by toxic water at camp zhun in north carolina, nearly 400,000 claims have been filed. but here's how many have been settled. 114. that is it. and the deadline to file new claims is saturday. now, frustrated vets are suing to get the help they deserve. we have cnn medical correspondent meg tirrell here to explain all about this may give us the background this water contamination case yeah. >> brianna, i mean, this is called some of the worst water contamination in history. >> so as you pointed out, camp lejune is marine corps base camp in north carolina between the 1950s and the 19. 1980s. it was discovered that as many as 1 million people who lived and worked add that camp were
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exposed to toxic contaminants in the water supply. these including contaminants like tce pce, and vinyl chloride that came from different contamination sources. the cdc over time through various studies, has shown that this exposure has been linked to increased risks of different cancer firstly, kidney cancer, multiple myeloma, different leukemias and other cancers, as well as adverse birth outcomes and other adverse health effects including those that affect infants and children so the biden administration has essentially made there was a law passed two years ago that enabled people who are affected by this to file claims the us navy for financial assistance settlement claims essentially. and as you pointed out, the deadline to file those is saturday, but our reporter, brenda goodman and found out from the u.s. navy, there have been about 385,000 claims filed. and as we approach this deadline, the government has offered settlements only 100
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114. now some of those have been accepted, some of those have been rejected. brianna this point you're talking about settlements going to widows, right. >> and widow worse because many of the victims who passed away here, what do victims and their families do now? >> yeah. brenda, are reported or talked with a widow of somebody who worked on the camp at camp lejeune terry core was a baker there and then 1970s, he died last year from complications of parkinson's at the age of 65. they filed a claim to years ago. they still haven't heard back. so if the government doesn't act on a claim within six months of filing, people can file a lawsuit, but attorneys warn that could take years to resolve and brenda, our reporter heard from denise teres, widow. she had a lot of health expenses related to taking care of him you now. have a grandchild. she says he would want nothing more than to be able to provide for his
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family. so she is still waiting. brianna yeah. >> it's heartbreaking what these families have been through. we've heard from so many of them, meg tirrell, thank you for that update. we appreciate it. and we are right now waiting to hear from former president donald trump. he is holding what he's calling a general news conference at the top of the hour. we don't know if he is going to take questions though. we're waiting to see if that is the case, will be heading to florida live next home front. >> brought to you both hi, endless wings and baby back ribs that golden corral the only one for everyone when i got say why don't you actually get good sister and got me sworn flowing on second thought, i'll be a director let's check go get you. oh, we get some more lemon pepper wings in the scene. >> and honey teriyaki to have you people call my people, tommy copper shoulder support bruh will be your new favorite. >> i love how i feel when i wear it available into styles. >> you want to win there every day for all day comfort. why
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