tv CNN News Central CNN August 9, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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clearly just an excuse to play all the greatest of this because let's go back. >> remember, the earlier days of the show we had dana carney as george hw bush i'm talking three, 4% tops, no more than five. let's set. so read my lips. no huge new taxes i love it. >> who should play walls or anyone else no, no, no? >> the current trump wanted does trump now is farber the alcohol alcohol was the worst trump out of the three they've had an snl just might i mean, the lips were like various to exaggerate, it wasn't it wasn't a good impression on max i don't know. >> i think that's an unpaid i give the takes, but yeah i don't think he was he was i think the least funny one. all right. fair enough i'm sad though that it's not going to be steve martin, a huge steve martin fan. alright, thank you guys for spending friday with us. i really appreciate it. thanks to all of you for joining us as well. i'm kasie
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hunt don't go anywhere. cnn new central starts right now back on the trail and back to his old playbook, president trump with a rambling press conference as another historic debate is now set and a new vantage point of the assassination attempt on donald trump. >> body camera footage of police confronting the would-be assassin, moments before the shooting began and talking about a first day of school surprise, a teacher getting her class ready for the first day back, gets a new student who shows up early, a bear charging through? yes, it's friday. i'm kate bolduan with sara sidner. >> john berman is out. this is cnn new central donald trump hitting the campaign trail again today it will be his first rally in six days, his first since re agree to a
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presidential debate and his first since the harris campaign called the news conference he held yesterday. >> a quote, public meltdown the other side has to agree to the terms. they may or may not agree. i don't know if they're going to agree. they she hasn't done an interview. she can't do an interview. she's barely competent and she can't do an interview. but i look forward to the debates because i think we have to set the record straight. >> for the record, the other side did agree to a debate, but isn't sure trump himself will show up glad that he's finally agreed to a debate on september 10. >> i'm looking forward to it and hope he shows are you open to more debate? >> i am happy to have that conversation about additional debate for after september 10. >> all right. there you have it harrison trump will debate september 10, which is of course, in the final sprint it falls just 12 days after the dnc and 56 days before the
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election. and cnn has now learned next week, president biden will make his first formal appearance with harris chris since passing the baton to her. cnn's isaac dovere is leading us off this morning. isaac, we're now showing the campaign stops happening today and tomorrow. those are on-screen right beside you trump's in montana tonight while harris is going to be in phoenix what more can we expect to hear from her in the coming hours after that wild press conference that donald trump had yesterday what looks the way that kamala harris has tended to deal with what trump has said about her, is to kind of shove it to the side and focus on what she's saying. >> i think we're going to see more of that. this of course this week is about the introduction of tim walz as the running mate and her first tour of a lot of these battleground states as the presidential nominee here. and so we're going to continue to see that introduction of kamala harris that introduction of tim walz.
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remember walz has been her running mate for all of three days now. she is it's been a presidential candidate for all of i think we're up to 18 days so that is where it's going to be talking about who they are and why they think that they have a case to make to americans about things like personal freedoms, abortion, economics, and what it is that they are offering. that's different from donald trump the trump campaign, looking into walls as is everyone else is, he. the new face of this campaign are kfile also looked into walls and his past. what, what did they find? >> well, these questions about walz's military record and the reasons why he left the national guard when he did in 2005, have we've found been with him for the entire time that he's been in public life. when he left in 2005, the questions that have come up in this path it's couple of days since he got in courtesy of the trump campaign has been about whether he left knowing that
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his unit was going to be deployed to iraq his retirement came before the the unit was officially notified of being deployed to iraq, but there was some question of whether he had a sense that that was coming. he was also running for congress at the time, but going back to that campaign in 2005, when he was elected in 2006, people in his unit and others, we're raising questions. then of whether it had been a decision to avoid service in iraq. and the k-file reporting that we have says that he had a statement then in 2005 that said, i'm proud of the 24 years i served our country in the army national guard. there's a code of honor among those who served and normally this type of partisan political attack comes only from one who's never worn a uniform. and he goes on to say, when you dishonor a veteran, you dishonor are all soldiers and veterans you owe an apology to all those who served honorably. that it should be that is very similar to what he and the campaign, really the campaign on his behalf have been saying
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over the last few days, and of course, we're looking at this with senator vance making the attacks as someone who served as a marine himself and donald trump who got it a deferment from ever serving in vietnam all right. >> isaac dovere. thank you so much for your reporting, kate, when you start going after people at 24 years in service, things get really complicated and sticky, just honoring everyone's service. that's my right again, we're going to what were your 40s meaning always said yesterday, we should say again, i agree. >> but let's continue right president trump's return to the campaign trail today comes just after that very classic donald trump esque news conference yesterday, where he was frustrated. he called questions stupid. he ranted and you went on for over an hour here we have somebody that in my opinion is more incompetent. >> she couldn't pass her bar exam. kamala, who by the way, is worse than biden, and she's actually not as smart course. there'll be a peaceful
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transfer and there was last time. and there'll be a peaceful transfer. i just hope we're going to have honest elections. nobody was killed on january there were six, but i think that the people of january 6 were treated very unfairly with hillary clinton. i could have done things to her that would have made your head spin. i was very protective of her. nobody would understand that, but i was i think my people understand it they used to say lock her up, lock her up, but i'd say just relax, please. if you look at martin luther king, when he did his speech, his great speech, and you look at ours, same real estate, same everything same number of people, if not, we had more i think the abortion issue has been taken down many notches. i don't think it's i don't think it's a big factor anymore really, because i'm leading by a lot and because i'm letting their convention go through i'm letting their convention go through okey-dokey. see as daniel strauss has much more on this. so daniel, i was put together a
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short list of the ways that people are describing some, in some of the reporting, what happened yesterday is trump tries to wrestle back attention. trump looking to seize the spotlight back, trump tries to shoehorn himself back into the national conversation. what do you make of what went down yeah. >> look, this is classic trump. going back to circa 2016 with the philosophy that all attention is good attention and that this is a moment where the trump campaign feels pretty nervous about how the spotlight has shifted over to a new democratic candidate. a new running mate, who is very new to the national spotlight. and this is how trump operates. he would rather have criticism and have all the attention on him and then shift to a more concerted message that helps him then stand by and allow another campaign to get at all that attention daniel isn't it also some of what how what we heard yesterday from donald
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trump is also what many call them swing voters, independent voters going from supporting trump in 2016, what exhausted them when they decided to not vote for him, exhausted them when they were going into 2020 yeah. >> and if you talk to democratic strategists, they will say truthfully that is the real liability about trump among the voters that will decide this election. it is not anything in particular, he says, it is that he is exhausting is one very high level strategy has told me in the past. and so this is there is a string of argument here that if trump is more visible, that actually helps democrats, but it's a risky move not one that's going to change is my guess is great to see you, dana. >> thank you, sir. >> all right. >> new body camera footage shows the moment a police officer spotted the gunman, who tried to assassinate donald trump watch out because he can you tell me down on you over there both bag he's got mad
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hey he's got he's got it. >> he's laying down, found out bookbag next to him there's so much more to discuss on that video. >> we will talk about that ahead also. please have arrested another teenager. they say pledges allegiance to isis and helped plot the foiled terror attack on a taylor swift concert. plus a new report credits childhood vaccinations that's saving 1 million lives in the last three decades. >> we'll discuss coming up cnn is live from chicago as democrats unite to offer their support to a new nominee and her running mate fellow cnn for complete coverage. >> the democratic national convention starts monday, august 19 on cnn and streaming on max what works i'm just
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players and teams that are breaking out reasons tuesday at 7:30 p.m. on tbs and max this morning. a new look and a new vantage point of the moment and pennsylvania police officer spotted donald trump's would-be assassin on a rooftop overlooking the former president's rally. the footage was taken right before the shooter opened fire. you can see the police the police officer being hoisted up to onto the roof of the building, and the officer then sees the shooter and then quickly drops back down 40 seconds later, the shooting begins more now from cnn's danny freeman it's the moment we've heard so much about see now for the first time on police body camera, a butler township police officer asking for a boost to check the roof of the ajr building outside former president trump's rally. >> there's no audio in this video obtained by cnn you can see on the timestamp, this is less than one minute before crooks started shooting the
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officer climbs up to the roof and almost immediately drops down. and the tone changes. you don't see it on the video, but police have said crooks aimed his rifle right at the officer. he runs to the other side of the building to look at the roof. and on this officers dashcam and which was recording audio, you can hear those first three gunshots from thomas matthew crooks at 6:11 p.m. the officer rushes back to his car to get his rifle. you hear him shout to other law enforcement officers on the dashcam? >> john paul, have your head. he's right there back to the officer's body bodycam. it goes close, bro dude, he turned around on me who want him chaos ensues by this point, the gunman crooks has already been killed by secret service. but it doesn't appear local law enforcement is aware barbie's laying down. >> next doing over right after the gap he's got glasses, long hair. these videos provide new
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insight into local law enforcements, movements moments before the shooting and the frantic aftermath. since that day, there's been finger pointing between us secret service and western pennsylvania law enforcement, including testimony from the acting director of the secret service, asserting local snipers hidden in a building could have spotted crooks i'm not saying that they should have neutralized him but if they had just held their post and looked left, maybe there's a lot of maybes are senator a lot of maybes. >> but this new body camera footage also suggests local law enforcement had warned secret service they needed to protect a bill building crooks used to fires the shots can told them we need to post the guys can ever hear. i told him that the secret service i told him that tuesday i told him the post can guys over here i don't know exactly what now, we're inside
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i told him post thing guys over here. >> i wouldn't even concerned about it because i thought some of them rooftop. i look at a guy walking back. >> there they were inside. >> i should also note that frustration you just saw right there coming just about ten minutes after the shooting took place. now, we did get a statement from the secret service on thursday saying that they are reviewing body camera footage that was released by local law enforcement. and furthermore, they added that they appreciate local law enforcement partners who act did courageously as they worked to locate the shooter that day. danny freeman, cnn, washington thank you so much. >> danny freeman, also ahead for us coming up after a wild week on wall free, trump's misreading of the economy now, without evidence saying that the country is heading toward a depression with the actual numbers and the actual data says that's next and just this morning, a new suspect has been
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detained. a fourth person link to the forum terror plot against a taylor swift concert in europe will be back sunday on the whole story, donie o'sullivan dives back into the world of misinformation. no computers that are used in our election held shop that was illegal, will miss information cause chaos in november's election. the whole story with anderson cooper sunday at 8:00 on cnn from need the dot to need it now so many ways to save life ready wallet, happy. that's 365 by whole foods market doug somebody needs to customize and save hundreds and car insurance, but liberty mutual let's fly keep i
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spotless house for $19 this fall. comedy is coming to cnn good, go wrong i got news for you for me or saturday, september 14 at nine on cnn knew this morning up down and all around, it's been a roller coaster week on wall street and we're climbing up once again, stocks surged thursday after new unemployment claims, numbers suggested the economy may avoid the downward but spiral investors had feared. >> it comes as donald trump is suggesting the u.s. is in danger of heading towards a depression, something economic analysts have not predicted at all. >> we have a lot of bad things coming up. you could end up in a depression of the 1929 variety, which would be a
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devastating thing, took many years, took decades to recover from it. >> and we're very close to that cnn business anchor julia chatterley is here with more. >> we're very close to a depression, like the 1920s he yes, he welcome to the politics of fear, not hope. >> know, is the answer i can show you some stats are great depression is years of prolonged downturn, unemployment. i've chosen the worst year of the depression. does that help the former president out? unemployment was 25%, one in four americans out of work. we're at 4% wages were down 40% excuse me, in the great depression, we're rising 4% it's utter nonsense. so please don't listen to that and fear for what's going on today. it's a joke, quite frankly, inflation. he mentioned that there was no inflation. there was it was positive, it was just low enough not to worry. a year later after he left office, it was much higher and that is a problem. so again, i'll help the former president out a good stat to question at this
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moment. prices are up 20%. since the pandemic began. that's the cost of living crisis in one statistic. former president, what's the fix to camila's team to what's the fix? the way you fix that is the unfortunately the central bank hiked interest rates. and that's cause more pain for a lot of people. the former president said he'd like to have a say in what the central bank does, what politician in his right mind is going to jack up interest rates when they need to go up and cause more pain for people. it's why you keep the central bank and the government separate. and if you don't believe me, ask argentina and asked turkey because they know what hyper inflation looks like. and we don't want that here. they're out of ten, sorry for his economics one-on-one class that is an f, i think is what you're saying. so much worse than that. >> let's go ahead and check what is happening in the markets this morning. obviously, you've got the international markets and, you know, the opening bell will ring and about what an hour here. yeah okay?
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>> good news. >> we're hayya astonishing news. this was the performance yesterday. it was the best day for the financial markets since 2022, if that rings a bell because monday was the worst day since 2022. so the roller coaster continues. we talked about that better jobs data, mortgage rates as well hit more than a one over a one-year low. good news for borrowers out there to, again, we said it yesterday. this kind of data shouldn't have that kind of outsized impact. the volatility that we're still with were tech tactic, once again, super micro unchanged. keep watching that quick session chart. if i can show you very quickly. august 1, was that data we've gone nowhere fast. the message in this don't panic when we have down days because we've literally gone full circle on the week it's amazing right i f julia chatterley, it's always a pleasure to see you. >> thank you so much. >> all right ahead. donald trump throwing everything but the kitchen sink at his democratic rival kamala harris. he talks about her race or
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make a lifetime of difference. find out more at screen for autism.org, cnn is live from chicago as democrats unite to offer their support to a new nominee and her running mate fellow cnn for complete coverage, the democratic national convention starts monday, august 19 on cnn and streaming on max. >> i, wolf blitzer in tel aviv, israel. and this is cnn attacks and insults. and it continued obsession with crowd size. it was a greatest hits a classic of donald trump during a press conference yesterday, within those barbs and jabs, he was also asked you about policy, including reproductive rights, abortion access, trump's take dismissing abortion rights as an important issue this election i think that abortion has become much less of an issue. >> it's a very i think it's actually going to be a very small issue. what i've done is
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they've done what every democrat and every every republican wanted to have done, and we brought that issue back to the states. and now the state share of voting on it the harris campaign was quick to respond, highlighting and hitting at trump for suggesting he would be also open to revoking access to abortion pills joining me right now, cnn, political commentators, bakari sellers and alyssa farah griffin, good to see you guys. >> i get the double whammy of having you both here. thank you. happy friday. okay. alyssa, abortion was already an animating motivating issue amongst democratic voters. we know that and others, what do you see in donald trump's answer here? >> well, this was an absolute dumpster fire of a precedent conference just to be clear, but i think it's if you say it, it may be so he knows it's a huge issue. donald trump's actually been ahead of most republicans and realizing what a major vulnerability is for republicans. and while abortion doesn't generally rank as the top three issues to voters, it's one of the highest intensity issues, right? especially with women and with swing voters. the very voters does that he needs to win this
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election to dismiss it is such a poor strategy, but i think honestly the only strategy they're saying like, oh, it's not a big deal and hoping that that resonates. >> i actually, i was thinking the same. my sense was the car that this was donald trump trying to manifest like a strain version of like, if you build it, they will come. >> but he also can't shake it because donald trump is the party person who has to claim credit for the three justices who overturned roe v. wade. that is a part of his legacy, and that also endears him to the far right. that is the reason. and that evangelicals flocked to him. that's the reason that people put up with a lot of the nonsense that he does. but for many americans, many women throughout this country. the other thing donald trump does is he really narrows the scope and people just when, when he says that he just limits it to the procedure. but most times, democrats and women throughout the country look at reproductive rights as a whole. for example, my wife and i, we went through iuie ivf to have our twins. i mean, it's an entire it's an entire mantra or entire plethora of right? it's that donald trump wants to take away. and so i think
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that when you look at it that broadly it doesn't matter what he says. people know what's at stake in this election and people know what he's trying to take away. >> you make a good point when you're talking about the justices he put in place that overturned roe v. wade. he also said that everybody wanted everyone in the country wanted roe overturned no matter how many times you say it, people know how they felt about it, which that is, that is completely inaccurate, but listen, it was correct because of the fact that this is a very, very high intensity issue, and it depends on where you go. it can be a one-two, three type issue right behind the economy, et cetera. but this is going to be an issue that turns out voters that matter, particularly in those excerpts and suburbs of places like milwaukee, detroit, philadelphia, even if he misunderstood the question on, on mifepristone and abortion access because some know what mifepristone i would be confident he does like the funniest. i don't think he understood that the question is if he didn't have an answer and it yeah but that statement, the misunderstanding, the lack of understanding, the barely
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competent of that question, if you will that's a big problem. >> it's also, it's a real issue right now. >> that's also why a lot of men, in particular, the chuck grassley's, the donald trump's, the mike johnson's need to get out of the business of women in this country, like women should have the freedom to make these decisions themselves because of donald trump doesn't even know what he's talking about. why does he believe he has the audacity to make these decisions for either one of you all and vice president harris has kind of hone this message around freedom, which is something that republicans and conservatives and my day, i'm a romney ryan republican. we used to run on, but it's really hard to make that case when you're rolling back abortion rights, you're talking about, you know, even leaning into controlling ivf and things it's like that so i think they're trying to flip that narrative on the head and i think that it's effective. i think it resonates right now. it seems that they have more they have more message discipline where it seemed to going into the republican convention in coming out donald trump's campaign had, had, had real discipline. >> i mean, i was at the convention and really saw kind
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of the message is they were hitting on and since then, it's very, it's kamala harris has gotten into something very, very different. i want changing focus for a second. >> i want to get to leave abortion. it's 730 this morning yeah. >> let's go to away gut check me on this because for me this was kind of the embodiment of where we have landed with the point in the election that we're in right now, which is like we are back at crowd size. >> i want to play this photographs of the inaugural proceedings were intentionally framed in a way in one particular tweet to minimize the enormous support that had gathered on the national mall. >> this was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration period. both in-person and around the globe so that's sean spicer. >> hi, shawn, from way back when in 2016, back to where we are today though, is donald
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trump saying the following. i've spoken to bigger crowds know re spoken to crowds bigger than me. if you look at martin luther king when he did his speech, it was great great speech. and you look at it hours, some same real estate, same everything, same number of people, if not, we had more. you worked in the administration when the obsession in the sean spicer occurred, the obsession with crowd-sized kind of became so famous. i know from conversations over the years with swing voters, any voters, all voters this kind of obsession on this thing is had become exhausting by the time you got to especially 2020. what, what do you see in this it is exhausting. listen, donald trump's triggered because he's actually running against a candidate for once, who is the celebrity candidate, the one that poppy culture is falling, that's, that was him against hillary clinton in 2016. he was sort of this outside are hosting snl. now there's someone else who's got obama level momentum and is pulling huge crowds and he doesn't know how to attack or i'm absolutely stunned by this. the message that the rnc was basically he's weak. i'm strong. he's old. i'm a
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fighter. they can't land a message against common here it's frankly not that hard. say she's joe biden, but more liberal if you don't like biden policies don't vote for her, but instead he's going he's flailing. i mean, talking about crowd sizes is just an absolute example that he's spiraling his advisers don't have control over his message and he doesn't ody and comparing it to martin luther king crowds and also let's flip it what is the lesson you think that you hope kamala harris and team take from this he is diminished and i think that if you look at a picture or a message from donald trump in 2016 versus the message that you saw yesterday. you see somebody who's 78-years-old and we all have grandparents who age in front of us are parents who age in front of our eyes and some of the things just don't click like they used to. this is not the donald trump of eight years ago, not only that, but as material is getting old and stale, i mean, keep going back to dr. king's light what do you what am i i'm just chilling. >> would jesus relaxed, not
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i'm not no politics that was i was just like, why am i in this? >> and i think a lot of people are like, why are we why are you going down this path again? you know jason miller, chris lacivita, and susie wiles have done the best they can do with what they got out of a great operation he needs to do. if i was if i was the strategist for donald trump, you go out there for 1015 minutes, 20 minutes at max, you hit a few things and you get out of there. these these like little deviations. he takes an a crowd size and everything else that stick is so old, but i do think that voters are realizing that is the oldest person in the history of this country to run for president of the united states you're looking at a very diminished man and no matter what the actual is, the political strategy in saying that now works and democrats favor. i like using that talking point actually is one that you were refreshing what did you guys thank you so far much, sir all right. another teenager detained in the investigation of the alleged plot to attack a taylor swift
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concert there. an 18-year-old rocky national was detained by police and what they say was a it's warded, multi-pronged attack. the accused ring leader is a 19-year-old isis sympathizer that authorities say was radicalized online. and now we're learning what the suspect's plan to use to attack concert goers. cnn's selma abdelaziz is in the crowd with a bunch of swifties there who are still out there. they've been singing, they've been trying to have a lot of fun despite the fact that there are some really serious new details as to how this was going to be carried out and the weapons they plan to use, tell us what you know this morning yes, sara. >> so the investigation is very hey, much underway. the interior ministry giving an update this morning that yet another person, yet another teenager was arrested this time in 18-year-old, iraqi now he was also radicalized according to authorities and had recently pledged allegiance to isis, was within the same circles
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authorities say as this 19 year their role is alleged mastermind behind these attacks will also remember that one of those that was being held for questioning with a 15, he has been released. authorities still unreal i willing this clot, but meanwhile, on the streets of vienna, yes, the concerts are canceled, but the swifties have taken the celebrations here and i really want to show you the atmosphere sara they've written in chalk all over this floor here. i think the thing that really stood out to me was we are fearless all in yellow and they've gathered in this alleyway and they've been doing so so for the last couple of days and you might hear them spontaneously burst into song. let me just walk you into the crowds because i want you to see some of the outfits i'm going to tap shoulders here with one of these swift okay. now where he's nowhere and what you're going to see them doing is exchanging bracelets, sara, because that's what this way if these you with that one simple phrase can i, can i switch bracelets with you? can i exchange bracelets with you? suddenly strangers become friends. i'm going to film over here if we can just walk right,
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it can i show you guys just changing bracelets? tell me why this is so important to keep exchanging these bracelets, to keep singing through the streets. why is this so important because we don't want to let them when, like, you can take the concerts, you can try to like make us afraid but you can't take away so if you joy and that's what i love about the sand them so much that we always come together. >> we always come out on top because we like taylor swift and that's what connects us. yes. and we won't let another safe space be taken. her loss. >> there's a lyric it reminds me of this. they can take hours. this love is ours. yes. and i think that pretty much sums it up. >> that's absolutely beautiful. it's so amazing to see this community atmosphere. you really have people of all ages coming together, sara and they think they will keep going. they are undeterred. >> the juxtaposition is incredible. and to hear them talking about love at a time when there was this alleged dangerous plot happening in the background was remarkable thank you so much for sharing that with us this morning. salma
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abdelaziz from vienna so a teacher, a classroom, and bare what could go wrong, what this teacher did to get rid of one very unwelcome new students also, childhood vaccinations dropped during the pandemic. >> we've talked a lot about that and what those shows, just how important those shots are. these staggering number of illnesses, vaccinations have prevented and lives they've saved but, first pediatric nurse, patrice sanders, for years, she devoted life, her life to taking care of sick babies and children, and then she fell ill herself suffering a stroke. yet even in her final days, she went beyond the call cnn's veronica miracle has more betsy tapia is no stranger to hospitals. she's been then out of them for years battling a kidney disorder. it becomes the law, it's stressful times that after dialysis you get really sick tired. the disease has made life for the 38-year-old grandmother and mother at times painfully
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unbearable. >> so when she got a call from sutter health, california pacific medical center to i'm so ago. she was stunned for four years. betsy has been on the organ donor list each day while waiting for an organ transplant, 17 people die when you got the call kidneys available, you must have been in shock. >> yes. i was very in shock. and then thinking of the family of the pain that they are going through. because they just lost a loved one about 150 miles away in central california at valley children's hospital, that are a nurse re ayala knows the delicate nature of light oh, you okay. so when the trace was working, she would work in rooms like this? oh, yes, definitely work with babies like yes. oh, she'd come and talk to him tell him she was going to take care of them. >> i yala is talking about fellow nurse, patrice sanders how is this hospital now that
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she's not in these hallways anymore? >> there's an empty hole. i walk where she used to sit and i just think of i just picked her her there and that big smile at she would give you the smile that you just made her day. >> a couple of months ago, betrayed was working a shift in the pediatric intensive care unit when she suddenly got sick her sister said patrice suffered a stroke and needed emergency brain surgery. >> they neuro intensivist called our family in and said, she's going to have many disabilities. she may never walk again. she may never breathe on her own. and we as a family knew that that was not patrice is worse. >> patrice, his final act of heroism, organ donation for four days. >> patrice remained hospitalized as the donor network found recipients. >> now amazingly about three days into that, she was able to communicate with us by blinking her eyes and wiggling her toes. and so we asked her if she understood what was happening.
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blink. yes. i understand you've had a stroke. we're honoring your wishes of becoming an organ donor. are you comfortable with that blank? yes. we really felt like she was a part of the decision at the very end after her final moments on this earth inside a hospital, which reese's colleagues were there, our beloved the trees. >> there must have been 100 people that showed up and were squeezing her hand on the way down and in just showing their affection for her as she was rolled down the hallway just a few hours away in another part of california enable the teresa's gift of life lives on through betsy for her, a kidney means a life off of dialysis, a life full of travel with her kids and grandkids away from hospitals in machines my life has changed tremendously not just my life, but also my family's life because they've lived a journey right along with me we're just so grateful
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and message received by the ones patrice loved so much i go and experience things, do it in honor of patrice because that is exactly how she lived her life. >> veronica miracle, cnn central california beyond the call of duty, brought to you by a place for mom, the place for senior living advice, talk to an expert adviser today at no cost to your family i thought we had a plan for dad he was set to go to the senior living community, right by my house. then her friends suggested i talked to a place for mom they really opened my eyes. my advisor listened and understood his needs and showed us options that we're still nearby, but a better fit for dad now, he's isn't he warm, engaging community with the big group of friends i know he made the better choice for free senior living advice. go to a place for mom.com here we are driving down the road and all of a sudden there was a crack in our
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windshield. you know what we can do now though, right safe flights and we're good to go. yes. i'll be replaced in the windshield for you. >> can we go in there with you new cars come with cameras that would control your automatic braking systems and lane departure, which do need to get recalibrated when you get you windshield replaced you get a crack in your windshield. >> there's only one choice, save lives say might replace like we played you got to take airborne daily, unlike some others, it has seven nutrients to help fill those holes. your immune system may have ols. >> what holes? >> new airborne seven immune supporting nutrients are most complete support yet hey, you singing this where's the one
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you're telling me? >> you can get directtv? good stuff and you don't need a satellite dish i used to love doing my business on those things. you're one sick pigeon, then dishes kept the rain off our beaks. we just have different prices the already saw satellite-free directv. never thought i'd see the day well, our lifespans are quite short, extreme directv without a satellite dish, are you going to do this thing? >> with my neck just for a bit from meat-free monday to fizzle pans sunday so many ways to save life. ready, wallet, happy that 365 by whole foods market new glasses by one. what works i'm just telling everyone by one pair, get one free for back-to-school vision works. >> see the difference. >> billy, i need help with a clicker.
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>> one second, grandma, disguise going to buy my car are you still there? >> okay. you need karbala what's your plate number? boss? mov vehicle features? >> no accidents, right? no good generating offer. >> guard mana can pick it up tomorrow. that's an amazing offer. >> but do you still need help with the clicker? >> i'll ask your sister sell your car the easy way with carbonic how do i love the let me count the ways love can get a little messy good thing. >> there's resolved love the love, resolve the mess. >> so who are you? >> i mean, a child what you really need life is some brick in total oh yeah. >> four-star keeps you going toward gets you going now we're talking i want guard bonds so i
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know our job cornered or two with told torqued out crossover this looks like an actual farm. look. you on the app i know my, the, the vote tonight when other vacation rentals aren't what they're cracked up to be dry one where you know what you get? >> russia, her trying to spy on us. we were spying on them. >> this is a secret, war. secrets and spot now streaming on max as fears of a broader, wider war, increased pressure is mounting on israel and hamas to get back to the negotiations
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to secure the release of hostages. >> and also secure a ceasefire overnight, a new joint statement from the united states, qatar, and egypt it says, quote, there is no further time to waste, and cnn has learned israel has agreed to send a delegation to negotiate where does that leave everyone? cnn's alex marquardt has new reporting on this. he joins us now. alex, could we finally see a deal? >> well kate finally really is the tone of this statement. these three countries signed by the leaders of these three countries in this statement, saying that it's finally time to get this ceasefire across the finish line. and the suffering in gaza and the suffering for the hostages. and their families. so what they're proposing is a no other meeting next week either in the qatari capital doha or the egyptian capital of cairo to hammer out the final details. this is part of that statement that was signed by president biden and the two other leaders. it is time to bring immediate relief to both the long suffering people of gaza, as well as the
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long-suffering hostages. and their families the leaders go on to talk about putting forward a final bridging proposal if needed, to essentially close the gaps. and there i think you see a bit of the frustration with the proposals and counterproposals between hamas and israel that haven't gotten the ceasefire across. the finish shine so we could see this meeting happen next week. it is not a done deal. israel, as you say, has agreed to go. hamas has not yet. but there's a good chance that this happens if it does happen. the cia director bill burns would represent the united states alongside the qatari prime minister and the egyptian head of intelligence now we have heard in the past few weeks, us officials saying that they believe that a deal is close by kate, there's no question that these negotiations took a major hit when one of the lead negotiators, the head of the hamas political wing, ismail haniyeh, was killed last week in the iranian capital in an
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operation that was widely believed to have been carried out by israel. there are significant gaps that they need to work out. a senior administration official saying yesterday, it's not like the mediators are going to get into a room and sign this deal next thursday but they do believe that they can close those gaps and it is it is vitally important to do so now, they say ten months after this war started against this backdrop of a region that is on the precipice of blowing up as we wait for hezbollah and iran to potentially carry out strikes against israel exactly. >> it's that backdrop just adds urgency to what is already urgent urgent situation. alex. thank you so much, sir. >> all right joining me now to discuss all of this as the ranking member on the house foreign affairs committee, democratic congressman gregory meeks, look since more we just heard this from alex marquardt. >> since the more moderate leader of hamas, who was outside of gaza, gaza, ismail
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haniyeh was assassinated in iran and the parties aren't are left to negotiate with the more hard liner yahya sinwar the mastermind of the october 7 attack. i mean, what are the chances that this can be brought together in a ceasefire? now, after all of this with iran promising retaliatory attacks, or hezbollah as well. >> well, you are correct. i think that we will closer before the assassination because where we need to be is negotiating and have a ceasefire. i feel a little bit better this morning because i know the dialogue and conversation is taking place and but qatar and egypt and jordan all participating and that puts some additional pressure on israel now agreeing that they're sending some representative to have this conversation. but i hope that we don't get to a for tat. we're now the agreement changes. each side changes because we do need to
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de-escalate. no one needs at this point in time for the middle east to explode. it will help no one so i'm hopeful that all sides are hearing this and we are able to get a ceasefire hostages returned to israel. and then we can utilize the others in the region to start talking about how we can move forward with reference to a two-state solution. and again, with saudi arabia, for example, which is really important for them, normalizing relationship with israel you were very tough on benjamin netanyahu, the prime minister of israel when he came to speak to congress back in june, he nears a little bit of what you said. >> you said, look, you remained determined to make certain that israel can deif, can defend itself from iranian aggression. however, you were concerned about this, that the prime minister as the, as you put, it, refuses to implement president biden's widely accepted proposal. this was back in june that would lead to a ceasefire bringing the hostages home and allow for a new surge of humanitarian
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assistance into gaza. the prime minister did not outline a religion mystik plan to postwar gaza which you fear, meant that he intends to bend towards the extreme right voices of his coalition. now that israel has agreed to these new talks, after all that has happened, what is your message to hamas? do you have that same sort of tough stance on them? oh, absolutely. it was always a tough stance on down they are a terrorist organization. >> they're not someone that you play, which we know they started this on october the sudden there's no there's no way that they get out of this. they are not an equivalent to israel. they are a terrorist organization that initiated this i believe they initiated it because we were starting to move to have other countries in the gulf recognize israel's right to exist. and when you look at hamas along with iran, the one thing that they have in common because you know, it's sunni and c and they have nothing in common i'm only
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thing they have in common is they do not believe israel has the right to exist, and they would love to attack and wipe them off the map. >> all right, i want to talk to you now about what's happening here in this country and this political season the state of the race right now, there was a wild press conference by any stretch of the imagination, by former president donald trump where he continues to attack kamala harris for many different things. but this in particular, we keep hearing these words that she's not smart. here's what he said. i want you to respond she's not doing any news conference. you know why she's not doing it, because she can't do a news conference. she doesn't know how to do a news conference. she's not smart enough to do a news conference. and i'm sorry, we need smart people to leave this country because our country has never been in this danger before, both economically and from an outside, from an outside perspective, russia it doesn't respect us anymore. china doesn't respect us anymore. north korea, kim jong un liked me a lot. he doesn't like this
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group we are in great danger what is your response to that? >> he goes all over the place, but what's your response to some of the things he said about camila and then the other thing i'm really getting concerned about this guy he was incoherent nonsensical he was an individual who sounded like he had a low iq he sounded like he does not playing with a full deck he sounded like he don't i don't think he understood what he was saying because if he did, he wouldn't have said it. so it's really it's getting really nervous just listening to him and what he's talking about because i don't think he does. when he goes back and talk to his individuals that in his campaign they are going crazy because he is going crazy and that driving him nuts. he can't finish a sentence. that is something that is wrong with him. you know, i don't know. maybe it's he is incomprehensible maybe he is losing a lot because, you know,
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he is the oldest person to run for president of the united states. he's not all there anymore. >> this was the accusation against another candidate, biden, and now he is out of the race. kamala harris taking over. we will see what happens. thank you so much for your comments in coming in this morning for us, congressman gregory meeks. i appreciate your time. thank you for having me. >> this morning. a new report from the cdc shows just how important routine childhood vaccinations are the new data showing that the shots have prevented more than 500 million illnesses. and prevented any million deaths in the united states since 1990 for some of the very same the nations that dropped during the pandemic seen as jacqueline howard has much more on this, she's joining us now. so jacqueline, what more are you learning yeah, kate, well, this report from the cdc looked at nine common childhood vaccinations and they specifically looked among children born between 1994 and 2023, and that's where they a found that these routine childhood vaccinations lik
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