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tv   The Chris Wallace Show  CNN  August 17, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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nation's greatest era. and later from tacky took trendy. there's a price and come back for a fashion item at a word people have hated for year the panel is here and ready to go. so sit back, relax and let's talk about up first at the democratic convention next week, kamala harris house to pull off a delicate maneuver showing she intends to build on joe biden's record without breaking from it. all part of an effort to carve her own path without coming off as disloyal vice president harris unveiling part of her economic message. >> i will focus on one element that's on the minds of many americans, and that is lowering the cost of living, calling for a federal ban on price gouging especially for groceries in a bid to cut costs and win votes.
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>> we will help the food industry become more competitive. >> harris is walking a tight rope, taking a more populist fans while trying to stay in lockstep with joe biden president appearing together for the first time since biden left the race. >> it is my eternal and great, great, great honor. i have to tell you to serve with this most extraordinary human being. >> it's a tough spot praising the president whose job approval remains in the mid 30s now how rose hopes the democratic convention will help her turn the page but what happens outside the convention could change that as thousands of pro-palestinian protesters are expected in chicago as genocide, joe here with me today, conservative pollster and new york times opinion writer kristen soltis anderson, new york times journalist and
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host of the interview podcast, lulu garcia navarro. jim geraghty, senior political correspondent for the national review, and natasha alford, senior correspondent and host of the grio welcome everyone, especially in a tausche. as a first timer. >> thank you for having me delighted to. >> jim is harris doing enough to become her own canada? >> well, she's neck and neck in the polls. she's had a really great launch. if she's ever got down to sitting down and having an interview or doing a press conference? when she unveils things like her economic agenda. she did friday at some point to make like, hey, these are great ideas. why are you not doing them now as vice president, you're in an administration. is there anything here that you want to do that joe biden doesn't want to do. i've very hard time believing biden would say, oh yeah, we're not doing that. that's terrible idea. >> so would you like to see her be more open and saying, here's something i'd like to do. >> i would love to see her sit down and do interviews. i'd love to see her do press conferences, but apparently don't need to do that anymore. apparently, you can cruise to
quote
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the top of the i just love though that right now. the right is all of a sudden embracing the free press. i'm very excited about this as a journalist, i think it's wonderful that everyone, including donald trump is really pushing kamala harris to do this. i agree. i think she should do press conference. i think she showed sit down for an interview but you know, it's a little disingenuous for no other right to do that, is it ever beat donald trouble. >> do interviews with anybody. he went to the national association of black journalists and she didn't write that's not because he do a lot think interviews with the man amen corner at fox news? yes. no doubt about that, but he will sit down. he'll qubits with reporters. he does a lot more accessing that joe biden has done for the last four years, or kamala harris and she's become the nominee. >> but i want to get back to this question of is she doing enough to become her own candidate and not? joe biden's vice president back in 1968, vice president humphrey didn't start surging in the poll until he broke with his president lbj, and said he would stop bombing north vietnam kamala harris's effort to establish her own political identity,
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isn't made any easier by comments like this. from president biden how much bothering vice president harris might field for political reasons start to distance herself from your economics she's not going to natasha. >> does harris need to more explicitly show differences with biden? obviously, she's on the biden team. she'd been part of the administration. but to save, for instance, as she did on friday, you know, i and so concerned about prices that i'm going to dart going after price gouging, and we're going to make a make some policy statements that are herds. >> i think that one of the things we've seen joe biden struggle with is the accomplishments that he touted and then the public's actual understanding of those accomplishments. so i really think that she has somewhat of a blank canvas, even though she's a part of this
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administration, there are people who still can't articulate what's in the inflation reduction act, what was in the chips and science bill? so i think that she can talk about these things while also, again, having her own style. and we've seen it in the communications. i mean, look at her comms team, the wideness, the sharpness that's the way that they're able to give and take jabs in a way that the biden administration would when you talk about joe biden and the way that he communicates, it's just night and day. i think she's already defining herself going back to 68 as we were that democratic convention in chicago was disrupted by anti-vietnam war protesters protesters battling police in the streets. >> and that chaos hurt democrats with middle america, kristan will, the pro palestinian protesters disrupt? harris is coming out party. >> i expect that they likely will. they have certainly expressed an interest in doing so. and i think there'll be really, really big problem for harris because she is using
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this coming week to introduce herself to voters who actually don't know that much about what she has done as vice president over the last four years. in some ways that blank canvas natasha, you were talking about it the time when she was vice president. it was sort of seen as a bad thing, right? that the administration, do they not trust her? why are they not putting her out there on things? what has she actually done for the last four years, but that is now weirdly enough, allowing her to have this break to be this person who is her own person on issues like the economy you were voted for trusting donald trump over joe biden by huge margins. now, she's running much closer to donald trump by having this opportunity at the convention introduce herself. it's a big, important moment and if it is overshadowed by chaos, that makes voters think, oh look, democrats can't even control their own convention. how are they supposed to bring about law, order safety, security piece? it's in this country that would be a bad message for them. >> lulu paris has much more than biden spoken out about the bloodbath in gaza and ben on the margins were critical about
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israel, but the protesters say they hold her responsible. >> she has blood on her hands as well as the entire administration. how disruptive and they're talking about tens of thousands, how disruptive could the protesters be, and how much that damage this this fairly flawless launch so far by kamala harris. >> i mean, i think it's potentially damaging. i mean, that's the objective of protests, right? they want attention, they want there to be accountability there is a huge portion of the younger part of the democratic party that is very upset by what's happening. and that's why i think you're seeing the clock ticking right now in terms of what's happening in israel and the ceasefire, i mean, i think there's a real push to try and make that ceasefire happen as quickly as possible to try and dampen these protests but at the end of the day, i think those images of chaos, if krcr will be damaging to the democratic party that said, protest is part of what makes america, what america is. they have the right to protest. they
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have the right to ask their leaders for accountability. >> meanwhile, the democrats have come up with a new way to try to win over more traditional shuttle republican voters here's secretary pete buttigieg, promising a return to a more normal gop beating him twice. >> what i think have a different effect on a lot of people in the gop who know better than to be on board with him. but we got so close to the fever breaking but it didn't quite break because republicans found that their access two power still dependent on their standing with donald trump jim buttigieg said that to our very own lulu garcia in her podcast is break the fever a good way, a bridge he ilestedt way to try to win over some not very happy with trump republicans. if you could make the argument that kamala harris was going to be a centrist new democratic leadership council, centrist, middle of the road style
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democrat you probably have an easier sell maybe there are some republicans out there who are so fed up with donald trump and so exasperated by this and the idea of this is going to drive a stake into the heart of trumpism. than maybe so my sneaking suspicion is we all thought that january 6 was going to do this and we thought that the convictions we're going to do this. i could very easily look, you know, if trump loses, he's going to say oh, it was cheated, it was still in i did nothing wrong. it's going to be all it could do the rest of the show with your trump, chris, i'd love to do it though, so fed up with the way you handle that debate was admittedly i won't do that because they voice gets into my head and it gets kinda it's hard to get out it's like demonic possession the isn't that like i'd love the idea that a trial trump loses in 2028, republican party. i think, i mean, i think i think he said it to me and at the time i understood what he was trying to say. pete can dream. i'm not i don't buy it. i think also because the takeover of the republican party has been so complete. i mean, it's not just women that were nikki haley voters. >> and even after she dropped
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opt down, she was still getting 20% of the vote in the primaries. those are people one would think who might, you know, if we drive a stake into the heart of trumpism? >> know, i just don't buy it because what happened to the republican party is it's not just trump himself. it is a financial system there's a philosophical system. there are so many things around what trumpism has become in the republican party has become that, you know, nikki haley coming out of out of the back to the crip master and driving a stake is just not going to happen in my view, donald trump also deliberate a speech on the economy this week or at least that's what it was supposed to be next, how the former president is out-of-focus with what some of his most loyal allies say. he needs to do then not fit to print why some major news organizations are sitting on what's in some sensitive trump campaign documents and later flag on the play will show you the new and kind of nasty menu items coming to a
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get some mail finch they give seeds to females in funding mitchell even covering the harris-walz can mean you see in it donald trump tried to stick to the script this week, highlighting policy differences and says with kamala harris but as usual, trump ad libbed as white into trouble ignoring some close advisers and insulting some of the nation's war heroes radical-left person wants to put price controls all over the place which will end up driving up your prices in two events this week, both supposedly on the economy. donald trump couldn't stay on
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message. >> she wants to jj free enterprise type country into a communist country that's what she knows. >> growing from his playbook of personal attacks, which even some of his most loyal supporters now criticizing in public when trump attacks harris personally rather than on policy harris support among swing voters rises are waiting formula for president trump is very plain to see. it's fewer insults, more insights, and that policy contrast. >> but trump isn't less night. i think i'm entitled to personal attacks. i don't have a lot of respect for i don't have a lot of respect for her intelligence and trump once again insulted a key group of voters that her race is the equivalent of the congressional medal of honor. >> while talking about giving the presidential medal of freedom to a billionaire supporter, trump, who reportedly his called soldiers who die for their country suckers and losers diminish the
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nation's top military honor. >> everyone gets the congressional medal of honor. that's soldiers. there, either in very bad shape because they've been hit so many times by bullets, or they're dead kristen, when it comes to the advice we heard from peter navarro and kellyanne conway, don't make it personal, make it about policy. will trump ever listen you don't have to finish what we have seen so many rounds of oh my goodness. >> is this going to be the time that kelly and finally takes the phone from trump so that he stops tweeting or what have you. the idea that he can be contained i feel like we've just got to get over the idea that this will ever happen. he's like bruce banner turning into the whole, like you can keep the normal seagoing for so long. and he did frankly here he held it together through the republican primary through the republican convention and is about 30 minutes into that speech at the republican convention that bruce banner starts turning into the hulk. and that's what we've got.
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he's in full health mode. good luck to anybody trying to put them back in. >> well and speaking of pulp mode at lulu, trump has never been i think we'd all agree a disciplined campaigner but it seems since biden dropped out harris came in and this huge lead has just disappeared trump seems like he's really been knocked off kilter. >> he's been knocked off kilter. he is clearly upset. he keeps talking about the same things over and over again. he's obsessed with biden. he brings up biden every opportunity that he can. it's kind of touching in a way. it's like the odd couple. >> this kind of relationship that he clearly has. >> he misses him. there's there's some there's some definite you know, tenderness there. i think. but, you know, he doesn't know what to do and i would also and in this i do think that the shakeup within the trump campaign that we've recently seen with corey lewandowsky coming back. i think we're going to see a push to let trump be trump,
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right? which is the whole idea that this is someone who cannot be corralled and he has expanded the republican party. he has brought more people in to the party. he has fundamentally changed it, and he's done that by being himself. and so i think what people are going to come to is that this is the man who won in 2016, who has managed to keep the party in his grip all this time, let him do what he does and let the chips fall where they may. and i think what he does though, is starting to get boring, like i'm looking at the meme that came out, the racist meme that he tweeted and yes, there was some level of outrage, but i think there was also eye-rolling. >> it's like we've seen the show before. you're going to you're appealing to the most base instincts of voters. and i think people are kind of over it today in her speech harris pointed out she said, you know, he gives this this talk about the economy, but the actual policy plans were really light. and so she's reversing the critique that trump gave of her, that she had no policy and now she's saying, where are the details besides the rage, besides the fear mongering and
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i think that she's she's exposing. >> i want to pick up on that kristen big cost whatever you want to say about trump, he really has been entertaining in a kind of demented way and as i watched his presser at bedminster on thursday, i thought what a bore, what a board this man has become. >> well in part of his appeal he'll all along are part of his political power has been that he understands the medium of television very well. and you saw flickers of that, right? he had all the products they're lined up at that bedminster press conference. he understands entertainment, he understands television, but he can't control himself. and that's where he's getting into trouble. and so i frankly want to put this on a pole. i want to know if you ask voters, who would you rather spend ten minutes watching kamala harris or donald trump i actually think that if you'd ask that question six months ago, donald trump wins that in a landslide, doesn't mean people would vote for him, but he would win that question. i wonder what people would say today if i asked
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because god forbid. well, first of all, it wouldn't he mean this shouldn't be an hour of drowning on and i didn't don't like though is the one that was reading in that huge binder that look like my sixth sixth-grader giving a book report. i mean, that's not a trunk that is going to sell anything i thought to myself trump a political malpractice who gave this man that binder because i mean, it just had page after page and he kept writing. >> i want to go to this other utterly gratuitous slam at the congressional medal of honor winners, jim what, why would he keep insulting vets? >> i suspect that every trump campaign advisor is asking the same why, whose idea was it that you want to compare the medal of honor in the middle of freedom and which one is better? i mean, remember freedom. i mean there are a lot of great people who get it, but also billionaire donors guys, like an eerie, i'm edelman nicely lady, not a hero besides having the focus and attention span of an over caffeinated ferret donald trump also has
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this impulse to focus on the dumbest thing imaginable, and then make that the focus of his attention. there is an easy monocyte he's if there was there was a soup to nuts case to be made against kamala harris. if nothing else pointing out look at who she was in her 2019 presidential campaign, look at who she is now, look at all of these positions she's abandoned. who is the real kamala harris comma camila chameleon, if you can tell a trump nickname is that there's stuff to work with. there, but he's a 78-year-old man. i don't think can remember any of this stuff anymore. that's why he needs the giant construction paper binder. sure and things to flip through and they did make it very simple, very large font, all i kind of like, wow, maybe we should not have geriatric presidential candidates. why would that be like a lot of people said that the key to this election was who was going to switch from the 78 to 81-year-old person, the democrats dead. >> and they may reap the benefits of that while he was randomly assaulting key voting blocs, trump also went after a union members who go on strike
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here he is praising elon musk for how ilan handles workers. and then doubling down on it they go on strike and you say that's okay, you're all gone you're all gone. >> are you really comfortable with companies threatening to fire workers who go on strike well, now i want companies to get workers that are going to love them and work for a wage. >> it lets the company make a profit so they can go and expand kristen has trump jeopardized his support among union workers depends on if that support is rooted in an economic populism, or if it's rooted in a cultural connection. >> and i think there's a lot of the latter going on in donald trump's appeal to union workers across the country that it's not just that they view donald trump as, say, a break from the mitt romney style economics of the republican party of a decade ago. but that he has something in touch with the working class in terms of cultural appeal. and that's still there regardless of comments like that take a look
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at the cnn exit poll from 2020 as you can see there among members of union households, 56 56% supported biden, but 40% backed trump, which is a good number for republicans. >> lulu after trump's remarks about union workers, strikers to elon musk, the head of the united auto workers called him a scab this is a new though. >> i mean, unfortunately, i think that donald trump, instead of making statements that will actually expand the kinds of people who would want to vote for him. he does the opposite, but it is cultural. he does appeal to certain values and so i think that, you know, i don't know that it's going to make a huge inroad. >> i think wherever you go, there you are. right. >> and he continues to show who he really is, even though he tries to turn himself as an ally of certain groups from veterans to auto workers. >> they're seeing who he is i think maya angelou said
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something sort of like that. >> they show you who you are believed them the first time that was her famous quote, which also applies to this situation hackers dig up 60k trump campaign documents and send them to several news organizations. >> but you may never know what they say. also ahead, the costco crackdown that'll have you digging through your purse or wallet the lead with jake tapper. >> weekdays at four on cnn choice hotels is a family of brands with a hotel for any traveler you want to be like quality in for the dad that gets every dollar and minute out of this family road trip the day is upon us day twice and get a $50 gift card when you booked direct, the foil would ever give a product to a patient? >> i tried on myself, so i started taking super beach and i said, wow, super beats is a game changer. >> it's given me the energy that i want, the blood pressure support that i need tequila collation heart heart-healthy. >> you feel like you can get
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and media story you may have missed this week. >> the trump campaign says it was hacked by iran, and several documents about vice presidential nominee j.d vance were stolen the former president downplayed the hacks in an interview well, i've been briefed and a lot of people think it was iran probably was. >> i think it's pretty boring information. and we know pretty much what it is it's not very important information now, three organizations, the washington post, the new york times, and politico, they all receive the documents from an anonymous email, but none of them reported what was in them that's a stark contrast to eight years ago when news organizations reported on thousands of hacked emails from hillary clinton's campaign danger, john podesta, which were posted publicly on wikileaks in including one in which a pedestrian criticized hillary clinton's instincts. >> and another from a top
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adviser who wrote about clinton saying apologies are like her achilles heel lulu, why haven't the media reported what's in these hacked documents? >> first, i want to say i have no inside knowledge of what decision-making has gone into this at my news organization what i will say is that i think there are a couple of things that are different first of all, the media has learned a few things. second of all i think that the fact that it was potentially a foreign hostile power that did this makes it materially different and thirdly, last time they were released by wikileaks, which is not an organization like the new york times, the washington post, and political so, which has different values at different structure. ultimately, the debate is between the public's right to know which is what news organizations have evaluate when looking at this information is the information here of such importance that its supersedes other considerations and perhaps in
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this case, i don't know. they made the estimation that the public's right to know was not actually imperative, but sources that give the media documents often break the law to get them they steal them, they violate security. classifications. that's on the source, not on the news outlet. that received them. kristen to get back to lulu. what about the public's right to know particular believe when it's information that might affect until it's about the vice presidential nominee, the republican party information that might affect who they vote for. >> what i wonder is whether this decision to not publish us information has something to do with it, genuinely not being that juicy information in it. if it was something that was a true bombshell that might heat up in the election. i wonder if the calculation would be different. but if this is say, the opposition research file on j.d. vance, then that is something that the harris campaign is also putting together will probably find all the same stuff and will surely be putting it into the happy hands of reporters very soon, you are suggesting that the
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reason that they're not putting it out is it isn't that interesting? first it's that it's weighing just what lulu said that you've got a weigh these different considerations. >> and i frankly think that learning the lesson from the clinton campaign where it was don't reward bad actors for doing bad things when it is foreign. i think that's a good lesson alright, but let's go back to 2016 and the media is exhaustive reporting of the clinton campaign's hacked emails neera tanden, who was a top adviser to hillary clinton and who wrote that achilles heel email tweeted this seriously, the double standard here is incredible do they the media now admit they were wrong in 2016? or is the rule hack materials are only used when? it hurts dems? there's no in-between. jim, is that hacks hypocrisy to how they are handling this as compared to how they handled the hillary clinton when the direction it's already up on a site like wikileaks that anybody can just go up onto the internet and you look at, it's a lot easier for a news organization to say,
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well, they're already out there. people want to see him. they can and we should at least right about the response to them, we should already respond are these emails causing bad blood within the hillary campaign, blah, blah, blah. the question one, would you want to do a favor for r&, the rented molas, want you to put this out there. they want to stir up trouble in some sort of well, but we think that the wikileaks came from the kremlin. >> the second thing is once but once bitten, twice shy. the question of okay, if you feel like 2016 was a mistake, do you go back and make the same mistake again in order to be fair? or do you realize, hey, you know what, when foreign until if, if iran, the government aransas, oh, you guys won't publish it here they are. here's all the stuff we hacked out of the trump campaign. here is jd vance's deep dark guardian then all of a sudden you see a lot of people, right? writing about it and talk about natasha. >> are you troubled at all by the difference this very stark difference between how they handled the hacked material from hillary clinton, the pedestrian emails, as compared to how they're not handling, not reporting this material? no. >> i agree with jim. i think if
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you realize you make a mistake, you don't have to double down on it for the sake of balance, but i do wonder if hackers are looking at this and saying, well then we'll just publish our documents directly going forward to create that incentive for media outlets to report on what's in the documents versus sending it directly to report it. but, you know, all of this presupposes that. >> and i go back. i kind of agree with president. it's just that it wasn't that juicy, right? i do you really think that it today if they got the hacked material from john podesta with people inside the campaign criticizing their own candidate. in other words, juicy material do think the reported that the press wouldn't cover that? >> i'm not sure. i mean, we look at the way that they handled kamala harris. they meaning the press, even just in those first few years, there's something about covering women in leadership. and i think the press still struggles with right there elements of it where you see a double standard, where you see sometimes sexism come through. and so again can't say if it
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were to happen now how they would approach it, they might still fall prey to those instincts because i just want a big run. >> though. i mean, you're using this word juicy and again, that makes it sound like the thing that the media is doing. and i'm talking about the fact-based media here is really trying to get something out and sensationalize pfizer just to see what i'm saying? >> no really interesting in some desert, but it's interesting. the question is, again, the public's right to know, is it impactful? is it important for people to know this information to make informed decisions? >> i ask you the same question. so i do you think if the 2016 material came out today? and hillary clinton were running not kamala harris, do you think that the new york times and other news organizations would report it as they did back there. >> but they've reported because wikileaks first put it out, it was already out in it was already out on the paper. it was all jumping on it because it was interesting information about how people inside a campaign fairly what about their candidate i mean,
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we agree to disagree. we agree to disagree that's one of the things we do on their show one thing the media is reporting on two blended words for a once hated fashion trend. >> that's now having a gen z revival. plus what in the world? why do you might soon be ordering a beer? and this then that's your local stadium this election season, stay with cnn with more reporters on the ground. >> and the best political team in the business, follow the voters, follow the results, follow the facts follow cnn your skin is ever changing. take care of it with goldman's healing formulations seven moisturizers and three vitamins for all your skins called bond when i acted. >> so why don't you to get
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candy burrito. looking knows unappetizing as it sounds, the burrito contains h sweets from marshmallows to gummy bears wrapped inside cotton candy and over the top, food isn't just for football fans. baseball's kansas city royals last month launched the taste of the chaos. taco. it's a hotdog wrapped in a cheeseburger case of dea top with brisket fries, lettuce, onions, cracker jacks, and barbecue sauce, all for $25. kristen, are you yea nay. on these calorie busters? >> i like things that are classic with a twist. this is too much twist. >> i am pretty nay, on all of this with one exception, one of these ballpark supposedly is rolled out a waffle that is topped with ice cream pretzels caramel sauce, and bacon. >> i would give that a try okay. as an elder millennial, who's metabolism is a little bit slower than it used to be. i'm going to say no on this. and also as the mother of a
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toddler, i want to stay as far away from sugar as i can. so it's a no for me. >> okay speaking of so next time you go to costco, be sure to bring your documents. the retailer is now requiring both your membership card and a matching i.d. to get in and they'll soon install scanners to speed up the process. as part of an effort to stop card sharing among family and friends since it turns out that's the main way costco makes money they more than from what you buy. the store earned $4.6 billion last year in membership fees from about 128 million people lulu, are you yea or nay, on the new costco crackdown 100%? >> nay. i think this is outrageous. first of all, what it is so it's, it's not your card, you're taking somebody else's membership part if it's among family and friends and also do want to be going into a costco now and having an feel like you're going into maximum security prison. >> first of all, know, the
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second thing is, has anyone ever gone into costco not spent three to $400, just on like bulk candy. i don't know anyone like that. you're always going in there like that's so all of this is, is just a horrible wait a minute gym because i was surprised to learn that costco actually makes more from the membership fees which were $60 gang up to 65 on september 1 than they do from all of the stuff that people by. so where where are you on this? >> because the i.d. check used to be about as easy as getting passed at walmart greeter. now apparently is going to turn it to the tsa, your pockets. let's see some i.d you know, all of a sudden we're in east berlin in 1949 wow. >> and a maximum security prison, maybe a little hyperbole here. finally should alarm though summer staple, you didn't know you need the gd, a combo of genes and shorts made out of denim is back in style after surging in the 80s and 90s, then going into when uncool phase in the 2000s, the georgia is finding new fans
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according to fashion experts, the trend was even the focus of a reason video on the tonight show up i press him on doors, water plants in my car to take my pants and enhance do a dance and my doors, i can say i'm the king of jordan by all means, take your genes at the scene now the jorts natasha, are you yea or nay, on jorts? mea, chris, because because fashion sustainability, i can just get some genes, cut them. i don't have to go to the store. so anything that's, you know, money conscious outrage with it is important to generation let me ask you a question. have you ever won georgia? >> of course, i've made them many times. you know, you could fray them at the bottom, fold them up. i'm here for everything comes around. all fashion, comes back around. >> lulu, you are, or fashionista. where are you in georgia? >> i am a hard nay on jordan i was a child in the 80s and i think so i'm things should be left back then forget it okay
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the panel is back with their takes on hot stories or what will be in the news before its news. >> that's right after the bright. >> did you ever where jordan? >> i did not wear george other than when i was a child oh, absolutely not water. five good things listen wherever you get your podcasts when i so why don't you actually get good sister and get me somewhere about flowing on second thought i'd be a directory that's go get you and we get some more lemon pepper wings in the scene in honey teriyaki too. >> good know, how do you people call my people. >> okay. everyone. our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition or strengthen energy. >> ensuring with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein the ergo smart base from tempur-pedic automatically response to snoring. >> so no more hiding under your pillow because this system actually detect snoring than a job. tell reducing, don't miss
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polantz at the federal courthouse in washington. >> and this is cnn yeah, it's time for our panel's special takes on what's happening or predictions of what we should be looking out where lulu hit me with your best shot for me, it's still the olympics and jordan chiles, the u.s gymnast, got her bronze medal taken away she has said that she feels this was unjust. it was because
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apparently the court of arbitration for sport, which is an olympic body, basically said that us gymnastics hadn't put in at a certain amount of time objection. >> its objection. and ultimately what i think this shows is that this is a body that is unaccountable. it's filled with fat cats and it really is. i think a very, very sad day for them for us gymnastics is thinking about the olympics, the athletes worst thing the officials jim, you're focused on the remarkable incursion by ukraine into russia and the impact it could have back here on capitol hill. >> now the expectation is that the aid package passed earlier this year should get the ukrainians to the end of the year. we'll see. but at some point they're going to come back and are going to say, hey, what can we get some more weapons? can we get some more ammunition? demonstrating success on the battlefield and saying, yeah, you know, for a lot of these stretches, it's been a it's been a stalemate. it's been a bloody world war one style fighting. but hey,
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look at this giant chunk of russian territory. we have that will make it easier to convince people. this is a cause worth supporting and that they have a plan for victory natasha, best shot. >> my prediction is that president obama's dnc speech is going to be a hit. it will be the icing on the cake for introducing kamala harris as the official nominee. there's an astounding for the past for dems and he brings that there was a lot of question about, okay, is obama going to endorse her? hur why did he take so long? now he gets to have his moment i am also fascinated. he is going to get hit tab, his moment. bill clinton's going to get to have his moment. i suspect they're going to feel a little competition as to who's going to give the bows, blow away. memorable speech. don't show. >> well, i think they bring something different, right? and i'm particularly legally interested in hillary clinton because she's the what would have been she's always come up as we could have had a woman president. now, we can again, kristen, bring us up. >> so my best shot is also about ukraine, but it's a
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little bit different. it also involves combat dolphins. the wall street journal this week reporting on what happened to the north stream pipeline. it is a fascinating story of some friends who were attached to the military got drunk, decided they were going to take a yacht around and go learn how to dive, go put these explosives on this pipeline, which cut off russian gas and look at the vote here. >> it's not exactly believe able i can't wait for the movie of this to be made, but it real-time. >> what's going to be interesting is how will this affect nato allies and their support for ukraine in trying to deal with putin's aggression. because this really, this caused a lot of european countries to lose their supply of russian gas. it was very economically problematic and i'm sure it has not made the authorities in those countries very happy. >> yeah and germany, which has been one of the country's biggest supporters of ukraine in the pipeline was blown up from russia, coming into germany. >> they were not happy about that. thank you all gang for being here. and thank you for
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