tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN September 14, 2024 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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day on winning day all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. >> i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom the latest from the campaign trail. kamala harris calls out donald trump for his divisive comments as he doubles down on threats to deport migrants as we examine the political we'll information wars, how a 24-year-old former bernie bro became a social media influencer, embracing some pretty fringe ideas and verbal war wanting shots from moscow as nato defense chiefs meet in prague, what the kremlin says about letting ukraine use weapons like these to target inside russia. and what the head of nato says that's about providing ukraine with more military support atlanta this is cnn he's room with kim brunhuber just days after his debate with kamala harris, donald trump is trying to change the topic of the
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presidential campaign from his debate performance to immigration. he appears to be doubling down on his claim that haitian migrants living in the u.s. legally are eating people's past that's in nevada friday night, he claimed without evidence that some undocumented migrants have assault weapons and are taking over parts of the country like the town of aurora, colorado, curious what i returned to the white house, i will launch a special task force of elite federal law enforcement in charge them with crushing and eliminating every foreign gang. >> an organized crime network that is concrete are we will deploy ice dhs and other federal officials to go in and liberate aurora. >> we're going to can you believe? can you believe i have to say this? we are going to liberate torch of our country harris spent friday campaigning in another battleground state pennsylvania. she criticized trump for spreading what she called hate and division she
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also said trump has no plan to address the needs of the american people addressing porter's friday night, harris warn that american freedoms and rights are under attack. here she is we are witnessing a full-on assault on other hard fought hard won fundamental freedoms and rights i like the freedom to vote the freedom from gun violence freedom then china union comments likely intended for rural, traditionally republican parts of pennsylvania. >> harris sought to clarify her position on gun ownership and i am a gun owner and tim walz, my running mate is also then owner. >> we're not taking anybody's guns away. i support the second amendment and i support
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reasonable gun safety laws thomas gift is the director of the center on us politics for university college london. >> and he joins us live from harrisburg, pennsylvania. good to see you. great to get your local knowledge of the state. there are harris has spent time in two counties that former president donald trump won in both 2016 and 2020. so tell us about where she was, what kind of folks live there and why she would spend time visiting those red counties? >> well, some of this is areas right in the middle of the state. right now. i'm here visiting my family about a 40 drive south of harrisburg and place called chambers berg, pennsylvania, which is part of franklin county. it's absolutely trump country. it's about 70% republican. lot of working class blue collar jobs, dairy farm coming in orchards or bag hear lots of warehouse jobs along the interstate. so these are the kinds of counties that kamala harris is trying to not flip, but at least get some
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votes. i think it's going to be an uphill battle though for her. i mean, within blocks from my family's home. you see trump flags. they're ubiquitous. you see signs with trump let's face on it. you still see f biden signs that have been up since 2020 so voters are kind of activated in this part of the state. but of course, one of the big criticisms of joe biden in 2020 and particularly hillary clinton in 2016, was that she wrote off some of these areas. and i think that that's what kamala harris is trying to avoid. i usually don't bring props, kim, but these are the things that have come to my family just in the last week. eight of them kamala harris has failed week and dangerously liberal policies kamala harris extreme on abortion. kamala harris is lying about trump's position on project 2025. so if you're in pennsylvania, you just cannot avoid this kind of politics. >> yeah, obviously is so much at stake there in that state. i
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mean, we heard in the debate kamala harris sort of talking about the war on ukraine and its effects on poland. obviously calculate to appeal to pennsylvania's large polish community. well, that resonate? do you think? >> it could, although i don't think that this is the number one issue facing most pennsylvania and said, if you look at pennsylvania is a lot of it in rural areas, is fracking and a lot of it is gun ownership. i think that those are two issues on which many voters cast their ballot singularly. but now on the margins, maybe it could be a difference, but in general, we think about americans not voting on foreign policy and ultimately stressing domestic policy issues when it comes to presidential elections. yeah, absolutely. and we heard her talking there in that clip about gun ownership, something that you flagged as something that is important in that state and the state state itself. i mean, it has more electoral votes, 19 than any other battleground state and
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pennsylvanians are routinely pick winners voting for ten of the last 12 white house winners. so it underscores just how vital your state is no, absolutely. i mean, pennsylvania is the biggest prize among the battleground states. as you said, 19 electoral votes, pa has voted for the eventual winner of the white house intended the last 12 elections, it's a bellwether for other states. the winter of pa has also won michigan and wisconsin, combining to form the so-called blue wall in eight consecutive elections, trump won pennsylvania in 2016. very close. it was about 48 to 47%. biden won in 20 2050 to 49, give or take. but here's a statistic that really struck me according to nate silver's election model. if harris wins pennsylvania, her odds of winning in the white house are 91%. if trump wins pennsylvania, his odds of winning skyrocket to 96%. so that's really why pennsylvania is the center of the political
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universe right now. >> yeah, the path to the white house clearly goes through pennsylvania. i want to take a bit of a a jog here. >> ask you about this. the pope made head the lines in the context of this election yesterday, he said catholic voters face a grim choice between the two candidates. he described it as coming down to a choice between what he called the lesser of two evils, referencing trump's stance on immigration and harris's stance on abortion rights. i want to play this humble shannon both of them are against life. but let it be clear, sending away migrants, not allowing them to work, not sheltering them is a sin. >> it's serious the charge doesn't allow abortion, not because it's closed minded, but because to have an abortion means to kill it is murder. is murder and we must be clear on this and also to be clear, the
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pope did add that it is important to vote so i'd be curious to get your take on this being, being disk by the pope it's unusual move by him. >> what effect might it have? who could it hurt the most? do you think? >> oh, that's really hard to tell. i mean, typically we think about the pope is fairly apolitical or not weighing in on american politics that explicitly. but it could, on the margins affect the catholic vote. of course but it may affect the vote more generally, already we know probably bet worshipping it's one of the biggest issues and i think there's every reason to think that that's going to favor democrats. we saw that in the 2022 midterms where the red wave never happened in large part because voters came out for the abortion issue. we saw that and state referendums across the country and just anecdotally again, and here in pennsylvania, we get ad after ad, after ad, that is on abortion and how democrats are now standing for freedom, for
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reproductive rights. i'm not sure ultimately if this is going to have a huge impact as actually the first time i've heard those comments, but it's super interesting these wang and that explicit of the way yeah, absolutely well, listen now we're sure of one thing that the candidates will be spending a lot more time in your estate really great to get your take on all this thomas gift. >> thank you so much thanks. >> as always, kim chiefs are meeting in prague this hour as russia ups the ante over the use of western long-range missiles by ukraine. on friday, russia's ambassador to the un reminded nato that his country is a nuclear power and that there will be consequences if ukraine gets the green light to use western made weapons for strikes deeper inside russia. he spoke a day after president vladimir putin raised the prospect of war over the issue meanwhile, the leaders of two of the countries that supplied long-range missiles to kyiv, the u.s. and britain met in washington on
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friday. us official said there would be no major announcements or immediate changes in and washington's policy in an exclusive interview with cnn's christiane amanpour, nato's outgoing chief said the alliance needs to send a loud and clear message to the kremlin i think we need to be even stronger. partly in what we do, provide more military support on toppled unpresented support, which is which has already been delivered. but as important is actually that we communicate long-term commitment because loud and clear, loud and clear for long term because now president putin, i'm afraid that he believes that he can wait us out and as long as he believes that he can wait us out, the war will continue so we, the policies that the stronger our meter support is and for the longer-term, we're willing to commit the sooner the war can end. but i don't think we can change the mind of president putin, but we can change his calculus so we need to make
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sure that he understands that he cannot win the battlefield. you will pay a high price. it will be a lot well suffering if he continues to fight this war. and then he may be willing to sit down and accept a solution where ukraine prevails as a sovereign independent nation in europe if kyiv gets the go ahead for strikes deeper inside russia, possible targets could include airfields, missile launchers, and ammunition depots. us assessments show russia has already moved some targets out of range of western made missiles. but as clare sebastian reports, some analysts say there are still many military assets left to strike ukraine has been using western long-range missiles on occupied territory for months. >> this believed to be a british storm shadow long-range stealth cruise missile hitting russia's black sea fleet headquarters in crimea last year, russian territory has been off-limits now a major reason for that is of course, western fears of russian escalation. but recently the u.s. has also been arguing that
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actually lifting those restrictions wouldn't make much difference on the battlefield because it claims many high-value targets, including aircraft drop those deadly glide bombs, are out of range for what exactly is in range. well, this map from the institute for the study of war suggests that there are well over 200 targets still in reach of us atacms. those are the red dots. you see there. and among them is also the headquarters of russia's southern military district in rostov. and dozens of command centers, storage depots weapons production facilities, and military regiments including, for example, the 52nd guards heavy bomber regimens believed to be responsible for a deadly cruise missile attack on an apartment block in dnipro last january, president zelenskyy warning that any further delay may mean us is proved right processor vote. >> they sure are they might say permission him six cosine election but territorial
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russia, excuse me, my own admission. >> but manama to do is you choose sure. but sabella strategic, ukrainian digital strategy meanwhile, at the white house on friday, ukraine was at the top of the agenda during that meeting between president biden and british prime minister keir starmer. >> again, no decision announced on using those western missiles deeper in russia but the white house says they reaffirmed their unwavering support for ukraine in its fight against russian aggression stages commitment, standing view to help ukraine as it defends against russia's onslaught of aggression. >> clear that putin will not make it clear will not prevail in this for the people of ukraine, but it's really important to scrape allies, that special relationship have this time let's talk about the global issues you have just identified. starting of course, with ukraine, where i think the next few weeks and months could be crucial very very important
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that we support ukraine in this vital war of freedom the current in president's as he needs the go ahead to conduct those strikes without delay. >> he spoke with cnn's fareed zakaria about where and how the western weapons could be used in russia everybody is looking the decision of the united states. everybody is waiting for side's decisions after that, they make decisions is true. >> and the so we wanted to earn much to use this weapon and just to attack these jets on the military basis, not civilians, infrastructure many their bails. >> so you just want to be able to attack us the basis that are being used to launch these weapons, these planes dismissed because these jets perry had these jets. these jets from that they use not only missiles they use these jets. and jets, us per month 4,000 president guided aerial bombs on just on the east of our terry 4,000
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bombs and you can watch the full interview with ukraine's president on fareed zakaria, gps. >> that's on sunday at ten in the morning eastern time or five in the afternoon? in kyiv meanwhile, there's another fight taking place off the battlefield in ukraine later, the song meant to remind you that thousands of children abducted to russia are still missing. plus control over gaza's southern border is one of the main issues holding up a ceasefire deal. still ahead, cnn gets rare access to the area known as the philadelphi corridor drinking too much? >> take back control with or health or health provides access to medication proven to make it easier to drink less warm to quit drinking altogether qualify for treatment today. and we're
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full editorial control over the report if two boats this place called the philadelphi corridor, which is a key bit of real estate in this conflict because it's emerged as a sticking point in the negotiations to get a ceasefire and get the hostages released. >> as you can see, it's right up against the egyptian border. that's the, that's the border fence right there. and it's important because the israeli say this is an area which has been used over the years and particularly over the past several months as a way of smuggling weapons into the gaza strip. some of the smuggling has taken place over land through presumably holes in the fence and through other border crossings. but a lot of it is taking place right under what has been taking place, right under our feet today, family and loved ones will hold a funeral for the turkish american activist killed by israeli forces in the occupied west bank. >> more than a week after her death, the body of 26-year-old,
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aysenur eygi is expected to be laid to rest in turkey where for her family lives, the group she was with says she was peacefully protesting against israeli settlement expansion in the west bank when israeli forces shot and killed her israel claimed she was hit indirectly and unintentionally by idf fire cnn's nic robertson is following developments from tel aviv nic before we get to that funeral, another funeral taking place today as well. what can you tell us about that the funeral for somebody who worked for unwra, the un agency that helps displaced and refugee palestinians he. >> was killed in the west bank with become very used to a large number of unrwa workers being killed by israeli forces inside of gaza, six were killed just a couple of days ago in a strike in on an unrwa school in gaza, where there were displaced people this
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particular person, according to unrwa was a sanitation worker for them and the al-faraa refugee camp in the west bank his death is the first unwra death from idf fire in the west bank in ten years now, it is disputed. unrwa say that he was on the roof of his house at night having a coffee when he was shot three times in the chest by an israeli sniper. the idf says that he was throwing are preparing to throw explosive devices at the idf who run a counter terrorism operation nearby at the time the idf over the past couple well days have killed ten people in and around the west bank who they say were, were terrorist operatives, palestinian islamic jihad announced five of their operatives were killed in these particular strikes. but when it comes to this unwra worker, the
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idf is saying that they have looked at their records they believe that he has been connected with terrorist activity in the past. so this is a dispute, if you will, between unwra and the idf geoff, over the nature of what this person who this person was it is not uncommon to see that in gaza, but now we see it as the idf is increasing its military operations in the west bank, stretching into the west bank. and this of course, is a very worrying development for all the un agent says. and civilians inside the west bank. >> yeah, nic, i started off talking about the death of an american activist who was killed death that resonated deeply here in the u.s. what more can you tell us there really it's very little advancement in the past couple of days, it appears into into the investigation into her
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death, the idf has said that this was not a he targeted death they were shooting at protesters where she worked, where she was and one of them was a ringleader who was presented i'm trying a threat to the idf because he was throwing rocks. >> now, president biden was toughened his language on her killer and just called it unacceptable secretary state anthony blinken said the idf's approach to protests in this way must change president biden has described it as not only totally unacceptable that there is required full accountability, but i think at the moment we're somewhere short of that full accountability. >> i appreciate those updates. nic robertson in tel aviv. thanks so much family and friends of ugandan olympian rebecca cheptegei, who died after a brutal attack acre gathering for her funeral
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today. the runner competed in the recent paris olympics, finishing 44th in the women's marathon. weeks later, police say her boyfriend attacked her at her home in kenya and set her on fire after a disagreement over land chapter guy has been laid to rest in her home in uganda. she suffered burns over 75% of her body and died after a few days in hospital. she's the third elite female athlete to be killed in kenya in the last last three years. and i see international kenya says her death highlights the urgent need to address femicide in the country she was 33-years-old lies and misinformation seem to be dominating the u.s. right-wing political lens, league ban coming up, we'll meet a former progressive so-called bernie bro move to the hard turn and became a pro-putin propaganda machine. that's coming up. please stay with us in the taking a break from breaking news to air. have i got news for you? >> breaking news.
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mutual physicians mutual welcome back to all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. >> i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom donald trump says he could change his mind and agreed to a debate with kamala harris previously, he said he wouldn't debate her again, the former president also wrongly insists he is leading in all post-debate polls is not true. trump also doubled down on his anti-immigrant rhetoric during his rally in las vegas. he said he would deploy law enforcement to quote, liberate our country, meanwhile, harris spent friday campaigning in pennsylvania. she accused trump of spreading hate and division, and she said, he has no plan to address the needs of the american people debunk claims that trump made at the debate are causing problems for city in ohio
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during tuesday's debate, trump told a nonsensical story about how haitian migrants were eating dogs and cats in springfield and speaking to reporters friday in california, trump refused to admit the store was a lie or to acknowledge the problems. it's causing for the people living in springfield here he is the mayor of springfield, ohio, the police chief, the republican governor of ohio of all debunk this story about people eating pets. >> and now bomb threat, this school kids being evacuated. why do you still spread? >> no, know the real threat is what's happening in our border because you have thousands of people being killed by illegal migrants coming in the mayor of springfield spoke with cnn about the impact of trump's lies we have to focus on making sure this rhetoric is dispel that these rumors are just, they're just not true. we have a beautiful city and we need, we need the national stage to pay attention to what their words are doing to cities like ours, legacy cities in ohio,
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legacy cities in the midwest that are working hard to be significant. and we are doing well at that. we don't need this pushback that is hurting our citizens and hurting our community spreading lies and misinformation in-person and across social media platforms has become a way of life for some people. cnn's donie o sullivan talk to one american man who went from following mainstream politics to pushing an extreme, radical right-wing propaganda movement, one of the biggest voices online isn't a former diplomat's regional expert or even a palestinian it's a 24-year-old white kid from california named jackson haka, that at all, just like you're not prepared to admit that israel is a terrorist organization, but you wrong kim jong moon it is a peace seeking leader. >> we're going to d nato phi, ukraine and we're going to de-nazify. >> you just sound completely bonkers. >> and the people the established palestinian
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movement, just want him to stop he and his followers called themselves maga communists and that isn't supposed to be a joke the crowd here was mostly male and mostly twice. >> i will just say once and for all so piers morgan never asked asked me again. >> no. >> i do not condemn hamas jackson social media following skyrocketed after the october 7 attack on israel i've been to russia. >> i've been to china their major cities are much nicer, but jackson had barely started speaking about gaza veteran know russia's better and stronger than ever before, and their leader has a very high approval ratings before he launched into pro russia and pro-china. >> talking points to more america supports real terrorists entities like israel, real terrorists, countries like ukraine, the more that we strengthen our actual enemies. most of what is
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said about vladimir putin in the mainstream press is just factually not true, illegally, williams jackson has become a darling of the kremlin and russian state tv it's made multiple trips to russia this year. we're in tokmak, which is just a few kilometers away from the front line and back but jackson wasn't always like this just a few years ago, he was a soft-spoken southern california kid, a bernie sanders border who even run for city council as a progressive. >> why do you think the russians? like you so much i speak truth. you are in some ways the quintessential american man right? you're surfer guy, california. so for the russians the chinese to have somebody like you to go over there and basically schitt's all over america? >> no, no, no. oh, no shooting on america. i love this contrail of the people i just wanted to be better. >> is there not a way to do that? what else having to fly back and forth to moscow and and seem to be embracing
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authoritarian regimes well, they're far less so toward darien in the united states. come on man ultimately, you know, ultimately i live in a generation where for the first time there's going to be a lower standard of living than the previous generation. >> that's not good. >> and i mean, i get i hear all that. you can't genuinely say that people in russia and people in china have more liberties than people in the united states. >> there's no free speech you have, you have a lot of free speech, really. >> you take in free speech you don't think you have free speech, you know, i mean, what's the public square today? it's obviously social media. >> you have 3 million followers on x. you could pose whatever you want your hosting events here, how do you not have free speech while kind of various speeches being curtailed, very simple. it's very simple. yes, i have 3 million followers on x but what about instagram? i've been banned youtube, i believe and ben, i was banned from riaa a dating site. >> jackson's bans might have
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something to do with his repeated sharings of hateful posts and his celebrations of violence yeah and, just a few years ago, jackson henkel was a bernie sanders supporter. he was a bernie bro he's not the only person who has made this sort of political transformation in just a few short years. we have matched other young american men who feel disillusioned are aggrieved, are left behind american buy american politics some way who have also gone from bernie bro two very far rice down these rabbit holes of extremism and haitian radicalization well, there's a fight in ukraine right now, not getting the attention. it perhaps deserves and one singer is working to change that i'll speak with ukraine's jury heil about her new song and what she says it's, time to put all eyes on kids
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one of ukraine's top recording artists is lending her voice to a fight taking place our from the front line, dividing her country again song by, a jury trial entitled hashtag. >> all eyes on the aim is to draw attention to the untold number of children abducted by russia since its full-scale invasion of ukraine gives you a sense of the scope of the problem ukrainian authorities estimate that around 20,000 children have been forcibly displaced from their homes and possible deported and they added on only a few hundred had been returned. the international criminal court has issued an arrest warrant for russian president vladimir putin and the russian commissioner for children's rights, for their alleged role in all of them now russia
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denies it's doing anything illegal, claiming it's bringing ukrainian children to safety. and ukrainian singer at jury heil joins me now from london. thank you so much for being here with us. such an important issue that you're singing singing about tell us about the song and the girl that inspired the girl we see in the video. >> hi thank you so much for inviting. it's a very, very important topic which isn't discussed enough and understand that having my music heard after eurovision, after people from all the world, attention to my music, i tried to show down what's going on and you're told that it's an untold number of children that being kidnapped by russia. but it's like 10,000. i just i need you to understand that. it's so many of children's lives. that has been taken. childhood that has been taken
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because russia how's that children are the future of the country and cynically stolen as stealing the children because they know that without them, we won't have the fuel sure so that's why we're fighting for them and we need, you, people from abroad, people from all the world to bring your attention to this topic too, because only together we can change it. >> and i'm sure that music can change it because it's the softest way to talk about something really important fira is a girl. >> she's 14-years-old, girl she's from mobile. and when people were occupant was occupied her father was killed by russians and they good enough kara, she tried to escape. >> she was blown on land mile it's horrible. there are so many of such stories and just by miracle, thanks to her grandfather, they brought her
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back to ukraine the miracle. >> it is a miracle. i mean, after her father was killed, i understand the only thing she she had while she was in hospital in donetsk was her father's cell phone, which she used to contact her family. i mean, if she hadn't had that, it could have had a very different ending. i mean, she could still be away. from her family right now? >> yes. and imagine how many this endings we already have and we can let this happen. but i see that people in the world, we all leave in our own bubbles. of course, it's okay, i guess. but it's also okay to take one minute and do something for the for the good so that's why we created this hashtag. all eyes on kids. and you can post the story of this children. you can post, destroy of the child that resonates with you. you can pause this video because it's about kara
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and you can raise your voice and be the voice of children. that's why i created this yeah. >> and the girls were talking about, i mean, she was as we say, one of the lucky ones. it's just important to, again, emphasize the scope here according to ukraine, almost 20,000 children who've been deported or forcibly displaced. and only about 400 have been returned. and that's one of the reasons that putin has been charged by the icc for the the unlawful deportation of children. i mean, it still is an issue that isn't talked about enough. you're trying to mobilize just normal people to sort of participate in all of this. but certainly it needs more than just you and i really more powerful forces have to be brought to bear to this. what more do you think that, you know countries and others can do to help these children well, i think we underestimate the power of ordinary people
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because small staff we'll make the way. >> i mean we learned this review revision when people are bringing the power, all the power together, and they just posed you honor, estimate and not to. but people in general, we underestimate the power of social media when you posted, you make people see and they boasted to, and it's become it's becoming bigger and bigger and bigger that's my mission. that's why i talk to people through music, because i know this will impact them of course, we're trying to get the attention of bigger organizations. >> and i see that music is working because even like look at us now, i'm working and i'm talking to you and through your source a lot of people, millions of people will see this and hopefully it will take actions. so all we have to do is small step take action, post
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all eyes on kids, and be the voice with children. there has to become there has to come back home do you hear from sympathetic russians, from people inside russia and those occupied areas well, actually, i don't look that way. i'm trying to trying to work with them before the invasion. we've been trying to be like rather something like that. and that didn't come out not nothing really good, came out of that now well, i'm with my music with the culture we are trying to bring this all to you or bring this all to the world and to exchange our cultural our culture is with them because i see that, that works better. >> you're talking about culture. you were a finalist in
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the eurovision contests. you say you've been fighting to keep ukrainian culture alive. do you still feel that it's under threat? i've talked to some ukrainians who've said that, that it's actually stronger now that the response to russian aggression has made people in ukraine and ukrainian ex-pats around the world more interested in passionate in their history and culture yeah, it's, it's another miracle how people under attack. >> they somehow together. >> they try to produce even more of more of songs because ukrainian pop industry is growing more art that's strange i was thinking, what if like, that would be another country, for example, not ukraine, another country. and i don't know, for example, great britain and another, in another
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country invaded would artists here be still hear, not like going anywhere and produce, produce, produce i don't know. but what i know about your grand is that it's a country of very brave people who know what they are standing for and but of course, we wouldn't make it all alone and we are we're very thankful for all the attention, for all the help and that's why i'm talking to you again, because we need that and we feel that you can help us in your doing that. thank you so much. >> well, listen. thank you. you're bringing attention to a really great cause. and those childrens certainly needs everyone's help. i certainly hope it bears fruit. ukrainian singer jerry hall. thank you so much for joining us. really appreciate it right back. stay with us
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community service, $500 fine, and a license suspension in new york it's also make a public safety announcement this is a mistake that i made but i'm hoping that whoever's watching and listening right now can learn from this mistake i know that i certainly have and like i said even one drink don't get behind the wheel of a car as offense, and prosecutors agreed to the softer sentence much the judges dismay. >> he called the plea deal surprisingly favorable to timberlake the singer avoided a potential one year in jail sentence nasa astronauts, suni williams and butch wilmore, who flew to the international space station aboard the boeing starliner capsule, say they aren't upset about having to stay at the iss months longer than they expected. even if it did mean an awkward family conversation things that i can't control. >> i'm not going to i'm not
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gonna fret over it. i mean, there's no benefit to it at all. there's nothing we can do. there's nothing we can do. so we mark which forward i have to say though in the back of my mind, you know, there's there's folks on the ground who had some plans, right? like my family and to spend some time with my mom and i think i was reading more about that, like the things that we had sort of all talked about in planned for this fall in this winter and i think i was little bit nervous to be honest. this with you to say like, okay, i'm not coming home for it, but, you know what like like we both mentioned in the very beginning, everybody was onboard may want to say that they are lucky to have the option to stay, that the mission teams made the right decisions and with more time, they believe they could have returned for an on starliner, which they were very happy to see land safely and also in space, the polaris dawn mission special sara gillis sled, a worldwide musical constant cert on her violin. >> listen to this
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is called ray's theme, and it was written by legend jon williams. >> it was beamed back to earth via the starlink satellite network played with groups of young musicians around the world and supportive children's charities, st. jude's hospital, and build sistema usa and she did it after taking part correction the first ever civilian spacewalk well, you could say new clothing style unveiled its soul fashion week, yours truly visionary. thank electronics giant lg, which is turning high-tech into high fashion, showed off garments made with wearable fabric, like video he owes screens. cnn's mike valerio, go look fashion something new that i've
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never seen before and really inventive these panels created by lg can twist bend and for my shoulder like the south korean tech giant says, this is a world's first when it comes to displays that are not only hi erez, but also stretchable. very good, very good. >> i'm going to show some patterns, or like the shape of bodies and then we change that a bases in the graph thanks, so that people recognize, oh, it's a display created from cutting-edge technologies such as flexible interconnects, film, and micro leds lg envisions the screens molded onto gadgets played on skin, and foreign explored on this. soul fashion week runway i thought amazing because as a designer, we have a many haldol to describe some ideas actually like it, techniques the fascia
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what's amazing to see how technologies can do to pick sailed and the patterns were very cool i feel like in the future, yeah, that's what we'll be lg debuted the technology in 2022 by its fast evolving this is a small but i think these elect first step to change the design world mike valerio, cnn, seoul this hour, of cnn newsroom. >> i'm kim brunhuber. i'll be back with more news in a moment the tv moments that took culture over the yeah people who are watching. >> and then our world change. >> he had an explosive reverberation tv on the edge from airs sunday, september number 22nd, did nine on cnn.
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