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occurred erin, i have a strain of we'd named after me connie chung weed? yes. >> i mean it doesn't get any better than have you tried it you have to go just during his a time oh, we guard. erin i have to go your pulling a gary condit on me gady. >> thank you. >> wonderful. what can i tell you? you you you can get a five pack pre-roll for only $22. do you know if that's good or bad? >> what you're trying to find out if i would, i actually don't know. >> i don't either well, we will try it. >> all right. i guess on that note, we'll leave this enemy not where anybody thought it would go now, and that's what happens when you have connie thanks so much to county can and hope everyone will read connie a memoir. it is out now
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>> thanks for joining us. the news continues now here on cnn and the fed makes a jumbo rate cuts what it means for you and the global economy are now just 47 days away from the us presidential election. >> you polling is giving us greater insight into which way voters or leaning in three critical battleground states, according to a set of
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post-debate quinnipiac university polls democratic presidential nominee kamala harris is leading her republican rival, donald trump, among likely voters in pennsylvania and michigan her one-point lead in wisconsin is within the margin of error on wednesday, both nominees sort to get their messages out. harris was in washington where she slammed trump's immigration proposals or trump criticized his democratic rival at a campaign rally in new york it's time to stop the lives, stopped the hoaxes, stop the smears, stopped the lawfare, the fake lawsuits against me, add stopped claiming your opponents will turn america into a dictatorship. >> give me a break. >> because the fact is that i'm not a threat to democracy. >> they are move our nation forward to a brighter future.
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>> donald trump and his extremist allies we'll keep trying to pull us backward. we all remember what they did to tear families apart and now they have pledged to carry out the largest deportation mass deportation in american history. >> both candidates also reacted to the move by the federal reserve to cut interest rates for the first time in four years harris called it a welcome news while an adviser in the trump camp called it a political decision yes it shows the economy is very bad to kind of buy that much assuming they're not just playing politics the economy would be very bad, or they're playing politics one or the other. but there was a big guy economy remains top of mind for many voters, the quinnipiac poll shows trump has a slight advantage on that key issue. >> well, james, his union has
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announced it's not endorsing anyone in this year's us presidential race. will this marks the first time in nearly three decades the teamsters have withheld an endorsement and those sense have been in support of the democratic nominee. despite that the harris campaign is touting the endorsement of local teamsters chapters in several key battleground states. a republican rival meantime is cheering survey data from the union indicating about 60% of its members supported him over harris, donald trump claims that amounts to an endorsement earlier today, i was honored to receive the endorsement of the rank-and-file membership of the teamsters. i love that president of another major union, the united auto workers, had this response to trump's claim it's not a trump endorsement. >> i believe their union just like argument in most other units i know of in this country are going to vote heavily for
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kamala harris and tim walz trump's comments on wednesday come as the republican nominee took his campaign to new york, cnn's alayna treene, is there with the details spent his wednesday evening in uniondale, new york as surprising choice that many people kind of raised their eyebrows out given clark is not a battleground, donald trump actually lost the state both in 2016 and in 2020 by 20 percentage points. >> so despite all that, trump on wednesday argued he believed that he could win new york even while acknowledging that some people, including his allies in washington dc, question him why he was choosing to come to such a blue state so close to the election. take a listen to how he put it when i told some people in washington the going up to new york, we're doing a campaign speech. >> he said, what do you mean new york? you can ever, nobody can win. republicans can win.
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and said i can win new york or weekend when new york, we're going to win now when i talked to donald trump senior advisers about this decision, they argued that a lot of the reason he came to new york, to long island specifically is because this steeped in personal history for donald trump. >> he grew up in new york and he's always wanted to do a large scale rally in new york arena. this was kind of checking off that box for the former president, but they also acknowledge that they don't necessarily believe that new york is going to turn red in november now. q. >> notable things that trump spoke about on tuesday one is that he had dressed an endorsement from a major union group that teamsters, a union actually, i should say not endorsement from the union group. >> however, donald trump falsely claimed that they had endorsed him. i'll note that their decision not to endorse this cycle is a big deal. they would going they have endorsed the democratic presidential nominee for the last several election cycles. every election
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cycle really since 1996 trump also vowed to visit springfield, ohio. of course, the place where both he and other republicans have been spreading baseless rumors about haitian migrants eating pets. he said he wanted to go visit that city as well as a war or colorado at another place where he has claimed that venezuelan gangs are taking over the city something officials on the ground argue is grassley overstated so a lot of harsh rhetoric on wednesday night and again, not necessarily in a state that is crucial to the election come november, alayna treene, cnn, uniondale, new york worried the fighting between israel and hezbollah could escalate following at twin attacks involving booby devices targeting the militant group, the lebanese foreign minister tells cnn, he fears the consecutive attacks could signal a quote introduction to war with scores of
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walkie-talkies exploded across the country on wednesday, killing at least 20 people and wounding more than 450 others. >> it comes a day after hundreds of pagers blew up nearly simultaneously across lebanon in an unprecedented attack which winded about 2,800 people. >> the death toll rose to 12 on wednesday israel's defense minister tacitly acknowledging his country's role in the exploding devices that we are at the start of a new phase in the war, and we must adapt this is true for everyone i think what i have said it before, we will return the citizens of the north to their home safely and that's exactly what we are going to do and israeli source tells cnn, israel carried out the pager attack after it believed hezbollah had discovered the devices capability, the u.s. >> says it was not involved in the operation elliot gotkine is following developments from
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london. elliott, as we know, his bluff it's reeling from these multiple attacks, not just the death toll, but the staggeringly high number of casualties. and then on top of that, this is completely humiliating for hezbollah it is a humiliation, anna, as you say, its members will be not unreasonably wondering what devices, what other devices, gadgets, gizmos they have in their homes, workplaces, cars, on their persons, which could also have been booby traps. >> so there's a kind of psychological warfare element to this. and as you say, this death toll by all accounts, something like 33 hezbollah members according to releases by the militant group, have been killed since the pager attacks on tuesday. we don't know specifically how many were killed in those pager attacks, but certainly this is the biggest loss of life for hezbollah since last october since hostilities began between hezbollah and israel, when hezbollah began firing on the country in support of the hamas terrorist attacks of october
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the seventh. so there's a psychological element, there's the physical element that deaths and injuries to its members. there's also, of course, the damage to its ability to communicate, its ability for its fighters to communicate among them cells. not least, since has hassan nasrallah, the leader of hezbollah earlier this year, told them to effectively bury their cell phones for fear of them being hacked or surveilled and encouraging the use of pagers. nasrallah, by the way, due to speak later on today, we do know of course that hezbollah has vowed retaliation as how does its main backer, iran, whose ambassador to lebanon was also wounded in tuesday's attack, although he's said to be recovering there are concerns that tensions are heating up and we know that just as another indication of that and concerns for a full blown war between israel and hezbollah, which has been in the main fear for months now, lloyd austin, the u.s. defense secretary, having three calls with his counterpart, yoav gallant in
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israel since tuesday, the americans were aware that israel was planning an operation in lebanon against hezbollah, but weren't aware of the specifics. but as you say, after tuesday's attacks from those pagers, wednesday's walkie talkies, there are concerns and questions and wondering as to what is coming next, what could happen on thursday? what could happen in the days ahead? ana elliott gotkine in london. thank you for the update joining me now, is seth jones senior vice president of the international security program at the center for strategic and international studies said, thank you for joining us. let's start with the impact of this attack. extensive casualties, obviously, but also that the psychological damage that this has done this attack has had at least two major effects. >> one is it's actually killed and wounded a number of individuals connected directly to hezbollah. and then even
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some innocent individuals. the second it has had in at least a short-term psychological impact of there's just a sense of hezbollah, right now, whether it's pagers walkie talkies, potentially you even cell phones, that they're vulnerable as you say, first, it was the pages. >> now walkie talkies. i mean, what else could have been compromised well, i mean, any any technology right now, i think the there are other options hassan nasrallah has already encouraged hezbollah members not to use cell phones, sold, abuse computers. >> so i think they're arranged. there still a range of other technology options that i think has what has to be a little bit concerned about now where he hezbollah is at now is in some ways where al-qaeda ended up being at, including osama bin laden, which is having to resort to couriers to pass information along because any
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kind of technology was too dangerous, it could either retract or it could be weaponized, like what we've seen this is obviously highly embarrassing and humiliating for hezbollah how do you expect them to react there are three options. >> these are mutually exclusive, but one is hezbollah is a an international organization. it's conducted attacks against israeli embassies. israeli and others around the globe in latin america, in africa, in europe, in asia so one option is there's a retaliation somewhere else around the world option number two is hezbollah has between by our count, hundred and 20,000 to 200,000 standoff weapons, including short range ballistic missiles that they could fire on israel.
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and then a third is hezbollah, partly through its iranian connection, the islamic revolutionary the guards quds force has allies across the region in syria, in iraq, the houthis in yemen we could see some kind of coordinated activity as well. again, these aren't mutually exclusive, but i think there are a range of ways has blocked could respond now hezbollah, we understand believed that the israelis had developed technology to hack into phones. your activate microphones, and cameras, spy on users. ironically, the israelis had opted for an old school basic tactic in catching his villa completely off god, i mean, what do you make of israel doing this and doing this now interesting is we're at a period right now where the israelis are starting to wind down the war in gaza, it's not over, it's not going to be over in at least a short term
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but israeli leaders, including prime minister netanyahu have said repeatedly that they are going to turn their attention to lebanon and to hezbollah firing of anti-tank guided munitions and other standoff weapons from south litani river, north so the blue line and area that has caused the israelis to evacuate individuals even hotels that i was in recently when i was in tel aviv so this is really the israelis starting to focus on both direct strikes aircraft and other drones that they've been firing into lebanon. >> and now these sort of unconventional irregular types of activities, covert action. so i think what we're really seeing is this combination of the israelis i expect hezbollah do the same of varying both conventional and very unconventional attacks against
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each other as we heard from us secretary state anthony blinken saying that the u.s had no knowledge of these attacks, had nothing to do with them. >> he said that the audit states is trying to work for a peaceful resolution to the conflict, not escalated i guess so i ask you what has taken place israel doing this to hezbollah. how can it not escalate tensions in that region? >> yeah i think since october 7, we've seen the war. >> i'm going to call it a war between israel and hezbollah creep up the escalatory ladder. there have been thousands of stand-up weapons fired from both sides at each other killing both civilians and military officials. >> i think this is just another step up the escalatory ladder, but it is still well below
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full-scale war. 2006 was the last real case where these really put some boots on the ground, including in southern lebanon. we haven't gotten that stage yet if we do look out for a lot more weapons flying at israel from lebanon, and probably also syria and potentially iraq and even, even yemen. and then on the other hand, i would expect to see the israelis really pummeling parts of of lebanon, including beirut. >> so there's more war rings up. the escalatory ladder. >> if they continue to go up not quite there, but it is concerning it says jones. >> we appreciate your analysis. thanks for joining us thank you very much still to come a big news for the u.s. economy were the first interest rate cut since the start of the pandemic and it's the first of several to come and later, sean diddy combs remains in federal
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with youth you. >> every step of the way calling it rebuffed rebuffed.com for your free and home design consultation here's a look at us futures as we wait for markets to open in the coming hours, as you can see, everything is in positive territory. >> we are keeping an eye on the major indices to see if there's any further reaction to the big news from the u.s federal reserve? >> it announced an aggressive cut to interest rates by half a point. >> it's the first cut since march of 2020 at the height of the pandemic. well, since then, right saturday 23 year high for more than a year, fed chair jerome powell says the move is a sign of commitment to keeping step with the ever-changing us us economy. but it wasn't unanimous, drawing the first dissent from a board member in nearly 20 years, one member. what did you see? a smaller cut. >> cnn's matt egan breaks down the feds bold move this is a
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major milestone for the economy. >> the first interests three cut since covid and the fed data cited to go big, the fact that they went with a jumbo-sized interest rate cut. >> it's telling on multiple levels. first, it shows they're not worried about inflation anymore than chair jerome powell, he stopped short of declaring victory over inflation, but they're all but doing it does also suggest though, that they are worried about what they're seeing in the jobs market. powell, he said repeatedly that he's not a warmed with the jobs market. he even said at one point, the labor market is in a strong place. we want to keep it there but there are some economists who are concerned that the fed is late and that they need to play catch-up before the cracks in the jobs market turn into something more ominous. >> so the fed has made clear that they've switched the mission. >> they've gone from fighting inflation the fighting unemployment of course, all of this is happening just weeks before this hotly contested
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election powell, he stressed politics played no role here, and that the fed only does what they believe is right. and i asked powell about the idea from former president trump that the sitting us president should have a say in where interest rates go. >> and powell, he made clear he's not a fan of that idea. we do our work to serve all americans. we're not serving any politician, any political figure, any cause, any issue. nothing. it's just maximum employment and price stability on behalf of all americans and that's how the other central banks are set up to. it's a good institutional arrangement which has been good for the public and i hope that i happen and strong, strongly believe that it will continue. >> the power went on to say that the evidence is clear. independent central banks are the ones that have lower inflation matt egan from the federal reserve, cnn were joining me now is ryan patel a
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senior fellow at the drucker school of management at claremont graduate university. ryan, as always, great to see you as we know, the fed cuts a full 50 basis points. many thought it would just be 25 i haven't told me what is your reaction to this wearing one word. wow, i mean, this is a fed that has very, very conservative over the last two years and now they come with the first cut to be 50 basis points. so i think two things. it sends a message to wall street because we saw i think you and i were together a handful weeks ago where it was lawsuit was not very happy. have a hold down. week about the information in jost and so this kind of helps settle it down and i also think that now the focus this is really price stability and unemployment. and these are the two things that jerome powell was really short from saying that he's still a little bit worried about on what the next decrease in
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interest rates will come. and that still, he still reserves the right to make a pause do you see this perhaps couldn't be interpreted as a sign of panic because as i'm sure, some economists might might read it this way. do you see that perhaps they are seeing things ahead that are more worrying than, than many of us may immortals realized that the economy is during on recession mean i truthfully think that it wasn't that i actually even though he said it wasn't, i believe that they missed this meeting. >> they could have done a 25 basis-point in june in place was already easing down. they probably had a good sense it was going to continue and then they would have done another 25 basis points in september right? now, we're back to where we are. i think that there was a little bit of a panic right. with some of the numbers and with inflation already in the 2% and interest rates northeast six, there's a big gap that you had to do something. so i think this
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wasn't a panic because something was wrong underneath this system. i think it was more of like you got to start right-sizing think it now. and how do you get there quicker? and so yes, there's still it's still not solid. i don't think we're still out of the woods because we're still teetering. i mean, it's a bouncy when you decrease inflation and not really kind of have the labor market or unemployment rise in jobs, right? it is still really tricky to play this out what about the market? >> because it was pretty much flat, rose 3%, then dropped about 3%. i mean, what is that telling you nothing. >> i knew that that was going to happen every time there's good news. it just like okay. but i think part of it is the argument as it was priced in and you would say logic would tell you that 50 basis points, if it was the word everyone that using jumbo, if it was really jumbo wouldn't the market go crazy not really. and so i think it just took it as okay. >> we got direction what's next
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and the markets always looking what's next. >> and for me, that's important of like, okay, you're gonna do 25 basis points at one qatar to cuts this year. is it going to line up with four cuts next year? and so jerome powell and the fed, this is not the time to not, you know, you have to be really transparent and the numbers over the next month than the jobs numbers are going to be really important to be, you know, what, what's next? and i think that's what the wall street always looks at. >> ryan, the dot-plot, it points to further rate cuts by the end of this year and more substantial cuts in 2025. i mean, how will all of this play in the upcoming election? >> yeah. i mean, i am out of the camp that this wasn't a move that and wanted the fed wanted to make september before the election. >> i think that's interesting. i think the dot-plots also interesting because i look at you see the media and you see the majority. but like you know, it's clear the dot-plot like, you know, there's two cuts possibly this year the. next year? they're kind of
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split of three to four. i mean, really the focus should be the best-case scenario this time next year, you're interest rates around three, some three to 4% in-between. and now you're really having relief for middle-class lower, middle incomes toward businesses mortgages we'll be more of an effect than just today of 50 basis points, which in the short-term, most people are not feeling ron patel always a pleasure. >> thank you so much for joining us. ramping up pressure on republicans to shut down the government unless they pass a controversial bill targeting non-citizens in the u.s. the proposal included in a short-term spending plan requires proof of citizenship in order to register, to vote but house republicans were unable to muster enough votes to pass the package on wednesday house speaker mike johnson says he'll draw up a new temporary spending bill to keep the government running beyond the end of this month when current funding is due to
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expire, he did not provide details disgraced movie executive having one weinstein pleaded not guilty to a first-degree criminal sex act in a new york courtroom on wednesday, prosecutors announced the indictment last week, but it was not unsealed until wednesday because weinstein was too ill to attend court. the indictment stems from an alleged assault in 2006 prosecutors are looking to consolidate this new indictment with weinstein's retrial on sexual assault charges related to a 2020 case music mogul, sean diddy combs remains in federal custody after a judge denied his legal team's appeal for bail. combs was indicted on charges of racketeering conspiracy sex trafficking, and transportation to engage in prostitution he could be sentenced to life in prison if convicted on all charges, cnn's kara scannell has more details on wednesday's hearing music mogul sean diddy combs
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will remain behind bars as he is awaiting trial on racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking charges a federal judge denying his bail application, saying that there were no conditions that made him comfortable releasing diddy given his danger to the community and its potential? >> for witness tampering. judge also rejecting diddy's proposed bail conditions, including having a visitor log, having no internet access, and no cell phone accessing and that those were insufficient. did he was escorted out of the courtroom by two us marshals. see was headed back into federal detention. his lawyers spoke to reporters after court saying he will appeal. >> he's ready. he's focused. >> he has been ready to defend this case since he first found out about this case. >> nothing has changed james from his perspective i obviously would much prefer to fight this case with him out of jail and we are going to try to bring that about comes as an attorney telling me after court, i'm not going to let him sit in their a day longer than he has to. he also asked
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the judge to recommend moving combs from the federal detention center in brooklyn, which is known for its quote, horrific conditions to a county courthouse in new jersey. he said they're going to fight this. and diddy is going to trial kara scannell, cnn, new york still to come the top names in tech gathered in washington to discuss how they fighting election interference online, what they told lawmakers just plus cnn talk to trump supporters at a maga boat parade in florida why they think he will win in november have i got news for you. saturday at nine on cnn. >> it's michael's lowest prices of the season take up to 70% of thousands of items like fall the court and marks. a huge savings on these and great deal on frames and you'll love this yarn is on sale, sign up to earn rewards while you save what is circle surplus appeal
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you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title. to 6 million coin bonus make every today, he went i'm elizabeth wagmeister in los angeles. in this is cnn investigators. believe iranian hackers have attempted to tip the scales and the upcoming us presidential election. >> they are accused of trying
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to send information stolen from donald trump's campaign to officials with joe biden's reelection team over the summer. the campaign for kamala harris says the information was only sent two a few stuff as personal emails and that the messages looked like spam or phishing attempts. us authorities say there's no indication anyone replied. iran denies the accusations, calling them fundamentally unfounded election meddling and misinformation was a key topic on capitol hill wednesday, leaders from some of the biggest names in tech testified before the senate intelligence committee about what they're doing to keep their platforms under control. >> we what is your policy if in that critical time period before an election there's deep fake content attacking a candidate for office which can be demonstrated to be an authentic but cannot be decisively attributed to a
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foreign actor how will you handle it? >> we would label it, would label it so they users would see that the veracity, the truth of it is under real questions. we would label it but what about how it's handled by the algorithm and its amplification or suppression. >> we would also make available to us the ability to demote the circulation of mr. smith yeah. >> i we don't have the same issue in terms of a consumer platform, but i think that the notification to the public, the labeling, i do think that's the essence of what we all need to be prepared to do very quickly. >> and i would add to that that we've notified the foreign influence task force so that there was government awareness of the situation but the latest also made recommendations on what lawmakers can do to help, including regulations on deep fakes mandatory labeling of ai contents, and legislation protecting elections from the deceptive use of ai meantime, republican has converged on florida's panama city beach.
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>> to show their support for donald trump by holding a maga boat parade. cnn's elle reeve talk to them and has this report shelter island, which i've never been to. >> that was my first time coming. we were in the middle of the parade following the lead boat. well decorated with all the flag there's a contest who can be the most trumpian and i want to it's a weedy your motor 21 worst power to makes a very frozen mudslide pro-american. >> he loves america for one, i love america. i served this country. i love america we're from the same place in queens, new york. so that's my home. >> i live in latitude margaritaville. >> what's your most important
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issues the economy getting interest rates down, getting it where we can afford to live in america. >> right now it's too expensive. >> okay, now, let me maybe ask the u.s. slightly in polite question but, you know, she couldn't afford a boat. you're not heard it so bad, right? because a boat class, a lot of money a lot of upkeep. >> nobody gave me. i earned everything that i've got. i'm retired, military retired power plant, and i am successful in retired with boats, jet skis because i did it right. and everybody has that chance whether they choose or not, that's up to them i would never tried to take a living away from you in that way. >> but what i'm asking is grocery these are probably a smaller part of your budget than say, you know, someone who is like a little worse off. i'd think it's interesting that people who are a little so bit more comfortable are still so concerned about the economy. to sue because i want my money to go further. >> i want inflation to go down
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when interest rates go back down i want all that, but that covers everybody in the economy not just me, not just the poor, not just the rich. and it covers everybody. >> that's something i've heard from some people tell me if this applies to you is like they're worried, their kids aren't able to the florida house, are i train my kids and taught my kids properly. they have great educations and they're both successful in their careers. actually, they're doing better than me another woman told us that she had a good retirement, but she worried about others who are having a hard time with higher prices whether they were locals are on vacation, everyone we spoke to at the boat parade, was it a good mood? but underneath there was anger about immigration secure border and i like wet and people in the right way. can you give me some specifics? how do you see immigration affecting you in your life in texas? >> so i'm recently retired by those in the multifamily business which has managing and owning apartments and i see the
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effects of illegal immigration at my properties. >> so you're telling me there have been incidents at your apartment buildings and we've had to call the cops yeah i've seen it firsthand most said trump didn't do well at the presidential debate, though they didn't think it was his fault while they were ambivalent about his false claim that haitian immigrants in springfield, ohio are eating pets they tended to defend trump for saying, i'm not saying they're eating cats and dogs. >> i think that's a little cuckoo, but they do have a different belief system. they're polite, they're nine they're not hurting anything or anybody. but it's just i can see the change in the demographics and not every town can absorb a big influx of population do i believe that actually happened or not have no evidence of it? do i doubt it? >> i don't know i can't say. >> i can't say thumbs up, thumbs down. >> do you think it shows good judgment on trump's part to talk about it? it's not
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confirmed. >> i think it shows good judgment for every one of us on every side to look into it there. all of us to investigate it. and i live there. so a will truly say that the record of it and the city manager says they don't have a record of it in the governor has now governor my governor, why? >> no why he said something about it? i'm going to look it up i'm happy to look it up all by myself google it if i have service something that came up on the internet and the internet can be quite crazy sometimes to wine told cbs news, dewine says he trusts city officials who have said they do not. they have not received any credible reports of such conduct. mayor rue of springfield says, no, there's no truth in that. they have no evidence of that at
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all. so i think we go with what the mayor says. he knows his city dewine mindset. >> sure. >> that's a great way to pass the buck. >> you think trump's going to win but do you think i think we'll be in the middle of a civil war? >> i'd wake, don't matter who wins. or you said this, that polarizing on both sides elie reeve, cnn panama city beach, florida coming up israel's spy agency, mossad, has long history of targeting the country's enemies in ways big, small unsurprising we take a look at the agency's past unbiased reviews, unrivaled research, and unreal favor thanks elevate your every day. >> cnn underscored the all our reviews and recommendations that underscore.com here on the internet, you can pretend to be anything like a medical professional it's for skilled electricians don't trust the unfiltered internet. >> angie has 30 years of experience finding the best
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to walmart and find total bsw welcome back. >> well, sources tell cnn the pager attack on tuesday was a joint operation involving the israel defense forces and the country's spy agency, mossad while said, has a long and deadly history of tracking down israel's enemies. as cnn's brian todd explains walkie-talkies explode throughout lebanon over the course of two days, the latest in a long line of audacious,
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lethal sometimes high tech operations. but the legendary israeli intelligence agency, mossad, the israelis are the best. >> if you find your name on one of their hit list you probably can't get insured. they have excellent operational security. they don't wake this has july a bomb secretly planted in a tehran guest house two months in advance is how a source tells cnn hamas leader ismail haniyeh was killed which iran and hamas say was done by israel. >> another assassination in iran of a top nuclear physicist in 2020 was allegedly conducted by an explosion plus a remote controlled machine gun in a car parked nearby. and a palestinian bomb maker nickname the engineer was killed in 1996 using a cell phone with perhaps just over an ounce of explosives. >> he put it up to his air. the phone said, hello, dad, and then the israelis remotely exploded the phone in blue. this side of his head off. so
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it's a very sophisticated operation. it was very precise in the 19 in baghdad, according to one historian of the mossad and israeli hit squad placed poison in toothpaste used by a palestinian militant who later died in excruciating death. but there have also been unsuccessful operations in 1990 he seven mossad agents in jordan sprayed a lethal dose of fentanyl into the ear of hamas leader khaled mashaal. but some of the agents were captured. israel was forced to provide the antidote and to release at least 19 prisoners. michelle is still alive today. one of mossad's earliest successes in 1960 agents track down notorious nazi adolf eichmann, an architect of the holocaust. he was located and captured, hiding in argentina and spirited back to israel to stand trial. >> and they managed to grab eichmann, drugged them, and send them back to israel as a patient, eichmann was executed in 1962. mossad also tracked down almost every terrorist who killed israeli athletes at the
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munich olympics in 19 1972. during operation wrath of god suspects were assassinated one by one, but so was a moroccan waiter in norway, who, in a case of mistaken identity, was killed but turned out not to have been involved. still operations like these recent ones against hezbollah have a lasting effect on israel's enemies psychologically, they're going to turn on one another who are the informant's? how could this happen? they're going to be fearful. they're going to be in short, disrupted the new york times, citing officials and security experts reports that earlier this year has bullet leader hassan nasrallah put strict limits on the group's use of cell phones because he thought they were too vulnerable to israeli surveillance. intelligence expert chris cost to tells us that what hezbollah will likely have to do. now, in the wake of these beeper and walkie talkie attack? tax is go back to more old-fashioned physical methods of communication like couriers and dead drops. brian, todd, cnn washington
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recovers from two typhoons to new tropical systems are expected to make landfall in asia on thursday, tropical depression 16 developed off vietnam's coast where it is expected to make landfall. >> farther north, tropical storm polar son has lost strength, but is still expected to bring anywhere from 50 to more than 200 millimeters of rain when it comes ashore near shanghai. wildfires raging in portugal claimed another home on wednesday, affiliate cnn portugal, quote the structure exploding live on air well, no one was inside the home at the time. 100 fires are burning across portugal. >> and authorities say 28 of those are sigrid. >> a good 5,000 firefighters are working to get them under control and civilians are stepping in to help transporting water on tractors and using garden hoses to try to protect homes at least seven people have died in the fires, including three firefighters
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amazon warehouse employees have something to smile about. does that retailer is raising their pay and giving them a prime perk that story and more ahead cnn this morning with kasie hunt tomorrow at five eastern i'm nfl hall of famer. >> dan marino, you know, i used to be afraid of things like defensive lines, losing games. but what's insane is that years later by biggest fear became trying to fall asleep, but the insanity stop. ron learned about relaxing them sleep. i still started sleeping again. the first night while i might not be worried about winning games anymore, i still want to perform at the top of my game relax him sleep. completely changed how i live my life, and it will change yours to join the hundreds of thousands of people who've experienced the relief and health benefits from getting a great night sleep and get relaxing them sleep. >> i've been using relaxing them for about ten years now. i
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being hampered at a five-star resorts know skechers basketball strike in western russia cause an explosion so large, it may have created a small earthquake, a ukrainian security source says the drones destroyed a russian ammunition depot. about 400 kilometers west of moscow on wednesday so as manu, just in norway later said, they detected seismic activity, probably caused by the blast. this before and after video shows the massive plumes of smoke following the attack. a russian state news agency blamed the fires on fallen drone debris without mentioning what the target was. >> ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy is expected to meet with you vice president kamala harris in washington next week, according to multiple sources, donald trump says you'll probably meet with him as well the ukrainian leader will also attend the un
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general assembly next week in new york, he wants to present what he calls his victory plan to both harris and trump as well as president joe biden can say the total victory plan has been fully prepared. all the points, all the key accents, the necessary annexes. with details to the plans have been identified, everything has been worked out. the most important thing now is determination implemented. >> there is no end cannot be any alternative to peace. and if freezing of the war or any other manipulations that will simply move the russian aggression to another stage the u.s. is trying to counterbalance the spike in the russian and chinese military activity in northern pacific. the u.s. army has deployed part of its use let's known as arctic angels to alaska as remote schurmeier ireland, a military statement says the move is meant to show the army can deploy ready and lethal force anywhere within hours chinese and russian aircraft have ramped up their operations
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in the region the us intercepted russian military aircraft flying near alaska four times over the last week china and russia conducted joint air patrols in june amazon workers in the u.s. are getting a raise and new benefits. the company announced wednesday that it's raising pay rates by at least $1.50 an hour for its more than 800,000 warehouse and transportation workers well, that will bring the average starting wage to more than $22 an hour workers will also get amazon's when $139 per year prime membership for free, the pay increase is in line with what rivals ups, walmart, and target have done for their us employees. well done to them well, thanks so much for you company i'm anna coren in hong kong. >> newsroom is next with my colleague, max foster in london stay with cnn people were watching and then our world changed.
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now to receive 15% plus of free shower package he told us who he was should abortion be punished if it has to be some form of punishment, then he showed us for 54 years, they were trying to get roe v. >> wade terminated, and i did it and i'm proud to have done it. >> now, donald trump wants to go further with plans to restrict birth control and abortion nationwide, even monitor women's pregnancies. we know who donald trump is he'll take control. we'll pay the price. >> i'm kamala harris and i approve this message which pods biggest sale of the summer is ending, save up to 25% on moving in storage until september 23. and cy pods has been trusted with over 6 million moves but don't wait, use promo code big 25 to save visit hod.com today. >> it won't be hard to find someone to fix this. but before i started, angie's list, different story. a lot has changed for us to dng since then, but the issues facing
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