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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  September 23, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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battleground blitz, donald trump and his running mate targeting with the seven swing states that could hold the key to winning the white house as new polls show, the republican ticket is doing well in the sun belt states and a day of reckoning in lebanon as nearly 300 people are reportedly killed in israeli airstrikes the idf plays a high-risk game with its new strategy for confronting hezbollah and new details from the investigation into the titan submersible disaster, the company's co-founder explains why they needed to build their own subs while defending a controversial decision over how they did it. >> we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central
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of battleground states underway today is election day is just over six weeks away. next hour, former president trump will hold the first of two campaign events in the critical cool state of pennsylvania. he is running mate j.d. vance, campaigning in the swing state of north carolina, where mark robinson, the embattled republican nominee for governor, is also set to hold a campaign event this hour, the defiant gop candidate vowing to continue his campaign despite a big exodus of his topic aides after cnn reporting uncovered lewd and racist comments that he made on a porn website years ago, he denies making the posts. all of this coming as a brand new polling, as brand new polling is out today, it shows donald trump narrowly ahead in arizona no clear leader in georgia and north carolina you know, we do have a team of correspondents joining us to
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break all of this down. so let's start with kristen holmes here we have trump campaigning in pennsylvania today as he's getting what is some pretty encouraging news on these key states in the sunbelt? >> yeah, look, these are the kind of polls that his team has been hoping. we're going to come out. obviously as we're looking at them there within the margin of error the other than arizona, which he has a five-point lead on according to this new york times poll these were the kind of numbers that they were hoping to see after what they believe to be was a boost for kamala harris. they're also looking at the poll numbers and they believe that this is really the strongest that donald trump has ever polled in 2016 and 2020, he was pulling far below where he is pulling now. so they believe but this is encouraging information. now i do want to note one poll on there, obviously is that north carolina poll shows within the margin of error. we know donald trump is going to be back now in north carolina in two days on wednesday, notably not by his side as mark robinson and we don't expect them to be anywhere near the candidate they are trying to keep him as far away as possible. possible. but one thing i want to point out was something that had
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nothing to do with this election. it was actually something that he said when he was asked about the future and his political future. this is donald trump, over the weekend. here's what he said about what would happen if he loses this election and whether or not he would run again and take a listen if you're not successful this time, do you see yourself running again in four years no idea. >> know. i don't i think that that will be it will be it. i don't see that at all. i think hopefully we're going to be successful now, part of this obviously is also the fact that donald trump doesn't see himself as somebody who's going to lose. so that's part of this also looking at 20:28, if he would be 82-years-old. so perhaps there is some kind of clarity there that he would be not taps too old to run during that time, but i would likely say given the people that i've spoken to that most of this is because he doesn't want to admit to himself that he's not going to win in 2024. >> yeah, he sort of says that
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caveat at the end that he doesn't he's not going to lose. so then he would have served two terms and that's the limit on north carolina. i wonder how the trump campaign is looking at mark robinson then and whether they're worried that this could be a drag for trump looks, they're hoping he goes away. i mean, as kristen was saying, the former president is going back to north carolina where he just was on saturday. that tells you all you need to know about their worry about north carolina. that has become a battleground state that has increasingly of interest and more to the harris campaign in an award of the trump campaign's so mark robinson, the embattled lieutenant governor running for governor, is at the center of all of this he is still campaigning. much of his staff abandon him and left over the weekend, but he was at a stop earlier today in north carolina and he had this to say about the race rear for small business people we're here for all those parents out there who are losing their children to fentanyl where volatiles people out there that are struggling to keep a small businesses open. we're here
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for the people who are we're here for the people who are struggling to get their children a decent education. we not here to talk about 15 or 20-year-old salacious false lives. they don't want to talk about what's going on right now they want to talk about what possibly happened 15 years ago what possibly happened 15 years ago. look, he has denied these allegations that he made some very racist and a salacious post, but you could see his campaign behind him. there, there was no one behind him, obviously very small press gaggle there. look, this is not what any republican wanted to see. some i'm more afraid of this exact thing happening, but donald trump now, i mean, he endorsed him, so yes, they're trying to distance themselves from him. the question is, what is the effect on the down-ballot? and a lot of republicans are very worried about this north carolina is a rare statement. it as a history of electing republican presidential candidates and democratic governors that happened in 16. it happened four years after that. so we
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shall see how much this impacts the republican ticket overall. but it says all you need to know when trump is going back, anyone's robinson nowhere with him? >> yeah, it says a lot, jeff. all right. priscilla, so huge fundraising haul for the vice president would she really wants another debate? he's not getting it. and so do her advisers. >> well, we don't know yet. i mean, the foreign president says that he doesn't want that the vice president has consistently needling him. look, it's a surprise harris advisers really were delighted by her debate performance earlier this month, but they were also aware of two things. one that just because he had a good debate performance doesn't translate to a win in november, hillary clinton often came up in the conversations i was having from 2016, but also that voters are still trying to get to know her. if you look deep into these polls, what you find is that voters are still saying they don't know enough about her, about her policies and so this is also a play to try to get her out to a larger audience in addition to all of her campaign stops but she
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directed reporters on it specifically this weekend, take a listen stage. let's have another debate is more to talk about and the voters of america deserve to hear the conversations that i think we should be having on substance, on issues on policies, what's your plan? was my plan and we should have another one before elections and so i've been hearing that while on the campaign trail with her, we can expect that that's going to be a steady drumbeat over the next few weeks. >> but you also mentioned the money this has been a through line since she took the lead of the party's ticket. they have had a boost with fundraising and have felt pretty good about it, but they still need more. remember in trying to introduce her, it also means hitting their airwaves. they already reserved $370 million in ads and one of the ads that they ran north carolina was tying donald trump to mark robinson. so they're trying to seize these moments. those moments require money. so the money is what they're trying to continue to bring in 27 million at a weekend fundraiser certainly does help with that.
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priscilla alvarez. thank you so much, john of zeleny, kristen holmes. thank you. and let's talk more about these developments now with larry sabato, he's the director of the center for politics at the university of virginia. larry, i wonder what you're seeing, looking at north carolina, what this mark robinson business portends for trump in a state that has a history of ticket-splitting well, it may have a history of ticket-splitting, but i think this is kind of unprecedented you know, there are scandals, there are many scandals and middle rank scandals. >> and this one is very hot to the touch, the stove is on. >> full blast so i don't know how comparable the previous situations are. >> and you can tell that republicans are greatly distressed by this already. >> the republican governors association is hinting that the money that they may have planned to spin it did plan to spend to help robinson maybe
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you who's better elsewhere. >> it's always what the political professionals are thinking and saying that has an impact on what actually happens and whether a candidate can get his message out. >> so i'd say they're not real happy with this. >> they shouldn't be happy with this and it will affect trump's bot-2 some degree. >> i've talked about reverse coattails, maybe that's not the right term for it, but you're going to have republican voters who will be discouraged and their enthusiasm level will decrease because of this. pretty shocking report about their nominee. this is not some minor you're a little thing this is got about 20 different pieces to it yeah, it is it is hot to the touch as you say, it is really something this reporting from our kfile. >> another key battleground that we're watching, of course, is arizona and trump is up five points there outside
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the margin of error, down-ballot you have democrat ruben gallego. he's up six points over kari lake in the senate race abortions on the ballot and nearly 60% of arizona and say, they'll vote in favor. so there's a lot of vectors pointing in different directions here. what is your read on the state? >> no one is going to be surprised if donald trump in the end carries arizona. after all, joe biden, who had quite a head of steam under him at the end of the campaign in 2020, just barely carried it. you had a lot going for him then. i don't know if kamala harris will have quite that much going for her at the end? we'll see now, having said that, i find the new york times sienna poll difficult to swallow just a month ago. >> you had kamala harris in their polling up five points now, a month later was the only significant event in between being the debate that all almost everyone, including many members of the trump staff
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admitted that harris won easily over-trump suddenly trump is up five points. that's a change of ten points in a month with no clear cause i just find that strange you know, i'm i look for strange things. there a lot of shows named strange well, what about the i'm trying to get the word right of how the fbi is looking at this. >> the suspected attempted assassination of trump, again, at his golf course. i mean, how do you see that? maybe playing because that is something in that happened in could have factored into this polling yes and no, everyone should condemn that. >> and i think just about everybody does because everybody know who think its sways voters and that's something that could have swayed voters or maybe explain what, what is a shift here? >> well, maybe, but what
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happened after the first assassination attempt, there was no bump at all generated by that this one might have been different. there's no reason why it should have been, but again, that's hard for me to believe. i think we need to look at polling averages the, polling averages suggests that harris actually leads press former president trump by a few points nationally, maybe 345, like the nbc and cbs polls showed yesterday, they were taken at about the same time as the new york times sienna poll yeah, we'll certainly be looking at that average and see as more polling is coming out, especially arizona, we haven't seen as much polling there, so maybe as we get more, it'll tell us something, larry, it's always great to get your input on and your analysis. thank you so much thank you, brianna. we are following some breaking news now out of west palm beach, the detention hearing for the man suspected in these second assassination attempt of former president trump. it just
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ended. so let's get right now to randi kaye. randi assuming that started when it was supposed to, this was a rather long hearing what did the judge decide here yeah, brianna, this was a three-hour hearing, a detention hearing to determine whether or not ryan roof should be released or remain behind bars as this case goes forward, the judge found that the government met its burden. >> he will remain in detention for now. and the judge found that the evidence that the government presented is very strong. let me share with you some of that evidence. a letter was presented in court and also in an earlier filing from the prosecutors that they believe was written by ryan ruth, and it says in part, this was an assassination attempt on donald trump, but i failed you. i tried my best and gave it all the gumption i could muster it is up to you now to finish the job and i will offer $150,000 to whomever can complete the job that was a letter that they talked about. there's also more evidence from the scene
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that they discussed in court today, saying that the agent observed the defendant in position that provided a clear line of fire to the sixth hole putting green. now remember, donald trump was on the fifth hole putting green at the time. they said in court he was just about 12 to 15 minutes away from that six whole putting green also new information on the scope found at the scene. the scope on the gun was attacked matched to the to the rifle by electrical tape. and the government presenting evidence in court today saying that there was a fingerprint, at least a preliminary report of a fingerprint ryan roof on that electrical tape on the scope, would that rifle they also searched routes, car. this came out in a court filing earlier they found six cell phones, including one that included a google search and how to get from palm beach county where this occurred to mexico also cell phone data now showing according to the prosecutors, that he traveled from greensboro, north carolina, here to florida on august 14. so that puts him in
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a state of florida for about a month or so and that there were hits on his cell phone from cell phone towers multiple times between august 18 and september 15, the day of this incident and brianna, one last note. there also was according to prosecutors a list of a handwritten list of venues, dates, and venues where the former president was supposed to appear, four or five of those venues were listed on that, and trump is expected to appear there before election day, and that they believe was handwritten by ryan bruce brianna what was the defense argument today that obviously was unsuccessful their best. they made a strong argument. they pointed out to the judge that no shots had been fired by ryan ruth. they said there was also no evidence they actually touched the firearm, though there was a fingerprint, preliminary fingerprint on the tape, the electrical tape attached to the scope on the firearm. they also pointed to that letter that i read to you in part it doesn't
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have a signature on it so they said that maybe it was from somebody else and there was no handwriting analysis done on that letter that was provided. of course, we're very early in this investigation, so perhaps there wasn't time for that, but they did make that argument to the judge. they also offered a $250,000 bond. they said that his sister would take him in in north carolina. she's the attorney there. he would wear a gps monitoring device, but the judge was not buying it and he said he must remain in detention and noting that reus travels to ukraine, showed skills in crossing borders very interesting. >> randi kaye, thank you so much for the update and coming up and intensifying crisis. the u.s. says is now sending a small number of military personnel to the middle east as israel says, it's preparing to strike more hezbollah targets in southern lebanon will have a live report from beirut next plus the cofounder of oceangate, the company that built the doomed titan vessel that imploded in the north atlantic last year testifying on capitol hill today, unveiling new information about
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the days leading up to the deadly implosion and whooping cough, surging in the united states this year, five times worse than last year, will discuss, stay with us syscall cnn is taking a break from breaking news to air. >> have i got news for you? >> the breaking news. i'm getting a sandwich. >> we need to talk about what constitutes breaking news. >> provide got news for you saturday at nine on cnn and streaming next day on max allergies with a legro, they won't stop me. that's because nothing beats a legro for the fastest non drowsy 24 hour allergy relief choose a leg, grab o'malley, mandel, the newest ambassadors. plenty story how i became an ambassador. >> i went to the store and i lied and said i wasn't ambassador. do i get it? this count, the owner called me and said, would you like to be an ambassador for sketchers? and i said, yes, try sketcher slip in
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for free information called watergate 18068 for your free information in your free gift. that's what 800 806881300 dealt. wait, now at verizon, every phone can be the new iphone 16 pro with apple intelligence wow, going to be flying horizon right new and existing customers can trade in any phone in any condition and get iphone 16 pro on only on verizon meet the jennifer's each planning their future for the chase mobile app. >> hello, new apartment. >> one bank for now for later for life tastes, make more of what's yours. >> i'm natasha bertrand at the pentagon and this is cnn new developments out of the middle east the head of the israeli military now says they are preparing for the next phases after launching the deadliest day of strikes in lebanon since
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2006, the idf killing more than 320 people, wounding more than 1,200 others, according to lebanon on its health minister and amid the escalating conflict, the u.s. says it is sending a small number of troops to augment american forces already in the region cnn's ben wedeman is live in beirut for us, ben, what's the latest from lebanon? >> yes, brianna well, we just heard from the ministry of health here in lebanon that the death toll has so far reached 300 356. that includes 24 children and 42 women. it doesn't give a breakdown on whether they're hezbollah fighters among them. but that's it's where it stands. more than 1,200 wounded. now, just put that in perspective that's about a third of the entire number of people killed civilians, as well as hezbollah fighters in the 34 days of the 2006 a war. now, what we've
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seen from the early morning of the hours just before dawn is hundreds, perhaps up to 1,000 israeli strikes on targets initially focused on south lebanon, but then we saw many airstrikes on the bikov valley to the east of here and other, other strikes in parts of lebanon that have never been hit before in the entire history of the conflict between hezbollah and israel. what we are seeing is that as a result well, two of the bombing and also israel sending text messages to phones on the local cell phone system, as well as breaking into the broadcast of a local radio station, urging people to leave homes or buildings in which hezbollah might be storing weapons. that tens of thousands perhaps hundreds of thousands of people are on the move to the north away from the conflict zone. what we're seeing is the streets are the highway from
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the south to beirut are, are packed on both sides of the highway. and it appears in many areas that traffic just isn't moving moving at all now, as a result of today's events all classes and universities and schools have been canceled. some schools here in beirut are being converted into shelters for people who have fled north the fear is that the tactics that israel is using with massive bombardment and telling, ordering the inhabitants of the south of lebanon to leave is sort of a copy and paste of what we saw in gaza, the so-called gaza vacation of the conflict blinked between hezbollah and israel whereby the south may be depopulated in advance of, as we heard, the israeli military talking about, the next phase, the fear is the next phase is
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going to be some form of an israeli ground invasion rihanna, all right, ben wedeman. >> thank you so much. live for us from beirut, happening now, president biden is meeting with the president of the united arab emirates at the white house where they're discussing a range of issues affecting the middle east rue also going to discuss our efforts to end the war in gaza. and a number of regional issues however briefed on the latest developments in israel and lebanon my team and the constant contact with their counterparts working to deescalate the way that allows people return to their homes safely vice president kamala harris is set to meet with the uae president soon and joining us now is former defense secretary under president obama, chuck hagel. >> he of course, is also a former republican senator from nebraska. sir. thank you so much. much for being with us thank you, brianna. so you're now endorsing harris. you're
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joining more than 700 current and former national security and military officials who signed a letter on sunday in doing that. and you're trying to draw a contrast between a future trump and harris administration. who are you? hoping to win over with this endorsement think this election is going to be a defining election for both foreign policy and domestic policy. >> when looking at political leadership, actually everything in life i've always believed that there are three indispensable three indispensable requisites for leadership character, courage, in judgment, character being the most important characters about integrity. it's about honesty, it's about decency i think harris has those qualities. i think historically it's been proven that former president trump does not. so i think what we're trying to do,
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all of us who signed this letter is to call attention to? maybe the undecided voters out there as to why are we republicans and democrats endorsing harris over trump? what's so important about that? well as i've said, this is going to be consequential. this election and if we can use our influence so once her reputation experience to be able to add to this debate, then i think that's what we want to do former president trump will often criticize harris or biden on foreign policy. >> he'll say, look at what's happened in the middle east look at what has happened with russia invading ukraine. that wouldn't have happened if he were empowered, it will say, look at what happened in afghanistan with how the withdrawal was carried out under the biden-harris administration, what do you say to that? >> well on the withdrawal in
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afghanistan, that was sloppy it shouldn't have been done that way it was a black mark. i think on the biden/harris administration as to the other two issues, and i've heard mr. trump's comments about this. if he had been president, those things would have never happened. oh, come on that's nonsense those two issues are defined by the realities and the dynamics of those two situations. putin started this in 2014 i don't think there was any surprise about where he was going next and when he was going as certainly, we told zelenskyy about it and the ukrainians and nato, as far as the middle east, the middle east has been the middle east for many, many years. there's a real disaster your political disaster in israel. and unfortunately what happened
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october 7, i think just clarified that even more. and obviously the israelis had to respond so to say that if he'd been president, those things are never happened is this nonsense and speaking of israel, as i mentioned, harris is going to be meeting and speaking with the president of the uae here in the next hour. >> a key partner in these talks between israel and hamas on a ceasefire and hostage agreement, which has just not come to fruition and you have growing skepticism within the administration that a deal can be struck by the end of biden's term was in your opinion, was the administration duped into thinking that these two parties would agree? three to a diplomatic solution don't think that was the case at all. >> duped into thinking we've always been regardless of the
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administrations, republican or democrat. we've always been focused on trying to bring a solution bring an agreement, a two-state solution for the middle east. >> and that's what biden and harris of tried to do. >> we've tried to work that through. i mean, how many times his biden and in particularly blinken ben, the middle east. so i don't think there's any duping here this is an issue that needs to be resolved and needs to be resolved soon because we're seeing what's happening in lebanon that if this broadens this war, it's going to include the entire middle east, iran will come i'm in we're already in who else may get involved. i don't know. that's what we've been trying to contain and make sense of this and to criticize that. i don't i don't know if anybody who's criticizing it understands the realities of
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what's going on and has been going on over there for years. >> it won't be for lack of trying to your point. we've seen the shuttle diplomacy with so many american officials, but i wonder what you think the effect is going to be that there is not that agreement in place potentially on the election. and for whoever wins you mean on our election, the us on our election, and for whichever person inherits, us involvement or us backing of israel in this conflict. i don't think this is an issue that kamala harris campaigned on that i'll have an agreement before the election. i don't think biden has said that. i mean, what they've said is we're doing everything we can every day that the secretary of state said this other senior members of the administration grayson we're doing everything we can every day to try and resolve this, bring a
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cease-fire, bringing an agreement long term and that's what they've been trying to do. i don't know if anybody thinks it it will be done or has to be done, or the election well, depend on on that. i mean, they're doing everything they can, but we have only so much control over this, brianna i mean, the israelis are in charge i mean, they are the ones that and then hamas and hezbollah. there, the three main players in this, we can do everything we can to help deal with both sides. but we're somewhat limited secretary hagel, it is great to have you on. thank you so much for being with us thank you. and coming up today, a georgia state election board meeting gets heated as members consider even more rule changes 43 days from election day
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go to for patriots, got calm now is not good he what it feels like the georgia state election board is back in session to weigh new voting rules just 43 days from election day and it got heated between members of the gop majority ford we have cnn political correspondent sara murray with us now for the latest. >> all right, sara, what's happened so far in this meeting? >> he now it's off to a little bit of a touchy start today again, they're considering these new election rules very
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close to the electioand the democratic member of the board, sara tindall, ghazal, and the newest republican on the board at janel, king gotten little bit of back-and-forth. take a listen about the fact that this board is acting in a way that the attorney general has stated is unlawful well, i'm concerned about the fact that you are going on national tv the un making an assumption that we are working on some, some agenda that's been constructed, a rant from the media because i haven't spoken to the trump campaign. i have nothing to do with the trump campaign. >> now the independent chairman of the board told cnn he doesn't like to see this kind of public sniping that he wishes they can settle their differences privately. but this is kind of the fallout we're seeing of them passing a lot of these controversial rules. so close to the election again, just last week, they passed a rule requiring a hand count of the number of ballots on election day at the polling places, which is worrying a lot of voting rights groups. >> and we're so close to the
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election that's part of it, right? but we're looking here at georgia in this specific case, but i know that you are looking more broadly across the country and that you have election officials all over who are a little worried about post-election chaos yeah, i think that what we are hearing from election workers is just kind of preaching patients, election officials, especially in pennsylvania and wisconsin, are already kind of trying to set the stage and warn people that we're probably not going to know on election night who won the presidency? >> the polls are looking very tight and in a place like pennsylvania, in a place like wisconsin, unlike many other states they can't start processing mail-in ballots until 7:00 a.m. on election day because of partisan gridlock in both of these dates, that rule has not changed since 2020, much the frustration of everyone who works on elections and we know that that time period between when the polls close on election night in 2020 and when the race was finally called by news outlets is when we saw this misinformation run wild. and so election officials
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are saying, please have patients with us. it takes a while to count all of these ballots, especially takes a while and a very close race, it doesn't mean that anything nefarious is going alright. >> they're putting out the word, will. people heed it? certainly branding you so much. the co-founder of oceangate testifying that his company did not intend to build the doomed titan submersible from scratch, but there was no one else who could do it. now has more on what we're learning from his testimony next legro, they won't stop me. >> that's because nothing beats a legro for the fastest non drowsy 24 hours so do you believe shoes allegro i was so excited to buy my first home, but i needed a lot of work done on it. >> i went on to angie. jamie was the first person to call these resurface my fluorine. he's done plumbing work, he's refinished this beautiful table
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we hear from homeowners is i shouldn't need to replace my windows. they're just not that old. but here's the thing. >> homebuilders put in high-end kitchens and bathrooms and low in windows, just aren't that good. so even if your windows are only seven to ten 10-years-old, they may still need to be replaced so there's so many window companies out there. what's different about your company? >> well, decides being the full service replacement window division of anderson, where the company people tend to call when they're particular about their home, they don't want just any old window or any all and salt. >> so your standards for installers are pretty high, right? >> yeah. >> brian, you can have the best window or door in the world than if it's not installed correctly, it's going to fail. so we don't hire these jack of all trades installers that do gutters inciting on the side our window installation teams do our windows year in, year out and i've done thousands of them anytime a homeowner has to deal with multiple home improvement companies, they get stuck in the blame game with other companies if there is an issue, the manufacturer blames the installer. the installer
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last year's catastrophic implosion that killed all five people on board guillermo sohnlein says the company oceangate did not initially intend to build its own subs, but that no existing sub builders could meet the company's requirements, despite the tragedy, sohnlein has hopes for the future this can't be the end of deep ocean exploration. this can't be the end of deep diving submersibles. and i don't believe that it will be but i hope that someday in the near future will look back on this time as human history when the global general public finally took an active interest in all of our efforts, everything that all of this due to explore the deep oceans, to study them and to preserve them sal mercogliano. he is a maritime historian at campbell university, a former merchant
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mariner. sal thanks so much for being with us. i wonder what the takeaways were for you from guillermo sohnlein testimony and from what we've heard so far in this hearing, just more broadly yeah. >> thank you for having me, brianna, i thought today's testimony has been really interesting. i mean, sohnlein talks about the fact that they were working closely with the coast guard, for example, and that's one group that's really been missing from this hearing, even though they're running it is the role of the u.s coast guard has in the certification process of the vessel i think the testimony last week gives us a lot of insight into how the titan was developed. and more importantly, we're also seeing a little bit of finger-pointing here between different testimonies. i think a lot of people are trying to focus the blame, obviously on the stockton rush, but stockton did not build this submersible by himself. there was a lot of people involved in it. >> and so sohnlein testified that oceangate didn't plan actually to develop its own subs, but then it changed
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course when outside manufacturers couldn't deliver what they needed, maybe what they wanted and it was around that that oceangate first began to consider using carbon fiber to construct a pressure driest whole. how important was that decision-making well, i think that goes to the business model they were trying to set up. >> they were trying to become the go-to ocean explorers out there where they can operate a fleet of up to six submersible's with a mothership. but when they could not get a vessel that met, there specifications, they had to go developed their own and that's where stockton rush really came in, the engineer decided to use that very unique carbon fiber design. and the issue comes back to the issue about whether or not anyone was investigating whether that carbon fiber could withhold and withstand the depths over a prolonged period of time. that's are you hear a lot of discussion about classification societies and who is doing the inspecting and testing on the vessel the co-founder tried to
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stress that use of carbon fiber. >> fiber isn't novel. but at the same time, there was an engineer with the american bureau of shipping who testified this afternoon about the dangers of carbon fiber pressure holes in submersibles. why isn't carbon fiber approved for use in submersibles? >> the material that's used as titanium and carbon fiber is just not tested to that depth. it's one of the reasons it hasn't been used in one of the processes and we've seen it kind of unravel here during this testimony, was that the stringent testing that was necessary to certify titan wasn't being done he did not want to go to a classification society like the abs. they were really trying to get down at depth as quickly as possible and they circumvented what would normally be a long thought thorough process. and that's the issue we're not exactly sure that carbon fiber cannot be used, but what we do know is carbon fiber was not thoroughly tested at depth until we saw the failure of
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titan sell. thank you so much. obviously, a lot of folks, very closely watching this testimony, and we appreciate your analysis of it. thanks. >> thank you for having me, brianna. >> and we'll be right back this source with kaitlin collins tonight at nine hcm is a serious heart condition affecting as many as one and 200 people well like me and me it can impact how you feel and what you can do. >> i still felt tired on my beta-blocker. >> so i talked to my cardiac knowledge about treatment advances in hcm that gave me new options. >> he was a breakthrough for me that conversation with big for me, talk to your cardiologist today and visit the hcm real taught.com for more information trains
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>> number one, we know that since the covid, pandemic were no longer masking, no longer distance seeing that's led to a rise in many respiratory illnesses number two, we know that vaccine induced immunity with what be cough can wane over time, which is why it's important to get your booster doses. and we also know that we tend to see every three to five years and outbreak of whooping cough. and this year, like you said, it was on september 14 when data from the cdc found that the number of cases were boarded that week were five times higher than what was found around that same time last year. and the best way to prevent whooping cough is to get vaccinated. whooping cough is also known as pertussis. and that's included in the tdap and d tab vaccines. these are vaccinations that are included in the routine childhood but immunizations, the cdc also recommends this vaccine for women during pregnancy and it's also recommended every ten years among adults. so that's why it's important to get that booster dose. and brianna whooping cough itself.
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it's a bacterial infection. and while initial symptoms can be like the common cold over time it can cause coughing fits and that whoop noise you make when you try to catch your breath after a coughing fit is how whipping cough got its name. so that's really the symptom to look out for with cases like this, brianna. >> that's the telltale sign jacqueline. thank you so much. we'll be keeping an eye on this story. coming up, prosecutors say the man suspected in the second assassination attempt to former president trump wrote a chilling letter about it months ago, laying out his plans will have details amgen life changing, managing medical breakthroughs every second counts without investment, those breakthroughs are often paused cities seamlessly connected, banking, markets and services businesses deliver global financial solutions so our client can keep investing in innovations for patients around the world
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