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tv   [untitled]    October 19, 2024 2:30pm-3:01pm PDT

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fear amongst the hostage families that because of the chaos within hamas that actual captors mid mid-level hamas terrorists and it's very possible that out of panic confusion self-interest will take matters into their own hands take revenge or simply execute the hostages. so if things were incredibly urgent before the death of sinwar no matter how you look at it, it's even more urgent now that some kind of arrangement be made, whether it's through a negotiated process and pressure. now full bore from the intermediaries or through some other arrangements with the people who are holding our loved ones and i also want to ask you about the videos that the idf has been releasing around sinwar's death the hours leading up to them, the drone videos.
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>> do you agree with their decision? to release those videos? i know some family members have been concerned in the line of what you're talking about, that it puts the hostages at further risk, at the risk of inflaming their captors. i want to know what your thoughts are well, to trust that before they were released by the idf thought very hard about this question i'm its beyond me to get into the head of savage terrorists that massacred 13, 1,400 people on october 7 conducted mass rape despite civilian communities and took hundreds of hostages i can't say, i honestly don't know how to respond. >> i think what those what those films certainly seemed to show is how premeditated this attack was on october 7.
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>> and the fact that from the very beginning, if he has some lauren, i hamas commanders in gaza, and knew in advance that they were going to protect themselves. however, they needed to and allow the people of gaza to suffer from what was about to happen and that seems absolutely clear. >> and before i let you go, i just i want you to tell me a little about soggy and i want you to just to anyone that's watching as his father, as someone who is pressing and doing everything humanly possible to get his child home. what do you want people to know if any lawmaker is watching, if anyone that's part of that the administration, what's your message to them well, small correction, the beginning, you said that he was 35. >> it actually we marked his 36th birthday
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now sagi is a father of three little girls and his youngest, ten months old. he's never met for her name is shahhat, which means dawn in hebrew he's a picture on a wall and no more than that, he is one of 29 hostages being held from my kibbutz, my small community alone, which was completely destroyed on october 7, 2023. these are all human beings. these are fathers, sons, grandparents husband's. their also two women and to vote very little boys, the be bus boys, who are my neighbors and this always was and continues to be a human problem we've been blessed with the cooperation of support of the biden administration since the very first days of this crisis we have implored all a member first of congress, not to allow the hostage issue, whatever
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wants opinions are about the conduct of the war between israel and hamas, not to allow the hostage, the hostages to become a kind of political football in very contentious elections that are coming up. and i would continue you to ask all americans to remember that. and for those americans who consider themselves pro palestinian which is completely legitimate it's also legitimate for anyone to criticize this or that action of the israeli government. but if one is truly pro-palestinian and what they need to do right now, at least as much as criticizing israel, is to do everything in their power at this moment, two days after the death of sinwar, to pressure hamas to end the madness. the only way a ceasefire can possibly begin he is by return of the hostages. all 101 those
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that may still be alive, and those that have already been murdered while we hope that your son is home with you and his family. >> very, very soon. jonathan dekel-chen. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you for having me still ahead. >> illinois governor jb pritzker says, i think vague america, he's going to join us live next to talk about protecting abortion rights. and what he's doing going to get out the vote for kamala harris you're in the cnn newsroom have a show were right and left talk to each other cnn presents an encore presentation of hbo's real-time with bill maher tonight at 8:00 on cnn which i'll i'll get to decide when i get paid. it's kind of crazy. we can choose where we'd get paid, can change there for me. my pay less me get up to $500 of ma pay when i needed there's no interests, no credit checks, no mandatory thing martha gives me the
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pentagon. this is cnn likely come down to a handful of swing states, including nevada, where early voting got underway today, people in nevada also deciding on a ballot initiative to safeguard abortion rights by insurance finding them and their state's constitution harris campaign surrogate illinois governor jb pritzker spoke last hour in las vegas at a block party hosted by nevadans for reproductive freedom. >> he's also the founder of think big america. it's an advocacy advocacy group working to expand abortion rights, protections, governor, thanks so much for being here with us greg, glad to be here with you. jessica. thank you and i know you've said in the past, no one is a single issue voter, but that being said, i know your focus very clearly on reproductive rights what is your message to undecided voters out there today? well, first you know, on the ballot here in nevada is a
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reproductive rights amendment to their constitution. so we want to make sure that that gets passed on november 5. but it also means that they're going to be people coming to the polls that really care about this issue. and if you're pro reproductive rights if you care about women's rights, you're probably going a vote for the candidate that stands for those rights and that's commonly harris and tim walz. so i'm i'm pleased to say that we had a lot of people who came out to rally today for reproductive rights. and also i went to rallies among members of labor unions and the democratic party more broadly, just to make sure that everybody is launched in their canvassing, knocking on doors, making phone calls to get voters out. so it's really, there's a lot of excitement on the ground here in nevada, but it's going to be tight and you found in think big america to support more abortion rights ballot measures in the country like the one that nevadans will be voting on an are voting on now, when it comes to a possible donald trump presidency, he said he would
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not support a nationwide ban on abortion why are you concerned? >> what about that concerns you and do you believe him yeah. >> first of all, donald trump is a known liar and frankly it's like the whim of the day, whatever position he takes on something we know that he's the one who appointed the members of the supreme court that overturned roe v wade. so for him to say that he's not opposed to abortion is just ludicrous the fact is that he wants to end a woman's right to choose. he wants to end ivf yeah, he's okay with states limiting or eliminating people's right to contraception and that's just a position that's untenable for women across america for, for men to the idea that we're going to take away their right to as a family member, as a husband, to have a say over whether they're going to be able to have children i know a lot of people who've gone in and had ivf in order to have children or going through it
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now, downs trump and the republicans would take that away. so we're fighting hard on that issue and not just here in nevada all across the country. and i think you know that we won in kansas on the issue of reproductive rights. we want to know ohio on the issue of reproductive rights, but it's on the ballot at the same time as a presidential election in nevada, in arizona, in florida, in missouri, and all over the country, eight states many of them are very important to the outcome of the presidential election unless, if, if, if colin harris is to win, the white house you and i both very aware that that just a president can't do anything to bring back to enshrine what was roe v wade to bring back those protections federally at the federal level? >> level, you're going to need majorities in congress to do that. do you think that's a realistic possibility oh, i do. >> i think that in the congress, in the house of representatives, i think the democrats are going to retake the majority democrats already have the majority in the senate and it looks like they may be
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able to, we may be able to maintain that majority. so if we elect kamala harris, we went over the house and keep the senate we can protect reproductive rights that can we do everything that we want to do know because the senate requires a filibuster proof, majority in order to get a lot done but one thing is important is that you can protect reproductive rights from being diminished. if we win the house, the senate and the presidency. and kamala harris is going to do everything that she can to protect those rights right. >> because that 60 vote filibuster certainly can kill a lot of legislation and has, in the past, i want to ask you about just broadly, the race was 17 days to go look in the last week two weeks, there's been a lot of handwringing by a lot of democrats, both publicly and very much on the record and on background, they're very anxious, they're very nervous are they nervous for a good reason? are you how do you feel i think republicans to our nervous look, this is a razor
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thin margin in every state. >> i literally, if you look down the poll list, you'll see that in all the battleground states, it's a one point margin. it's all it's crazy. i've never seen it yet quite like this. but it means that if you haven't fuzi asm on the ground, if you have organizing on the ground and phone banking and knocking on doors, that's the winning formula. and everywhere that we are right in all those battleground states, the republicans have less than the democrats in terms of the organizing on the ground. and i can see it here in nevada was in arizona and wisconsin, michigan. where the enthusiasm was very high. and we're going into republican areas. where people really are disgusted with donald trump as a portion of america that's decided they're not voting for donald trump. they just don't know whether they're going to show up at the polls and vote, or if they're going to show up and vote for kamala harris. and that's i think why you're seeing vice president harris and tim walz going to places
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that are really republican and trying to convince him country first you saw adam kinzinger and liz cheney with her. you saw her campaigning in areas that western michigan they're traditionally republican i i'm enthusiastic about the idea that this is really going to be almost 1 bipartisan victory for her because we are winning republicans sober. >> and you say about, you've never seen something this close. we are just in historically tight race where just these margins of voters in a handful of states, including the one you're in right now, could tip it one way or another. governor, how do you close that deal if you're kamala harris? >> well, she's doing it. look at how many places she's going every single day and it's all in the battleground states, if you think back to 20161 of the criticisms that was made of hillary clinton was that she didn't go to those states in the final couple of weeks and she should have and we lost
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those states as a result, kamala harris has not making that mistake. she's going to the battleground, said she's going to the areas where there may be the undecided voter or the voter who is not currently decided they're going to vote and try to convince people. you got to come out and vote. we've got to make sure that we're putting donald trump away. finally beating him at the ballot box and moving and we country forward. we have to bring people together and downs trump's not going to do that. commonly, harris and tim walz will. >> alright. illinois governor jb pritzker. thanks so much for your time. we appreciate it. >> thanks, jessica, news for you? >> just 99 on cnn? >> i, have, type two diabetes, but i manage it well, it's a little bill with the big story to i take once daily, john at each day as time went on, it was easy to see a lowering my
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until the election how speaker mike johnson joins jake exclusively with his take on trump's closing arguments, plus senator bernie sanders weighs in on harris's path to victory state of the u.s. >> siew-nya live tomorrow morning at nine closed
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captioning brought to you by mesobook.com if you are loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you they don't 808 to 14000 in the u.s. will develop breast cancer in their lifetime. that is according to the american cancer society. and when our colleague sara sidner was diagnosed, she shared her courageous journey battling the disease. cnn's stephanie elam shares the story of how two of her closest friends based their diagnosis i'm sorry, years was left, right? >> yeah. right. okay. >> little bit different. >> you got to make right? mirror i'm just crazy that we're joking about it >> i'll start with you, nauta, where you good about getting your mammogram. >> know i wasn't you heard about this is a nanda louis and she has breast cancer. he's a content creator who is known for her time hosting bet's teen summit in the 90s, being a
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vijay for mtv and hosting her own talk show in the early 2000s. she's one of my best friends as is cnn anchor sara sidner she too has breast cancer, stage three, both for them found their lumps on their own. sara is discovery was just months after a mammogram, the american cancer society does not recommend self-exams anymore. but to me if you can tell you know, your body you want to advocate for yourself. so much. and i am terrible at advocating for myself. i will advocate for you. i will advocate you're actually me to do it for everybody else. >> i will i will fight someone like i am a writer, diabetes so this has been a real lesson for me to self abby hey, sara had a double mastectomy, a nanda took a different approach by the time she found a lump in her breast, her cancer had progressed to stage three, and doctors recommended to double mastectomy but she went against the recommendation. my plan at first was to get out excessive toxins in my body. i felt like
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my body is intelligent, ai so that to be true, our bodies are brilliantly made. i decided to keep my tumor and tried to work it out of my body a different way. >> looking back on it, i go her diet improved her sleep pursued aggressive homeopathic therapies along with traditional medicine and radiation. she improved for a long time. she says removing the toxins, physical and emotional from her body has been beneficial but last year, she found out her cancer had metastasized into stage four, which means the cancer spread to other areas. >> my, my lymph system really flared up. and so all through my abdomen, all those limbs were very flared up my collarbone and it was the first time i ever had a conversation with death because i felt like this is this is how it ends. i was like, okay, so i don't get afraid of things. i was just like man, i really thought i had this i was frustrated. i
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was a little angry at myself. i was and i said, man, i know you're coming from me at some point, but i don't want it to be now. and if you could just wait. i promise when you do come on, fun for you, what's interesting means that you both are saying, is it to appreciate life more now that you're going through this? or is it joy? >> mine is joy? i didn't realize how little joy i had in my life like i didn't realize that that was not a priority in my life my quality of life was very important to me. >> we've had that conversation before, like i there's certain things i know i'm not going to be okay with an i know myself i want to want to be here and so i had to do it a certain way for me. >> the fact that you like i want to want to be here. i've had times when i didn't want to be here. >> right. >> and so you mean in life? in life. yeah. i didn't want to be here. i didn't want it go through all this because of this during this before and
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then this journey came along, it's so weird that it was cancer that was like high want to be here. >> i insist on being here and i insist on thriving, not just being alive, not just existing ai but to thrive in a way that i have never felt before stephanie elam, thanks so much for that. >> we're gonna be right back before election day, vice president harris bases voters and takes the pressing questions anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall, kamala harris, wednesday you cnn >> it's not clean until it's stanley steamer clean our black men anymore. i'll be going
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