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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  October 21, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT

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have today as a $5 can get $50 instantly, prospects running again, i'm dr. sanjay gupta in atlanta. this is cnn closed captioning. >> he's brought to you by christian faith publishing, right? for a higher purpose, published with us christian faith publishing is an author friendly publisher who understands it, your labor is more than just a book color scan for your free riders guide, 800, 4, 5, 518 to-7
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campaign trail right now, both campaigns wrapping up their events with 15 days until election day. >> vice president kamala harris visiting three blue wall states or form president donald trump holds three events of his own in north carolina. and a crime, the divided a city and made national headlines today, the trial begins for the man accused of killing a whole homeless man with a chokehold on the subway in new york city and be careful when you sign those terms of service. a new agreement for acts is infuriating some people as it could let the company use anyone's content for a very specific purpose we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news center >> we're grateful that you're spending your afternoon alongside his son, boris
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sanchez, alongside brianna keilar in the nation's capital in any moment now, former president donald trump is set to hold a second of three campaign events in the battleground state of north carolina. he will soon take the stage in greenville for a rally. this is the eastern part of that state where he is expected to focus on the economy earlier today, trump made a campaign stop in the storm-battered western part of north carolina where he met with relief workers and also doubled down on a barrage of disinformation about the biden administration's response to hurricane helene donald trump, as we noted, is expected to focus on the economy during his north carolina rally this hour and comes as a new report about trump's economic plan, warns that is promised tax breaks in tariffs could create serious problems leaving social security insolvent in just six years. >> let's go now to cnn's matt egan, who has the details on this report. matt, bring us up to speed. >> well, boris and brianna social security was already in deep financial trouble in this
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new analysis warns that a trump presidency could make matters much worse. now, this is coming from the committee for responsible federal budget. this is not some left-wing group. this is a budget watchdog that over the years has called out republicans and democrats alike on the national debt. and now they're warning that trump's campaign proposals could leave social security funds depleted within six years. that compares with nine years under current law. now this analysis finds, among other things that trump's campaign proposals would shortfall by $2.3 trillion over the next decade, it would advance insolvency i three years and it would lead to benefits being cut by a third as far as why this is their pointing to a number of trump's specific proposals, including ending taxes on social security benefits. that alone would cost almost a $1,000,000,000,000. the social
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security's balances ending taxes on overtime and tips restricting immigration, imposing tariffs, add it all up. they see a 2.2 trillion dollar hit to social security's funds. now, to be fair, this analysis finds that neither trump nor vice president harris have come up with any sort of fix to social security, but they do not see insolvency date being brought forward under the harris campaign proposals. now, this is obviously extremely important because when and if sources security becomes insolvent, the program will still exist. but the benefits will have to be cut and don't forget nearly 70 million americans receive social security benefits last year alone. now not surprisingly, the trump campaign is pushing back, lashing out at the committee saying, quote, the so-called experts at crf fbi have been consistently wrong throughout the years. >> and the trump campaign argues that his proposals, we'll put social security on
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strong footing for generations to come by speeding up the economy, cutting red tape, and unleashing american energy. >> but again, all of that is very much the opposite of what this analysis finds. therefore, warning that the trump agenda could actually make social security's financial situation much worse. >> all right. matt egan. thank you so much. really critical details there. cnn's kristen holmes is now with us now from concord north carolina, where trump will hold another campaign event later tonight. kristen, what's the latest from there yeah. >> look, these faith events are likely to try and target a very specific group of people, not includes suburban women. >> one of the things that we've been talking to a lot with the trump campaign, but also outside republican operatives outside republicans, just to the state of north carolina, but as well as in pennsylvania, is this idea of the gender gap. it is something that has existed in the polls for several months. now, if not longer, but it seems as though the trump campaign really
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started paying specific attention to it in the last several weeks when one of the things that we reported on friday is that donald trump's campaign is in talks with nikki haley, the former south carolina governor, to hold an event part of that reasoning is to try and reach these suburban women, these more moderate women that they think they might still be able to siphon off. now remember this is a huge gender gap for the former president. so they are trying to do anything they can even just to win over handful of votes when it tom's to suburban or moderate women, or just women as a whole, because this is such a big issue for donald trump. and i don't want to specifically talk about north carolina. we are here today in the state. donald trump was just visiting an area in asheville that have been devastated by helene. he it did make this a clearly political endeavor or you talked about early voting, talked about driving out people to those polls specifically mentioning that if you were in temporary housing because of the storm today was the last day, you could apply for a ballot to get sent to not your permanent
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address, but this temporary housing. so it gives you an idea of just how seriously they are taking this and you want to show you some of the numbers from 2020 compared to now, because early voting turnout now is about 40% down compared to what it was in 2020, where we stand right now in terms of republicans versus democrats, it democrats are at 35%. they make up 35% of those early voting voters and republicans are at 33% in 2020. those numbers were significantly different at this exact same time period, democrats were at 44% republicans were at 24%, but it's very hard to compare this election to the last lecture that happened in the middle of covid, in the middle of lots of different ballot changes and in the middle of really a campaign that the former president had put on against early voting, against mail-in voting. we have seen republicans try to take those extra steps to get people out there to vote early to participate in mail-in voting to vote any way they possibly can now, donald trump, while he has said that, while he is agreed with republicans, he has
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also taken every opportunity he can to insult mail-in voting and say that we should have same-day paper ballots. so hopefully for republicans, people are actually listening to not his messaging. in this case. and the polling shows, or at least the day it just shows that that might be the case. donald trump himself still has been slamming mail-in voting, making it harder for republicans in states like this yeah, that's gonna be tough. >> certainly for a lot of people in his party who do not want to see him doing that. kristen holmes. thank you vice president harris is also busy on the trail today. she's holding multiple roundtable discussions with former republican congresswoman liz cheney in three critical blue wall states cheney, of course, a longtime conservative and is hoping to help harris win over undecided independents and moderate republicans in the blue wall in michigan, wisconsin, and pennsylvania, those three states you'll recall tip the 2016 race for donald trump and they swung back in democrats favor in 2020 we're joined now live by cnn's jeff zeleny. jeff, tell
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us more about this strategy of harris teaming up with chaining boris and brianna. >> there are no three states that are more important to the path for kamala harris or donald trump? for that matter, to winning 270 electoral votes. and the blue wall states of pennsylvania, michigan, and wisconsin, and vice president harris is hitting all three today with, as you said, former wyoming coming congresswoman liz cheney, of course, she endorsed her several weeks ago, but as on the road with her today for a series of conversations, this stages small. the crowd is small. it's intended to be a question-and-answer session, which some of the key voters, they believe that liz cheney can unlock those voters. i'm told by strategists it's are likely independent voters, or perhaps even some moderate republicans who are turned off by donald trump, but not yet sold on kamala harris. >> we will see the extent to which how many voters exist. but when you look at the results from the spring primaries here, nikki haley, voters, of course, in
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pennsylvania and, to michigan and wisconsin make up a significant share of the vote here in michigan, 26.6% of the republican primary electorate went to nikki haley's. so those are the voters that they believe they can potentially win over at least some of them. of course, it's very much an open question. how many of them may vote for the former president or simply may not vote? vote at all, or have already decided to vote for harris. but earlier today in pennsylvania, liz cheney gave this really tacit admission for why she supports harris should it's all about i think constitution the most conservative of all, conservative principles is being faithful to the constitution. >> and you have to choose in this race between someone who has been faithful to the constitution, who will be faithful and donald trump, who it's not just us predicting how he will act. we watched what he did after the last election. we watch what he did on january 6, so the suburbs of
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america, the suburbs of these swing states, the battlegrounds within the battlegrounds, if you will, or the place that vice president kamala harris there's believes that she can mind some more votes that may have otherwise in years past gone to donald trump's. >> she'll be having conversation here. and interestingly, in that pencil venue rally this morning, liz cheney also said she of course, is opposed to abortion rights, but she said the dobbs decision went too far. she believes that women have been hurt by that. so that forces a, it'll be interesting to see if that comes up here that has been essential question on the minds of many women voters and others. of course, but there is no question the geography of these harris cheney events today in the suburbs of pennsylvania here in oakland county, michigan, end later tonight in wisconsin, the harris campaign believes is their key to winning the blue wall yes. >> certainly telling where they are spending the last few days of this campaign. jeff zeleny, thank you so much. let's expand the conversation now with lance trover, former spokesperson for doug burgum's 2020 four
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presidential campaign. and muddy, i got to go now cnn political commentator and democratic strategists, buddy, i want to start with you and that open question that jeff presented, obviously, vice president harris spending the day in pennsylvania, michigan, and wisconsin taking with her liz cheney, former congresswoman and noted conservative. where do you think this fits into their plans to try to lure those disaffected republicans, those independent voters versus folks that might vote for trump, or might just stay home i think it's really smart of a kamala harris campaign to be focused on those we'll disaffected voters and each of those specific three counties where she is today in those states, were counties that had massive votes for nikki haley and there's a lot of discontent among republican voters in those states, especially, especially in those counties that really do not like an ar, very uncomfortable with donald trump. >> and i think somebody like liz cheney with her history of being such a conservative
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republican, she can really lay it out and give permission for these republicans to say, look, this is a time to put country before party. this man is so incredibly unfit to be the leader of the united states that meet as a conservative. and my dad, and they're not the only ones kamala harris had an event over the weekend with 100 more than 100 conservative republicans who have come out to support her. many of these were people who worked alongside donald trump, who were some of his closest advisors including his home vice president, who has said that he cannot vote for this man so i think it's really smart strategy underscoring that this is not about partisanship, this is not about political party, this is about the country. this is about the constitution as liz cheney said, this is about our rights and freedoms that will be in massive jeopardy if somebody like donald trump gets into the oval office again trump lances said that nikki haley could soon join him on the trail and that would clearly be someone
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trying to give maybe the same kind of voter permission to vote for donald trump. >> i wonder what you think good about that. >> i think it would be a smart play. absolutely. i mean, and who better to get the nikki haley voters than nikki haley herself? i would argue i'm a little perplexed by this liz cheney thing. actually, when you think about it, i mean, this is somebody whose name is synonymous with been like a diesel see insider here, the cheney family names, somebody who is many people consider a war hawk in this country. you have the largest arab american population in michigan, which obviously does not look kindly on and the cheneys of the world. and it's interesting to me that kamala harris is going out there saying, i'm not i'm not i don't want to be part of the biden administration. i want to turn the page, but i'm taking the cheney family name with me. the continent dc insider name saying, oh, trust me, she should be the one that stands up will be president united states. >> i'm curious, what you make of that, in part because there are democrats that have been out now there are critical of harris for campaigning alongside cheney and not more notable republican figures like senator bernie sanders or
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others. >> well, i think she's doing it all. and i think this is where i think people get caught up in the oh, well, she's doing this. why isn't she doing that? or she's doing that? why isn't she did she's doing this. >> she has a very nimble campaign which is one of the smartest things that i think they have done. >> and one of the most strategic they're doing it all. boris they are doing everything, everywhere all at once and they had to because of the constricted timeframe of her campaign, she had to do everything everywhere all at once. and so that's why you're seeing her move from a campaign with liz cheney? to a campaign with other democrats and she's going to continue to do that. >> let's listen in to former president trump harris, kamala >> the guy had 14 million votes. i'm no fan of his by the way. >> but he had 14 million vote. >> she had none she was the first to lose 22 peoples shoes, the first out she never made it
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did the great state of iowa, i'd never made it and, you know, they talk about it. she is a threat to democracy. every that's really she's a threat to a lot of things, but that's the way it has to be because we're winning by a lot. we're leading by a lot, we're leading in the polls every single state looks like 5, america will be bigger, better boulder than ever before between whether we will have a four, i think at this four more years could could you stand in four more years of incompetence? stupidity. and failure in disaster, or whether we will begin the four greatest years the history of our
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country. i think we have a real choice and we were set back. we were setback and then you think about what they've done because i happen to think the border is the biggest problem we have not inflation, inflation is terrible. it's a country buster and the economy, all those things, but i happen to think that what they've done at the border to our country by letting millions and millions of people in totally unchecked now unvetted. i think it's the worst thing, including mrs. actually supposed to be a speech about the economy, but you can hear some of former president trump's kind of recent greatest hits that he is trying out there calling the harris a threat to democracy and trying to provide a contrast. it's quite insulting in the language he uses, which i do wonder if that works. but i want to ask you another question. about something trump said today because he was using north carolina, but he earlier was in a more hard hit area from hurricane helene and he
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was asked about a north carolina man who was arrested for allegedly threatening harm against female employees and whether his claims about fema were helping the recovery effort. and here's what he said well, i think you have to let people know how they're doing. >> if they were doing a great job, i think we should say that too, because i think they should be rewarded. but if they're not doing, does that mean that? if they're doing a poor job, we're supposed to not say if you have to be able to speak, does that mean let's talk about it because by doing that, they'll do a better job than next time. >> we should just be clear, there are a lot of regional republicans who are making clear that his concerns or not based, in fact, lance and also this man was armed with a handgun and rifle and he was arrested for allegedly threatening harm against female employees. i just wonder sort of what you think about what we're hearing from trump in regards to this obviously, no excuse for somebody with a handgun to be going after a female employee is look this is
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a this is classic donald trump. >> i'm not going to sit here and say, right or wrong. i talk to people in north carolina. there are people who i do think that there are struggling to get back on their feet down there. i think the headline as much as we have this discussion today, the headline tomorrow is going to be donald trump showed up in north carolina and the other headline will be congress needs to come back in session and pass more fema funding. he did say that today my guess is that's going to be the headlines for him tomorrow. >> the other headline will be donald trump continues to lie about the fema response and here you can make a direct line from donald trump's words to possible violence. >> and that's not the first time we have already been able to make direct lines between donald trump's words and actual violence that have actually killed americans. >> this is one of those things that i think kamala harris and her campaign are also focused on. and i think smartly so to underscore that this is somebody who does not believe in the goodness of the country he believes in belittling
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communities. he believes them belittling certain people. he believes an insulting certain people. and in doing that, his followers hear that and they say, oh, i need to do something about this. i want to put keep this in my own hands. and then they go and do something. the shooting in el paso that killed latinos. i mean, this is not the first time january 6 for god's sake, right? that resulted in the death of five law enforcement officers this is something that i think americans truly understand, which is why it's smart when kamala harris says, let's just turn the page. i think so many republicans, americans, moderates democrats, progressives independence, have just had it with this guy and they all want to turn the page. >> this is what i think is interesting that she makes a very compelling argument for her side. no question about it. this is really where the last two weeks of this campaign are shaping up, right? donald trump, right there you heard was talking about the border and the economy and lowering the cost of living. we can get caught up in all the other things that he says. their
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argument now, with liz cheney and others is that he's a threat to democracy. democracy. look at the lies. he says, and all this stuff. but i would just go back to what we've talked about time and again, the voters are very clear eyed about who donald trump is. that is why he is leading are tied in many polls and they look beyond a lot of that. and i would argue that kamala harris has not made that case to voters, which is why it is still close. you look at pennsylvania, michigan, and we're talking about the rust belt states. bob casey the city united states senator in pennsylvania, is running ads with donald trump in them and not showing up to events with kamala harris. but again, this is what kind of where you're seeing the last couple of weeks are coming down to trump's talking about the economy, and they're focusing more. you guys are focusing more on the he's a threat to democracy and go, and i think right now, we've seen voters aren't, concerned about trump is not only talking about the economy, he's talking about other things that also are really insulting and vulgar and disgusting, vile. >> got to go now let you guys all day, i think are producers would frown upon that and yell at us. so we have to let it go
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there they still ahead this hour on cnn news central did a us marine veteran, daniel penny risked his own life to save others or did he recklessly caused the death of a homeless street performer on a new york subway jurors will have to answer that question, and they are being chosen right now with the latest on the subway chokehold trial plus a change in x's terms of service will have massive implications for what elon musk is allowed to do with your data. it may make you think twice before you post on x. >> but first, another us intel leak, this time, top secret documents about israel's plans to tack iran in response to iran's missile attack on tel aviv have ended up online. but some in israel suggest it was no accident before election day vice president harris basis voters and takes the pressing questions lie. >> anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall.
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>> kamala harris, wednesday at nine eastern on cnn israel is under attack, antisemitism like i never thought i would see jury about samantha's point, max. >> now, he got spit on, just walking at penn in that scary. what about kamala? >> busy defending the squad? >> they, you know, trump, i never cared for. >> but at least i'll keep us saying, hey, i've never voted republican in my life, but i am voting trump. >> and man, rjc victory fund is responsible for the content of this matter. >> subway is making foot-long snack in history first, epic foot-long cookies, churros in pretzels. now all new $3 footlong dippers. >> is there a hall of fame for snacks? >> find your perfect quit law snack at subway 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 homeowners are the same and the solution to
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to give a new smile. thousands of children are waiting the lead with jake tapper today at four on cnn up on prospects for a ceasefire in gaza and lebanon as secretary of state, tony blinken departs for the middle east today, the administration hoping that last week's killing of hamas leader yahya sinwar well, mark a turning point in the war and create a new opening for peace talks. in the meantime, israel's offensive in lebanon is straying further from military targets. today, a nonprofit financial institution with links to hezbollah came under fire and on top of all of this, the u.s. is trying to figure out how some highly classified us intelligence on israeli war plan it's got leaked and wound up on telegram. we're going to start with cnn's jeremy diamond live for us in tel aviv. jeremy first talk to us about this visit from secretary blinken state, is arriving on the hopes that the united states has that
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in the wake of the killing of hamas leader yahya sinwar, that there could be an opportunity for israel to end the war in gaza and strike a deal to return the hostages back to israel. >> but for now, even us officials aren't able to beat that optimistic about the prospects of actually restarting those negotiations. the white house national security spokesman john kirby acknowledged that as much today, but the secretary of state is arriving after for president biden last week said that he did see an opportunity to advance those ceasefire negotiations and bring much needed humanitarian relief to the people of gaza. the secretary of state will also of course, be discussing the war between israel and hezbollah, as well as the he likelihood of an impending israeli strike against iranian targets. but even as we are hearing some hopefulness from us officials about the prospects of advancing ceasefire negotiations. what we are hearing something very different from the israeli prime minister and members of his own government, the israeli prime minister over the weekend expressing some continued
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defiance, saying that this war there's going to continue until victory, even as he said that the killing of sinwar could mark the beginning of the end of hamas in gaza. and today, we heard from several ministers and that's an yahoo's governments, several members of his own party at a, at a conference promoting new settlements in gaza, not only calling for the continuation of the war in gaza, but also calling for israeli settlements to be assessed published in gaza after the war ends. very different message of course, than what the u.s. is saying. >> boris breanna. >> all right, jeremy, thank you so much. live for us from tel aviv. let's bring in cnn chief national it's all security correspondent alex marquardt, to talk more about this intel leak, which was israel's plans for how it's going to respond to iran i know you have some more information about this investigation to documents dated last week from two different us intelligence agencies. what appears to not be in dispute is the authenticity of these documents there is no pushback from these national security agencies about the fact that they are indeed real. and the white
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house is john kirby spoke about these documents earlier today, saying that their release was deeply concerning. the big question now, was this a hack from the outside that got these documents or a leak? from the inside and that is what the investigation is going to focus on. and we have a bit of a bit new information from our colleagues evan perez and katie bo lillis, who say that this has set off a scramble within the u.s. government, as you might imagine, the fbi is leading the efforts to figure out what happened here pentagon investigators, of course, will be involved because these two agencies actually belong to the department of defense. and one of the first things are gonna be looking into is essentially the universe of people who could have had access to these documents, which might give us an indication that they're actually looking more into the fact that this could have been a leak from the inside the way that these documents were classified a large number of people who would have actually had access. but one of the two documents was a scan from a printed briefing book. and so that could give investigators a bit of a leg up because they
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can track who's actually printing things but no doubt there were some significant secret information here about what israel is doing. it it talked about the movement of their missiles, of their navy, of their air force, and their nuclear weapons, which guys israel doesn't even acknowledge exist yeah, that's key. so there you go. i mean, cats sort of been out of the bag on that one. but again, the fact that that was in a way now is public. that's got a really variation chips. certainly, i'm alex. thank you so much. we do appreciate the report so how does that saying go? nothing brings diverse members of the voting population together quite like football isn't that, that's the saying, right off the top. >> right now, box seats and banner ads part of the goal line push campaigns are making an pivotal swing states football being used as part of the campaign's, we'll be right back have i got news for you?
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get their championship rings and face the new loop news in the timberwolves and lakers season their son duo take the court covers begins tomorrow at six presented ikea on tnt presidential candidates are according sports fans in the stands and fly above them to former president donald trump made an appearance at the steelers jets game in pittsburgh last night earlier in the day, his running mate senator jd vance, served as bartender ahead of the packers game in wisconsin. >> meantime, the dnc is going with the 10,000 foot approach with pro-harris banners and sky
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writing messages like this one above nfl game it was in battleground states let's get some insight on this collision between politics and football with cnn sports analyst and host of the right time podcast, bomani jones. bomani, great to have you as always. what do you make of football? taking center stage at this point in the election cycle? seen in these last couple of weeks, particularly with his last podcast tour that we saw trump and particular go on, but also some of the appearances that he has made that reaching men and young men, it seems to be a goal right now, we'll both of these campaigns and it's a pretty easy logical through lied to decide the sports is the way to go about doing it like that? at me, keep in mind the democrat, the democratic campaign started with getting tim waltz on there and calling him coach, like he's a coach right now. i they've clearly decided they go through people than a football lins is the way to go how about your thoughts when you saw antonio brown hugging donald trump, he was also with levy on bell over the weekend. i see rolling your eyes now i'm just trying to
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figure out, like look if you decide if you just looked at a stat sheet and we were talking about antonio brown, he's one of the greatest football players who have lived where the greatest players in his position who ever lived, but like this isn't mean joe greene and a franco harris when it comes down to the steal. >> so then it gets you to your next question. who is it that puts antonio brown on stage? agent is like, you know, this has gotten to impress people. i could be wrong. i just feel like the people who hear antonio brown talk about politics and not along with it are probably not people who are going to go and vote. i could be wrong about this, but i just don't feel like they got about to be heading out to the polls and getting know mail-in ballot does that give you any indication as to what the trump campaign sort of conceptualizes as the voter that they're trying to reach, that they would put antonio brown out there i think that generally speaking for the republican party when it comes time to try to do so sort of outreach to black people in fighting black people to do this, particularly when they tried to go to the celebrity class, the pickens a
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slim, it kind of got to take whoever it is that's going to show up and do this. and the guy who's going to do it is antonio brown, like if you look at the way that he closed out his talk, you realize this is not serious, like that. i think the most mind-blowing part of it was how totally unserious it was. but i'm not sure that donald trump can get a serious black person to speak to black people and black people would actually want to listen to what do you make of the democrats approach that you mentioned touting governor tim walz is coaching bonafede days and also these images in the sky over games. what do you think? >> well, i mean, i think the move would walz it felt a little cynical to me. i understand where they're going for this, but i don't just out of nowhere, we're just going to call him coach. is that we're not even bring it up, that he was a coach. they started off with we're going to call him coach and maybe they think people will fall for it because i do understand the idea that at the title of codes confers a certain authority, particularly
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in smaller communities. that's kind of hard to explain if you're not from one of those places. i got it. i think the idea of like flying banners over makes a lot more sense because that's a little bit less intrusive i don't think that if i were going to a football game and i had to deal with all this traffic everything goes into a digital security that comes with it. i don't know how happy i am going to be to see the person who's the reason why i had to go through all these hoops when all i wanted to do was go through a football game. i know that for years when i would want to talk about important things around sports, yet a long line of people that would tell you that this is not what they come to sporting events for. this isn't why they turned to even a sports talk radio so station, those are the things that they want to think about. i always understood to a degree where people were coming from with an understanding of where they're coming from i'm not sure how many people at that stadium felt like seeing donald trump in that moment, they were actually a little more concerned with whether russell wilson can still play football i'm wondering bomani quickly as a selfish dolphins fan, just seeing this news we got this
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afternoon. if you could give me your thoughts on tua tagovailoa saying that he's going to play football no matter what happens to them, seemingly the one thing about america is you're allowed to make his banded decision as you want. and maybe it's not a bad decision for here. and with my risk calculus, that seems like a bad decision, but we are at a point now where i think the players are far more informed of the dangers of what happens with playing football and the dangers of head injuries and all you can do really is provide people information and if he decides he wants to continue playing, that's his decision at the dolphins decide they can't live with his truth than they have the option of saying no, you can't play, but he wants to and they're going to throw him out there bomani jones, appreciate the perspective as always thank you thanks so much. stay with cnn news central. we'll be right back cellular tower, bell towers. they don't consumer cellular uses the same towers as big wireless, but then passes the
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tract health products the core is a lifestyle tried today at your core.com the death of divided new york and ignited a debate about crime and safety in the city. >> the trial of daniel penny now underway with the screening of potential jurors penny is the former marine who put 30-year-old jordan neely chokehold last year allegedly killing him. penny said he felt he needed to act before neely hurt someone. >> what happened next was caught on tape. and so what was so was what happened afterward. as penny stood over neely after he'd gone limp and was lying on the floor of the subway car cnn correspondent gloria pazmino joins us now, gloria, what? the kind of questions are potential jurors being asked? >> well, boris, brianna, we're in the early stages of this process and so far they've spent the day trying to determine jurors availability so far of 58 of 80 says 86 perspective jurors have already been dismissed. but by the time that they are done, they will have selected 12 manhattanites
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who will have something in common with all other new yorkers. they fact, the fact that they likely ride the subway almost every day. that's something that all of us can relate to here in new york city. and that is going to be key because that there's, of course, where this incident took place. they are going to try and put that jury as if they were inside that subway car. now, daniel penny is the marine who as you said, was riding the subway on that day last year, he said jordan neely, who was also on the same subway car and he says that neely was acting thing erotically, that he was screaming, that he was shouting, and that he was saying he was not afraid to go to prison so penny felt that he was going to hurt someone and he decided to take action. he put neely in a chokehold. he brought them down to bring them down to the floor, and he held him there for more than six minutes until he stopped moving. he stopped breathing and jordan neely died. now
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daniel daniel penny is facing manslaughter charges and criminally negligent homicide. and much of the prosecutions case is going to hinge on this video on the witness statements that were in the car while the defense is going to try and argue that there was panic and fear in that subway car that penny was responding to we know that some people reported being afraid while others said that it was just another day on the city subway. that is going to be a key element of this. and really an encapsulation of a key issue here in the city, which is crime in the city subway. and public safety. boris, brianna, gloria pazmino. >> thank you so much for keeping an eye on that case for us. still ahead. we'll tell you why a big change to x's terms of service has some users racing to scrub their fees
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the celtics get there championship rings and faced a new look next in the timberwolves lakers sees a father, son duo take the court. >> coverage begins tomorrow at six, of ikea on tnt if you read the fine print on the new terms of service for x, formerly known as twitter. >> you'll notice a big change that will have significant implications for anyone who can can you is using the platform according to the new language starting on november 15th all x users give the side permission to use their data to train ai models up until now, there has been an opt out feature, but it's not clear if that option is included under the new in terms cnn business writer clare duffy is following this story clare, some people may hear this and think, you know, what's the big deal will explain why it is a big deal. >> yeah, boris, brianna, many users are concerned about this. in particular, people like artists, comedian, certain
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subject matter experts are worried about their content. they're written posts and images being used to train these ai system that could ultimately replace them. some people are also worried about private information that they've put on x. that could show up and answers from this musk ai chatbot called grok. so we're already seeing some users starting to delete earlier post on the platform. and it's notable because this is a pretty big change, as you said, x was to offer has offered the option to opt out from having posts used to train grok and also said it won't use posts from private accounts, but it's not clear that those sort of opt options will be available under this new policicies starting on november 5, and clear this isn't the first time that elon musk's efforts with ai have courted controversy? >> yeah. i think that's the other reason that people are probably concerned about this grok isn't just another chat bot, it's pretty controversial. it's been called out for spreading false information about the presidential election, for
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generating these failed peak. but really realistic looking ai images of political figures and kind of compromising positions. so people might have an issue with having their content on x used to train this kind of tool alright, clare, thank you so much, clare duffy, we appreciate the report. next one, airports controversial, cuddle crackdown running late, but i got led my foot as spirit today, my fingers the right auto insurance coverage, the cost cover that by take your season auto or service. >> a be protected from may have like me just a pet, he really is a part
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sparks dual action kamala acts fast and last long. >> now, when she wants to hear up the spark we got you. did san francisco's leadership is failing us. that's why mark farrell is endorsing prop d. because we need to tackle our drug and homelessness crisis just like mark did as our interim mayor. mark farrell endorsing prop d, to bring the changes we need for the city we love. san francisco is in crisis and we need real experienced leadership. we need mark farrell. our interim mayor who got things done. who showed we can clear tent encampments, fight crime, and address the drug crisis. who will make the tough choices for our city's future. "i'm mark farrell. i'm running for mayor because san francisco deserves better." "i'm ready to deliver that change on day one." mark farrell. a proven leader with the experience we need.
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san francisco's leadership is failing us. that's why mark farrell is endorsing prop d. because we need to tackle our drug and homelessness crisis just like mark did as our interim mayor. mark farrell endorsing prop d, to bring the changes we need for the city we love. emotion. and also that a 22nd hug is adequate to get that burst of oxytocin, the love hormone that's running. >> all right so for those who need more than three minutes a new signs suggest quote, for fonder farewells please use the car park, the limit there 15 minutes. >> the ceo admits in that parking lot, quote, our team have seen interesting things go
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on over the years and quote, you don't say they set themselves up for that. i feel like, i mean, when they say you're hug and a three-minute hug, that's a pretty good hug. but yes, when they're directing people to the car park, also, who's enforcing this rosary? a curfew patrol. there is a producer patrol and they're telling me to go to kamala harris, who's in oakland county, birmingham, michigan, right? now. let's listen. >> just recently come up, for example, that my opponent donald trump does not believe we should raise minimum wage and i think everyone knows that the current minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, which means that the person who was working a full day and working full week picks will make $15,000 a year, which is essentially poverty wages so there is a big difference between donald trump and me on a number of issues, including this where i absolutely believe we must raise minimum wage and that rd

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