tv CNN News Central CNN October 24, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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>> now, what was this about me exaggerating >> it's going to be a star studded night for the harris campaign in georgia as former president donald trump heads out west we're following both candidates on the campaign trail. and an israeli soldier revealing to cnn that the idf using palestinians as human shields, forcing them to enter potentially booby-trapped houses and tunnels you'll hear that idf soldier in his own words and moments of terror caught on tape, 911 calls from the trump rally shooting have just been released. we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central
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on the campaign thanks israel as the candidates look to pick up supporting critical battlegrounds just days before the election right now, vice president kamala harris is on her way to the key swing state of georgia, where tonight she's going to bring out some major star power in a big way. >> former president barak obama will join her on stage for their first joint event. >> the boss bruce springsteen, tyler perry, spike lee, samuel l jackson, all of them will be there. >> all coming on the heels of the cnn townhall where harris made a pitch to undecided and persuadable voters painting former president trump as unfit to serve. >> trump, in the meantime, has headed out west today with rallies in arizona and nevada as he gives new details about how he'd handled some of the charges against him if re-elected. our correspondents are live on the trail traveling with both campaigns. let's begin with cnn's steve contorno, who is just outside of phoenix. steve, what's trump saying about about those
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charges? and is that a message that we might expect to hear from him tonight brianna, donald trump, and are interview earlier today saying that he intends to fire special prosecutor jack smith. >> if he is re-installed in the white house, this is obviously the individual who is overseeing the two federal cases against donald trump. and it's the latest example of how he intends to use the white house and the powers of the presidency to get rid of these charges that he faces in multiple cases, take a listen to what he told conservative radio host hugh hewitt earlier today. >> you're, they're going to have to pardon yourself, are going to have to fire jack smith. which one will you do it so easy, i would fire him within two seconds. say later today. look, he is medicine which has been quite scattershot lately. i was at a rally with him just outside of pittsburgh on saturday where he
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lengthy story about arnold palmer that ended with an anecdote about what he looked like in the men's locker room yesterday. he talked about getting tired chemicals out of our food supply. and promising to eliminate taxes on car loans. so his messaging of late has been somewhat all over the place. but what i could tell you is that we are in arizona which has a border state and donald trump believes that the issues at the u.s. southern border are the greatest priority for this country and should be the number one issue on the minds of voters. this election. so i can anticipate that he is most certainly going to talk about that in this swing state that he narrowly lost four years ago all right. >> steve topics do run the gamut. i will say that so does the musical stylings that we always enjoy when steve is at a rally? let's turn now to cnn's priscilla alvarez, who's live for just near atlanta. priscilla, where you're at is significant. tell us more about why the harris campaign has pick this location in such a tight race in that state well, this is of course
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battleground georgia it's our block. the campaign is trying to energize and mobilize voters. >> we know from state data that a third of active voters have already cast their ballot. this is a state where early voting is well underway, so they can campaign is trying to capitalize on that over the next several days by again, encouraging their supporters to go out and vote. now, they're bringing in all the stops to do exactly that with foreign president barack obama joining the vice president today. here is their first time on the campaign trail together. of course, bruce springsteen we'll be headlining. he of course, has made frequent appearances in the waning days of the election for democratic candidates before. but even as all of this is ongoing, we are also getting a glimpse into the vice president's closing argument for example, tomorrow, she had to houston, texas, not a battleground, but it is where the campaigns because it is the epicenter of what they call a trump abortion bans are giving
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them an opportunity to amplify their messaging on this issue with none other than beyonce, who we're told is going to be joining the vice president. there has been worked behind the scenes between the campaign and or the celebrities team. the singer seemed to try to get something on the books. this this is going to be one of those moments where the two talked together about reproductive freedom. now, moving forward, the vice president will continue to warn about a potential second trump term. we saw that during cnn's town hall last night, we expect to hear more of that, particularly her messaging that the former president is out to get revenge of his of who he says are his enemies while the vice president is focused on what she calls the american to to-do list. so anticipate hearing more of that messaging in the closing days of this election as well. one of the places we'll be making are delivering that message is going to be in washington, d.c. see you on tuesday at the national mall at the ellipse,
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where former president donald trump delivered his fiery speech on january 6, that set in motion the attack on the u.s. capitol by his supporters so certainly again, the vice president, pulling together all these different issues to make her case to the american people all right. >> priscilla alvarez live for us from georgia. thank you. not stop us. if you've heard this before or honestly don't because i don't know what else we'd say then like, what would we be saying that the race between vice president harris and former president trump is just neck and neck, razor thin virtually tied. no clear leader. it is true though the polling is she joan an extremely tight. competition for months now, we've been saying that. >> yeah, we have, you know, who has harry enten saying that? we're wondering harry how accurate the numbers are really, here's cnn's senior data reporter, harry enten joining us now put this into perspective for us. harry, what are the polls actually revealing? come to us discern the math for us because sometimes it's just a lot of numbers area it's a lot of
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numbers. >> i will discern the math for you, but during the segment, i have a job for the two of you. i haven't eaten lunch yet, so if you too could come up with a game plan for what i should do for lunch. i would really, really appreciate it. okay. >> alright. so we're going to run the numbers and here's the deal. someone could win them this election in a blowout despite the fact that the polls are so tight. in fact, at this particular point, if you take an aggregation of the different forecast models, will the 2024 winter get at least 300 electoral votes? in fact, the majority answer is yes, a 60% chance that either kamala harris or donald trump will get 300 plus election total votes. the minority answer, 40% chance at know the winner will get less than 300 electoral votes. but the bottom line is at this particular point, if you're making a bet on a really tight election, the electoral college or one in which you get a relative blowout you'll actually be betting on the relative blowout guys and how is that possible? given the polls are so close in the swing states? >> yes. how is it possible? i'm not just going to tell you the what i'm going to show you
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the how and why. all right. how is that possible? well, look, swing-state polling averages, right? if you look across the seven key battleground states, they're all within two points this particular point, but here's the thing to keep in mind. if you look at the average swing state polls since 1,972, the average swing state average what it's the average error is actually 3.4 points. so let's just say that there's a 3.4 point error, right? an average error, and it goes to one side or the other. let's say, for instance since that that error benefits kamala harris across all the swing states. well, what happens? she wins in the great lake battleground states, pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin she wins down in the southeast, right? north carolina, georgia. she wins out western nevada and arizona. look at it. she gets to 319 electoral votes of course, we don't know which way the polling error is going to go. if there is, in fact one, it could benefit donald trump. let's say he gets michigan there. i pointed appointed to wisconsin where he said michigan, i'm losing my mind.
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wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania, north carolina, georgia, arizona, nevada. if the polling error actually benefits donald trump, he gets the 312 electoral votes bottom line is the race is so close at this point but of a polling her goes to one folks that folk could actually get north of 300 electoral votes, guys yeah, there's a range of scenarios and we've seen the polling underrepresent certain voters that donald trump seems to attract. >> so we'll see if things may be different this time around. harry i think he should go get that bull of pokey that you and i talked about going years ago and ultimately never did he tried to take me to a pokey lunch date while it was raining and i was like gary, i'm not walking several blocks in the rain for this. i'm sorry. >> you know boris, maybe the next time you around will get polk a together. and i'll just note at the end of this that when a polling error message this is for one candidate in one state, it manages cmess and older say, i had that last lied. i was going to get it in
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>> i'm gonna go with a burrito able to get a burrito bowl i'd like harry. well thank you. so let's get serious now and discuss all of this with david axelrod, cnn senior political commentator, and former senior adviser to president obama. david, thank you so much for being with us. you've got former president obama, bruce springsteen, samuel jackson, a lot of star power tonight in georgia beyond in texas. after tonight, how much does having these big names helped the harris campaign well, first of all, let me say i think harry pulled up the hokey-pokey to get his to get his last slide in there at my expense. >> but look, i think that at this point these large crowd rallies are all about getting base voters out there, going to a county in georgia that joe biden carried with 81% of the votes. so they're not a persuasion mission in that part
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of georgia around and atlanta to so much persuade, although there's some of that as to motivate and tell people to get out and vote. i think there was some concern about early vote in georgia and some of the some of the numbers that were coming out of rural georgia and some of the republican efforts there. so i think that this is a well-timed rally to try and get people out engaged and voting. and you know, you bring your biggest, your biggest attractions to do that. and that's an all-star cast. as for uston, i think it's a little bit different i've they're going to use to not because they believe they're going to win the state of texas, but because they want to highlight this issue of abortion rights and reproductive rights, texas being ground zero in terms of restrictive abortion laws that have had really grave impacts
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on some women. there there's so i think they're trying to give people at a peek into what could happen if there were a national abortion ban. and i think beyonce will certainly bring more attention to that event, but that's slightly different than what's going on in georgia today. sure. >> sure. yeah. and then there's a potentially competitive senate race there in texas in which the democrats pushing a message of reproductive rights. i do want to go back to something you said about motivation for certain voters for obama, he's been more direct than harris has when it comes to addressing support for trump from black men. she's kind of avoided making identity and her identity a central focus of the campaign do you think that's the right approach? should that be adjusted in the final days of the campaign it's interesting because i think in some ways is taking some cues from barack obama when he ran for president. >> we never spoke about the
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historic nature of his candidacy. we thought people who are motivated by that probably understood that he was a black man and that there had never been an african american president. and we also thought people who weren't motivated to, who are motivated against him for that reason knew that but voters wanted to know what about me, who weren't necessarily black and do you understand my life? are you going to advocate for me and he ran to be president of the whole united states and not get earmarked are or narrowcast it into a kind of identity candidacy. and i think she's done the same thing and i think it's the right thing to do i kamala harris is running not to be the first woman and not to be the first asian, african american woman she's running thank to be president of the united states and she's speaking to issues that have universal appeal and concern.
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>> david, i want to get one more question and we did give that lunch conversation with harry extra time, so i wanted to make sure i got your perspective on this other thing you mentioned last night and after the town hall with kamala harris here on cnn, you mentioned that some of her responses to tough questions, specifically on israel and on immigration resulted in word salad city, essentially reverting to talking points by his own admission. donald trump weaves when responding to certain questions and it seems to make no discernible difference to his supporters. so i'm wondering how you think harris can manage what seemed to be to very different standards well, yes. she's in a more difficult position because she has basically had to introduce herself to the american people in 90 days donald trump. we've seen for years and he does get, there's no doubt about it. boris, you
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listen to a donald trump rally and it is a incredible flight because you never know where he's going or where he's going to land are how one-point connects to another. but that in some ways is priced into the stock of donald trump. whereas people are really trying to get to know kamala harris. so her answers are being scrutinized more closely because people are looking for who's how who she is and where she's going. and that puts additional pressure on her. i know that that particular piece of my analysis was quoted widely. i also talked about some of the strengths of her presentation, including when she said the difference between us is that he's going to come to the office with an enemies list and i'm going to come with a to-do list about how we work on those things that those concerns that we've discussed here tonight, i thought that was powerful and compelling and really fundamental argument in the
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final ten days of this campaign. and every time donald trump goes out with his grievance list and talks about who is going to fire to protect himself and who he is going to go after using the tools of the justice department and the presidency. i think he and scores the fact that that's his fundamental concern, that's his focus. donald trump. i think that's a great opportunity for kamala harris. and i was i thought when she said that last night, it really struck a chord in me you predicted that we would hear more of that and today she's repeating that that refrained to do to do plus the i suspect it will keep hearing until next tuesday. >> david axelrod. thank you so much for being with us. >> great to see you, boris. >> of course, things actually to tuesday's from now, just to be precise, i ahead this hour on cnn news central has elon musk ended his $1 million. voters sweepstakes after being warned he could be breaking the
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law. we have the latest details on that plus the world's largest lake, roughly the size of montana, is shrinking. we investigate why and the impact it could have. >> at first an israeli soldier comes forward with disturbing accusations the idf has used palestinians in gaza as human shields. his testimony and photographic evidence next >> who were in the hallways working on a project while loading up our suv, one extra push and for so we schedule that safe flight.com. >> we were able to track our technician and knew exactly when he'd arrived we could keep working safe. flight came to us. >> i am kendrick with a replacement. >> we could trust that service the way we want it schedule a free mobile service. >> now, at safe flight.com, we pay your safety
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host a meeting this weekend in the northern part of gaza, health officials are warning the area is at a breaking point. the idf ordering large-scale evacuations as its military operations there intensify. let's take you live to tel aviv with cnn's jeremy diamond. jeremy, you've learned some of the disturbing tactics that have been employed by the idf what did you find well, listen boris, the israeli military frequently accuses hamas of using palestinian civilians as human shields. >> and there is ample evidence for rockets fired from residential neighborhoods, tunnels passing beneath civilian homes. but now there is also mounting evidence that the israeli military itself has been using palestine kenyans as human shields as well, sending civilians into potentially booby-trapped buildings and tunnels ahead of its soldiers. and for the first time on television, we have an israeli soldier who i interviewed describing that practice they walked through the rubble at gunpoint into potentially
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booby-trapped buildings and down dark and tunnels. some were teenagers like 17-year-old mohammad can believe it. >> no it looks the lives of others like abu alia scene were grandparents film aula, think a lot these five palestinians, all civilians, say the israeli military detain them and use them as human shields in gaza. foot view a plot hand, couldn't happen a gave us the it good window run fact at this hour
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speaking out breaking the silence. >> a watchdog group which verifies soldiers testimonials provided photograph listen facilitated the interview. the soldier says a 16-year-old boy and 20-year-old man were brought to his unit this spring their hands were tied behind their back and they had a cloth over there. >> i've the instructions from the intelligence officer who delivered them were clear he told me to take them in the next attack, use them as a human shield he told me that they have a connection to hamas for two days. his unit followed those orders this haunting photo captures the scene, the silhouette of a palestinian man flanked by two soldiers, ordering him forward. >> when we went to the attack before they enter a building, we took the cloth up so they could see in my company, one of the soldiers new arabic, you just shouted in arabic, opened the door and walked in this building or the other. >> you're using them because you think this building might be booby traps? >> yes, my soldiers didn't like that at all and they
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refuse to do this anymore. >> soldiers decided to take their concerns to their senior commander telling him they believed they were violating international law. >> the commander, though this fellow assemble soldier, doesn't need to think about international law he didn't say, you guys shouldn't be doing this, shouldn't be happening. >> they said that we need to do this. he said that our lives more important. >> so he didn't just tell you, don't worry about it. he said, keep doing it. >> yes. yes eventually, the commands or relented telling his soldiers they could release the two palestinians, suddenly you're allowed to release. yeah, it made it sure to us that they are not terrorists. >> in a statement, the israeli military said the idf's directives and guidelines strictly prohibit the use of detained gaza civilians for military operations. the relevant protocols and instructions are routinely clarified to soldiers in the field during the conflict. but the israeli military's use of human shields in gaza appears to have been widespread. so
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common it even had a name aumosquito protocol both israeli and international law banned the use of civilians in combat. israel also accuses hamas of using civilians as human shields. there is ample evidence for it tunnels dug beneath homes and rockets fired from residential neighborhoods for me, it's more painful with my own army. >> hamas is a terrorist organization. the idf shouldn't use terrorist organization practices and so when you here spokespeople for the israeli military, israeli government official saying the israeli military is the most moral army in the world. that's of course, i don't believe that dr. yahia al hayya ally, who worked at al shifa hospital knows that all too well. months after he says is really soldiers forced him to risk his life. he cannot shake this terrifying experience asked me to come. >> he was talking to anglish, told me, i will kill you if you didn't intend that, i was
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thinking, but i will be killed or die within minutes, his brush with death and the day he feared, he would never again see his family note that while the israeli military said its directives do not allow for the use of human shields. it also didn't deny the existence of the practice in gaza. and of course it is just one of a long list of alleged violations of international law by israeli soldiers in gaza, force brown. >> all right. jeremy, thank you for that report. jeremy diamond, live from tel aviv and still to come on, cnn news central for the first time the 911 calls from the assassination attempt against former president trump had been released and we're going to play them >> you've gotten used to chaos. we can get rid of them, don't sell only gosh, is this when leaving just isn't an option? >> the brothers are here to
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shake up a protect the world's oceans from its biggest au plus turned potion advocates who are making a difference to move and this is cnn super pac has yet to announce it's a wednesday winner for its daily $1 giveaway. it is, of course, thursday since saturday, the pro-trump group america pac has been naming a winner every day until yesterday, when cnn broke the news that the justice department sent musk a warning that it could be breaking the law. >> and cnn reporter marshall cohen has been following this story for us, marshall, have they said why there was no winner announced for wednesday? >> they have offered no public explanation. the speculation is swirling. look, it could be
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that they've decided to retool this sweepstakes to make it comport with the law, but also maybe they just forgot to do it for they're going to announce to today. we have been keeping a close eye on their twitter account or x, that's where they've been making the announcements, but wednesday came and went with no winner. and of course, yesterday was when we all learned that the justice department took that notable step of sending a letter to elon musk, super pac warning them that this could be illegal. remember, it is against federal law to pay people to register or to give cash prizes are incentives to register to vote. you just can't do it. it's punishable by up to five years in prison. not that were anywhere near that, but it is a crime. and the justice department took action to tell them basically, they should stop. >> is this doj letter slap on the wrist or is it a serious threat? >> mean it's always serious when federal law enforcement
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reaches out to you and tells you we may have a problem here and lucky, they didn't have a winter yesterday and that's certainly raising some eyebrows it was the next logical step after musk announced this on saturday, it looks like the justice department took action pretty quickly within just a couple of days to at least intervene it is also possible they just forgot who knows martial believe that marshall cohen. thank you so much for the reporting. appreciate it so if you live in a swing state, you've probably seen an avalanche of political ads over these last few weeks and so far this month voters in seven key swing states have been seeing tens of millions of dollars worth of ads from both candidates and also outside groups. >> one philadelphia tv station says it's actually run out of ad space altogether of pro-harris super pac has spent the most, more than $22 million on a spy hitting donald
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trump's tax policy. here's a clip not know hell. >> i work hard. i scraped to get by donald trump wants to give tax breaks to billionaires, but kamala harris has plans to help us joining us now to talk about how these ads could affect the race is jacob ny, hazel. he is a political science associate professor at the university at buffalo, and an expert on political communication and campaigns jacob first, let's talk about the ad that we just played there. do you think that is the right message? assange to pour $22 million into why or why not i think the more important part of that is that they message that that group thinks is the one to pour $22 million into as outside observers, that's really all we have to go off of in terms of what it makes for
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an effective or an efficacious why should of ad is their internal polls are suggesting that that's the way to go. >> their focus groups are probably pointing that direction and that's, that's where they're focusing their efforts as outside of reservers. that's what we have i have a pro-trump ad to play for you. this one came in third for the most money spent this month that criticizes harris, his record on law enforcement. let's go out and play as san francisco da liberal kamala harris, killers go free. and as california attorney general, kamala continue to put criminals first after a little girl was raped and buried alive, laws were passed to keep sex offenders away from children. nor jessica law and the lab convicted sex offender lived here and parks obviously, trump is running with a message that crime is rampant in the united states, that it's out of control, and that harris doesn't really have the wherewithal to stop that. >> or perhaps nefariously that
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she's somehow promoting it through immigration policy i'm wondering jacob, when it comes to two decipher in what to put in an ad like this what's the conversation like from a strategy perspective? is there like information that comes from focus groups? how does it all gets sorted out to make an ad that turns into this? >> no, it's internal polling, its focus groups, but if we think of a consistent pattern, it's often issues that the party is known to be trusted on. and so you typically see republicans running on law and order. you sometimes see democrats like in the previous ad running on republicans are out of touch the party that represents the majority, maybe the middle class, which has been a key feature of a lot of harris has ads. and so i think that there are certain things that they can tap into where they know that the voters, historically speaking, trust them on at issue and they run toward those issues are you tell us about how much these
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really work? because when you go into these places or let's say, if we traveled to different swing states will get a taste of what people are dealing with there. and it's unreal. they must start getting tired of it. did they get immune to them? any point that's a really, really good question that's something political scientists have been working on for a while. >> we do think that ad work. we think the campaigns like that ads work or else they wouldn't be airing them that they work though, means that it's probably more at the margins right there. they're not winning elections on their own helene not? winning elections outside of the other activities that are going on within the, within the campaigns themselves but we do think that they can persuade at the march, it's now whether there's a marginal return, right? that additional ad that somebody in pennsylvania seeing for the 11th or 12th or 15th time they're probably is getting into something like a domitian return type of event.
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>> but on the margins, and this is going to be decided on the margins as we, as we know professor nye hazel, thank you so much for taking us through that my pleasure thank you. the world's largest lake is shrinking, and some scientists are concerned that it may never factory, great visual solutions to perfect your process an asthma attack. every second feels like an eternity prima team missed works fast. it's clinically shown to open airways quickly, get the number one fda approved over-the-counter asthma inhaler prime 18 missed, breathe easy again. >> do you know you can save with goodr accident even if you have insurance amount of medicare had checked good rx because it can be my coping like that even if you have
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that's 800 for three six, 0-3, nine to high as 22-years-old. he's not just a pet, he really is a part of our family knowing that he's getting good nutrition. that's a huge relief for me and my dad au been piglet and yes, that is your name. if you saw his big lead, you would say the same to do close captioning is 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 seven evan the planet's largest lake is under threat. >> it's shrinking fast and some experts fear that it may never recover. >> we're talking about the caspian sea, bounded by countries including iran at the south and russia, the north. this is a vital resource for these countries and it also plays an important role in regulating the region's arid climate cnn chief climate correspondent bill weir joins us now. bill, what is driving
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this and how serious is the problem? >> well, boris, its people, its people both in those the vulgar river, which feeds most of the water into the caspian sea that winds through russia. russia has put up dozens of dams there. there's a lot of overuse, but the underlying culprit that is really seems to be out of control is global warming. climate change that is, makes inland seas much harder to maintain a consistent water cycle. the caspian has gone up and down over the eons as everyone has warmed and cooled. >> but right now it's happening faster than ever before. the 4,000 mile coastline has receded, the lake levels have dropped by about five feet and you look at the trends it's getting worse and worse. >> and this is going to create sort of resource stress in a place that depends on this water, not for drinking farming and every other us you can imagine there in five different countries, but cast a light on sharing resources in the age of climate change when they're becoming more scarce and the caspian sea obviously many
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countries border it, but also azerbaijan does, and it's hosting the next climate summit as also have this deeply concerning report that was just released it's bill that's right. >> back. who will host the next big climate summit next month right there near the caspian as well. and the un climate change report every year they say, here's where the goals were, here's how much progress was made and this last year, straight maps no progress, zero. >> in fact, a world humanity burned in record 57 gigatons of planet cooking, fossil fuel pollution right now it looks like not only will humanity exceeded the 1.5 of the paris accords, unless nothing changes, but will double it by the end of the century will pass three degrees celsius. >> that's also five degrees fahrenheit. that makes coral reefs obsolete. it makes a lot of global south and livable. that's horrible number to think about there basically
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saying you've got to do more. the only country out of over 160 nations that pledged to raise their ambitions and come back with better carbon cutting strategies was madagascar a little island nation and african far from the richest in the world. but it just goes to show that even as solar and wind energy is coming up in record numbers, the demand for electricity for like ai computing cryptocurrencies is devouring and just as fast as the new ones come online on. >> another sobering report, boris bill weir. >> thank you so much for bringing it to us. appreciate it next, you'll hear 911 calls from trump's butler, pennsylvania rally, the desperate pleas for help made seconds after the assassination attempt against him have just been released special coverage begins tuesday the november 5 at four on cnn i've been warned by celebrities athletes, and world leaders but i'm always felt
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callers voices. listen we're i believe a guy shooting took place. >> are aware of it. are taking care of the situation no. no i'm scared. >> they just tried to kill president trump one woman trying to locate her husband who had been shot and taken by paramedics i have a female and align her husband was shot at a trump rally in my name
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paramedic service tim, i called butler hospital. he's not there. they told me to call 911 and joining us now is cnn chief law enforcement analyst john miller. >> amazing, calm from that woman. i will say as she was trying to find her husband, john, what did you notice in these calls? >> well i've listened to all 13 calls in what you get there is not much new information about what happened, but what really punches through is what it was like in the stands, right? we've seen the video from behind the building where the gunman crawled up, where people are pointing him out and saying he has a rifle and alerting the police but we've never gotten this sense from audio as to the level of fear, panic and sheer anxiety that was going on in the stands because what they couldn't see that others had is they didn't know where the shots came from. they didn't know what it just happened. they knew people were wounded but if you listen to aren't a lot of 911 call takers they're trying to triage
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the call by saying, are you with somebody who was hurt? where is that person? and if not, they're just telling the callers were aware of the situation police are taking care of it and then trying very quickly to move to that next call. >> john, yesterday, we saw something interesting in georgia where donald trump was having an appearance at one point, he appeared to walk outside to greet the overflow crowd apparently without those bulletproof glass panels, we're used to seeing given the amount of concern about his safety that that raises some security concerns, doesn't it well, it does. >> and it also introduces us to one of the realities of being the protective agency around what they refer to as a principal or a protectee? which is you can provide that envelope of protection. you can provide those layers. but you can't, you can't tell them what they can't do. and sometimes a protectee in this
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case, a presidential candidate, a former president we'll say, i'm just going to do this. now, if you look at the pictures from that, you can see he steps out from behind the glass. he moved slowly down the stairs, a moves to that to that that fence line where the people are but the secret service are already ahead of him already. at that crowd when he gets there. and this is one of those one of those spontaneous things that because it wasn't planned and because it was unpredictable, leaves a potential assailant at a disadvantage but still it's an opening and i know it makes the protectors very uncomfortable. but he's a candidate running for president. and you can't tell them what not to do yeah. >> does make their job very tough though, to your point, john miller. >> thank you so much. still ahead on cnn news central, cnn finds evidence that fox altered one of its interviews with former president trump will show you what was edited out
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