tv ABC7 News 600AM ABC September 23, 2020 6:00am-6:59am PDT
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welcome back. a restaurant appears to be burned and a witness says that firefighters told him that icks. he she reaunteaceerord is fami owned. and a devastating milestone in the pandemic. the coronavirus has now taken more than 200,000 lives here in the u.s. right now cases are on the rise in 33 states, washington, d.c. a puerto rico. officials warn at least 18
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states are in the so-called red zone. here at home, cases do appear to be stabilizing. now more indoor businesses will get the green lights to reopen. solano, alameda and is an made day "counties moved from the purple tier to the red tier. and the economy of course is just one of the things that we're following. amy hollyfield is live for us in san mateo county. how are you? clrt it looks like people are working out there. we'll come back to you in a moment. we do want to check in now with some other reopenings that are happening. the state has relaxed restrictions on nail salons, they can now reopen and take customers inside. but the final say is up to the
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county health departments. in the bay area, every county septemb except sonoma and alameda are allowingsalons to reopen indoor operations. and the decision came after they realized that businesses could reopen and operate safely. san francisco is trying to keep parents informed about where schools stand on reopening. public health officials have published a tracker on data sf.org. it shows you which schools have applied for a waiver to reopen and also shows you their application status. you can search for a specific school, you can sort by elementary, middle and high schools. now, among the approved schools, elementary schools can reopen first, then middle and high schools. abc 7 news has a new interactive tool to help make sense of the four tier reopening weekly covi
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lets you pick your county and then you can see how the numbers are trending. if your county is below its current color coded tier for three weeks, that means that it could be moving into a new tier pretty soon. so check it out on abc7news.com. this morning president trump is taking a break from the campaign trail to attend a white house event honoring veterans from the bay of pigs invasion. joe biden will campaign in charlotte, north carolina. and then the two come face-to-face tuesday in the first debate. and now we know the topics that will be discussed. they include the individual records of each candidate, the supreme court, covid-19, the economy, the social reckoning happening in our country and the integrity of the election. so basically all the topics you thought that they would address. the pandemic was front and? are last night at a trump rally in pennsylvania when the president mocked biden's use of masks. >> i mean honestly, what the hell did he spend all the money on the plastic surgery if he's going to cover it up with a
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mask? seriously. >> this morning on "good morning america," the surgeon general reiterated that wears masks is it the best way to stop the spread of coronavirus. florida today we start three days of mourning for ruth bader ginsburg. so here is a live look at the supreme court in washington, d.c. that is where ghinsburg's body is expected to arrive in the next 15 minutes. and as the country prepares to say good-bye, the political battle to replace ginsburg has taken a new step forward. republicans appear to have are secured the numbers they need to confirm president trump's pick. gop senator mitt romney says that he will vote if it reaches the floor. his backing g party the 51 required votes to take until nomination. democrats argue that there should be no confirmation process to replace ginsburg because early voting is already under way in some states. >> youy wve oigation under
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the constitution to fill the vacancy and i assure that you is very likely to happen. >> now the focus turns to the fronts runner amy coney barrett, a devout catholic. in 2017, 14eshe said her religi beliefs will not affect her decisions. there will be special coverage this morning when ruth bader ginsburg's casket arrives at the supreme court expected to happen around 6:20. where are the terrorists? >> one possibility i see is hanford police department -- >> new criticism for apple coming in, where siri is being heard making suggestions about terrorists. b.a.r.t.'s big newon, ming to trains to help solve one of the top headaches for commuters.
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looking at our air quality, good today and tomorrow. so breathe easy. but friday and saturday, we head back to the moderate category. part of the reason why we are heating up, we have forecasted highs on saturday, hottest spots going close to 100. turns even hotter here on sunday with our heatwave on the horizon. we're talking temperatures likely exceeding 100 degrees in our hottest spots. look at this, from concord to antioch to fairfield to livermore, even around the bay shoreline, we'll be in the 90s. and hottest day over the next seven, monday, we're in the 80s and 90s around the bay shoreline, well above 100. and speaking of hot, we have a couple hot spots. one is the bay bridge toll plaza. traffic is backed up to the our second hot spot also in the east bay, from fremont, an earlier sigalert earlier and now there appears to be a separate
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accident as well. so traffic is heavy on the northbound 880 stretch as you approach dakota. however, drew is talking about all the hot weather this weekend, and this is a live shot in san jose, this is highway 17. things are quiet right now. but expect highway 17 to be jammed this weekend with all the folks heading to the beaches. >> makes sense. thanks. fwloo a . and on wab.a.r.t. trains, wi-fi and 5g service will be coming to aull trains by 2023. so no more dead spots. g 5 g could be 100 times faster than 4 g. and a state of emergency still ongoing in louisville and
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. new at 6:00, the name uncle ben's is no more. it will now be called ben's original. the popular brand announcing that new name and the packaging will hit stores next year. and there is no image, just words. back in june, companies decided to rebrand uncle ben's, aunt gentleman app jemima and mrs. butter's worth. and also a question why siri
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says this when you ask about terrorists. >> where are the terrorists? >> one possibility is the hanford police -- >> and they call siri's answer horrific and unacceptable. a number of similar videos already posted on social media. within hours of the video being published, siri was no longer including police stations in the results when asked about terrorists. we've reached out to apple for comments and we'll let you and recent demonstrations against police brutality have sparked a conversation about mental health and policing. in an effort to build a better bay area, several local cities are rethinking their policies. redwood city officials are working with other areas on a mental health pilot program that would provide mental health support when police encounter
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nights psychological intervention. >> really hard to listen to because some people have had very poorpa. >>y he to launch the promise in early 2021. and a liouisville plisolice office is speaking out. sergeant jonathan mattingly was shot in the leg during that botched drug raid in march. in an email he says i know we did the legal, moral and ethical thing that night. it's sad how the good guys are demonized and criminals canonized. this comes as the kentucky attorney general is expected to ofceunce whetherrges wl >> ye erar charges brought against those cop, then you don't start the process the real
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process towards justice for plea anna taylor. >> no drugs with are found at their apartment. officers had barged in unannounced and her boyfriend fired one shot and officers returned fire killing taylor. vallejo city council just approved a "black lives matter" street mural that will be painted in front of city hall like the other ones that you've seen in other bay area cities. but when it came to a vote, vallejo's only black city council member opposed the idea calling it a hollow gesture. he says the city should focus on education, housing and police reform. checkout lines as we know them may soon be a thing of the past in the east bay. berkeley has passed an ordinance that would ban junk food items from being stocked near the
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checkout. they will be replaced with healthier options. the ordinance goes into effect in march of next year but won't be enforced until jab nuaryab nf 2022. and "rolling stone" magazine says that its new best album of all-time is -- marvin gaye's 1971 protest epic what's going on. the magazine updated its 500 greatest albums list originally published in 2003. back then, it had the beatles sar pepper' sergeant pepper's lonely heart's cub band as number one. that is now number two.
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there are newcomers at number 19 and beyonce at number 32. you have to find out if mariah made it on there. you know she's on there. >> who we need to put respect on this name, prince. >> yeah. >> sign of the times, and purple rain. also the missed indication of lauren hill. >> yeah, love that album. >> she's at number 10 on the list. and this is a big deal because it jumped more than 300 spots. if only she could get to the concert on time. >> that's not what we're talking about right now. nd perfect in the weather department is the air quality. smoke is out of the die. and we'll have good air quality today and tomorrow. and here is a live look from the
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rooftop camera. the air quality is spectacular right now no matter where you live. fresh air from the north bay to the coast to the east bay, to the south bay. we are good t righ nos look mperatures in the 60swith breeze right now. highs today numbers slightly below average for this time of the year. we'll get to about 88 the high in concord. our marine layer tonight will expand. and so a lot more fog overnight as we head into thursday. and we'll also track the chance of some coastal drizzle for tomorrow morning as the marine is deepening. pacif hwlyea of i
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check,t keeping that onshore breeze off the cool ocean water that keeps the air quality good today and tomorrow. even beneficial rain coming to the pacific northwest. they will have rainfall in several inches. but it doesn't look like northern california will see much of any rainfall. but it is hard to find storms. october is a better bet for rain to return to california. fire danger increases as we head into the weekend. a fire weather watch goes into effect 11:00 on saturday and lasts until monday. there will be offshore winds developing out of the north/northeast could gust as high as 50 miles per hour in our hills. and the fire danger is increasing. so i wouldn't be surprised if this gets upgraded to a red flag
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warning. of course we'll track it. here is the accuweather 7 day forecast. tomorrow, grizle drizzle in the morning, but air quality remains fresh. air quality starts to decline friday as we heat up for the weekend. look at that, hitting the triple digits on sunday with the high fire danger. and it stays hot and hazy for early next week, so enjoy the air today and tomorrow. >> we'll have to jump into some water at some point this weekend. >> you know i stay ready to get in the pool. >> i'm still remembering the photos from the beach day. i don't know who took those photos, but it looked straight out of vogue. >> thank you, friend. i know you're not talking when you were in the lake or the river. >> oh! check the insta. all right. going to move on now. new developments in the south bay.
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til leit.heyl spend adi3 million st removing huge piles of trash at aad and a lucky dog has a new home after being found in a scary spot. a bridge inspector saw this hound stuck under the bridge deck 120 feet over the mississippi river. and look at this, a rescuer climbing to the dog making sure that it is all right. he then made a make shift harness out of rope and lifted the dog to safety. and that do adopted soon after the rescue. so this is what an empty museum sounds like. this is the sounds of silence in the museum. but those rooms will soon be
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filled with people once again. the museum has members only preview days starting next thursday october 1 and then opens to everyone else the sunday after that. >> i know that they will be looking forward to seeing it filled. i miss doing things like that. >> yeah. and just yesterday, some museums opened in san francisco. and those people were like waiting outside in line ready to see the art. so do it safely, do it apart. sounds good toew special f juice arriving to lie in repose at the supreme court. and you can see that people here waiting with their masks on the
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steps for her to arrive. this is going to be really a three day honoring and celebration of her life and all that she has done and cribbed during her time on the supreme court and before. so we are waiting for her to arrive. she lie in repose here and will also be at the capitol before having a private ceremony and burial with her family at arlington national cemetery. and some additional information here -- okay. happen only in america like so many others. i owe so much to the entry this nation afforded to people yearning to breathe free. serving on this court is the highest honor, the most awesome trust that can be placed in a judge. it means working at my craft,
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working with and for the law as a way to keep our society both ordered and free. >> announcer: celebrating ruth bader ginsburg, a judicial icon. now reporting, chief anchor george stephanopoulos. good morning, and welcome to our coverage of the celebration of supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg. that is the scene at the supreme court this morning. you see the plaza and the supreme court steps lined by the -- the honorary pallbearers who also served as clerks to justice ruth bader ginsburg. her family and friends are also gathered there at the supreme court today as we prepare to see her casket roll up to the supreme court where she will lie in repose for the next two days, an honor accorded to justices going back to salmon chase back in the 1800s. terry moran, we're seeing the pallbearers walk down the
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stairs. huge crowd across the street, and ever since the word broke on friday night, you've seen people come to pay their respects. >> reporter: george, it's been remarkable and beautiful and solemn, and really in a way heroes tribute the kind of thing we've seen for the great stmen . ruth bader ginsburg touched so many people, and to see the memorial here grow over the past several days as people brought flowers and candles, wrote cards and signs, and then the sidewalk and the plaza -- this vast plaza, not up on the steps, but here on the sidewalk covered in chalk messages and hebrew and english from all over the world, and so many children -- i brought my own kids here -- coming because they're learning about what ruth bader ginsburg has done for this country for equality, the principle of equality in their schools. there was -- there was sadness, but there was also a great deal of pride.
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concern among those who are of the liberal persuasion, but they're worried about who will replace her, and it was more about gratitude than anything else, and here in that solemn moment, you can feel that as well. >> you can see the hearse approaching the steps of the supreme court. the casket will be taken up the steps. there will be a short, solemn, private ceremony. chief justice john roberts expected to speak. also, a rabbi at the congregation of washington, d.c., her husband served as a law clerk. kate shaw as a clerk on the supreme court, and i remember what justice sutor said. she achieved greatness before she became a great justice. >> reporter: we're reflecting on her legacy not just as a justice
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before she ever ascended to the bench. in the 1970s, she litigated cases that changed the meaning of the constitution. before she started litigating these cases, it wasn't what equality guarantees, applied to women at all, and she systematically changed that understanding by convincing the 9th court to include women in the 14th amendment of the constitution, and years later, she ends up on the d.c. circuit, and then on the supreme court continuing to place her mark on the law, but, you know, it's her life in its entirety both as a lawyer and as a justice, and then more recently really as an american icon that i think everyone is really coming together to honor today. >> and kate, we're seeing her pallbearers now approach the casket. when president clinton appointed her back in 1993, one of her great selling points was that she was someone he believed could work with the republicans, with the conservatives on the court, and she did that, but she also became known later in her
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career for those fierce dissents. >> she somehow managed to do both, right? to forge across ideological alliances. her friendship with justice scalia was as real and deep as any friendship. i talked to scalia clerks who are devastated by this because justice ginsburg meant a great deal to them just because of her relationship with justice scalia. so that was real, and yet they disagreed also as fiercely as you can imagine, and so her dissents, i think they were respectful, but they were powerful and many in ways, that's what catapulted her into the public view over the last decade or so, but always on the substance, always on the merit, and always in a way that allowed her to retain, you know, good, warm even relationships with her fiercest at ved adversarieadve >> the casket now being taken up the steps of the supreme court. all eight justices of the supreme court will be there today to honor their colleague.
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jon karl, first time all eight justices together since this pandemic struck. >> reporter: yeah. it's been a strange time for all of us, a strange time for the supreme court, working virtually. i have to say one thing. one thing that strikes me about my m my memories of ruth bader ginsburg was attending hearings here at the supreme court which i had a chance to do from time to time. her questioning, she was often the first to jump in. she had absolutely no patience for long preambles by counsel for either side of a case. she would jump in, sometimes interrupt in the first sentence or two of a lawyer making a case. she read all the material. she knew what was at stake. she wanted to get right to the meat of the matter. >> in her honor today, theha of the justices dpe in black wool crepe as are the benches in front of it.
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those are supreme court police actually carrying the casket. her clerks lining the way, all in masks at this time of covid. as the casket makes it up the steps, it will be placed on the lincoln kettle, another american tradition. of course, we saw that earlier this summer when congressman john lewis, the great civil rights hero lay in state at the u.s. capitol. courtars.
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as i said, appointed by bill clinton back in 1993. terry moran, you see those clerks lining the steps. what a relationship between a justice and their clerks. >> reporter: kate can speak to this. it's so special, those of us who covered the court. sometimes they're almost jealous. it's part hard work. it it's part a seminar, and it's part a personal relationship that many of them helps define their lives, and ruth bader ginsburg and other justices tasking master, and speaking to former clerks, you had to know
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the brief just as well as she did, and she was tough, but always a very kind person. she managed to combine in all of her -- in all of her life, really grace and steel. i remembered a time, oh, more than a decade ago that she came to the court after battling cancer which she did for 20 years. she showed up in the press room which the justices don't often do. it w an awkward greeting. somebody asked, how are you feeling, justice ginsburg? she paused. she's a woman who deployed silence. she gathered a moment to her, and she said in that quiet voice, very determined, i'm not going anywhere. we laughed. shdidn.vega s o a through this year despite battling cancer not once, but at least twice. >> reporter: she did, and -- and it was a fight, and there were many nervous times over the course of that, and, you know, there are now some democrats in the wake of her passing who have
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been asking in retrospect whether with her illnesses that she faced over the course of these years, she perhaps should have stepped down sooner given where we are with the politics in our country right now, and the battle that is about to be waged on capitol hill for her replacement, but as anybody who has covered this justice, as anybody who has met and spoke with her or listened to her interviews knows no one was going to tell ruth bader ginsburg what to do when it came to her job, when she should do it or how long she should stay in that seat. certainly it was exactly what she did. she stayed until the very end. >> what an example she set as you see the lincoln kettle falk. the justices behind her. chief justice john roberts will speak. the family of justice ginsburg there as well.
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she was a widow. her husband, martin ginsburg, also a lawyer. they met before law school. deb roberts whar, what a love s >> reporter: what a love story indeed, george. i have to say in spite of her towering intellect and trailblazing spirit, so many admired her of her storybook of a marriage. 56 years she was married, and she had a partnership when at that time it wasn't very common. he just adored her. said she was a terrible cook, so he learned to become a cook and he advocated for her to become on the court. she said he was the first man who cared that she had a brain. a real love story, and something a seminar should be taught about. what a couple, and what a marriage. >> you see justice stephen breyer there, also appointed by bill clinton. justice john roberts.
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half the ginsburg family seated so far. notice the woman in the re red kerchief there in the front row. it was she who dictated her final wish to the public that she be replaced by the president elected on november 3rd. i believe that is justice sotomayor wearing the full face shield there. very small ceremony. there will be a larger memorial
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in the capitol on friday morning where justice ginsburg will lie in state. the first woman in the united states history to lie in state in the u.s. capitol. rosa parks was given the honor of lying in repose. justice ginsburg will be the first woman to officially lie in state. >> you may be seated. [ spe blessed is god the true judge. [ speaking foreign language ] god has given. god has taken. praise be the name. psalm 23. [ speaking foreign language ]
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[ singing in foreign language ] ♪ the psalm of david, the lord is my shepherd. i shall not want. god makes me lie down in green pastures. god leads me beside the still waters. god restores my soul. god guides me in the straight paths for god's namesake. yea, though i walk through the shadow of the valley of death, i will fear no evil for you are with me. your rod and your staff, they comfort me.
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you prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies. you have anointed my head with oil, my cup runs over. surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and i shall dwell in the house of adonai forever. today we stand in mourning of an american hero, justice ruth bader ginsburg. in a moment, i will speak to what she meant to all of us, but first, i would like to turn to her beloved family. the justice was a mother, a grandmother, and as we all know, had one of the most extraordinary life partners in her beloved marty. to each of you, to the justice's colleagues, to her law clerks and to her court family, the
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country mourns with you and sends you our deepest love and comfort. to be born into a world that does not see you, that does not believe in your potential, that does not give you a path for opportunity, or a clear path for education and despite this, to be able to see beyond the world you are in to imagine that something can be different, that is the job of a prophet. it is the rare prophet who not only imagines a new world, but also makes that new wld a reality in her lifetime. this was the brilliance and vision of justice ruth bader ginsburg. the torah is relentless in reminding and instructing and commanding that we never forget those who live in the shadows, .
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36 times we are taught that we must never forget the stranger. 12 times we are told to care for the widow, and the orphan. this is one of the most important commandments of the torah. it is the torah's call to action. and it is also the promise written into our constitution. as justice ginsburg said and i quote, think back to 1787. who were we the people? they certainly weren't women. they surely weren't people held in human bondage. the genius of our constitution is that now over more than 200 sometimes turbulent years, that we has expanded and expanded.
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this was justice ginsburg's life's work, to insist that the constitution deliver on its promise that we the people would include o tt work i as an advocate arguing six times before this court for equal treatment for women and men, as a judge on the d.c. circuit and as a justice on this court. and as a path-marking role model to women and girls all all ages who now know that no office is out of reach for their dreams whether that is to serve in the highest court of our land or closer to home for me as the rabbi of their community. nothing could stop justice ginsburg's unflagging devotion
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bond of life. may she rest in peace and let us say amen. >> thank you, rabbi holtzblatt for those compelling words. jane, jim, the entire ginsburg family, on behalf of all the justices, the spouses of the justices, and the entire supreme court family, ierheartft othe loss of ruth bader gibu th lselyared, but we know that it falls most heavily on the family. justice ginsburg's life was one of the many versions of the american dream.
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her father was an immigrant from odessa. her mother was born four months after her family arrived from poland. her mother later worked as a bookkeeper in brooklyn. ruth used to ask, what is the difference between a bookkeeper in brooklyn and a supreme court justice? her answer, one generation. it has been said that ruth wanted to be an opera virtuoso, but became a rock star instead, but she chose the law, subjected to discrimination in law school and the job market because she was a woman. ruth would grow to become the leading advocate fighting such discrimination in court. she was not an opera star, but she found her stage right behind me in our courtroom. there she won famous victories that helped move our nation closer to equal justice under law to the extent that women are
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now a majority in law schools, not simply a handful. later she became a star on the bench where she sat for 27 years. her 483 majority and dissenting opinions will stand for decades. the unaffected grace in court and in our conference room was soft, but when she spoke, people listened. among the words that best describe ruth, tough, brave, a fighter, a winner, but also thoughtful, careful, compassionate, honest. when it came to opera, insightful, passionate. when it came to sports, clueless. justice ginsburg had many virtues of her own, but she also unavoidably promoted one
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particular one, humility in others. for example, on more than a few occasions, someone would approach or call me and describe some upcoming occasion or event that was important to them, and i knew what was coming. could i come and speak? but no, instead could i pass along an invitation to justice ginsburg and put in a good word? many of you have seen the famous picture of justice scalia and justice ginsburg riding atop an elephant in india. it captured so much of ruth. there she was doing somethingun had in law school where she was not only one of the few women, but a new mother to boot. and in the photograph, she is riding with a dear friend, a photo that either was poised to push the other off.
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for many years, of course, ruth. she met each of those challenges with a combination of candid assessment and fierce determination. in doing so, she encouraged others who have their own battles with illness, including employees here in the court, and she emerged victorious time and again against all odds, but finally the odds won out, and now ruth has left us. i mentioned at the outset that ruth's passing weighed most heavily on her family, and that is true, but the court was her family too. this building was her home too. of course, she will live on in what she did to improve the law and the lives of all of us, and yet still ruth is gone, and we grieve. let us have a moment of silence for reflection.
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tribute to ruth bader ginsburg's career, to ruth bader ginsburg as a person. warm, intimate words. he reminded everyone that the court was her family too, and it's a reminder to all of us just how different from all other institutions is supreme court is. >> it's a poignant message right now in the supreme court in the center of the discourse, but, you know, i think that the chief justice sort of channeled something that ginsburg has famously said years ago in an interview. how would you like to be remembered? she said, i would like to be remembered as someone who used what talent she had to make the world a little bit better. she did more than make the world just a little bit better, but as the chief justice, she w said, a humble person. we think of what to do in the wake of the loss of justice ginsburg, you know, making the world a little bit better, improving the institutions around us, improving our politics. like, those are really powerful legacies and, you know, if there was a message in what the chief
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justice said, maybe that is that message. >> we see the flag flying at half-staff there outside the supreme court just across the united states capitol. our senior congressional correspondent mary bruce is there. mary, on friday, justice ginsburg will be remembered at the capitol, and then another huge fight begins. >> reporter: and jorgeorge, the split screen that we have seen this week has been remarkable. while the nation comes together to mourn the loss of this truly incredible life, here across the street at the capitol, we are in the midst of this bitterly partisan fight i think for ruth bader ginsburg's supporters and admirers on the left. especially many women across this country, it has been a week of anguish and also outrage in the fight to fill her seat. it has been less than a week since her passing and it seems all but certain that republicans will have the votes to fill her seat. despite taking opposition in the
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fight to fill antonin scalia's seat, in the run up to that election, republicans saying given the balance of power, this is a different situation. we could be headed towards hearings here. president trump making it known he wants seats filled and making the democrats effectively powerless to stop it. >> today, the focus on ruth bader ginsburg as chief justice roberts said. her life, one of many versions of the american dream. her career dedicated to bringing us closer to equal opportunity for all. we're going to return now to our regular programming. for many of you, that's "good morning america." >> annnc: this has been a a very beautiful ceremony i think this morning. >> i 100% agree. it was so nice hearing from chief justice john roberts, describing it as a warm tribute
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and i totally concur. it was of course the unfair money bail system. he, accused of rape. while he, accused of stealing $5. the stanford rapist could afford bail; got out the same day. the senior citizen could not; forced to wait in jail nearly a year. voting yes on prop 25 ends this failed system, replacing it with one based on public safety. because the size of your wallet shouldn't determine whether or not you're in jail.
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and ask your doctor if biktarvy is right for you. good morning, america. breaking news in the race for a covid vaccine. as the nation's death toll surpasses 200,000, the fda reportedly expected to announce, quote, tough and rigorous new rules for the vaccine approval, as some major drug companies approach the final stretch. president trump touting his cking joe biden for arnding amp mask. isthsun gesuemcourt she thite houly 41 go. president trump lines up republican support to vote on ruth bader ginsburg's replacement. the latest a nominee has ever been considered this cse
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