tv NBC News Daily NBC October 9, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT
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israel's prime minister warning the fight is just getting started. and searching for loved ones. americans among the kidnapped. the race to bring them home alive. the steps the u.s. is taking right now to support israel and fears that this could become a wider conflict. hello, everyone. i'm kate snow. >> and i'm savannah sellers in for zinhle essamuah. >> we're going to get to the war in the middle east. >> night has fallen in the middle east. strikes from both sides are continuing now, israel pounding the gaza strip with air strikes after ordering a ful siege of gaza. that retaliation coming after hamas launched a an unprecedented attack on israel. israel's prime minister netanyahu addressing his country
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tonight. >> citizens, at the end of the war, all our enemies will know that it was a terrible mistake to attack israel. what we'll do to our enemy in the next few days will echo for generations. >> as we say, hundreds of people on both sides have been killed, thousands have been hurt the state department says americans are among the deceased. other americans are unaccounted for and dozen of hostages, hamas now threatening to execute one civilian hostage for every israeli strike that comes quote without warning. >> we want to give everyone context about the geography of where this is happening. the gaza strip is an area about 140 square miles, 2 million palestinians live within it, but israel and egypt control the land and sea borders as well as the air space. one of the u.s.'s most advanced carriers is on the area right
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now. we have pentagon correspondent courtney kube, but we'll get started with ellison barber on the ground in tel aviv. ellison, i know you've been speaking with people in tel aviv. that sound that we heard from prime minister netanyahu about what will happen here will echo for generations. >> reporter: a short speech, really from the prime minister, less than ten minutes where he essentially said that these air strikes being carried out in gaza that's likely just the beginning, from speaking with people in tel aviv, they want to see more from the israeli military from the sraeli government in response to what's happened here. they feel like this date, october 7th is their version of
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9/11. describing as we heard the prime minister do in his speech as well, hamas as an organization that's like isis, very much using terms that probably click for an american audience and american viewers than other terms, as we have spoken to people here one thing they've made clear to us they feel like there was a life in tel aviv, different from other parts of israel, but for tel aviv, for city life, they felt like they had relatively normal life, once a year they would deal with rockets coming from gaza. the iron dome being activated, intercepting it. now they say since what's happened this weekend they feel like life has completely changed. they hope to see a more forceful response and see the divided government unite quickly and do something about gaza to get those hostages out. >> ellison barber for us.
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the u.s. military is changing its posture in response to the conflict in israel. >> the defense secretary austin announce og every the weekend the military is moving a carrier strike group, aircraft carrier and a strike group, closer to israel. courtney kube joins us now. courtney, what more do we know about the move. we heard netanyahu praising the u.s. for being so supportive. what does it really mean in terms of what they'll do once they get there? >> reporter: yeah, that support has been echoed by senior officials about the need for the u.s. to continue to support israel. so, as far as that carrier strike group going in there it's about projecting power and deterrence against hamas and against other groups, one of the u.s. military's efforts to stop this battle, this fight from spreading outside of israel and outside of gaza, that's a major
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part of the reason that the carrier went in there and it could serve a dual purpose, if there's a need to help get americans and dual citizens out of israel. the aircraft carrier, they could be use as a wait station to get americans out of harm's way. for the most part it's about deterring this fight from going outside the borders. we're now hearing from some americans who are living in israel and survived those attacks. >> we want to bring in rachel, from new york, she lives now in tel aviv, thank you for taking time out for joining us. you were at home when those initial attacks happened in the south, tell us what you heard, what you felt? paint us a picture of what that was like? >> sure, thank you so much for
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having me. i think it's crucial that american viewers hear from u.s. citizens on the ground. i'm a new yorker, i moved here four years ago. on saturday morning i was woken up by sirens which indicates that there are rockets headed for tel aviv. i live in a building that's old, we don't have a bomb shelter in our apartment, all modern-day buildings that are built now have bomb shelters within the apartments but we stood in the stairwell with our neighbors and we heard the explosions above and around us. here in tel aviv. afterwards we went upstairs and i'm sabbath jew, this saturday was holiday. me and my husband sat on the couch and we waited to see what the news was. as mentioned previously, we've had events where there have been
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rockets gone into the bomb shelters and come out, but we understand something was different this time. what we were seeing on the news was the beginning of an unfolding tragedy of an enormous massacre of innocent families, individuals, elderly, children, babies, teenagers, and what we learned over the course of that day and then over the last few days has been nothing but traumatic and what has hamas has done by video taping these atrocities and putting them on the internet shows the world we're dealing with a terrorist organization that's holding captive israelis and endanger all lives of palestinians in gaza. >> you mentioned those videos circulating, we've seen a lot of
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that, do you have any personal connection to anyone who has been impacted? >> yes, one of my brother's best friends and his girlfriend escaped from the music festival. he just got out of the hospital with several -- he was shot several times. i don't know the details yet. he's still in recovery. i don't know the details of how he's survived. but i've heard accounts of how these teenagers survived. i heard the account of one young girl who ran into a shelter with 35 other young people who were at this music festival and hamas threw grenades into this shelter and many of them died and this young girl laid underneath dead bodies for seven hours. seven hours she laid underneath dead bodies hearing the massacre
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above them. she's made it out. israel such a small country, savannah, i know so many people who have lost ones. family members who have been kidnapped who have been killed and i have many friends who have been called up to the reserves. >> rachel, we really appreciate you being with us and giving your perspective. please stay safe. thank you. >> thank you so much. let's turn to our cnbc money minute starting with the focus here on the attacks in israel. impacting the global economy. several airlines are suspending service to tel aviv following the hamas attacks on israel and are waiting for conditions to improve before resuming those flights. that includes united, delta, american and air france, they're
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all suspending direct flights. the u.s. airlines normally operate direct from major cities including new york, chicago, washington and miami. over to energy prices on the rise in the wake of fighting between israel and hamas the price of oil up almost 4% today, 87 bucks, below recent highs from a week ago, many energy analysts are predicting a short-term price hike but no big impacts on the availability on oil right now. according to aaa it's $3.70 today. google cloud announcing new artificial intelligence tools for doctors today. it will help doctors pull information from clinical notes, scan documents and electronic health records so that it can be accessed all in one place. >> that might things better at the doctor's office. thank you. coming up, we'll go back to israel and talk about hamas and
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their unprecedented invasion, why did it happen now? nbc news chief foreign affairs correspondent andrea mitchell correspondent andrea mitchell joins us with a lot when migraine strikes you're faced with a choice. ride it out with the tradeoffs of treating? or push through the pain and symptoms? with ubrelvy, there's another option. one dose works fast to eliminate migraine pain treat it anytime, anywhere. without worrying where you are or if it's too late. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. allergic reactions to ubrelvy can happen. most common side effects were nausea and sleepiness. migraine pain relief starts with u. ask about ubrelvy. learn how abbvie could help you save. [sneeze] dude you coming? ♪ alka-seltzer plus powermax gels cold & flu relief with more concentrated power because the only thing dripping should be your style. plop plop fizz fizz winter warriors with alka-seltzer plus.
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stay down. these seem to be more tars coming in very close. >> that was nbc news chief foreign correspondent richard engel ducking fire earlier today. it makes it clear number one how hard his job is but the ongoing threat facing millions of people throughout that region. >> andrea mitchell is joining us now to help us understand the significance of the events in israel, the impact this is having around the globe. she's covered the geopolitics for this region for decades. andrea, the first person over the weekend nothing like this has happened within the borders of israel. >> it's unprecedented.
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hamas has never been able to cross the border in this way, they tunnelled through and rocketed. stopped at those fences or stopped just after they come out of the tunnels. they've never gotten into southern israel, attacked settlements, as well as towns anvil languages, and taken people, children, women, men, civilians, so those hostages now are an unprecedented challenge for israel in any kind of retaliation. israel as you know, you know, sent back a thousand, more than a thousand palestinians prisoners just to get one israeli soldier back after he had been imprisoned in gaza for 11 years. they negotiated for 11 years to get him back. they would pay any price in terms of prisoner trade just on get their people back and now you've got all these civilians,
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including some americans we understand, we don't know how many, so that's the real challenge now, also the fact that it's to go in and to find anyone in those tunnels and to go in with a ground invasion is what everyone, says would be incredibly challenging. >> andrea, there are so many questions about iran's potential involvement in this, were they were really pulling the strings and you just spoke to israeli ambassador to the united states, what did he say. >> he said they're not 100% sure that it's true as i posed in my question. back in 2021, maybe a dozen or 20 rockets in first couple of hours, almost 3,000 rockets overwhelming the iron dome, all
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of that is true, whether one source the wall street journal quoting sources hamas sources actually saying they in fact planned it, executed it, gave the green light that's something that u.s. officials say they have not established and they're being very careful about this. when i asked about it, michael herzog, israeli ambassador to the united states, he's an intelligence analyst and he said we're not 100% sure. it wouldn't surprise him given their past military support for hamas, but they have no hard evidence. no smoking gun. that has surprised a lot of people because this clearly by their own acknowledgment was a total surprise, a surprise john brennan our former cia director said was an epic proportions. >> andrea, talking about the white house and navigating this, we heard from israeli prime minister netanyahu just a little
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while ago, we know we're allies, he did specifically thank the u.s. for their support. how does the white house navigate this conflict? what is this like for the president and the white house? what's the plan? >> the plan is to be 100% as the president himself said yesterday rock solid in support. when it comes to israel's security there's no question, no tuition, no daylight between them. they have had a very difficult relationship. you'll recall going back to 2009 when vice president biden, then vice president biden arrived in israel to discover that the netanyahu was expanding settlements, illegal settlements in the u.s. and u.n. view in the west bank on the very day that joe biden was arriving. he almost turned around and head
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back. he stayed and have the meeting. it's been difficult this year. he hasn't gotten the white house meeting he's wanted. they did meet in new york. they do agree on going ahead with a possible saudi diplomatic recognition of israel, so they have a lot of agreement especially on security. >> an degree mitchell, always great to have you, thank you so much. coming up, lebanon militant gr ou your brain is an amazing thing. but as you get older, it naturally begins to change, causing a lack of sharpness, or even trouble with recall. thankfully, the breakthrough in prevagen helps your brain and actually improves memory. the secret is an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory.
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upgrade to cascade platinum plus. dare to dish differently. this is the fast forward. we are following the escalating conflict in israel right now. one local business owner unexpectedly found himself in the midst of the violence. we have his story. >> you could tell of manny here in san francisco happened to be visiting family for a double celebration in israel. he flew in for his dad's 80th birthday as well as his niece's bar mitzvah when the war broke out. he says he was in disbelief that saturday morning but realized they were real bomb warnings. >> my god.
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>> those are the sirens he heard warning he and others to quickly seek protection at a bomb shelter. he did so seven times that day. >> two of the times the sirens we want off, i wasn't near a shelter. i was in synagogue and i watched as over 100 children kind of ran frantically around synagogue trying to find place to protect themselves. needless to say, it was a harrowing experience. i actually saw a place not far from me where one of the missiles did hit and watched as a giant, black plume of smoke kind of filled the sky while jews from the area that i was in were praying and celebrating and dancing. so it was a, something i'm never going to forget, honestly. >> something else he will not be forgetting, a picture, an image of an apartment building that was destroyed by a missile just a couple of blocks from where he is staying now in tel aviv.
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the proximity of this war is very jarring. on a same note, he shares he has also jumped into action with thousands of other israelis who have volunteered to get goods to those who need it most. he says his work won't stop there. he will continue to work and volunteer throughout his stay in israel. city hall in san francisco was lit up in blue and white lights last night for what the mayor shows the city's solidarity with the israeli people. now there is a rally scheduled for later this evening outside san francisco city hall where we are right now is on montgomery street outside the israeli consulate. this was the site of demonstrations and protests yesterday. both from pro palestinian demonstrators and israel supporters. the scene is very different now, but we are expecting more rallies to happen throughout the day and in the week to come. nbc bay area news. >> thanks so much.
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were you able to see it? stunning statement from the 49ers. they are certainly looking like one of the best teams if not the best team in football right now after beating the cowboys on nbc sunday night football. a number of legends were there. said the 49ers ruled with george kittle scoring three touchdowns. now starting 5-0 for only the third time in franchise history. >> his consistency is what's really helpful. >> feels like everyone is on a mission. like the mindset is right where it needs to be. the play calls are great. it's like all i got to do, go out there and do my job. >> after the game, nick threw his gloves to some lucky young fans in the stands. 49ers head to cleveland next sunday to face the browns. part of the bay could be seeing scattered showers today. here's rob with exactly where that might be. >> well, we're seeing a cloudy start to monday. at times, drizzle and even
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opportunity for a little more than drizzle. especially around the north bay. high temperatures today only 60s and 70s an ongoing shower chances into tuesday. to start the day, the best chances of finding light rain has been up in the north bay. midday, that starts to pass san francisco and weakens by the time it gets to the south bay. likely most of the showers will be there around the santa cruz mountains. rain totals for north bay, high temperatures, 60s to low 70s today. more mild temperatures tomorrow and then we trend a little warmer. approaching wednesday and thursday. >> rob, thanks. jackpot just keeps growing. still no one has matched all six numbers on the drawing and saturday night's drawing, someone in san francisco picked all five numbers not including the power ball so tonight's drawing is worth $1.5 billion. it will take place at 8:00 tonight. that does it for this edition of the fast forward. i'll be back in 30 minutes with more news. take care.
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vision changes, or eye pain occur. ask your doctor about breztri. here's liz, whose bladder leaks drop in uninvited. but instead of period pads, she brought poise ultra thin. so she can bounce on with poise protection in a fresh new look. why didn't we do this last year? before you were preventing migraine with qulipta®? remember the pain? cancelled plans? the worry? that was then. and look at me now. you'll never truly forget migraine. but qulipta® reduces attacks, making zero-migraine days possible. it's the only pill of its kind that blocks cgrp - and is approved to prevent migraine of any frequency. to help give you that forget-you-get migraine feeling. don't take if allergic to qulipta®. most common side effects are nausea,
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constipation, and sleepiness. learn how abbvie could help you save. qulipta®. the forget-you-get migraine medicine™. bottom of the hour now, here are so much other stories making headlines on "nbc news daily." the taliban says nearly 2 1/2 thousand people are dead after a series of earthquakes struck western afghanistan on
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saturday. least 2,000 people are injurd and more than a thousand homes have been damaged or destroyed. classes were cancelled today at bowie state university. the incident comes after a shooting last week on the campus of morgan state university. another historically black college that's less than an hour away. police don't believe there's a connection between the two shootings and that there is no indications that the victims or suspected shooters are students. the nobel prize in economics was awarded to claudia goldin. the first to be the sole winner in any year. she was recognized for her study of women in the workforce, specifically the persistent causes of the gender pay gap. now we return to breaking
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news coverage of the war between israel and hamas. >> both sides launching new barrage of attacks today. sparked by hamas' surprise air and ground attacks on saturday. prime minister netanyahu said israel's response, quote -- has just started. what israel will do over the next few days will, quote, echo for generations. >> ali velshi is in tel aviv. last time we spoke with you started to hear loud booms. you took shelter a short time ago, amid new sirens, tell us about what you experienced in the last hour and what the situation is like now. >> reporter: savannah, that was the iron dome, the interceptions of incoming rockets from gaza that were probably some miles away, as we were talking the last time i was on you, there were a succession of them, it a of them, and each one became successfully louder. i was asking my crew, did you
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hear what i thought i heard? they got louder. all interceptions. this is time of day where gaza sends more rockets in and israel puts more air strikes into gaza. we have heard some jets fly overhead and since we last talked, there's been another air raid siren but no intercepting. we don't hear what's going on. we're tel aviv. it's an hour and a half drive to gaza. last night there were 500 israeli attacks on hamas positions in gaza. yet still rockets coming out of gaza. what the hamas has said in response, in targeting what the israeli defense forces say are hamas installations, there are civilians who are killed. for every house that's demolished, they'll begin to execute one hostage.
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many israeli developments, prime minister netanyahu said the things they'll do to gaza will echo throughout the middle east. they've called up 3,000 reservists, overseas in other places, sending out airplanes to bring them back, 300,000 of them and right now israel is prefaring for a battle on three fronts, the one on gaza, kinetic situation in the west bank, and what might come from the northern boarder with hezbollah. so everybody's on very, very high alert here. >> ali, thank you very much. stay safe. we appreciate you coming back on with us. attacks against israel aren't only coming from the south but across the north. >> matt brad hooe is in
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lebanon's capital city of beirut. how this fits with the larger rounds we're seeing from hamas. >> is this part -- this is part of the actual violence, hezbollah saying they're doing this in solidarity with hamas. they've managed over the years to wage muscular fighting against israel. sustained violence that escalated to basically a full-scale war and a lot of lebanese loathe to see hezbollah enter into fighting with israel. the death toll is increasing dramatically. one hezbollah fighter was killed. now it sounds like there were three as opposed to four, they corrected and wound that number down in the last couple of minutes. either way, this is an
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escalation. until just now looked like it was contained to within israel and palestinian territories, if this conflict breaches borders and involves other countries there's no telling where it will stop. >> for those who don't follow this region closely, how is it that hezbollah exists with the country of lebanon? >> reporter: hezbollah was founded a long time ago, really back during the civil war in lebanon that was started during communal fighting between christians and muslims and jews, a very complicated war that last td about 15 years. hezbollah was set up to fight against israel, and they have persisted. as other political groups in lebanon dismantle their militias, hezbollah has managed to maintain their position. to defend themselves against
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israel. hezbollah has maintained its fighters in the south of the country and now they have a huge political party and massive strength within parliament here, they dominate the government in many ways and they're backed by iran, this is a group through the last couple of generations have waged several different large-scale campaigns. they've even fought against other groups in neighboring syria, this is an enormous, basically a huge military, very formalized, not like a militia and it's backed by a political party, so now they're once again it looks like throwing themselves into a blistering battle. >> matt, thank you. there are growing questions today about how intelligence agencies missed signs of this >>right, we're talking about a former cia intelligence officer who told nbc news, quote, this is israel's 9/11, not just 19
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has there been such a catastrophic failure. not since 1973. joining us now is michael allen. michael, good to have you with us. israel has some of the best intelligence gathering cape lts in the world, they're known for that, what could have gone wrong that they didn't see this coming on saturday? >> i think the answer is that hamas likely backed by iran developed and operated with new counterintelligence techniques. i think they've had a long time to go to school on just what israel does in gaza and probably the west bank as well, and since this was going to be such a highly orchestrated and terrible attack they coordinated with these new techniques and did it
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in such away they couldn't see hamas coordinating with each other so they missed it. >> u.s. intelligence agencies didn't really see this coming either, right, and this comes amid the fact that president biden and israeli prime minister netanyahu have had this tense relationship, lot of questions as israel moves politically further right, we heard from netanyahu he's had this open line of communication with the president. thanking the u.s. for its support. how do you think intelligence sharing will unfold between these two allies given that backdrop? >> we have a great cooperation with israelis, but often limited to the nuclear program, i think we'll double down on what we're collecting in terms of signals intelligence if gaza and certainly within iran and work on sharing it better, first and foremost, our intelligence
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agencies are going back and seeing what has been brought up quicker. if there is a blind spot and i expect the senate and house intelligence committees to ask the questions of cia this week, if there's a blind spot you can they'll be on the hot seat for not letting policymakers know about this potential contingency. >> less than 72 hours, since the initial attack, that was missed, what do you think intelligence agencies are doing now to prevent the next thing? >> i think they're trying to figure out why this failed, how were the hamas members communicating with each other. they're trying to apply that up in the north and lebanon to see what might be coming from hezbollah, but the other thing they're doing is they're trying to discover the extent in which
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iran has been or has not been involved in the attack. wall street journal reports suggests they were complicit. with hamas and perhaps others. but we really need to get to the bottom of it and figure out how involved iran was because that policy implications for israel and whether they decide to strike out directly against iran and policy implications for the united states as we try and figure out what tact are we going to take with iranians going forward. >> missed by israel and our own intelligence gathering here in the u.s., what lessons can be taken from this? >> well, for one thing, i don't think the united states has
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human intelligence agents in gaza. we may decide after this that it's good idea that we collect human intelligence alongside of the israelis or at least if we have some maybe we need to do more, but i think also there's going to be an examination of how hamas was able to communicate, plan and undertake this attack almost without anyone finding out any clues whatsoever, they'll also look at maybe this information was collected and like during 9/11 there was a failure of imagination to connect the dots what overseas intelligence was telling us. >> michael allen, thank you. coming up rallies sweep across the u.s., how americans are reacting to the conflict overseas. you're watching "nbc news daily." >> we're also streaming for free any time, 24 hours a day on nbc
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♪ thousands of women with metastatic breast cancer, are living in the moment and taking ibrance. ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor is for adults with hr+/her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole significantly delayed disease progression versus letrozole. ibrance may cause low white blood cell counts that may lead to serious infections. ibrance may cause severe inflammation of the lungs. both of these can lead to death. tell your doctor if you have new or worsening chest pain,
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cough, or trouble breathing. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection, liver or kidney problems, are or plan to become pregnant, or are breastfeeding. for more information about side effects talk to your doctor. be in your moment. ask your doctor about ibrance. reaction to war in israel is rippling across the united states, thousands of people gathered for rallies and marches
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supporting both israel and palestinians. >> supporting the palestinian movement gathered at the israeli consulate chanting and cheering before they marched downtown. >> in new york this weekend, hundreds of demonstrators clashed in times square, clashed may not be the right word, they were across from each other in times square when two separate rallies one supporting israel and one supporting palestinians came together there. maggie vespa is in an area called little palestine in chicago. emilie ikeda, what are you hearing snr. >> reporter: kate, important to keep in mind new york is home to the largest jewish population in the world outside of israel, there are so many people here who know people in israel who died, who have family there, who perhaps on are waiting to hear
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back from them. the safety of their friends and loved ones in israel, another bit of unease is on the ground here in the u.s. wondering, will jewish americans be targeted in the fallout of violence that has played out over the weekend? we know that police are ramping up pa trolls out of what they say is abundance of caution in number of cities across the country. around synagogues and houses of worship. you know, just a few moments ago i was speaking to someone, a head of a rally scheduled for here, washington square park a show of support for israel, people standing in solidarity that's going to be happening in a short amount of time. during our conversation, someone actually walked up to him and screamed in his face expletive and israel. not a matter of question whether they'll see an increase of
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antisemitic behavior, he's certain they will. 4,000 incidents panning out last year, harassment, physical assaults, vandalism all increasing last year, kate. >> want to bring in maggie, a lot of emotion in little palestine as well, what have you seen over the past couple of days? >> reporter: well the conversations have been really striking, both here in little palestine, here in the chicago area, also really large around the city, includes this palestinian restaurant behind me and the demonstration we were at in downtown chicago. it marched through downtown, people telling us while no one
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wants to see the violence perpetrated on israeli civilians in that part of the world they saw the actions of hamas coming because of the violent history between these two populations, then we pressed about the tactics we're seeing against women and children, people telling us no one wants to see that but they pivot the conversation the atrocities committed against palestinians over the past couple of decades. one example we want to play for you. >> our families seen those brutal videos of children being imprisoned, being put in jail and beaten and killed. over 75 years now. so it doesn't make it okay that
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civilians are being harmed but we have been the civilians that have been harmed for over 80 years now. >> so, again, we're hearing that qualifier, people know it's hard for people at home to hear. we want to put that perspective on display there. lot of police around the demonstration in downtown chicago, everything was peaceful, similar situations in new york. guys, back to you. >> thank you both very much for your reporting. there's much more news ahead. >> you're watching "nbc news daily." stay with us. we'll be right back. hi, my name is damion clark. and if you have both medicare and medicaid, i have some really encouraging news that you'll definitely want to hear. depending on the plans available in your area, you may be eligible to get extra benefits with a humana medicare advantage dual-eligible special needs plan. all of these plans include a healthy options allowance. a monthly allowance to help pay for eligible
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feel the clarity and make today the most wonderful time of the year. live claritin clear. this is the fast forward. we are start off this fast forward with some headlines you need to know about today. fleet week bart set a ridership record. cal fire is doing a prescribed burn, but first, bay area food lovers with mourning the death of a celebrity chef. you may recognize him from the food network where he had his own cooking show. he was born in red bluff north of chico but spent most of his career in napa, becoming chef of the year from food and wine magazine. relatives say he was being treated from an allergic reaction and died from anaphylactic shock. cal fire doing a prescribed burn in sonoma county.
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started at 8:00 this morning. firefighters will continue this burn tomorrow so people in the area are being told to continue to expect to see all the smoke. may be rescheduled in the weather doesn't cooperate. and bart is celebrating a post pandemic milestone. they had more than 116,000 riders yesterday. actually 72% of the average saturday. their campaign is to have more people take trains and credited more trains running on weekends. how long will the rain stick around for us? rob has that answer in our seven day forecast. >> we're seeing much cooler changes in the forecast today. got the cloud cover, light rain chances in the north bay then as we pass lunchtime, a few more of those chances drop south around santa cruz mountains but the best bet for finding rainfall, northwestern sonoma county. may pick up locally up to a
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quarter inch of rain. no much at all around the santa clara valley, but we'll have a big impact on temperatures. mid-60s from the north bay and san francisco to oakland. low 70s around san jose. maybe some mid-70s south but downtown san jose, another chance of showers tomorrow and more clouds on the way towards the ekend. we my name's dan and i live here in san antonio, texas. my wife magda and i have been married for 39 years. about three or four years ago, i wasn't feeling as if i was as sharp as i used to be. i wanted to try something that was over-the-counter. i saw the prevagen commercials. after a short amount of time taking prevagen, i started noticing a difference-- that i'm remembering this, i'm remembering that. i stopped taking prevagen and i found myself slacking back so i jumped right back on it. i feel as if it's brought me back to the good 'ol days. prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription.
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nbc bay area responds to a family the south bay that's fighting a travel agent. chris found a lesson for everyone. >> good morning. long story short, these viewers were visiting maui recently when the fire storm swept through, they wanted to fly home immediately but michael and nate hit a surprise roadblock. all because they booked their trip with a travel agency. >> when we were officially evacuating, we're like, okay, let's just go home.
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so i called united and said can you change your flight as soon as you can. they said we're sorry, we can't touch this flight because it was booked through an agency. >> united confirmed that restriction for us. nate and mico hit a second roadblock. their travel agent was closed for the day so the family spent the night in an evacuation shelter. coming up tonight at 11:00, we'll dive deeper into vacation packages. there pros, cons and questions you might want to ask if you're not booking a trip directly with a hotel or airline in case your trip goes sideways. nate contacted us online. you can, too. scan the qr code on the screen. just fill out our consumer complaint form online. i'll join you again tonight at 11:00. >> thanks. city council is set to discuss rent stabilization proposal ordnance with cap increases at 3%.
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