tv CBS News Roundup CBS November 22, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PST
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food. >> afghan filmmaker sara mani says this is a reality for millions of women in afghanistan. living back under taliban rule. a situation that caught the attention of actor jennifer lawrence back in 2021. taliban fighters behind the desk of the presidential palace. >> my first reaction when watching that was to do what the taliban did not want us to do, which was give access and facilities to the people on the ground to capture what was happening on the ground in real time. because obviously, the taliban flourishes in secrecy partner, justine cherokee, set out to expose what was happening directly through the lens of afghan women. >> tapping mani to direct this documentary named bread and roses, sabrina singh pakistani
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activist malala yousafzai became an executive producer to further amplify their message. >> afghan women activists are calling it a gender apartheid that just because of their gender, they are oppressed. >> why doesn't the taliban want women to be educated what are they afraid of? >> we have been trying to figure out an answer to that for the past 30 years. the taliban took control in 1996. they have had influence in many parts of afghanistan and parts of pakistan as well. and this is now repeating in afghanistan once again, where the taliban have taken control for more than three and a half years. i cannot find any explanation that justifies it to me. how can you stop a girl from her school? they come up with these excuses that it's culture. it's religion. there is no culture excuse the true representatives of that culture are the afghan women and girls that we see in the documentary the documentary follows three afghan women who secretly filmed their protests and their
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painful solitude. >> i want to capture the intimate moment of their life, and i want people to to feel them to smell the life of afghan women under a taliban dictatorship. but also, i was encouraged with their life and how much they are fighting for better. >> one of the things that that people admire about you jennifer, is that you're known for speaking your mind about many subjects. can you imagine living in a world where you are told you cannot speak in public as a woman? >> i can't i can't either. i can't, i can't imagine not being able to take a taxi or being able to listen to music. i can't imagine if my just the sound of my voice was illegal malala came face to face with the taliban in pakistan in 2012, when she was shot in the head for daring to fight for the right to go to school. >> i was so grateful for the support that i received, but i
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was only 15 years old when i was attacked by the taliban, and i survived and i admired the support people gave me. what really shook me was the fact that people stand with you once you have survived, but we don't look at people who are still under a big threat. so it really made me question that is it all about receiving awards and applause or is it really about actually creating systems of accountability and justice so that it never happens to anybody? i thought that the praise i was receiving was a true commitment, that it should never happen to wanted to hear. >> so but that was not the >> that is unfortunately not the reality. but i do want us to change that. >> malala's story motivated sa rahmani nearly a decade before they would actually meet. >> when i was here malala for first time, that she said loudly and beautifully, that
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one child, one teacher, one book and one pen can change the world. i thought to myself that maybe one movie, also can bring change to their own society and that's really encouraged me camera, go out and find a story to tell, and i think it's it. was that the reason these women trust me with their stories? start sending their video. >> the three women who are in this documentary they are speaking on behalf of 20 million afghan women and girls, three women have risked their lives but these are not the the only three voices. we need to think about all the millions of afghan women and girls who need our attention our support. let's share our solidarity with them. >> that was gayle king reporting. bread and roses is now streaming on apple tv+ this
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cbs's luke burbank introduces us to the man behind the scenes of the hbo docu series chimp crazy >> and already scorchingly hot at the turtle conservancy in ojai, california. should i be concerned that they're slowly boxing me in here you're. >> i think you're okay. if you had red fingernail polish on, they'd go for your fingers. >> and yet the galapagos turtles are surprisingly active we've been here about 20 years. the turtle conservancy sits on ten acres of california chaparral and is home to hundreds of rare and almost extinct species and this guy documentary filmmaker eric good, whose work roared into living rooms in march of 2020. literally nonstop it's a brand new shirt and i quit tiger king was a pandemic sensation for
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netflix. the story of tiger trafficker joe exotic, a gun toting, meth smoking roadside zoo owner. now in prison for attempted murder it all began when i was investigating a notorious reptile dealer in south florida. >> a guy showed up one day wanting to buy a venomous snake when he was leaving he said, check out what i just bought in the back of this guy's van was a snow leopard oh filmmaking is an unexpected career development for documentaries to try to draw attention to the world's accelerating rates of animal extinction extinction? oftentimes, there's no fanfare. every week we're losing something. we're losing a tropical fish we're losing some lizard. we're losing a frog. we're losing species biodiversity on our planet at an unprecedented rate. >> oh my god, y'all muddy. what did get a lot of fanfare was tiger king, which is credited
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with helping get the big cat public safety act passed by congress in 2022. >> chimps are my whole thing. >> you can shape them into being you goods. >> latest project for max. is chimp crazy which delves into all that can go wrong when you try to keep a chimpanzee as a pet, an animal that starts its life adorable. but quickly grows into a beast that can kill. >> part of me is saying this is the craziest story ever now, and part of me is thinking, what do we do when one of the characters good was following tanya haddock's kidnaped a chimp good found himself in something of an ethical dilemma whether or not to go to the police. i want to make it clear i'm not the animal police. but in the case of chimpanzees, which is our brothers and sisters, right? we're 98% whatever the same dna as a chimp. i do feel that chimpanzees should have rights
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and should have autonomy and have choices. you know, it's like having a child in a cage. so i cared more about the apes than the people that were keeping them. >> good's love of animals began with the various pets that he had growing up in northern california. >> we had rats we had tropical fish, we had reptiles. we had a dog, we had a cat. but my mother would never let me take an animal out of the wild and keep it. she would say, you know, eric you can't play god. that animal needs to stay in the wild. >> good would go on to art school and then on to open various new york city nightclubs as well as hotels and restaurants and i realized that that's where people would go to meet. >> this is obviously before cell phones and the internet and and that's where ideas were exchanged. and where a lot of creative energy was happening. >> but the more successful good was in the world of nightlife and hospitality the more obsessed he was becoming with, of all things herpetology, the
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study of amphibians and reptiles and when a bronx zoo official asked him to turtles, the turtle >> i like to try to do things in unorthodox ways to make a difference. >> also unorthodox. his approach to filmmaking, which some have said creates entertaining but journalistically questionable projects like chimp crazy where he hired a former circus clown to pretend to be the film's director interacting with tonya haddix the woman hiding a former hollywood chimp named tonka in her basement let's say tonya was harboring a human, a child. >> let's say this was human trafficking and not chimpanzee trafficking. does the end justify the means? if it's a human being that she had in her basement? like, where is that line in terms of ethics? i would ask you, because you are a journalist. i'm not a journalist or i don't think
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i'm a journalist how do you get those stories? you can't walk in and say, you know i'm luke and i'm from cbs and i'm going to interview you about your human trafficking. so how do without having some deception? >> good says if his film work causes more people to consider the plight of animals this is, you know, considered one of the most beautiful tortoises in the world and helps him fund his turtle and tortoise projects. then he's okay ruffling some feathers people say i was angry after watching tiger king or i was angry after watching chimp crazy. >> i'm okay with that because that anger makes people act and so they're angry. they're watching it like this. but i think it it stirs something in people to make a difference, to pass legislation. i think that's a good thing. in the d
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late to pursue a dream. >> cbs's jonathan vigliotti introduces us to a california businesswoman who's built a surfing sisterhood. >> as the sun comes up, toya yamani peluso and her tribe of saltwater divas are in their element nearly all of these women started surfing later in life. at 58, peluso is proving hooked on the ride. >> if there's something that is tugging at your soul, you need to just go for it. the waves are just like life. you got to commit or it's not going to work out she founded the saltwater divas more than a decade ago. >> women from all walks of life formed friendships while embracing new challenges. this sisterhood of surfers now numbers about 1000. >> it was very inspiring to see so many women of almost a certain age just coming out and wanting to try something new. >> what was that like for you?
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were you ever intimidated to try surfing before? >> absolutely. >> i'm afraid of the water. it's like it's an avalanche and it's going to eat me. you know, but but once you get over that fear, there's so much that you can accomplish on the other side of just having a little courage. >> nancy arki, who's 64, recently found the courage to suit up and learn to surf after retiring from nearly 30 years in the national park service and forest service. nancy, what do you say to people who think i'm too old to try this? >> never, never never. >> if you stop trying things, i think that's when you get old. >> meghan berry caught her first wave with peluso on a day she needed a friend sitting on her board in tears, remembering her husband, retired army colonel david berry, who went into cardiac arrest while surfing. >> every time i'm out there, i feel like i'm with them. >> so when toyo paddled out and started chatting with me, it was really refreshing. you were just super chatty and super
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friendly and i just loved that. >> peluso's positive attitude translates to her career. working at a company that charters private flights. but when the waves call, surf's up. >> work is done. it's time to go even on a chilly, windy morning, the women say the ocean awakens their spirit. >> life is short. >> if you're upright and breathing, you are not too old. you never know what beauty awaits you and what kind of wonderful things could happen if you don't take a chance. >> some jonathan vigliotti in ventura, california and that's today's cbs news roundup. >> tune in later for cbs mornings reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york city. i'm carissa lawson
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>> hello and thanks for staying up with us. i'm carissa lawson in new york. here are the top stories on cbs news roundup. matt gaetz is out as nominee for u.s. attorney general and former florida attorney general pam bondi is in. more details emerge of the sex abuse allegations against president elect donald trump's pick for defense secretary and another day of wild weather from coast to coast as the bomb cyclone continues to churn the battle over president elect trump's controversial nominees claimed its first casualty. matt gaetz dropped out of the running for attorney general amid an avalanche of allegations about sexual misconduct and drug abuse. trump wasted little time replacing him with former florida attorney general pam bondi. she's a longtime trump supporter and election denier
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we just filed a motion in federal court for immediate injunctive relief to shut down the voting process until ed o'keefe has the details. >> there's a sense of relief about it, of course. >> cbs news has learned that at least eight republican senators would have voted against president-elect trump's first choice for attorney general. >> i got the sense that the process was going to be challenging while he believed he had momentum, it was a great day. >> former florida congressman matt gaetz said today his expected nomination to lead the justice department was unfairly becoming a distraction and there's no time to waste. trump was calling senators and associates as recently as this morning to assess gaetz chances. the two spoke, and the president elect later said the former congressman has much respect for stepping aside. the decision avoids, for now, an early fight between trump and senate republicans over one of his top picks. >> this is ultimately the president's call, and i think the president has a good sense of what's best for him and his
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agenda and his cabinet. >> his withdrawal came amid new reports that gaetz had a second sexual encounter with a 17 year old, though that allegation has been disputed by a witness. the encounter is the subject of a house ethics committee inquiry into allegations of sexual misconduct and illicit drug use by gaetz. he's denied wrongdoing. the head of the ethics panel said its investigation should now end. >> he has withdrawn his nomination. he is no longer a member of congress. and so i think that this settles any involvement that the ethics committee should have beginning in 2019. >> the justice department also investigated allegations involving sex trafficking and obstruction. it declined to charge gaetz last year. as for trump's new pick pam bondi joined with other republican led states to sue to overturn the affordable care act after her time as florida attorney general. she served as one of trump's defense lawyers during his first impeachment trial. in a statement, trump said she would refocus the justice department to its intended purpose of fighting crime and making america safe again. and cbs news has learned one of the
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reasons the president elect was calling around to gop senators is he wants to ensure he has his attorney general in place on day one, when he's expected to start issuing a flurry of executive orders that are likely to face big legal challenges. ed o'keefe cbs news west palm beach, florida. >> it was another rough day on capitol hill for pete hegseth. the president elect's choice for defense secretary. a police report detailing allegations of a sexual assault by hegseth is now public. nikole killion reports. reporter vice president elect jd vance played host to defense secretary pick pete hegseth on capitol hill, just as the news broke of a graphic, newly released police report that detailed hexum's involvement in an alleged sexual assault in 2017. >> did you sexually california? i have, as far as the media is concerned i'll keep this very simple. >> the matter was fully investigated and i was completely cleared. and that's where i'm going to leave it. >> according to the report, a woman referred to as jane doe
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pete hegseth during a conference at the hyatt regency hotel. both were drinking with a group at the hotel bar when doe said things got fuzzy. a nurse who treated her later said doe believed something may have been slipped into her drink. she then recalled being in a hotel room when hegseth took her phone from her hand. when she got up to leave. hegseth blocked the door with his body. her next memory was when she was on a bed or a couch and hegseth was over her. his dog tags were hovering over her face. >> i don't know the young lady. >> oklahoma senator markwayne mullin said. hegseth addressed the allegation in their meeting. >> i don't think there's any way in the world you're going to say that makes you so confident about that? >> have you read the report? >> i actually have. >> i've got it right here. >> i read the report, too. it's pretty. it's pretty clear that the of what took place. it was pretty clear that it was um. she definitely wasn't brought to a room. it was two people flirting with each other. >> well, it also said she couldn't get out of the room. >> well, that's one person's
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opinion. >> pete hegseth attorney told cbs news police found the allegations to be false and claimed it was hegseth who was intoxicated. and the woman who was the aggressor. he also confirmed the fox news host paid the woman an unknown sum of money after she threatened to sue, fearing it could cost him his job. the district attorney in monterey said her office declined to file charges against hegseth because it felt they couldn't be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. nikole killion cbs news, capitol hill. >> major storms bring more wet misery to the pacific northwest, but welcome relief to the drought stricken northeast. cbs news meteorologist rob marciano is tracking it all relentless rain pummeling northern california, turning the normally sunny state into a soggy mess. >> streets are flooded, roads are closed, and highways are backed up as 911 calls are on the rise. >> that is the roof.
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>> powerful winds from the bomb cyclone tore the roof off this popular community center. david regan and other volunteers laid down makeshift tarps to prevent more water from getting inside. >> like we always think it's going to happen to somebody else and we feel bad about it, and then suddenly it happens to you. it's tough, huh? yeah, yeah, it's a lot to absorb. >> everything was just flying in western washington crews are still removing trees that fell on top of homes brought down by the high winds. >> we watched this come through the kitchen right at us and on the east coast rain in new york city. >> a welcome sight. just days after a drought warning was declared for the first time in over 20 years and following weeks of wildfires, new jersey has now lifted its statewide fire restrictions. after a night of much needed rain finally, the northeast will take every drop they can get here in the west. we're waiting for this water hose to turn off. it's lighting up a little bit now, but this river behind me continues to rise. another
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12ft coming tonight. that will put it in major flood stage. has some residents scrambling the satellite and radar hasn't changed much from last night. that are the atmospheric river continues to be pointed right in this area from here down to santa rosa. that's where the heaviest rain is. that's where they have a flood warning out right now. and that comma shape that you see, that's our next cyclone that's likely going to bomb out like the last one, though not as strong. it will intensify the winds. and it saturated already. the ground is. so we'll probably see more in the way of trees coming down and more in the way of rain coming 1 to 4ft at the higher elevations of snow. speaking of snow, that rain now in the northeast is now snow in parts of indiana and cincinnati, up through pennsylvania and upstate new york, central new york, anywhere from, say two to as much as 12in of snow, depending on your elevation. so from snow to rain, both coasts look a lot different now than they did just a couple of weeks ago. rob marciano, cbs news [caregiver 1] i was in the hospital with my son for 18 months. [caregiver 2] when he got injured, i knew i had to be strong. [caregiver 3] i just remember rushing into his room and giving him a big hug
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this is cbs news roundup. >> i'm carissa lawson in new york. the international criminal court has issued arrest warrants for israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, as well as israel's former defense minister and a hamas leader who israel claims was killed in an airstrike. the charges include crimes against humanity and the war in gaza using starvation as a method of warfare. netanyahu called the allegations anti-semitic. the white house said it fundamentally rejects the decision. cbs's elizabeth palmer reports on the ongoing crisis of getting food into gaza for more than a year, hungry gazans have tried to rob food aid trucks, but now armed criminal gangs are looting whole convoys abu ahmad, whose in the worst incident so far last saturday, when more than 100 trucks were attacked with
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mubasher footage. >> they shot through the windows, he told cbs. they'd kill any driver who wouldn't stop. ahmad said israeli tanks were nearby and an israeli drone watched the whole thing. but israel's military says it is not responsible for protecting aid. israel's former prime minister ehud olmert disagrees. so why isn't it happening? >> the israeli government doesn't want it to happen. they want to punish the palestinians. >> it's already the poorest gazans scavenge for food in garbage dumps pitifully little aid is getting through. israeli crossings and even that's being stolen at gunpoint. it is a humanitarian crisis. >> it's just a matter of political will. >> and it's clear who needs to solve it, says juliette touma of the un aid agency in gaza. >> it is up to the state of israel to ensure that aid reaches people in need. they are the occupying power.
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>> local police used to protect the convoys, but since february, israeli soldiers have been killing them for their links with hamas meanwhile almost 2 million gazans struggle to survive to starve them. >> hundreds of thousands of people is atrocious. >> today's warrant says it was the policies of benjamin netanyahu and yoav gallant that deprived gazans of essentials like food and medicine, which is against humanitarian law. both men deny the accusations. >> that was elizabeth palmer reporting. back here in the u.s., the justice department has asked a federal court to force google to break up its monopoly on internet search engines. more than half of all searches are done through google's chrome browser. regulators want the company to make big changes or sell it. here's cbs's kelly o'grady on what this means for users to
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end google's search engine monopoly. >> the doj is proposing a number of significant remedies. the biggest one selling off chrome. the agency arguing, quote, the playing field is not level. further, the doj recommends dissolving any contracts where google is the default search engine on a device like an iphone. antitrust lawyer lee hepner doesn't see it as extreme. >> i think the justice department has put forward a pretty reasonable response to a monopoly that has persisted for well over a decade. >> if the judge agrees users would need to select their browser of choice in settings or navigate to google.com themselves and remember, the tech giant owns android. google could sell its smartphone operating system, or it would not be allowed to make its search engine mandatory on the device. the doj also floated the possibility of selling android additionally, the doj wants to block google from buying any search based artificial intelligence companies. pair that with losing access to data. if fewer
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people use chrome it would set the company back significantly in the ai race. in a statement, google called the doj's filing staggering, saying it would harm consumers and innovation. hepner disagrees. >> i think the entire point of this is to unlock competition and produce innovation that really is designed to benefit consumers. >> that was kelly o'grady reporting, and this is cbs
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november is national family caregivers month. >> the u.s. labor department estimates about 37 million americans provide unpaid care for an aging relative. it's important work, but it can be challenging. here are cbs's cristian benavides elvira trice requires around the clock care for alzheimer's disease her daughter, 65 year old anna, left her job as an executive at a major retailer to care for her. >> she doesn't know she has to eat. she doesn't know that she has to go to the restroom. she refuses to bathe she can't take her medication. >> at first, she tried to juggle both her job and caring for her aging mother, but it became too much. she left the company. she worked at for 40 years. the stress of having the dual job big job, and big job at home, according to a recent
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aarp survey, 67% of adult caregivers say they have a hard time balancing their jobs with caregiving duties. 27% have gone from working full time to part time. >> the survey also found more than 15% of caregivers stopped working entirely due to the stress. >> aarp estimates there are 48 million adult caregivers in the u.s. most provide at least 20 hours of care a week. >> what we are seeing is the number of adults turning 65 is at the highest level. the pool of adults who are going to be in need of caregiving is actually growing at a much faster pace than the available pool of caregivers had to hire an additional three caregivers to help with her mother who has good days and bad. >> it's the hardest thing i've ever gone through in my life, and today. today is a pretty good day. and she was an amazing mother. i had an amazing life. my whole life. so
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now it's my turn. >> a difficult reality for a growing number of americans. cristian benavides cbs news, miami. >> there's a lot more ahead on >> there's a lot more ahead on cbs news roundup stay with us when a tough cough finds you on the go, a syrup would be... silly! woo! hey! try new robitussin soft chews. packed with the power of robitussin... in every bite. easy to take cough relief, anywhere. chew on relief, chew on a ♪ robitussin ♪
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the forests in the pacific northwest. >> in the heart of oregon's fremont-winema national forest crews are going to new heights to harvest a precious commodity. we're looking for the ripe cones at the top of the tree, using lift operators and climbers. brian cutler with nonprofit american forests showed us how his team hunts for pine cones. >> the more that we lose forests we're losing our clean air, our clean water, the threat. >> the west's unprecedented breed of megafires, which, fueled by climate change, have destroyed more than 33 million acres since 2020 around the size of the state of arkansas. if nothing is done to restore these forests after a fire, what happens to them? >> so we're looking over here at the berry point fire, which was 2012. there's basically no live trees, and there's no natural regeneration happening. >> it's a vicious cycle. fewer surviving trees means fewer
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pine cones for humans to pick and plant once those pine cones are collected, they're brought to a network of nurseries like this. the seeds are extracted and then grown into these seedlings. there are about a million here, which represents about 4500 acres of new forest. this is the future towering tree in the forest. >> yes. >> that's correct. >> brian bertini is a geneticist with the u.s. forest service. is this enough to restore the forest? >> unfortunately, it is not. >> he sys they're short about 200,000 acres, more than seedlings at this nursery. and that's just in this part of oregon. the warming environment also means fewer seedlings will likely grow to maturity, which takes about 20 years. >> it's become much more arid, hotter and drier. one of the consequences of that it can push trees to towards the edge
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of what they can physiologically tolerate. >> but with that problem comes an opportunity. >> we are sourcing more drought tolerant populations of that species to be planted in these areas that are currently experiencing more drought prone conditions. >> the demand in stock now requires all hands on deck. >> you know, unfortunately, we've had to get pretty good at reforestation. >> logging companies like galen smith's are helping the forest service source cones and clear scorched land for replanting. why is that so important to have that partnership and that relationship here? >> fire and ecology and insects and disease doesn't care about a property line. if we're able to replant our little block of land, but we're surrounded by untreated burned forest land, eventually that's just going to become a brush field and it will burn again and it will threaten our land again. >> neighbors helping neighbors in a program the forest service hopes to expand to other impacted states. when you look at all of these seedlings, what
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wait, wait - i've been in first class before, but alaska airlines first class... there's way more space. like, i can reach for my stuff without knocking my head on the seat in front of me. and i could scootch by this guy to get out without touching him. at. all. i wonder what else i could do... no, no, no. self control. self control. ( ♪♪ ) it's friday,
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