tv CBS This Morning CBS February 24, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EST
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is wednesday, february 24th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." deadly tornadoes tear through the south. powerful winds toss rvs through the air. tens of millions could still be in danger. donald trump wins the nevada caucuses in a landslide. marco rubio surges to second. he'll be with us. is your phone secretly
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steal your personal information and your money. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. look up. it's going to cross right in front of us. >> oh, my god. >> wind picked up and sounded like a bomb hitting the house, basically. deadly storms sweep through the south. >> severe weather threatening on the southeast atlantic coast to the middle east atlantic coast. >> we love nevada! thank you! >> donald trump winning the nevada caucuses and leaving rubio and cruz far behind. >> donald became president? nobody know what he would do. he doesn't know what he would do. >> sanders went after clinton over her wall street speeches. >> i'm very happy to release all street. here it is, chris! there ain't none! >> worry about the zika virus spreading. cases may have been sexually
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republicans aren't blasting the plan to close guantanamo bay. >> this is what i think of the president's plan. to send terrorists to the united states. >> in new york, two window washers had to be plucked from the country's tallest hotel. >> in connecticut, up to 12 people fighting. >> all that. >> the next generation of robots looks so much like humans, it's kind of scary. >> oh, no! >> oh! i just threw that up. i drew that up at the time-out. >> and all that matters. >> bernie sanders who has had trouble attracting african-americans voters just got a high profile endorsement from spike lee. >> for bernie's sake, i hope it's better than other spoik lee's lee spike lee's endorsements. >> the vatican spokesman clarified the pope wasn't
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trump went toe-to-toe with the victor of christ and the pope blinked. just put a poster of him in the chapel. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump is now in a three-state winning streak after his big victory in nevada, building even more momentum toward the republican nomination.
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last night, he was really pumped. >> we will be celebrating for a long time tonight. have a good time. have a good time. >> reporter: celebrating his big night in nevada, donald trump declared victory across the board. >> we won with young, we won with old, we won with highly educated, we won with poorly educated!
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to a big turnout for trump and 60% of caucus go-ers said they are angry at the ferguson and more than 60% want the president to come from outside the political system. >> one week from today will be the most important night of this campaign. >> reporter: looking past his third place finish, ted cruz took the stage in las vegas, focused on super tuesday and his home state of texas. arguing he is the only remaining candidate who can dethrone the front-runner. >> the only campaign that has beaten donald trump and the only campaign that can beat donald trump is this campaign. >> thank you. >> reporter: leaving nevada before caucusing began, marco rubio watched the results from michigan, where he urged voters to look beyond emotion. >> we can't just elect someone that is angry. we have to elect someone that can make a difference and someone that will win.
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of some irregularities at the caucuses, people not being allowed in or others double voting appeared to be overblown. but the republican national committee did call the process controlled kayus. in fact, the ballot was a little confusing with voters being allowed to choose from among 11 candidates. six of whom are no longer running for president. gayle? >> thank you, dean. this is a question what will it take to stop donald trump? delegates. republican voters in 11 states will hand out almost 600 delegates on super tuesday. cbs news election director is here to where we take a stand on that. anthony, can donald trump mathematically be stopped? >> mathematically, yes, but it's politically going to get harder. after last night's big win in nevada, donald trump has a commanding 81 to 17 delegate
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given out so far. on super tuesday we will see 595 delegates in play and mainly across the south and full of kinds of voters donald trump has been winning like conservatives and evangelicals. if he keeps up this pace, then he can going to have at least 281 delegates coming out of super tuesday. partlily because of the rules proportionately. that means based on how many votes you get, not just whether you win or lose, that makes it even harder for everyone else to catch him. now, there is still time. it takes over 1,200 delegates to win and further down the road on march 15th, there are big delegate prizes in states like florida and ohio. those states are winner take all. the question for folks like cruz and rubio, can they hang on that long? charlie? >> thanks, anthony. florida senator and republican presidential candidate marco rubio is with us from grand rapids, michigan. good morning, senator.
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>> reporter: congratulations on your second place showing in nevada. many people are asking this question this morning -- as the group narrows, as the establishment's so-called makes endorsements and many of them, is it simply too little too late to stop donald trump, especially if he does very well -- - >> no. >> -- on the s.e.c. day, the super tuesday voting? >> yeah. i think it's important to take a deep breath here. first of all, the republican nomination is decided by delegates. over 1,200 delegates you need to have and we are nowhere that number of people have been filed, much less being able to win them. and nthat sense the votes happening between now and the 15th and before the 15th all of these states are aawarding delegates proportionately. it's not how many states you win but how many delegates you pick up. there are plenty of states out there in the winner take all category if you win them, you more than catch up. so i think what needs to happen
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continue to narrow because donald trump, for example, he underperformed mitt romney yesterday in nevada. four years ago, mitt romney got 50% of the vote there so shows a significant number of republicans even in nevada who are not -- do not want donald trump to be their nominee but right now divided up among four people. >> right now, you have yet to beat him, including the latest poll in your home state of florida. it shows that you're not even beating him in your own home state. at what point, at what state do you think you're going to be the one to trump donald trump? >> well, we will with win in florida. now that governor bush is no longer in the race. i filled up a lot of the support in florida so that will help us. again, as far as going into next week, we feel great about every state on the map. has to be a coalescing here and i think that process began after south carolina and i think continue after our second place showing in nevada last night. if we are going to keep working hard. we are in michigan already and here last night for a rally and headed to houston, texas, today for the debate tomorrow and a rally today.
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are putting in and what it's leading to when this process plays out. >> senator rubio, we keep hearing the party doesn't want it but the people tell a different story how they feel about donald trump. have you asked jeb bush for his endorsement? >> first of all, the people in every state that has voted, the overwhelming majority, including last night, 55% of the people did not vote for donald trump and that is helping him right now divided among the other people. i haven't discussed an endorsement with jeb bush and we are friends and i look forward to visiting him soon. >> can i ask you about the issues before the republican people, the ones you have debated. one of your opponents, senator cruz this week said that he would have federal agents knock on the doors to find those who are in this country illegally. would you follow that? >> yeah. well, that is a change of position for him obviously now that he is under duress in this campaign and trying to guess -- change his positions once again i guess to appeal and win votes. the bottom line i don't think
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not military style tactics. i do think we are going to enforce the law and people are being deported now. if you're here illegally in this country and have you a deportation order, you're going to be deported, especially if you're a dangerous criminal. that is going to happen but i don't think this country is going to support nor do i think we need to support a roundup style of people in america. we need to secure our border and bring illegal immigration under control and i think the american people will be reasonable and
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yes, she was asked about a new ruling by a federal judge who said that some state department official and even her own aides should testify under oath whether they set up her private e-mail system to evade public record laws. she says there is no base for it. >> i know there are, you know, challenges about what the state department did or didn't do and that will all be worked out. it's just not something that, you know, is going to have any lasting effect. >> reporter: clinton was also asked again whether she would release transcripts of her wall street speeches. >> why is there one standard for me and not for everybody else? everybody should be on a level playing field. >> reporter: sanders was asked if he would be willing to level the playing field. >> i am very happy to release all of my paid speeches to wall street. here it is, chris! there ain't none. >> reporter: in a state where african-americans make up a majority of the democratic electorate sanders accused the
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>> this birther issue, which we heard from donald trump and others, a racist effort to tie -- to try to delegitimatize states. can you imagine that? >> you're making the right choice. >> reporter: earlier, clinton appeared at a emotional gathering at a columbia church. >> she was joined by him the mothers of five victims of gun violence or police brutality whose support she cultivated for months. including the mother of sandra
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getting huge crowds. senator sanders is spending most of the week outside of south carolina in super tuesday states where he, charlie, thinks he has a better chance of winning. >> nancy, thanks so much. severe weather is tearing across the south as a series of destructive tornadoes killed at least three people. the violent storms left a trail of devastation from mississippi to florida. one tornado ripped through pensacola last night. >> powerful winds also slammed a trailer park in louisiana where two people were killed. the storms damaged several homes and buildings. more than 80 million americans today still face severe weather threat. the system is moving from the gulf to the mid-atlantic region. david begnaud is in convent, louisiana. good morning, david. >> reporter: good morning. 30 people were hurt here. seven critically and two people died. this rv park looks like a disaster zone. shredded rvs tossed like children's toys. this place was packed yesterday. there were people who live here
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they work at jobs in the area chemical plants. yesterday, when the tornado rolled through the plants closed and so the park was packed. as the sheriff told me, katrina was the worst hurricane to hit louisiana in modern memory and this, he believes, is the worst tornado. >> look! it's going down! >> reporter: more than two dozen tornadoes were reported across five southern states tuesday in a deadly outbreak of storms that punished the gulf coast. a portion of the sugar hill trailer park in convent, louisiana, was demolished. two people killed and another seven are in critical condition. >> i heard like a big rumbling sound. the whole entire house start shaking. >> look at thousand these trees were snapped off like toys. >> reporter: we toured the edwards. >> what makes this tornado different? >> it could not have hit a more vulnerable area. these are travel trailers. these are not even mobile homes that get strapped down and secured. >> reporter: some of the most
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from their rvs and suffered major head trauma. >> you have individuals crawling out of debris and people looking for help. you see walking injured. >> reporter: in the florida panhandle, a tornado tore a two-mile long path of damage. at least six people were injured here. 24 homes were destroyed at this apartment complex in pensacola. rescue teams searched for anyone possibly trapped under debris. >> it just felt like a big train just running through. >> look up. look up. >> that looks tornadic. >> reporter: 20 miles east of baton rouge, the capital of louisiana, another tornado was record in prairieville and ripped down the wall of this gold's gym. dozens of people inside at the time but no one hurt. the storm stretched to mississippi where a 73-year-old man was killed after his mobile home was tossed nearly 500 feet. back here at the rv park in convent, louisiana, there were cadaver dogs being used overnight to search for people who may still be missing under the debris.
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are six to seven people unaccounted for. it doesn't mean they are dead. it just means their family keeps calling the sheriff and he can't find those people at a local hospital. >> got to remain hopeful there. thank you, david. the fight over replacing late supreme court justice antonin scalia is escalating. senator republicans said they will not consider a nominee from precedent.
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a smoker. republicans will strongly challenge the president's plan to close the guantanamo bay prison in cuba. the proposal involves bringing nearly 60 prisoners to the united states and in 2011 congress outlawed the transfer of any inmates into the u.s. they looked at locations to house the prison and that includes the naval bringing in south carolina and super max prison in colorado and the military prison in leavenworth, kansas. apple wants congress to resolve its fight with the fbi rather than the courts. the associated press reports the tech giant plans to make that argument to a federal judge in the standoff over the san bernardino gunman's iphone. cbs news has confirmed justice department is demanding apple's help in other investigations. the fbi has asked the company to unlock a total of 12 devices in nine other cases. apple is fighting the government in at least seven of those cases. >> it's more than just one phone.
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driver accused in the deadly kalamazoo, michigan, shooting rampage planned to kill more people. surveillance video shows dalton before the killing spree. they say he bout a jacket with an inside pocket designed for a handgun. the shooting saturday killed six people and seriously hurt two others. there is a hopeful new development this morning on the plan for a partial truce in syria.
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cyberthieves are stealing confidential information and even money through your phone. ahead, the apps that could be hiding a dangerous secret. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nature made vitamins. . because i trust their quality. they were the first to have a vitamin verified by usp. an independent organization that sets strict quality and purity standards. nature made. the number one pharmacist recommended letter vitamin brand. it' s a taste so bold, yet so smooth, it could only be called, black silk, from folgers. a taste you could enjoy, fresh brewed, or one cup at a time. black silk, from folgers. when your cold makes you wish... ...you could stay... ...in bed all day...
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ahead, dr. david agus on the sexual transmission. zika virus. the new concern for men. tomorrow, team usa cup world winner hope solo will be here in studio 57 to talk about the zika scare and playing in the >> announcer: breaking news alerts and the hour by hour forecast from the weather authority this is local 12 news. >> bob: good morning, everybody. hope you are ready to try to stay degree. 46 degrees outside. we will get right to that check on weather and traffic. >> sheila: you might want to
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jen dalton. >> jen: the interstates are slow. much slower than normal. columbia parkway is seeing a mud slide hazard tureens parkway. i am hearing that they have a crew on the scene in that area blocking the right-hand lane. that is heading in bound where you may see slower than normal traffic on colombia parkway because of that. one at kyles station between long hunter, chase drive and yankee road that is a water main break that has been causing
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then we will see more move back in. you have a little bit of a window. that is a look at precision doppler 12 rain across the loop. the northern half of the loop and points north rain now. that moves north. a little break after 9:00 we begin to see more rain moving back in. it looks like a 60 to 90 minute break before we see another band of what looks to be pretty heavy rain impacting us say after 9:00 this morning. we will see the rain kind of become more scattered then after that. going no the afternoon 46 right now. we will top out in the mid 50s early this afternoon. fall back into the low 50s late day with scattered rain this afternoon could be a rumble of thunder around east of downtown cincinnati. your high 55 today. tonight more rain moves back in after 6:00 it looks like now and then it starts to mix with and change to snow after 10:00 tonight.
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star today, people in this country are up in arms. they are furious. they are seething with rage. 0 about starbucks new reward system. this is all so frustrating. if only there was some way for people to make their own coffee at home. >> starting april, you will no longer get one point or star per visit. instead, they will give you two
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he also does not belong to influential trade groups. trump said he started going international and national and running for president, which is, quote, cooler than all of that. >> okay. >> you like that, don't you? >> i do. i think it's very telling. "usa today" looks at the u.s. marshal's heavy use of cell phone trackers that were used to track nearly 6,000 suspects. the tools raised privacy concerns because they also intercept information about other phones in the area. the marshal services is the most prolink known users of those devices. the survey says marshals use various techniques to locate subjects. >> 72 million dollar jury award involving baby powder. jacqueline has a lawsuit. the company is expected to appeal saying their products are
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could face more than a thousand dollar cases. britain aguardian" on a huge recall on mars chocolate company. the united states is not among the recall. the discovery is plastic in a snickers prompted the move. the effective products including mars, mickey way, snickers, "the washington post" reports on a new twist in more than 40-year-old murder case involving the nephew of robert f. kennedy.
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if the state supreme court rules in skakel's favor, prosecutors will get a new trial. >> mr. skableg kel has been through this before. the hearing in the highest court in connecticut comes 40 years after martha moxley was found dead outside of her home. skakel was convicted in 2002 for moxley's death. >> i'm praying that i can find justice for martha. >> reporter: the case has been a roller coaster for the skakel and moxley families and has remained in a spotlight, partly, because skakel is the nephew of ethyl kennedy, robert f. kennedy's widow. skakel's new criminal defense lawyer says the family dynamic has brought unwanted attention. >> this case is not about the kennedy family. >> reporter: but skakel's cousin, attorney robert kennedy jr., fought for years to get the conviction overturned.
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>> reporter: the 2013 appeal centered on skakel's attorney mickey sherman provided a confident defense. skakel testified his former lawyer was more interested in his own public profile. >> he was hanging out with the press. he said he was a media hoar. >> reporter: the judge agreed and said sherman did not point the finger at other possible suspects. seger says he won't make the same mistake. who killed marriage moxley? >> that is a great question. i can tell you michael skakel is innocent of this crime and he certainly didn't kill marriage moxley. >> reporter: but someone within his own family may have. >> that is possible. his own brother, that's possible. >> reporter: and that brother, attorney steven seger, is referring to is tommy skakel, two years older than michael. it could be several months before the supreme court issues its ruling. until then, michael skakel remains free on $1.2 million bond. >> very interesting, peter.
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the cdc is investigating 14 possible u.s. cases of zika virus that may have been spread through sex. the new cases include several pregnant women and brings the u.s. total to at least 105 travel-related cases covering 24 states and washington, d.c. our dr. david agus is here. david, good morning. this even surprised officials at the cdc. >> reporter: surprised but there is medical literature showing a zika virus can be transmitted and present in sperm and been around several years so it's not new, but i think the number of cases this early on when zika is in the u.s. is a very small amount is surprising. >> what does it mean? >> well, what it means is that we have been giving warnings to women, volunteer traveling and especially if you're going to get pregnant. now what it means is we have shown or certificates have shown zika in sperm for up to 60 days and so what it means is anybody traveling in those regions and having sex, they need to have
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>> they might not know they have it. >> you're right. many people may have no symptoms of zika. we don't know if they can have zika virus in their sperm and not documented but especially possible with the new cases. zika virus is, obviously, here in the united states. as mosquito season comes in the gulf coast it will spread dramatically. >> what is the recommendation now? when it first broke it was about pregnant women and now talking about men and sexually transmitted disease. >> you remember the '80s? we were worried about hiv at the time. now you have to ask people about their travel history. we need a quick test for the virus. we need to accelerate vaccines. you need to be very careful if somebody you're considering having sex with had travel to south america or a place where there is the zika virus. >> what is a diplomatic way to ask that question? >> you'll have to ask charlie on that one. >> i cannot get an answer. do mosquitoes have any redeeming
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>> well, only women mosquitoes -- or bite you. >> men don't bite? >> you're right. we can eliminate all of the mosquitoes but the frogs will be upset. ecosystem out there. once you hit one thing, other things are affected also. mosquitoes have killed more people in this world than -- >> the most dangerous animal on >> yes. mosquitoes are. i have 8-year-olds and 7-year-olds and how i know this. mosquitoes are the most dangerous animal on the planet. >> one more thing to worry about. >> thank you, dr. david agus. from apps or alarm clocks or flashlights. how you may be handing over control of your phone to hackers and even places as far as beijing. that is next. watch us through our all-access app on your digital device because we know you do not want to miss the revealing
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inspired the ginormous hit musical called "hamilton." we will be right back. and plane tickets and shoes? you would turn an intimidating process into an easy one. you could get a mortgage on your phone. and if it could be that easy, wouldn't more people buy homes? and wouldn't those buyers need with lamps and blenders and sectional couches and wouldn't that mean all sorts of wooden leg-making opportunities for wooden leg makers? and wouldn't those new leg makers own phones from which they could quickly and easily secure mortgages of their own, further stoking demand for necessary household goods as our tidal wave of ownership floods the country with new homeowners, who now must own other things and isn't that the power of america itself now shrunk to fit the hands of a child, or, more helpfully, a home-buying adult. anyway. that's what we were
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reload the game she found hundreds of purchases had been made. by her math, more than 500 hundred dollars. >> i was sick. i didn't know what they were. >> some of the information the apps ask for are way beyond what they should be asking for. >> reporter: that thorough stroer story is no surprise to gary whose company tracks malware. what are the consequences. >> you'll lose your identity. you wonder why there was a transaction and got neurobank account and paid a bill that doesn't exist. >> reporter: he says when you download an app, you're also giving the app permission to access other parts of your phone. like an alarm clock app that can track phone calls. >> you think an alarm clock needs all of those per missions? access to the internet over the wi-fi?
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made and call history and i.d. to me is not a safe alarm classwork. >> reporter: as he showed us in a demonstration of what could happen when someone takes a photo of a check to send to their bank. what happens to the check now? >> well, the flashlight app spies on the camera and notice the check and grabs a copy of it and shipped it off to a server somewhere far away. >> reporter: last year the group fireeye discovered 11 apps that gathered users sensitive information and sent it to a remote server and it included the following. apple fought back by removing the apps and putting stricter security measures in place. >> they go to at your gps, your contacts list to build a profile you on. >> reporter: some apps are collecting information simply for advertising purposes. in 2014, the federal trade commission settled a lawsuit
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brightest flashlight app, alleging it transmitted consumers personal information to third-parties without telling them. but gary says he has found another flashlight app that can do much more troubling things. >> this one turns on your microphone in the background, listens in on you and sends an encrypted tunnel to a server we discovered in beijing. >> reporter: you're saying they are actually listening to people's conversations and sending that audio back to beijing? >> yeah. we have tracked it. i can show you where it does it. >> reporter: where is it on this map? >> a few blocks from tiananmen square. >> reporter: he gave that app to the fbi. his recommendation? >> we really have to look at our phone and say this is really a personal computer that fits this our pocket. let's shut down all of the apps we don't use and delete apps that don't make sense and reduce
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>> reporter: the creator of the brightest flashlight app settled with the ftc and agreed to erase all of the information it had gathered. a judge dismissed susan's lawsuit. saying she failed too late. way to shake us all up this morning, anna werner. read the fine print. >> don't you have an increasing suspicion that a lot of people known more about it than we do? >> i'm deleting my flashlight app. there is one that comes on the phone by itself so i don't need it any more. a awards show where actors of color will be honored. we will show you the all def awards show and they are like us, how a surprisingly human next generation robot reacts after a man knocks it down. first, it's time to check
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alerts and the hour by hour forecast from the weather authority this is "good morning cincinnati" live on local 12. >> bob: good morning again everyone. 7:56. 48 degrees outside. it is wet out there. we will get a look at what is going on with weather and traffic in a bit. shots fired at a car with 4 people inside. >> sheila: police are searching for the person who pulled the trigger. someone fired 8 to 10 rounds into the car. the victim was shot in the leg. he is recovering at the hospital.
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>> bob: rascal comes sunday june 26. tickets go on sale friday. we will give you a chance to win tickets to the show this morning. all you have to do is stay tuned to the next hour of "good morning cincinnati". we are not on star 64 yet. you will need to head that way. we will head over to jen dalton watching the roads which have not been pleasant to travel this morning. >> jen: it is slow because of the rainy conditions.
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on the interstates 71 southbound is sewing some heavy heavy traffic in both directions. there is an accident as you can see where the left-hand lane is blocked at this time. traffic is backed up to kenwood. slow go around the tri-state, guys. >> sheila: a little break in the rain. >>john: a break in the rain. women see it in the next hour, hour and a half. a little moore rain will be in. from here on hit or miss the steady stuff we have seen all morning long. steady rains cleared out of the area. there is more rain to the southwest which will swing in here in the next couple of hours. after that it will be scattered on again off again showers. we see a rumble of thunder possible into the afternoon. 48 now we will make it into the mid 50s before we fall back into the low 50s late day with scattered on again off again showers. maybe an isolated thunderstorm east of town. more rain moves back in tonight. 6:00 on. then that rain mixes with and
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>> bob: we will give it is wednesday, february 24th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including why donald trump is dominating the republican race. columnist and author mike lupica is here. he calls some other candidates real losers. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> this rv park looks like a
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shredding rvs tossed like children's toys. donald trump got more votes than ted cruz and marco rubio combined so he was really pumped. >> donald trump has a commanding delegate lead, but on super tuesday, we are going to see 595 delegates in play. >> what state do you think that you're going to be the one to "trump" donald trump? >> well, we will within in florida. >> if a state supreme court rules in skakel's favor, prosecutors will get a new
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is that really the show you should be visiting right now? why not drop by the set of "i did nothing wrong"? announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nationwide. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. severe weather today threatens more than 80 million americans after a series of punishing storms. threats of tornadoes and flooding stretch from the gulf
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sanders held a town hall there last night. they talked to voters about money and politics and racism in america in a state where a large number of democrats are right. i have a record that already demonstrates my willingness to take on wall street and financial interests. and there is no question about that. >> the people like the koch brothers, okay? second wealthiest family in this country. they and a few of their billionaire friends are going to spend $900 million on this campaign. i think that stinks. i think that is undermining the american democracy. >> we have serious chags challenges and i think it's important for people and particularly white people to be honest about those and to recognize our experiences may not equip us to understand what a lot of our african-american fellow citizens go through every single day. >> my dad, as i mentioned, came
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i'm running for president. guess what. certificate. maybe it's the color of my skin. i don't know. >> clinton heard stephen colbert respond to an interview where she was asked by scott pelley if she has ever lied. >> you're asking me -- i don't believe i have ever. i don't believe i ever will. i'm going to be the best i can can to level with the american people. >> how can you be this bad? just say no! just say no! even -- even richard nixon knew to say, i am not a crook! he didn't say it has always been my intention as far as i believe, i will do the best i cannot to be a crook. will you lie is the home run of campaign questions. you just say no! and then touch all of the bases! >> is that a question that you'd
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>> i'll just say no. >> with three days left before the primary, clinton still leads the polls in south carolina. have you guys ever told a lie? >> and has her sense of humor intact. >> have you? >> yes. >> have you? >> yes. >> have you? >> yes, i have. >> the polls got it right in nevada. >> i feel better, norah, that i confessed! thank you. >> i know. >> i'm just waiting -- >> i'm waiting to find the
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las vegas. >> we have maes amazing numbers coming out of tennessee and arkansas and florida. it is going to be an amazing two months. we might not need the two months, folks, to be honest. pro pro provoctary comments. mike, welcome back. >> great to have you here. >> have you ever told a lie? >> yes! yes! >> we want to keep the record going. >> no, but when scott pelley asked her that question, all i could think was the day somebody said to tom brady and he said, are you a cherting? and he said, i don't think so. the answer is no! >> but you could lie without knowing you lied? >> yeah. but then -- then, charlie, it becomes, you know, a definition
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>> we are not going there, are we? >> no. >> you've known donald trump a long time. >> yes. >> what is it about donald trump you think has connected in 2016? >> charlie, i don't think he knew how angry people were about, not just congress, but the president as well. so he tapped into something that ithis was more profound than knew. and every time i've interviewed him throughout this process, he always says the same thing, come on, aren't you a little bit surprised? and i would always say, yes, yes! >> no, no, listen. if somebody had told you eight years ago that a first-term senator, african-american from illinois was going to take on the clinton machine and beat them, you would have said, yeah, right. but this is way more surprising than that. >> here is the point too. it is within his dna, the ability to capitalize on the anger. >> yes. and i'll tell you something else he does and it's been
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he will find your weakest point and attack it, okay? and he'll listen to three hours and he'll seize on the one thing that he can use. when hillary clinton called him sexist, he put her husband into play at warped speed and when jeb bush thought he would bring his brother out of the bull pen, like the first army coming over the hill, he went right after him on iraq. >> and called jeb low energy which was right to a quality that people seem to -- >> jeb bush, if you would ask me at the start of this thing to bet my own money, i would have bet on jeb bush way back before trump came down the escalator. now you look at him and he is like the nice boy with his book bag and lunch money walking to school and he is almost at school. he thinks it's going to be a great day at school! and then? >> then this guy is waiting for him on the street corner! >> do you think donald trump will be the nominee? >> i do. >> yeah. >> i think that the only way that he doesn't is if cruz pulls out of the race.
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day, she says, why doesn't cruz pull out? honey, he thinks he is still going to be president. and rubio, i think, is the only one that would possibly have an avenue, but as he continues to pick up momentum -- charlie, my favorite thing is the second and third place finishers declaring victory. it's my favorite! as a child in the south, like carolina panthers going home after the super bowl and throwing themselves a victory parade.
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finishes somehow make him the odds on favorite to beat hillary clinton in november. >> just a capping point about expectations. it is expectations that allows people to declare themselves a winner, even though they came in second. >> but ted cruz, the other night in south carolina, said we made history tonight. i'm thinking, what kind of history? you're in the south. you can't walk a block without running into a white evangelical. >> thank you, mike. >> okay. >> are you done? >> well, no! >> okay. >> no, no, no. mike, we are delighted you're here. i'm just kidding. >> that's fine. >> there is a clock. it's not you. >> that's not welcoming! >> it wasn't hostile. >> it wasn't welcoming! >> mike, you need a hug. some are calling it the black oscars. >> where are you?
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ahead, a field trip for fans of the blockbuster musical "hamilton." >> i'm chip reid at alexander hamilton's south in northern manhattan. a hundred blocks south of here he is the biggest name on wall street. we will explain how hamilton has become the hippest of the founding fathers. new york see me. see me to know that psoriasis is just something that i have. i'm not contagious. see me to know that i won't stop. discover cosentyx, a different kind of medicine for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. proven to help the find clear or 8 out of 10 people saw 75%
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i swear to god, if you're not going to do it, i'm out. >> every punch i've ever thrown has been my own. you might show me how to do this? i'm ready. >> that is michael b. jordan with sylvester stallone in "creed." no person of color was nominated in any acting category for the second year in a row. entertainment co-host kevin frazier is in los angeles where a new show called the "all def
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>> you may find yourself between two rocks and a hard place this sunday. chris returns to host the oscars but his younger brother tony is leading an all new awards show and created by russell simmons and it's a more exclusive alternative. so this will be the stage? >> yes. we will build a staircase. >> reporter: comedian tony rock isn't looking to spoil his bringing brother's big night but the awards show he is hosting is looking to disrupt hollywood's status quo. >> hopefully, this awards show will create dialogue and get things moving as far as the oscars is concerned and casting is concerned and how people produce and right and how we are perceived in television and how we are shown in the media. >> i don't understand why black people feel this undieing need
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>> reporter: this launched tmz documented die atribe. >> our movies and our culture. >> reporter: your rant was epic? >> yeah, it was epic. >> reporter: but when you get down to nuts and bolts, is this something that you need? and if you have this, then do you no longer worry about the oscars? >> no, no, you always worry about the oscars, but this is needed because dialogue always, you know, can create a change. >> reporter: while the all fed movie awards were created to make a point, the show, produced by media mogul and def jam cofounder russell simmons -- >> we poke fun at the oscars and everybody else, but this is about celebrating people who might not otherwise get celebrated and movies. like, i can't expect 94-year-old white guys to vote on "outta compton."
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>> it did get a nod on the all def picture of best pictures nominees but the awards will go to categories like best hopeful white person. >> harrison ford. "star wars." "star wars." "star wars." significant vester sylvester stallone. >> you're a good fighter. >> you continue to deny my work. the world will deny my work. >> will smith. >> and legendary producer norman lear. >> reporter: who created the show? >> yes. we are moving on up >> george jefferson walked with swagger. >> we don't have to go anywhere. look around! we are already there! >> he cursed white people out. >> who you calling crazy? . >> norman lear will do something
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award, you will not see that at the oscars. >> norman lear? >> no. special category. >> he got a special category. >> sylvester stallone may win that one. emotion overcomes celine dion during her return to the vegas stage. ahead, the powerful tribute to her late husband. you're watching "cbs this morning." for the past 27 days, four men have outlasted authorities by making their getaway in a prius. this game ends now. to catch a prius, you've gotta be a prius. guys, what's that? oh, man. toyota. let's go places. pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies. then your eyes may see it differently. only flonase is approved to relieve both your itchy,z watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. complete allergy relief or
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moment. a rhine truck. it rams the toyota and pushing it sideways. no one inside was hurt. but they were shaken up. >> that is when you hit the gas! >>3 good morning i'm cammy dierking. their children were born with a condition also caused by the zika virus...two local families share their stories of determination and hope, tonight at 6. now local 12 news... >> bob: about morning again. 8:25. we are up to almost 50 degrees outside. >> sheila: a big problem. >> jen: we have developed a major issue on the norwood lateral west sound from 71 to 75. it is completely shut down right
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you can't exit 75 southbound or northbound right now. that is because of a multi vehicle accident. i counted as many as 10 vehicles involved in this. so avoid the westbound norwood hat are alley would say anywhere between 71 and 75. it is really starting to back up in that area. unfortunately right now no cameras that we can show you this right now. we are trying to get some images of the multi vehicle accident later on.
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>> sheila: 8:26. our top stories. new this morning police looking for the person who robbed the gas station. >> bob: they robbed the hill top quick stop after 4:00 this morning. investigators say no one was hurt. it is back open. anyone with information is asked to call police. >> sheila: developing this morning we are finding out about a new kroger marketplace over a battle over the site. they voted to restone the area from residential to commercial. some people voiced concerns about increased noise and traffic in the area. kroger will be part of a new development called the crossings of beckett. >> bob: a big old game xavier takes on villanova. villanova the top ranked team. a win over the wildcats would be a huge win.
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that starts at 7:00. >> sheila: coming up at 8:30 we are beginning away tickets. our friends at fresh table celebrating 5 years. 2 chefs sharing a recipe you can make for easter and talking about the big changes they are part of at finally market. >> bob: still in that windy? >>john: rains gone. they will be hit or miss the rest of today. southeast indiana receivier heavier rains. elsewhere it will be scattered. temperatures in the upper 40s. mid 50s this afternoon. low 50s late day with scattered showers. could be an isolated thunderstorm or two later this afternoon especially early afternoon to the east of downtown cincinnati. tonight we see some more rain move back in this evening. that will change to snow overnight. we expect some on again off again snow tomorrow. temperatures above freezing. the ground is warm. the ground is wet.
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>> bob: continue to now let's make that random call with today's 10,000 dollar question, who shot alexander hamilton in that famous d duel? >> hello? >> hello. for $10,000 -- >> excuse me? >> wait. >> the first got milk commercial aired back in 1983. a history buff knew the answer to a call-in question, who shot
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trouble saying who shot alexander hamilton, charlie rose. >> remember? >> ding, ding, ding. >> because he is out of milk! that is one of the fun facts i learned when i went to see "hamilton." you learn a lot going to see that play. i knew very little about him. highly recommend. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, more on the run-away success of
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>> you learn something new in our sew show. dr. tara narula is in our green room. why women fare worse than men. >> ginormous fact. >> that's true. she has got a good excuse. >> let's show you some of this morning's headlines. wp reports on dr. samuel alito said the supreme court will find a way to get its work done without dr. scalia's on the bench. he said the supreme court. erin andrews wants $75 million in damages. they accuse the hotel for giving
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>> two window washers in manhattan were stranded 70 feet up more than an hour yesterday when their scaffold got stuck. firefighters broke a window to rescue them. a coworker says the pair laughed and joked once they were safely inside. >> most people would have needed a depend so it's good they have a sense of humor. >> most people wouldn't. >> you know what? >> i'd be scared! >> i'm surprised depends has not
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looks at the declining popularity of cereal. in 2010 sales were $13 billion and last year fell to $10 billion. almost 40% of millennials say cereal is inconvenient for breakfast because they have to clean up the bowl afterwards. heart disease is the number one cause of death in women. it affects more than 6 million women every year. recent studies from the american heart association show how women's symptoms are often overlooked or misunderstood. our dr. tara narula is a cardiologist at lennox hill hospital and also a spokesman for the american heart association. good morning. >> good morning. >> why do women fare worse? >> right. since 1984 the annual more tall i didn't think for
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increase awareness and done well but 55% of women recognize that heart disease is a health threat. women don't recognize the symptoms or if they do they blow them off and say i don't have time to go to the doctor, i have to pick up my kid or go to work or they are afraid or embarrassed. then the biology issue. we are learning that the biology of women's heart disease may be different from men in terms of how they have their heart attacks. the mechanisms of their blood vessel dysfunction. let's not forget the health care
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risk factors before you get to a point where you have a problem. you should know your family history. >> everybody should, shouldn't they? >> most people wait until they have a problem. >> they do, unfortunately. >> thank you. >> accolades keep coming for the broadway hit musical "hamilton." it won the kennedy prize on monday. the cast wowed grammy viewers. tickets are sold out throughout at least january of next year. the show is based on alexander hamilton, our nation's first treasury secretary. chip reid spoke with the author who helped the founding father find new life. chip, good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. , you know, george washington and thomas jefferson are over this town but good luck finding alexander hamilton. yes, you can pull a 10 dollar pill out of your wallet or come
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now he is getting his turn in the spotlight. >> reporter: behind the wrath-inspired lyrics and hip-hop, new york's most talked about show "hamilton" served up a history lesson like no musical ever before. >> reporter: until recently, alexander hamilton was best known as the stoic face on the 10 dollar bill. that changed when hamilton hit broadway. so this is. >> hamilton grange where he lived the last couple of years of his life. then you have to remember, chip, this would have been very far north of the city at the time. this would have been virtual wilderness. >> reporter: about a hundred blocks north of the theater is where the real alexander lived in what is known as hamilton heights. ron chernow wrote the biography
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time, you can identify with him. >> reporter: play write wright decided to tell his stories behind rap. in a "60 minutes" interview, mannered complained it to charlie rose. >> i believe that form is uniquely suited to tell hamilton's story. it has rhythm and it has density and if hamilton had anything in his writings, density. >> reporter: his furious disputes with the other founding fathers were legendary, including a decades long rivalry with thomas jefferson over slavery which hamilton opposed and over the future of the young republic. >> hamilton had a vision of the country and not only true traditional agriculture but
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factories and stock exchanges. >> reporter: hamilton died in a duel at the age of 49. at his grave in lower manhattan, there's a surge of visitors here to remember the man who history almost forgot. he died more than 200 years ago and now he's getting his turn in the limelight. >> his name is literally up in lights on broadway. doesn't get any better than that. >> reporter: the alexander hamilton craze is showing no signs of slowing down. ron chernow's book has been on the best seller list 18 weeks and six weeks longer than in 2004 when it first came out. >> i just got the book yesterday. i'm one of the ones! thank you so much, chip. i marvel that here is lynn reading his book on vacation and comes away with that amazing play. >> and knew it was perfect for rap. >> so good. >> he says he'll be happiest notwithstanding all of the attention when that play is being produced by theater groups in high schools all over the world. >> can i see that happening
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prepared foods at your grocery store and 29 billion dollar industry and growing as fast as overall grocery sales. a survey looked at whether the prepared foods are fresh and healthy and save you any money. the magazine analyzed food samples in a lab for calories and fat and saturated fat and sodium. welcome, trisha. >> we wanted to look at prepared foods. people are busy and looking at convenient options to make dinner and get it on the table fast. we wanted to see what was in them nutritionally because those foods are not required to provide any nutritional information. >> let's get specific. what did you find when you looked at whole foods breaded
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>> we found they were similar in sodium and found the restaurant meal was slightly higher in calories in sodium and fat. >> what does that tell us or what are you suggesting? >> it really tells us that, you know, they are all more or less the same and it really does mean that homemade is usually the best option. >> so we reached out to whole foods but have not heard back from them and keep you posted on that. this is what you did. you sent secret shoppers into the grocery stores. what did you tell them to do? >> we asked the secret shoppers to buy the dishes we identify as being available regularly and asked them to ask the store clerks, the people behind the counters about the food, where the food was prepared and how the food was prepared. >> one of them went to shop rite's chicken march en en marsala? >> what did you find out? >> we found the same dish from two different locations of the store varied widely in sodium
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thousand milligrams in the same sized serving. >> how do you explain that? >> you know, it's just that the foods are not prepared consistently and people are not, you know, they are not adhering necessarily maybe to the store's recipe or the clerk throws an extra bunch of sodium in. you just don't know. >> shop rite has coming to say. it says the article does not represent the depth of their prepared food options and that they do provide healthy dishes for their customers to that, you say? >> yeah, i think that they do. i think there are some that they do, but i think the real issue with this is nobody knows which ones are healthy and which ones aren't because there are no nutritional information and that store doesn't provide nutritional information. >> you say rotisserie chicken is a great deal? >> it is and it's $1.66 a found what we found in our tests. >> the whole study is sort of do a check on whether you're getting a good deal and whether
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expect or whether it has more salt or sodium than you expect? >> absolutely. >> to those of us who don't have secret shoppers, what are we supposed to do? >> i think that you should -- you have to pay attention to portion sizes. that is big part of this. you also -- ask the clerks about the food. ask they have nutritional information, ask where it was prepared. >> good information. thank you. >> thank you, trisha. >> thank you. celine dion returns to the stage with an emotional tribute to her late husband. that story is next.
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traffic off on to paddock. i thought they had reopened the norwood lateral. it looks like from the camera they are keeping it closed and rerouting traffic. if you are planning on heading out the door going on the westbound direction between 71 and 75 i would think about rerouting yourself because it is backed up all the way on to 71 at this point in time. avoid that area. 562 westbound between 71 and 75. we are still seeing some slow traffic this morning. 71-75 still heavy from buttermilk to the ohio river. it looks like 71 is starting to clear up. if you look at that image from our wayz map they are very heavy this morning. avoid westbound lateral this morning guys, back to you. >> bob: on to the news of the day new this morning a shooting investigation is underway in college hill. >> sheila: 2 men went up to another man after work and tried
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the 45-year-old victim was shot in the hip. he is at uc medical seasoner this more than. he has a concealed carey permit so he may have hit one of the suspects when he shot back. also knew a man recovering at the hospital. the victim and 3 friends in a car when police say another car pulled up and somebody fired 8 to 10 round into that car. the victim was shot in the leg. police have not released a motive. >> bob: 4 adults and children are looking for a place to stay after fire tears through their home. this happened around 11:45 last night. the fire was caused been electrical short? the attic. $15,000 in damage. the smoke detectors not working in that house. >> sheila: a group trying to bring cincinnati streetcar to northern kentucky will be in washington dc. money for a feesability study.
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streetcar track extended. the group is looking at ways to get the streetcar perhaps over the fourth or 12th street bridges. >> bob: still in that window of drive. >>john: scattered showers. we were dry. 9:00 on we see a little here. here it is. scattered showers here and there. that's how it is going to be the rest of the morning into the afternoon hit or miss showers. they are more wide spread. so scattered showers i can't rule out a rumble of thunder. temperatures in the northwest part of the viewing area 50s. a gigantic difference in temperature in cincinnati low 50s on average through the day here with scattered showers in the forecast through the day. we have light rain at the airport now. could be an isolated rumble of thunder this afternoon. tonight some more rain moves in. that rain mixes with and changes
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snow around tomorrow roughly an of slushy accumulation. >> bob: try to stay dry he have been. >> sheila: we will see you tomorrow. >> announcer: local 12 news is always on, on air, on line and on the go. we are proud to be the local (phone ringing) you can't deal with something, by ignoring it. but that's how some presidential candidates seem to be dealing with social security. americans work hard, and pay into it. so our next president needs a real plan to keep it strong. (elephant noise) (donkey noise) hey candidates,
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