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tv   CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield  CNN  April 27, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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carefully. i was in some form of shock it had been hours since i was in a cell chained to the wall and suddenly i'm here in damascus and meeting my daughter and talking to the president and then press conference and the lights it was just it was quite an impact. >> he was the longest held american journalist. he was also a former marine veteran of the vietnam war. and after his release, he taught journalism at a number of universities salami said that her father would want to be remembered for his humanitarian work for many causes, including the protection of journalists and that is all we have time for this week. don't forget, you can find all our shows online as podcast. it's cnn.com slash podcast, and other major platform i'm christiana amanpour in london. thank you for watching and see you again next week cnn breaking news
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hello everyone. thank you so much for joining me this saturday. i'm fredricka whitfield, and we begin with this breaking news after devin stating tornadoes rip through the central plains overnight with more threads on the way. now, nearly 55 million people from texas to michigan are under threat for severe weather area between dallas and kansas city is expected to get the hardest hit with tornadoes. baseball-sized hail, and flooding among the hazards at least 78 tornadoes were reported across five states on friday, with no fatalities reported. officials credit the warning systems for saving lives now rescue crews are up against the clock searching flattened homes for anyone trapped before the storms
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intensify again we got home as fast as we could i got my babies in the basement. >> we covered up with a blanket. we got her dark down there all of a sudden the lights went out and we heard everything thrown around above us who is so scary those place those carried our neighbors everybody, everyone now says, oh, there their god all right, for the latest now, i'm joined by cnn's lucy cabin off and hard hit elkhorn nebraska and meteorologist less rafah, who was tracking all of this from the cnn weather center sure. >> so lucy, let's go to you first. tell us what you're seeing there afraid when we arrived to this neighborhood was completely pitch black. you couldn't really tell the full scale of the destruction can take a look behind me, that white car completely flipped on its roof that used to be a
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single-story home, a single-family home completely flat and follow me as i give you a closer look, you see residents now returning to their homes trying to salvage what's left in the path of this massive twister that touchdown on friday, it ripped through this entire suburb, flattening cars, flipping cars, flattening homes what you're seeing also actually, i want to point out the pink graffiti, the circles here on almost every one of these homes that was put in place by cruise last night, who were trying to check-in for anyone that may have been trapped here. we know that there were basements here, so a lot of the families wrote out that twister in their basements there are folks, again, returning to their homes trying to assess the damage. there are a lot of volunteers, neighbors from safer areas who are here just to help to try to help families salvage what they can overhear. i spoke with the owner of that home. they moved in a year ago. their family who was visiting from out of town the homeowner said that she's
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she's never heard a tornado siren before. she says she's obviously seen it in the movies. but when she heard it, she didn't know what to do. one family member for almost wanted to run out. they all had to shelter in the basement for safety you see a lot of of vehicles here again close-knit community people are really helping each other out. there is insurance for a lot of the folks here. so there is a possibility of rebuilding, but obviously with this scale of destruction that is going to be a very difficult and long road ahead, right now, a lot of the folks that i've spoken to express numbness, shock, there hasn't really been time to process this. again, the sun came up just a little while ago. people are just turning to this area. they lost power here. so everyone was largely evacuated once it was safe to get out so far two people injured were not sure about whether there's going to be more extensive injuries are casualties, but police yesterday said it was a miracle that there were so few injuries and they credit that to the early warnings. enough time to
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get to safety or to get out. in fact, some of those tornado warnings took place right around the time that kids were getting out of school. and so a lot of children sheltered in their schools before returning to a safer safer areas. and again, i'll get out of the shot just to show you the full scale of this devastation is really hard to wrap your mind around it almost looks like a fresh constructions sayyed, but no families had been living here. i think this home they are looking at. we heard that the family moved in there just a few weeks ago that life completely interrupted fred. >> well, i'll yeah, it's devastating there, lucy and obviously, many people are also counting their blessings considering the losses, but the assessments really have just gotten started. we'll check back with you. lucy, kevin off. thank you so much elisa. so what kind of conditions are we talking about for what areas? i mean, that was nebraska. we know that iowa also hard hit, but texas is also an area that
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has also dealing with severe or threats of more severe weather yeah, a lot of the same area today that they're trying to pick up the pieces could see additional storms as we go through the day, you could see all of the reports they are from nebraska in thai what and this is the threat for today. >> it's in level four five that moderate risk there in the red a little bit farther south than where it was yesterday, going into parts of oklahoma and texas, but some strong tornadoes possible. now that outbreak yesterday in the omaha area even headed into good morning, they were 42 tornado warnings issued by that one office in omaha. that is the most in five years in a single day for national weather service office are just incredible. the amounts of warnings that we had and all of the tornadoes right now, we have additional tornado warnings in parts of oklahoma just to the west there of oklahoma city as storm start to fire up, we're starting to get that daytime heat and community, the cook, the atmosphere, and we're already starting to find storms explode. here is a tornado watch that we've got for parts of oklahoma and texas. this goes until 1:00 central time.
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we are expecting this to be expanded and strength that you know, as we go through the day today bended will have additional tornado watches as we go through the de because we are expecting another round of possibly strong tornadoes. here's that risk for today's strong tornadoes, damaging winds, large hail up to tennis ball size. you can see that red, moderate risk, a level four out of five in that area specifically we could be looking at a chance of tornadoes that could be very strong. we're talking ef three or stronger that could cause severe damage similar to what we saw yesterday. we're talking about wins upwards of 135 miles per hour 165 miles per hour. just put that in perspective. what an e f three tornado can do and we will find these storms really blowing up as we go through the day today, because that atmosphere is so super fueled already, ghraieb, right? elisa raffa, keep us posted. thank you so much for that. >> all right. we're also following new developments in the eruption of pro-palestinian protests across college campuses. >> police detained about 100
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people at northeastern university in boston on friday clearing what they called an unauthorized encampment. and in a statement earlier today, northeastern official said they believed professional organizers had joined the ranks of student protesters administrators at cal poly, humboldt say they are closing campus for the remainder of the semester due to the continued occupation of two buildings. we've seen similar scenes across the country as demonstrators demand an end to the war in gaza and call on university to divest funding in various movements. university officials say reports of anti-semitism and vandalism on-campus could not be tolerated. and many jewish students say they don't feel safe at their schools cnn's polo sandoval and rafael romo are monitoring the situations at separate campuses. polo, you're at columbia university. what are you seeing there right now for it, if you compare it to yesterday when we did see
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some tempers flare up during some non-student protests that took place is off-campus. >> things are relatively calm today. >> it's what you can't see, which is these ongoing negotiations between liters of that student cabinet that's been on columbia for about ten days now. >> and a handful of university officials that's what we're really focusing on because those apparently are ongoing yesterday though i did hear from some of the participants have that in cabinet leaders of that group, but they really just what they, based on what they shared. it seems as negotiations after showing some progress on thursday have slope foad or even stalled. i want you to hear from muhammad khalil. he is one of two negotiators, student negotiators who i talked to yesterday at the stage, where at an impasse. >> they is not acknowledging the movement and the extent of the movement and what they're willing to offer. it's mostly just the statements, processes, and committees i think that's really the stalemate when you're talking about the
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encampment that started this massive wave of demonstrations from coast to coast, that they are in fact at a stalemate. >> but nonetheless, they are continuing. i didn't have an opportunity to speak a few moments ago to one of the student organizers and told me that they likely will not have an update on those negotiations until monday, which means fred did that in cabinet will likely continue for at least the rest of the weekend. the columbia university weighing in saying they are still actively engage with those students to try to find a resolution since that they are also considering oraa other options potential options in order to as they put it, restore calm on campus. but for now, it is certainly call them both on and off campus. and we'll continue to track for the rest of the weekend all right. >> polo sandoval, add new york's columbia university. all right. let's go to atlanta and emory university where we find rafael romo rafael, there were arrests there was a lot of unrest on campus as well yesterday. what's it like today that's right, fred. >> well, the situation here at
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emory university continues to be tense this weekend after clashes with police resulted in multiple or on thursday including at least a couple of emory university professors. there were protests. once again, here, friday but they were more peaceful. >> and also friday, fred emory, nured culty gathered on campus to express concerns about the violent the rest that took place thursday, they were considering a motion for a no-confidence vote of emory university president gregory fem v's one of those attending was noel mcafee, a professor and chair of the philosophy department here at emory university, who was arrested during the chaos on thursday mcafee said he diversity administrators who made the problem worse on thursday when they called the atlantic the police department macro mcafee spoke to cnn about her restless. >> they can listen what happened in there that one cup stood up and said man, you need to step back, you need to step back. >> here i am now not just
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professor, but human being watching this child being pummeled. >> i said no and i stood there, but i stood in a way that was non-confrontational. >> get there and then on the rested and for greek are some of the professors and students who participated in the protests differ greatly from administrators. when you ask them what happened thursday, they say it was mostly students of people affiliated with the university, but president fem be said in a statement that some were highly organized outside protestors who arrived on campus in vance construct and constructed an encampment in a statement, he also said that he is not going to tolerate any violence and disruption of activities. here on campus. fred, back to you. >> all right. rafael, right? from an atlanta polo sandoval in new york. i thank you so much for check back with you. i mean, times school teachers in tennessee are now allowed to carry guns in the classroom. the state's governor sign the
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legislation into law on friday i think we need to be really clear about what this what this law does. your right. districts have the option to choose. >> what's important to me is that we give districts tools and the option to use a tool that will keep their children safe in their school educators seeking to bring a handgun on campus will be required to complete a background check and undergo hours of training the new law comes more than a year after a shooter opened fire and killed six people at a covenant school in nashville evacuation orders remained in place after a train carrying propane derailed near the arizona new mexico border, huge flames could be seen billowing from the tangled overturn train cars. >> the burning hazardous material force part of i40 to be shut down no injuries were reported. the cause of the derailment is unclear right now, ntsb inspectors are
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expected to arrive on the scene later on today us secretary of transportation, pete buttigieg said, in a post that he is coordinating with state and local agencies to ensure safety in the region all right. still to come, three witnesses took the stand in the first week of testimony on donald trump's hush money trial, the major takeaways and what might be next straight ahead riyadh says new album is breaking records get to say what country is call me country beyond, say a nashville's renaissance streaming exclusively on mats today. america's beverage companies are bottles might still look the same, but they can be remade in a whole new way thanks to you. we're getting bottles back and we've developed a way to make new ones from 100% recycled plastic new bottles made using no new
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world's news all right the eighth day of former president trump's criminal hush money trial saw three key witnesses testify. former tabloid publisher and longtime trump friend david pecker, wrapping up more than ten hours of testimony jurors also heard from trump's longtime personal assistant, rhona graff, as well as michael cohen's banker, who arranged his home equity line of credit, which cohen used to pay stormy daniels $130,000 in hush money. cnn's kara scannell has more a new witness, former president donald trump's assistant of 34 years took the stand on friday, shedding light on the inner workings of the trump organization in trump's hush money trial, rhona, let me add to cost less rhona graff, whose office was next door to trump's on the 26th floor,
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trump tower said she was in control of this calendar and maintaining his contact list at the organization graph confirmed to contact. >> she maintained were for former playboy model karen mcdougal and adult film star stormy daniels, to women who alleged affairs with trump, both of which he denies. mcdougal's contact entry included a phone number, email, and two addresses. daniel it's contact listed herself phone. she testified as far as she can remember, trump never used email to communicate prosecutor susan hoffinger, ask graph if she had seen daniels at trump tower graph responded that she vaguely recalled one seeing daniel's in reception on the 26th floor then it was trump's attorneys turn to cross-examine graph. susan nicholas asked graph about trump's interest in casting stars in celebrity apprentice, suggesting that was the reason daniel's was spotted at trump tower graph responded, that's what she assumed testifying. i vaguely recall hearing him say that she was one of the people that may be
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an interesting contestant. destined on the show. >> thank you. good job as trump's assistant, ghraieb, often appeared on the apprentice trump. >> he asked me to call you and tell you to meet him tomorrow morning at the new york stock exchange? >> graff said in her testimony that she felt the apprenticed elevated trump to rockstar status nicholas also focused on demonstrating trump and graph had a good working relationship. she asked if trump was a good boss graph responded, i think that he was fair and respectful boss to me. she added sometimes who had peak is headed and said they go home to your family, which i thought was very thoughtful of him as graff testified, trump sat with a closed lips smile. tilting his head to get a better view of his former assistant, trump's team made clear graph was testifying under subpoena with nicholas asking you don't want to be here, do you? correct graph for applied earlier trump's attorneys worked hard to undermine a foundational witness for the prosecution. x executive david pecker, who is back on the stand for his
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fourth day of testimony during trump's attorney, emile bove as questioning of the former national enquirer publisher. he attempted to discredit one of the prosecution's key witnesses, trump's x person it's an old attorney, michael cohen. he asked pecker if you felt cohen was prone to exaggeration? pecker agreed he was after court, trump weighed in on the trial eight days that we all sitting in courthouse. i just want to thank everybody. i'm michele for through this, like everybody else michael cohen's banker took the stand on friday afternoon, explaining to the dreo he helped set up a bank account for the shell company that cohen ultimately used to transfer the $130,000 payment stormy daniels, there's no court on monday, but the banker will be back on the stand tuesday, answering question from prosecutors before trump's lawyers get a turn at him. >> kara scannell, cnn, new york former president donald trump will also have a key hearing next week on the gag order
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against him. thursday morning. judge, merchan will weigh prosecutors arguments that trump violated the order four more times this week when he talked about michael cohen, david pecker, and the jury. that's an addition to ten other incidents which he is accused of violating the order joining us right now, camille vasco as a partner in the brown redneck law firm and co-chair of the brand and reputation management thank group vasquez also successfully represented johnny depp in his defamation case against his ex-wife. amber heard camille wright to seal nice to be here. all right. well, let's talk about this gag order. upcoming gag order hearing. we know one already took place last week. how do you expect up part two? to go will be very interesting to see how the judges tone that he takes with president, former president trump. >> i think that what we'll see is stern. >> i think he will be very stern with the defendant and with his attorneys. obviously,
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president trump feels that the gag orders as unfair, and he is clearly trying to abide by it, but also testing the judge's patience and limit. we will see what the judge does. i expect he will be stern. he may sanction the defendant in this case. it will be interesting to see okay. well, when you say stern trump abiding by it, those things don't seem to compute with with what we're seeing. i mean, the judge has refrained from doing anything and trump has been continuing to push the limits so first up with the judge, what is str1? is it is it time now to impose some financial, some finds perhaps it's going to create too much attention if the judge were two put him in jail for
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contempt because this is so highly publicized, it's a former president. i'm logistically there may be some real problems, but what do you mean by stern i think he i don't think he will actually think tion or impose any fines yet on the former president. >> but i suspect her he will admonish him and do it publicly in a way that will send the message that should there be any other violations of the gag order he will not shy away from sanctioning him, finding him or potentially worse, holding contempt. >> okay. then you were talking about trump seemingly trying to abide by it if anything, he's been pushing that he has not refrained from criticizing the judge of from criticizing witnesses. talk to me from the attorney's standpoint representing a high profile client. high-profile in this case, a former president what
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do you think is happening between the conversations of his attorneys and him? how were they perhaps encouraging him to back off or are they saying just go ahead and be yourself? what was that conversation like? because it obviously is an issue. if now there's going to be yet another hearing on the gag order it is an issue and i think it's an interesting one, especially when you're referring to a defendant, a criminal defendant in this case that is in a campaign, and he is the presumptive republican nominee so as a lawyer it's a client control issue. so obviously you have to impose upon the client the responsibilities and the fact that he has to abide by the court order. >> however, you're also speaking to the presumptive nominee for the presidency in the lecture gen. that's highly contested and it's a polarizing issue here, whether the gag order is fair or not.
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so i think that as an attorney, they have to admonish him, they have to remind them of the order. however, they also understand that he's a candidate during an election year. so i think that it's what i've seen, at least from former president trump, is yes, he's probably violating the gag order at this point, but he's doing it in a way that a lot of people will view it as toeing the line. he hasn't exactly flip flagrantly violated it, but he is toeing the line and that's why i don't suspect the judge able fine him at this point, but the judge is likely going to be very stern with them if you were his attorney, what would you be advising him to do i would advise him to abide by the court's order. >> he has to do that. and as an attorney, we have an ethical obligation to do that into remind our clients of that but again, you're speaking with presidential nominee. so it's
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it's difficult holt, right. >> everyone is watching this trial, understanding that it's going to have a role in the way people go to the ballot box come november. >> so he has to defend himself and he has a right to defend himself. however, he does also have to abide by the court's orders, and that includes the gag order in this case. >> all right. we'll leave it there. camille vasquez. thanks so much thank you so much all right. calming up next, president biden and donald trump may be one step closer to meeting on the debate in stage ahead of november's presidential election, stay with us the sinking of the titanic. how would really happen, especially two well, with premier or would nine on cnn ain means pause on the
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scott skechers massage that sample all right. >> president biden now says he's happy to debate donald trump ahead of this year's election. it's the first time biden has said so explicitly in this campaign earlier, he told reporters any possible plans for debate would depend on trump's behavior. biden's latest comments came in a wide ranging surprise, injured deal with shock jock howard stern i don't know if you're going to debate your opponent. i am somewhere i don't know why. i'm happy cnn's priscilla alvarez joining us now from the white house, priscilla. so what else did the president have to say in this interview well, the president also got personal and talking about his early career or childhood, loss and also that he didn't take law schools seriously enough. >> now all of this in that interview, taking on an alternative media outlet as the campaign has been trying to do more of to reach voters across the spectrum. but it was notable, fred, what he had to say about taking the debate
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stage with former president donald trump. it was his most robust commitment up until this point to take that debate stage. because as you mentioned there earlier, he has up until this point really conditioned whether or not he would participate in a debate on his republican rivals behavior. now, of course this comes as republicans have been turning up the volume on there being a debate trump's team is eager to put the former president on a debate stage and the biden camp does see the 2020 debate between then candidate biden and the former president as a ultimately positive one. now, we don't know if and when a debate will happen. but clearly, we're getting indicators from both sides now that there is tourists in having a debate, what happens next? we will see, but clearly the president making clear in this interview that he's willing to do it. >> okay. >> and then some fun this evening, the president is going to be attending the white house correspondents dinner and kinda flex his sense of humor what do we know about his script? what
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he's going to say, what he's gonna do well, it's certainly an opportunity to need all the media and his republican rival donald trump, it's going to be an audience of nearly 3,000 journalists politicians, and celebrities, all gathering for an hourslong a fair, and it takes days for the president to prepare his speech for this evening. >> his teams have been meeting on a daily and weekly basis. people in biden's orbit also send in jokes to see if they can make the cut and get that included in his remarks. but over time, he has started to make more jokes and comments about the former president when he's on the campaign trail. so we'll likely see some of that. but then he'll also take a serious tone on the targeting of journalists across the country, including those who are detained abroad. >> all right. priscilla alvarez at the white house. thanks so much. >> and of course, join us tonight for one of the most unforgettable events in the nation's capital, president biden and comedian colin jost headline and the white house correspondence center, hosted
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resources to bolster ukraine's war against russia's invasion on friday, us defense secretary lloyd austin announced largest long-term military aid package to date, providing $6 billion of new military equipment. it comes just days after president biden signed a long-delayed $61 billion foreign aid package to ukraine. when billion dollars of equipment is quickly making its way to the front lines joining us right now, time correspondent, simon schuster assignment great to see you so president biden, just moments after signing that sizable legislation said that aid would begin within hours. how crucial, how critical has it been? for ukrainian forces to be receiving this aid right away is absolutely critical. i mean, they've been desperately waiting for this aid to come through four months, almost half a year and the situation on the front line was really
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starting to deteriorate without this kind of help. and also the morale of the ukrainian people and the ukrainian leadersh ao dg because the country didn't feel that this aid was going to come through president zelenskyy has been very clear, both in private conversations with members of congress and in his public statements that without american support, ukraine cannot win this war. so those were the stakes. and now i think everyone is breathing a sigh of relief. and trying to move forward. and when this then have you heard anything about whether this is changing the strategy, military strategy for ukraine with anticipation that more aid is on the way. >> yes, they have been changing the strategy somewhat compared to the first year-and-a-half or so of the full-scale war at least in the sense of focusing
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much more on domestic weapons production so they want to be able to not only rely on weapons, are arriving from abroad, but to be able to use some of the assistance that they're getting to ramp up their own military production inside ukraine. one thing that does is it kind of future proofs the ukrainian ability to continue fighting and stay in this war as long as they feel is necessary and important. even if in the future down the road, there's another holdup. there's another delay, or there's an attempt to block aid in the future. do ukrainians want to strategically be able to produce more of their own weapons? >> but still in mind conversations with president zelenskyy and his team. they're very clear and direct about the fact that that is a long-term strategy in the short the medium-term they need western support. they can't survive this russian aggression without it all right, i want to now turn to what's happening in russia.
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>> you recently interviewed a yulia navalnaya, the widow of russian opposition leader alexey navalny, for time magazine what is her message today following her husband's death and that was back in february, but i know for her and for his followers, it really feels like yesterday that's right. >> and this was the first interview that she gave since her husband's death in prison. it was the first interview that she used really to explain what is the strategy going forward as she attempts to take the lead of the russian opposition movement a role that her husband previously held even from prison the picture is pretty bleak the wave of repressions that russia has imposed on the opposition and really any dissent inside russia is verging on the totalitarian. i mean, it's very extreme all independent media have been pushed out of the country, dissidents are either in exile or in prison, or worse so she said that she's aiming to keep the network of
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activists together, to keep their morale as high as possible, and to find ways where people inside russia to show dissent, even if it's an a small way, even if it's signing a petition or attending a flash mob or anything to allow them to feeling that there is hope for a russia after putin or is hope for political change that is not very ambitious goal, but it's the only realistic one i think they can pursue in the context of the extreme repressions that are going on in russia now and you also wrote that navalnaya's is taking on a role that she had never occupied before the figurehead of the russian opposition. and she said this, most of all, i want the kremlin and its officials to understand if they killed alexey than i will step up if they do something to me another person will come she says, all of this, plus, there are many, many people who are against the ruling authorities in russia,
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against the regime. and i don't doubt that even if they kill a great many of these people people, more will appear to take their place. i mean, she's, she's bold. she's confident. and how is this being received? >> i think among the opposition activists, again, many of whom are now in exile. but even those inside russia, it was a ray of hope. what i sensed from talking to them after alexey navalny's death was an enormous sense of despair and hopelessness and a yulia navalnaya stepping into his role, attempting to take leadership of this movement really gave people some ray of hope that yes, indeed the movement can survive, can continue beyond the death in prison of its leader but so far i had the sense, it's only been a couple of months, roughly since he was killed i have a sense that there's still looking for ways, strategies to continue on in the future without him it's gonna be a
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long road and a really difficult one because the refresh, again are very extreme. there all right. >> simon schuster, great to see you again. thank you so much thank you when we come back, i've been number of americans living in places with unhealthy levels of polluted air is increasing what's causing the trend of the cities with the most air pollutions next every piece of evidence tells a story how it really happened with jesse l. >> martin moral at nine on cnn sometimes the lows of bipolar depression field darkest before dawn with cap lighter, there's a chance to let in the light kept lighter is proven to deliver significant relief across bipolar depression. >> unlike salman medicines that only treat bipolar one kept lighter traits. both bipolar one and two, depression. and in clinical trials, movement
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core.com all right. >> more than 100 rather million people are living with unhealthy levels of polluted air. that's according to a new report from the american lung association, the authors say this is a significant increase from last year's pollution levels joining me right now now to discuss a cnn health reporter, jacqueline howard. jacqueline, what's behind this increase i know fred to wildfires, extreme heat, drought. those are all factors driving this increase. and you know, those are factors associated with climate change as well. so what this new report tells us, it estimates about 39 9% of people here in the united states live in places with unhealthy levels of air pollution lot it's a lot and it's an increase from what was estimated last year. it was estimated about a quarter of us breathe unhealthy air so what we know, a lot of these places with unhealthy air pollution are based in the west. if you look at a list of the cities, most polluted by particle
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pollution, and ozone pollution as well. particle pollution. you see there most of the cities are in california. there's one in oregon. when we look at ozone pollution, ozone is a big part of smog most of the cities are also in california one and arizona. but then when you look at cities with the healthiest, cleanest air according to this report, many of them are in the east. there's one in main, one in north carolina, so we do see these regional differences exactly zero a correlation with vehicular traffic is that a pollutant? >> there is, but the main correlation here has been with the wildfires we've seen in the west a lot recently, especially in california. yeah, we know air pollution is associated with cancer, cardiovascular disease, respiratory diseases. so this is a public health issue brian, it's really important for people to now. all right. jacqueline howard, good to see you. thanks so much all right. >> coming up, we're following the devastating severe weather that flattened homes across parts of nebraska and iowa. we're live in one of the hardest hit command live from
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before go to harrys.com slash shave to claim your $7 trial, or how solomon in new york? this is cnn more than 100 years after the titanic sunk to its watery grave, the myths and mystery surrounding this ill-fated ship still draw explorers to the depths of the sea despite the many dangerous involved in traveling to the ocean floor some are willing to risk their lives to see the titanic wreckage for themselves.
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>> last summer, a disastrous n to one such attempt aboard the experimental titan submersible. jason carroll, who as long reported on deep dive ocean missions takes a closer look something that honestly still has not really sunk in for people like kernel, terry burt's, the titan accidents seems like it happened yesterday. >> he was friends with one of the men on board. hey, ms harding, the british billionaire and explore it still feels it was like he's around like i could call them up and we can plan our next adventure. >> one of their previous adventures included a record setting flight around the world in 2019. verts of former nasa astronaut knows the risks that come with exploration and has some thoughts about what may have happened to tighten when you're going to have a high pressure vessel. for example, space shuttle propellant tanks. they have to be a sphere than the titan was not a sphere severe. >> is that just because because
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structurally a sphere stronger? >> yes. and the other problem is not just the shape. it was the materials they had composite and metal mixing, two materials makes for an easy place for something to fail according to ocean gape, the company that created tighten, it was made from carbon fiber and titanium. >> after the subs initial disappearance, it was revealed that at least two former ocean gate employees had raised red flags about the thickness of the carbon fiber whole and that was years before the accident. >> the exact cause still under investigation german explorer arthur louisville, can't stop thinking about how lucky he is to be alive. >> it becomes everyday clear or clearer how many, how much luck i had to survive says trip louisville paid $100,000 for a seat on board one of titans earlier voyages to the titanic. his 2021 dive was plagued with problems, always pc electrical

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