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they expect another drop the mic performance from nvidia as of right now, johnson and co. are the only game in town. now investors are going to be living and dying at everything that nvidia ceo jensen wong says, the big key is, what does he say about future demand are big, big tech companies, are they ramping up spending? are they cutting back the answer to that question? carrie, the stock market to new heights or cause stock prices tumbled, doing a really good job keeping expectations in jail. yeah, breaks, saying this is the biggest thing ever? yes. all alright. >> great to see you really a, new hour of our flagship morning show, cnn new central starts right now breaking overnight, we are showing you new video from january 6 of nancy pelosi labeling donald trump as the domestic enemies. >> and the white house. >> her anger over the capital attack and her determination to
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make trump pay a price for what happened that day. >> also, new details on an incident involving we've trump campaign at one of the country's most solemn sides. why they say the visit turned physical after a confrontation with an official at arlington national cemetery? and saved from the flames. big mama, the dog, and a mother's watchful eye at work helped save a preteen from a house fire. how this all went down we'll explain i'm sara sidner with john berman, kate bolduan is out today. this is cnn new central all right. brand new this morning, just moments ago, the harris campaign releases they new ad, arguing that project 2025 is the blueprint for a second trump presidency is called project 2025, a 922 page blueprint to make donald
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trump the most powerful president ever now, the trump campaign consistently denies that this is their policy, but there are ties with the folks who wrote it. it comes as vice president harris and governor walz sit down for their first ever interview of the campaign right here on cnn with dana bash. and they also embark on a bus tour through southern georgia you know, georgia is a state that joe biden won but won by less than 12,000 votes. the margins are very close. cnn's eva mckend joins us dow. let's start with this new ad released just moments ago what's the messaging? >> you know, john, this has halfs to be one of the most effective lines of attack because even as the former president tries to distance himself from project 2025, when i'm out on the campaign trail, i hear from democratic voters unprompted without me even mentioning it. time and time again, how afraid they are of the locations of this. so it makes total political sense for
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them to hit this hard in this ad, they warn that a trump white house, so that would overhaul the department of justice they say that he would have unchecked power to seek vengeance and even eliminate the department of education. let's listen to this argument donald trump may try to deny it, but those are donald trump's plans will revenge, just take i will say that and sometimes revenge can be justified. hill take control, will pay the price so you hear in the messaging there, john, if they're leaning into this notion that he is hell-bent on revenge, which bolsters this contrast that they're trying to portray between a candidate principally concerned with the past versus one who they are argue is looking towards the future. now, what are you learning about this trip to georgia? because the port of georgia, they're going to tells a story here it does. >> they think that they can
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appeal to rural voters. they don't have to win some of these rural counties outright. but playing in them could make a difference. they've got 24 field offices across georgia seven of which are in the southern part of the state. they're really looking at these outer metro atlanta counties and then they're going to end the bus tour in savannah. and i've spoken to democratic strategists, and organizers in the state, and they say that often outside of atlanta voters really lament that campaigns don't go there, don't campaign the year. and so this strategy to them make sense alright, eva mckend for us in washington, eva great to see you this morning. thank you so much, sara. >> all right. joining us now, the mayor of savannah, georgia, mayor van johnson. thank you so much, sir, for joining us early this morning there from the beautiful city of savannah i am curious what you make of kamala harris coming and ending her georgia tour in your city. what does she need to do where
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should she go in order to try and win georgia as biden did in 2020? >> well, good morning and thank you so much for the opportunity we're excited, obviously is the first time we've had a major the person at the top of the ticket since 1990, i believe those might have been ronald reagan at the time, but she recognizes that georgia is in play. the road to the white white house goes through georgia and the lane to that road goes through savannah and coastal georgia. >> they have a lot of time here, a lot of money here in terms of making sure that they're being very inclusive, ensuring that they're appealing to. >> now only the metro atlanta voters voters, but also those in coast so cities and of course, a rule, george and they've invested a lot of efforts here and today is really essential awaiting those let me ask you about some of the things that have happened in this particular campaign. >> sorry. i am. thank you so
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much for asking. >> okay. how important is it that xi go to rural georgia and not just go to cities like savannah like atlanta well georgia is very diverse state. we have 159 counties. we have a lot of five 530 cities. and the fact is georgia is bigger than atlanta and savannah and so i appreciate the fact that they recognize that all those cities like savannah, atlantic so enjoy having her here. that is also folks that work in rural areas, folks that are working and farmers and farm communities that also want to hear that message that she brings to them. i think that just shows you not only how important it says to her, but also how much the resonating the message occurs here in georgia. this is a very, very big deal to us we're certainly excited about it. the campaign
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has invested a lot of money and a lot of time. and of course, to have her comments been significant amount of time with us just after the convention speaks volumes to us i know that being a mayor is one of the hardest political jobs in america. >> you are much closer to your constituents. >> people can knock on your door very easily. they know where you live, they know where your family, as i do want to ask you about the politics of both donald trump and kamala harris, kamala harris and donald trump both being accused of flip-flopping, flopping on a lot of different issues she's talking about spending hundreds of millions of dollars on a wall on the southern border something that she called an american during the trump administration. she says now that she does not support the electric vehicle mandate wildness senate, she was in favor of eventually outlawing lying. petrol powered cars donald trump for his part, has plenty of things he's flip-flopped on. banning tiktok and now he's totally in favor of tiktok demonizing
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undemocratic undocumented immigrants and now he's saying, oh, they should get visas if they go to college what do you make of flip-flopping in this new political climate that we're in doesn't matter? or is there a way for candidates to try and say, look, they've evolved well, it is evolved me, i've been in elected politics 21 years is my fifth year. it's mayor. and the way i thought 21 years ago is not the way that they now when you know better, you do better. you have different experiences, you receive new information technologies change. you hear from people i, think, you know, that is a natural part of the ebb and flow as it relates to that. i think beyond the statements you have to have explanations about why you've evolved and why your position has changed about that. i mean, that's just the nature of the beast but i think again for vice president harris, she also has a record of achievement, particularly here in georgia as
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part of the biden-harris administration that has brought unprecedented funding to cities directly which places like savannah appreciate. they have invested and aldi and time, but also in people and so that's been, that's meant a lot to us particularly as we have dealt with some of the most challenging times in recent history through the pandemic, through trying to revive and reengage. and savannah has done well because of our engagement with them. >> i think you have your new campaign slogan when you know better, you do better. mayor van johnson. just instead of right here on cnn, i appreciate your time and appreciate you coming on for us early this morning from savannah, georgia, which will be the last stop and the kamala harris georgia tour. appreciate you. john all right. >> breaking overnight never before seen footage of then house speaker nancy pelosi on january 6, this is while the insurrection was happening. >> and you can see that a very different look at her anger at donald trump during those hours
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there's domestic enemy in the world cnn sunlen serfaty is with us now. you've gone through this video. what does it tell us yeah, john, this is just remarkable video really underscoring the emotion, the chaos, and the real time reaction that speaker of the house, nancy pelosi, was having as the capitol was being attacked one of the most striking moments i think is when she is, you see it here, going through the halls of congress when she's being evacuated by security staff and she's accompanied by some of our senior staff in those moments, she's going through the halls of congress she then escorted in her suv and you see her talking as she's moving quickly throughout the capital and she's lamenting essentially how could this happen? >> why? are we not more prepared? and she repeatedly asked why the national guard
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has not been called in. here's more of her in that moment we're not all right? i like it understand why so you can really sense that anger and the frustration that she has in this real-time moment there. >> and she later goes on to say, shame on us of his video also shows the day after
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january 6 on january 7, she's in her office and she is convenient a meeting of her staff there and it's notable that they are sitting in the office and you can see that big shattered mirror above them. again, john, just one more video clip, evidence of the violence that took place that the day before there on capitol hill, john. >> so why are we just seeing it now someone? >> yeah, it's a great question. we have seen parts of this video. this is from her daughter, alexandra pelosi, who is shooting a documentary for hbo that documentary has erred, but some of these video clips have left essentially on the cutting room floor. but now the house has committee on administration they are again reopening their investigation and requested this video footage to be released by hbo. there in in essence working against the findings of the january 6 committee trying to undermine the findings of that committee and are using some of this new video as new evidence
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of what happened that day. >> all right. sunlen serfaty for us in washington. thanks so much. appreciate it. sara. all right. ahead. new this morning, a cnn exclusive look at the alleged iranian hacking of the trump campaign and how it focused on some in the former president's inner circle and could donald trump be placed under arrest again details on the new indictment from special counsel jack smith and this is a big oops, a four-year-olds, curious possibly ending up with a priceless pot in pieces we will tell you that storage tomorrow, the most anticipated interview of this election kamala harris and tim walz dame, with dana bash for the first interview, harris and walz, a cnn exclusive tomorrow at nine why nfl players choose a sweet pepper smart, but i like to sleep cool and i like it warm and cozy. >> am i really like it when we both get what we want.
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renovation to give back in a big way celebrity iou, all new monday night at nine on hgtv this morning, donald trump hit with a superseding indictment by special counsel jack smith's smith tweaked his original filing after the supreme court ruling that granted president's wide criminal immunity with us. >> now the former chief of organized crime and gangs section for the department of justice, attorney jim trusty, counselor. thank you so much for being with us. jack smith changed this indictment no longer referring to donald trump as the 45th president united states, but calling him a candidate for president, taking out the charges and references to conversations is he had with people in the justice department, how far does this go toward addressing the ruling from the supreme court well, it's interesting, it's kind of a aggressively being defensive. >> it's paring back the indictment to try to anticipate how the judge would rule on this official acts quandary that he finds himself in after
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the supreme court case on immunity, that basically says personal acts are prosecutable official acts or not. so he's anticipating that, but it's really interesting because the opinion says not just immunized information is not properly before the court at trial, but that it contaminates the grand jury process. if you include that information in pursuing an indictment that's a huge land mine, he's trying to get in front of him before judge chutkan has to rule on all of these acts to decide which stuff is fair game or which stuff isn't but the problem is if he guesses wrong in one instance, like in other words, if he says, oh, the president was consulting mike pence as president of the senate, not as vice president, which is part of this new indictment. then if he gets it wrong once he's got the same problem, he's got to go back to the grand jury re-indict for the third time based on this ruling coming from the supreme court. so it's interesting, it's taking the initiative, but it doesn't necessarily make it a bulletproof indictment. >> know, because it's a
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supreme court set the bar very, very high here just as a a thematic matter, 30,000 feet how complicated is it then to charge a president for any actions that he or she may take as a candidate doesn't this give a presidential candidate who happens to be president just incredibly wide latitude well, it does. >> i mean, i don't know if i'd say that happens to be president. i mean, the focus is not in terms of whether you have immunity as a candidate. it's that you're sitting president. and the bottom line is, now the constitution seems to suggest, and that's what the supreme court ruled on. that in fact, we don't i want to have our presidents hobbled with constant fear of prosecution by state and federal prosecutors. so they've set up a test. the problem is enforcing the test in a practical way. i mean, we don't know what the hearing will look like that a judge has to have to determine which things are official acts and which ones aren't. i mean, it's not i'm gonna be
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basically just, you know attorneys saying take my word for it. there's probably gonna be an evidentiary hearing that's like a mini trial. the stretches on for days and by the way, if it goes wrong for one side of the other, we're probably right back up to the supreme court. >> and again, i think everyone understands that this point that none of this will get decided or go to trial before or the election in november. a lot of focus has been paid to what happens if donald trump wins. obviously, east coast as cases just go away completely but what do you think happens if he loses, counselor? >> yeah that's a great question. i mean, look, i think that a lot of the prosecutions of president trump, from my perspective, are very singular, very inventive, very different. and you can call it lawfare. and i certainly have called it that. >> it tends to make the judges bristle the judges are becoming the safety valve they have to look at questions they've never had to address. >> and figure out are we going to let this proceed? so i think if you look at the jack smith's prosecutions, both of
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them now have significant legal issues, obviously, down in mar-a-lago, the case was dismissed and that appeal is being pursued by the government. you've got the immunity question and frankly the same question about jack smith's authority there can be raised in dc on the january 6 case. so they may die of their own weight without any sort of political interference because they're inventive because they're reaching for new territory. but if not, i guess we'll see whether the incoming democratic administration to follow up your hypothetical, whether they have the stomach to let that stuff continue? or whether they will look better if they end up just washington clean and saying, let's have a new chapter but that it's really more of a political determination than a legal one, right, counsel? >> jim trusty, so much for being with us. appreciate it. new details about a photo op that led to an alleged physical altercation. what happened when donald trump visited arlington national cemetery it is now charged with arson after a fire that burned down more than a dozen homes when investigators say he used to set it off the
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set for $19 when you sign up to be a new vip at fabletics.com wrestling can be we wednesday night dynamite tonight at 8:00 tv yes exclusive new reporting. a. cnn gets an inside look at irans hacking operation, revealing new details about a multiyear scheme targeting both the trump and biden administrations and with the presidential election coming up, u.s. intelligence agencies are on edge over this unpredictable wildcard. see cnn senior justice correspondent evan perez has details for us this morning there has been a relentless hacking effort for a lot longer than we realize years that's right, sara, look, this has been a relentless campaign and this is something that goes back certainly to the last presidential cycle. but we'll take you inside what one of these hacking operations
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look like. one of these campaigns looked like targeting people who are critics of iran, people who are critics of the iraq iranian regime. and also people who may have information that is useful to the iranians. here's, for example, an email that went out to a number of prominent critics of the iranian regime the iranians were able to, these hackers were able to get into the account, an email account that belongs thanks to someone who worked very closely with john bolton. again, a very prominent critic of the iranian nuclear program. i'll read you just a part of what this email said and it went out to again, a number of iranian experts here in washington. it says, i'm close to finishing a manuscript and i began asking experts like yourself to review these chapters. now, it takes you to a link that instead of showing you a manuscript, it actually shows you it is unleashes malware into your systems and
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gets these high tech hackers who work for the islamic revolutionary guard corps access to your computer also no, we also got access to an email that was used to try to infiltrate a former senior us ambassador in the middle east. against someone who had a lot of insight into israel and things that the iranians are very much interested in. sara i mean, we saw this happen with russia. we saw this happen now with iran. and the fbi and many others have been warning us all about this, that this was going to happen and coming into regular peoples emails and that sort of thing. so it is frightening for a lot of people, they need to really watch out evan perez. thank you so much. appreciate it. live from washington, dc for us all right. coming up an incident at arlington, what donald trump's team is now saying this morning, after allegations there was a physical altercation when trump visited the site and an amazing story
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everything changed dana said, you're still, you i love you man, the christopher reeve story only in theaters yet tickets now at pg 13 right new this morning we're learning new details about it incident that turned physical when donald trump visited arlington national cemetery earlier this week for president is now suggesting the problems stemmed from his campaigns use of photography while he was in section 60, which is the burial site for recent u.s. casualties. cnn senior political analyst, mark preston is with us now. what is known about what happened here, marc well, we're still getting some details, john, but we are seeing the campaign now play out in just about every corner of the nation, just on monday 13, service members died three years ago. >> donald trump up here to at the ceremony at arlington national cemetery, the service members died during that really chaotic and awful, which draw from from afghanistan. now what
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happened is that some of his campaign team showed up with cameras, video equipment, and that is not allowed in arlington national cemetery. it is it is part of the rules of decorum and those cemeteries. there appeared to be some kind of altercation that we're still trying to find out the details of what exactly happened. but the trump campaign is pushing back saying that that it was it was inappropriate. basically, what the cemetery officials did john, by preventing them from doing so. and donald trump's campaign has also put out a statement from some of the families saying that they had asked donald trump to appear at this at this really song moment here that we saw on monday. so a lot is still in the gray area right now. and we're still waiting to hear more from arlington national cemetery. they sit a report was filed, but still it just goes to show you that we really can't escape this presidential campaign. john, no matter where we go and what you have right
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now is you have on one side, you've got a political operation, the trump campaign, arguing one thing in arlington national cemetery, which is basically you're a cretic organization putting out very bland statements of what they be, what they consider to be fast, which is just to say, we don't allow photography in section 60, correct? absolutely. absolutely. and there's some very strong strong words as well from the trump campaign we saw in the new york times that the trump campaign said that the individual that stopped the filming the worker there, it seemed to have some kind of mental episode or what have you in the also said that they would release some of the footage. now, they haven't released any of that footage yet. so we're waiting to see if that actually comes out and we're also waiting to see what the full report says from arlington national cemetery, john. >> alright. mark, the trump campaign has said they have agreed to the abc debate and all of its terms does that mean it's happening? what is the harris team saying about this all right. >> let's just go to the very
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end of it. will there be a debate? i believe there will be a debate there absolutely will be a debate. there has to be a debate. i believe abc will do a good job at the debate. now the question is, how will the debate be conducted as of right now, donald trump says that he will follow the same rules that we at cnn put in place back when we did the june 27 debate between joe biden and donald trump not so fast as the harris campaign because they want some of the rules to be altered a little bit specifically, the microphones back in our cnn debate, the microphones if you were not speaking, were muted, john, if you remember that donald trump's campaign wants him to be muted for, for this coming upcoming debate. however, the harris campaign wants the microphones to be opened. and the reason why is they believe that they can get donald trump knocked off of his game. they believe that they can get him angry. they believe believed that that kamala harris would be able to get donald trump to probably say something or do something that would be embarrassing on
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national stage. >> all right, so stay tuned. so it says mark preston, who knows a thing or two about presidential debates. thank you so much for being with this morning. >> sara certainly does. all right. donald trump continues to lead vice president kamala harris and pulling out of arizona. but it is a state that harris campaign is working hard to win over one major voting bloc could be one of the keys to their success. mormons had been some of the most loyal republican voters until donald trump took over the party in 2020. president biden made significant gains with the fates large population in arizona. and now harris is hoping to replicate that support joining us now is the national director of latter-day sends saints for harris walz rob taylor. thank you so much for joining us this morning. i appreciate you. why are les voters drawn to to harris and walz? why should they be good morning, sara. >> it's great to be here and honestly, a lot of latter-day saints are just ready to turn the page on the last eight
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years. i mean, we look at this most recent report on arlington cemetery politicizing a solemn moment that's just the latest in a long string of things. we're ready for someone who respects election results, who respects the constitution, who will protect religious freedom of everyone who is fresh, face ready to represent america at home and around the world. and that's kamala harris a lot of letters answer really excited about her pick of tim walz. these are public servants who have dedicated themselves to serving other people to serving the public, doing what they believe is right. we're big tent. we're not all democrats. her a lot of republicans and independent latter-day saints of we're supporting harris waltz but it's because they just represent something different and that we think is the right path for our country moving forward. >> i would like to get your take on something that we heard from donald trump because clearly some mormons voted for donald trump back in 20202016 and so clearly there are some
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that like him and want him to be the president again, i do want you to listen to something that he said to dr. phil about after his assassination, what he thought why he thought he was spared in politics, you have an opponent and you win or you lose. >> what do you don't have an opponent. and then you're doing well against the opponent. they take him out, they give you a new opponent. they give me nice fresh opponent. and so i have to win that and if i went that, that would really serve. just say that there's some incredible power up there that wanted me to be involved and saving. and maybe it's more than saving the nation. maybe it saving the world, you know, i get along with all those stuff guys so he's talking about god there. he had mentioned that before, that he believed god saved his life. there's a lot of people who are religious, who, who truly believe god is involved in every step of the things they do. what do you think about him
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saying, look, if i get this, this was god's will and you know, i'm going to save the nation in the world i mean, we turn the page on the divine right of kings, about 250 years ago i believe in miracles. >> i certainly believe in god and i know harris-walz voters who believe that god's fair, donald trump's life because of what could have happened, should have something more serious have happened to him several weeks ago. but we also believe, especially as latter-day saints in moral agency, that we make the decisions. we believe that the constitution was divinely inspired. there was a great talk a few years ago by one of our leaders, president dallin oakes but what that means, that doesn't mean that the constitution is like letter perfect and erin. but this idea of establishing a small, our republican form of government, where we make the decisions, where we have a balance of powers, where we have checks on power and donald trump, we have someone with strong authoritarian tendencies and that repels a lot of latter-day saints harris waltz, they're not going to get every
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latter-day saint to vote for them. but just as we saw in arizona in 2020, we had 18,000 more latter-day saints vote for joe biden, then voted for hillary clinton four years prior. that was larger than the winning margin. it'll make a difference in arizona will make a difference in nevada quite potentially yeah, we're continuing to organize and just say, look, we have our agency we have the ability to make decisions got trusted us with that, and we, you know, from the new testament, judge them by their fruits, right? and we look at donald trump's fruits and they are not good rob taylor. thank you so much for joining us this morning. i know it is early there, so we appreciate you coming on john already, 3,500-year-old jar in a museum was shattered after a four-year-old boy decided again, hanzi, with the exhibit. >> is this a case of you break it, you buy it tomorrow.
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>> the most anticipated interview of this election kamala harris and tim walz walz sit down with dana bash for the first interview. >> harris and walz, a cnn exclusive tomorrow at nine i won't let my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis symptoms to find me emerge as with trump via most people saw 90% clear of skin at for months. >> and the majority stayed clear eyed five years, sumy, he's allergic reactions may occur, can fire, may increase your risk of infection it's a no your ability to fight that tell you, doctor, if you have an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to emerge as you emerged trim phi, it asked her doctor about from fire my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis held me back. now with diarrhea. i'm all aim of clears things like getting
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with sky resy three out of four people, which 90% clear skin at four months and most people were clearer even at five years. >> 70s, just four doses a year after two starter doses serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms had a vaccine or plan to they go hand in hand now for time ask your doctor about sky ruv. the number one dermatologist prescribed biologic answer is lerner. >> abby could help you save. >> we know how to turn something that needs fixing into something fabulous. >> we're excited to share some fabulous new designs that we created for your next remodel see them now at rebuts.com so
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fabletics.com how long have you been here? >> i don't know what did he say what is this place? for watchers dreaming august 30 exclusively on max this is cnn. the world's news network all right. >> breaking overnight, delayed space x has scrubbed a launch for a second time in as many days, the four-person crew remain in quarantine until the launch can take place whenever that is cnn space and defense correspondent kristin fisher is with us now. so what happened here? kristen so john, this was all about the weather and weather is always an issues for launches to space. it's gotta be just right. >> but for this mission, it's even more tricky because we're not just looking at the weather for lunch launch spacex is also looking at what the weather is going to be like, where this spacecraft is going to splashdown. five days from now,
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if the weather is not perfect both locations from five days apart then they're going to have to scrub and so that's what they did last night. they looked at the weather again and said, we're not going to do it tonight either. so we're looking at thursday into friday at the absolute earliest when this mission could finally launch and the reason that they're so concerned about splashdown, john, and it's not just the whether it's the wave height because this capsule so splashes into the water somewhere. so the waves have to be the right height as well it's because this mission isn't going to the space station where it can refuel on what's called the consumables. like oxygen, food, water. these astronauts are going to be up there for five days and whatever they have in that spacecraft when they launch is all they're going to get to have. and so they have to, there's no there's no wiggle room at day five, if the weather is not good at the splashdown location? >> that's a problem. >> so that's why we got this
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big delay last night, john and these four astronauts who are in this picture we have right here. >> we're all looking at something. i'm not quite sure what they're looking at though sara over there gazing, it's something that's fast it is riveted on something. but what will they do for these days while they what you said there were in quarantine. so what can they do while they're just sitting around not much, just wait. >> but for these astronauts, there are acutely aware of how dangerous this this mission is. so they don't really mind waiting in quarantine for a few more days until the weather is absolutely perfect. it's more tough likely on their families who've come to watch this launch and see them fly to space. but in terms of the crew, the commander is jared isaac man. he is an american businessman. he flew and partially funded another space mission three years ago, inspiration for this is his second mission to space. and he says, this is very different from what you've seen some
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other very wealthy americans conn's do in space. he does not see this in any way. a space tourism. this is a test and development program. he is partially funding spacex's technology and development into space. and so that's why what we're going to see here, john, this spacewalk going into the radiation belt, these are really pushing the limit of what spacex has done so far all right, well, kristin fisher, thank you so much for that update. >> i will just gaze off into space like there's throw anything into the galaxy. hello, they're looking up to the star is just enjoying the beauty of it. all. i have revised whether it or not i'm going to this one out how about that? i'm just going to sit it out and then we'll get our suits and we can look cute in our suits, but i'm not going to go to space on polaris for now. what do you think it's smart? yeah. you have anything to say that's good. >> good. john. coming up but 30s in california have charged a 26-year-old man was starting wildfire. did the story 13
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homes and burned more than 3,700 acres. investigate peter, say the suspect threw some kind of fireworks out of his car window last month sparking the thompson fire in northern california he is now being held in jail without a young girl in florida is alive thanks to a camera, her mother, and a dog named big mama. nbc two reports, the girl was inside her home she suddenly smelled smoke and her grandmother says, one of their dogs started jumping on her as a ceiling started to fall in. thankfully, the girl's mother was watching from miles those away on the families indoor cameras and got on the speaker to guide her daughter, and their pets out of their home to safety. everyone is okay. the family things in electrical malfunction actually sparked those flames and a significant late summer heat wave has 50 million people still under heat alerts today, including philly in new york washington dc is looking at a record breaking 100 degrees.
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some school systems to once again canceling school due to lack of air conditioning others or during early releases, cnn meteorologist derek van dam is joining us now, derek, wow, how long is this going to last? i mean, we are coming to the end of august. we're coming into my favorite season of fall, but not quite yet. >> yeah. >> i don't care how many pumpkin spice lattes you've already ordered sara. you cannot wish cast autumn in the month of august is just impossible. it'll play with your heartstrings a little bit. you get that little cool down we had last week and then the heat comes back with a vengeance and it surely did this this week. it stretched from michigan, wisconsin, where some schools, first day of school in the detroit public schools was cut short because of the heat and other were more stories just like that unfolding over other locations across the eastern portions of the midwest. and it's all because the heat came back and it came back in a big way. so
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here's the 50 million americans impacted by heat alerts. that doesn't mean this is the only area confined to the heat, but this is where it will be felt the worst. remember, we've got that urban heat island effect thanks to the concentration that dense concentration of the concrete, the asphalt, the buildings along this i95 stretch in corridor, so things heat up very, very quickly within this area. we've got a heat advisory for many locations, so yesterday yeah. this doesn't look like autumn to me. we're breaking temperatures or tying them st. louis is an example of that. and these records go back. we're talking well over a half century, but there's some good news in this forecast, at least some temporary relief will come our way quite a big difference from today to tomorrow, hundred degrees today and dc 90 tomorrow. look at the cool down in philadelphia, will take it while we can. we still have a few more weeks of summer the cool down in new york, 92 to 75. that is so cool. and by the way, i don't do public spice lattes. i do not like them, but florida rector manzo loves them. he drinks them every
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single day and i am outing him derek van dam. thank you so much. >> also on our radar, an ancient artifact which experts say was at least 3,500-years-old is now destroyed. it's in pieces after a four-year-old accidentally knocked it over, it happened last week at a museum in israel. the museum says the bronze age era jar was displayed near the entrance without a glass case. part of we're to make some artifacts more accessible. i bet you that's going to change the boy's father told bbc his son pulled at the jar because he wanted to see what was inside. obviously, a museum official says as it will use the jr.'s restoration as an opportunity to educate the public. >> john, whatever i break stuff, i say it's an opportunity to educate the public know oh alright, this morning, the first deaths related to a rare mosquito borne illness has been reported in new hampshire, health officials say in hampstead resident, died after contracting eastern equine encephalitis, cnn's jacqueline
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howard is here. jack and i got to say this is of concern to my people up in new england. they're seeing beach closures and other things that dusk what's going on here that's right. >> and they're spraying of pesticides to really target these mosquitoes. what's happening, john, this first death, sadly, it was in a 41-year-old man, steven perry, and his family says that he develops symptoms quickly and suddenly they turned fatal. and with eastern equine encephalitis, or triple e, this can be a deadly disease. about a third of cases turn deadly symptoms include high fever, chills, body aches, joint pain, but in most fatal cases, symptoms due impact the nervous system can turn into a neurologic disease. and sometimes you see inflammation of the brain. and that's what has reportedly been seen in this latest case in new hampshire. this is the first case that the state has seen john in a decade. so that's why it's very concerning and
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health officials, there are on high alert for this mosquito-borne illness. >> john, you mentioned new hampshire, i know about beaches and massachusetts. what states are areas of concern right now that's right according to the cdc, we're also seen cases one in wisconsin, one in new jersey, one in massachusetts, one in vermont in massachusetts. >> like you said, john, there some parks that are closing at night to limit people's exposure sure. to mosquitoes that could be carrying this virus. there are a lot of cases of planes and trucks spraying pesticides. we're also hearing of a voluntary curfew in oxford massachusetts. and we know that there are steps we can all take to really limit our exposure to mosquitoes. of course it's tried to wear repellent went outdoors, wear loose fitting clothing. make sure your window screens are in place for mosquitos don't come indoors and if you do have a mosquito bite and you develop symptoms which could develop within three to ten days after mosquito bite talk to your
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doctor, he's definitely want to stay on top of things with triple e. it is rare. there are only about 11 human cases in the united states each year. but after seeing this first reported death, we definitely want to again, stay on high alert, john look the town paper in the town i grew up in a massachusetts was called the mosquito. there are a lot of these bugs, wow, around there. so obviously it has cause for concern. jacqueline howard, thank you very much. i hope people stay careful. sara, i shall never go to your hometown. >> i i'm sorry, john. i cannot. >> all right. new this morning, an exclusive club that used to be exclusive anyway, and extremely lucrative according to brand new data this morning 401k millionaires now, not so exclusive, maybe cnn's matt egan joins me now. matt, what are we seeing here well, sara, this is an exclusive club that ease growing new data from fidelity shows that the number of 401k billionaires has hit a record high, nearly 500,000
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accounts at fidelity alone have $1 million balances or more. >> that's up two-and-a-half percent from the first quarter and the average size of these balances is 1.6 million. now, this makes sense because of course the stock market has been on a roll. the dow yesterday closing at a record high above 41,000, the nasdaq has spiked more than 30% over the past year because of nvidia and the a.i boom. now, i know a lot of people are thinking they don't have $1 million in there for one, k's or maybe don't have a 401k at all. and that's definitely true. a fidelity found that the average size of a for one k balance across all parties disappearance was $127,000 so far shy of $1 but look, this is still up 13% from the year before. so that is very encouraging. you zoom out. this does seem like pretty good news about the economy. first of all obviously, bigger nest eggs will set people a better
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for retirement. secondly, it's also a positive when it comes to financial flexibility, because this is money that people could borrow against to potentially pay for a down payment or to cover a medical emergency. and the other really interesting point here is that fidelity found that people are still saving the same amount of money in there for one k, despite the high cost of living. so even though people are paying more for food and daycare and rent, they found that the average savings is still 14% of the income. that is just shy of the field team percent that experts recommended. so another encouraging sign here, when you think about what all this means for the economy, sorry. >> sounds like people are being pretty smart with their money. matt egan, thank you so much. appreciate it. another hour of cnn new central starts right now new details this morning about an incident that turned physical at arlington national cemetery involving the trump
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