think some of the adversaries potentially, let's say china russia, other nations. how do you think they will view and understand what the president united states? we're saying today what i think firstly, allies will be incredibly grateful because he recommitted america. >> that's the only remaining superpower. and the leader of the nato alliance to committing to protect that alliance. and europe, this is, this is crucial and it's a incredibly differentiating point between him and the way donald trump talks about nato and the commitment to the alliance so it's very differentiating, of course, allies are incredibly worried about what might happen on november 5th or whenever the election is, they're very concerned about what happens in terms of the survival of the alliance and the, and the survival of europe frankie, when they face right now with a great threat to the survival of europe in putin's invasion of ukraine. so i think that's, that's on that part. and then on the other side, i would say that it was a very full-throated speech. it wasn't very long, but it was very, very strong in terms of its words and its commitments. and if anybody in russia or china, things that america is going to retreat then president biden said that that is not going to be the case, not on his watch and i also think that's really important is the context because as you know right now, there is a sort of anti-american lions. our axis of anti-americanism anti-western ism that china, russia, iran, and north korea are, have been very successfully building and they are really watching for moments of weaknesses in the armor in the commitment to continue chipping away at americas and the west dominance is the right word to say the same time america is being tested. in other ways, not just by other militaries, but there are many, many parts of the world who don't necessarily buy america's narrative. let's say the global south which everybody talks about and lumps in one great big thing, the global south. but it's half the world does not, actually by the western narrative over russia and ukraine and sees some him hypocrisy in that. but nonetheless, these are the issues and challenges that i guess history brings up for the president, at least for now. and as as long as he remains in power, has quite clearly put his stake in the ground to defend democracy, which is how he started his presidency, his inauguration speech was all about that. his first trips abroad, more than two years ago, we're all about that and he's reiterating that. but most importantly, it was directed to the american people as well, saying, i challenge you to think today that these rangers who did what they did 80 years ago would allow us to do anything less in defense of our freedom and our democracy and our way of life. wolff. >> yeah. he said this. he said refused to believe america's greatness is a thing of the past that he said the rangers would believe that as well if they were still alive today, christiana amanpour will get back to you. thank you very much. i want to bring in our cnn political director david chaldean, right now. what did you think from a political, domestic, political standpoint, because americans as we're watching the were listening, we're entering the heat of the presidential campaign. >> of course, if that line stuck out to me as well, because he didn't mention donald trump by name. but that, you know, donald trump's slogan is make america great. again, that line, i refuse to believe america's greatness is a thing of the past, is a complete rebuttal to what donald hold trump is selling. that's the contrast politically that he wanted on display with this speech. and also the notion of putting country above self, one of the main biden, sort of political frames for this campaign season is making the case to the american people that from his perspective, he believes donald trump is all about donald trump and himself and that joe biden portrays himself as about the country and what he used as one of the clearest examples in american history of putting country of putting democracy a putting these larger fights above self as those young men did on those cliffs that is also the political sort of contrast he wanted to set up with his opponent. >> how politically important potentially was this speech by the president? the said, i think this is part of a peace. well, if i mean, i think this notion of america's role in the world of what joe biden has accomplished with unifying the west in the effort against russia. in supporting ukraine, even in a delayed manner, getting republicans to go along with getting aid to ukraine. this whole project of what formed as a world order following world war ii and how critical that is in joe biden's mind to america's future is a through line of what he's going to sell to the american people throughout the next five months of this campaign and this is a huge that piece of that. now, you and i know the american people vote on a whole host of issues, not just foreign policy or big thematics like democracy. the economy, immigration, all of this will be part of the equation, but this is a key central component to biden's presidency and his ask for renewal of a four-year contract from the american people. >> very strong words, indeed a very powerful where it's coming right now at this moment, david, don't go too far away. i want to bring in our senior white house correspondent, kayla tausche. she's traveling with the president. she's on the scene over there at 0.2 ha kayla, what's the reaction there so far at least there, what the president had to say well, i think the biden administration officials who are here, we're very pleased with how the speech went down of course, it is an iconic setting, incredibly the point in its hard to imagine a more powerful backdrop than this. >> a few things stood out to me in the predator, in the president's speech specifically, how he rewarded some familiar length which that we've heard in speeches of the past to make it clear that this speech was about a domestic audience. he kept using the pronoun our, he said that he wants to make sure that people know that the veterans are the rangers who thought here that they would want us to care for others in our country more than ourselves. he talked about the soul of our nation and the solemn vow to never let them down. he's talked too often about the need to stand up to dictators to autocrats, to fascist. but for the average american who might think that terms like that feel like they're ripped from a history textbook today. they president biden distilled it into it's perhaps simplest term. he said that hateful ideologies are what the the us is standing up to and that essentially casten extremely really wide net. it doesn't necessarily mean that is just vladimir putin on the doorstep of europe, or just the ice and isolationists populous protectionist policies that he is combating in his opponent back at home. so that was perhaps what was most interesting to me here. it's also notable that while reagan's speech 40 years to go became most known for the line where he addressed the boys of pointe-du-hoc. he had 62 of those boys on hand in the audience to specifically referenced during the speech. and today, president biden said the ghost of pointe-du-hoc, that is, i think what the biden team wants this speech to become. they want it to be iconic. and if there's one thing where president reagan's oratory skills certainly set a high bar. there's one thing that president biden has in this moment that he did not. and that is high definition. it's not a grainy picture. it's not muted colors when the president did a fly over and marine one, there was music playing that sounded like a john williams score. you can expect that the white house and campaign are going to be able to use this imagery and cut it in a way that will continue speaking to the american people people well beyond today, wolf. >> good point. kayla tausche at pointe-du-hoc for us, we'll get back to you. i want to continue this discussion right now, joining us now cnn contributor leah wright, rigueur, cnn presidential historian tim naftali, are senior political analyst around bronstein and retired us army general wesley clark. he's the former navy you supreme allied commander. round. let me start with you. how would you rate this approximately 15 minutes speech by the president yeah. >> i mean, look, it was it was a solid, strong presidential speech. i'm not sure. i was like, what be as iconic as reagan speech. and it was most interesting in terms of our 2024 choice, in the way that president biden linked the struggle to preserve democracy around the world with the struggle to preserve democracy in the the us as we face something we have not really encountered before, an american in history with the dominant faction in one of our parties not committed to the principles of constitutional democracy that we have. that we have that have endured for over two centuries in this country. so that is the case he is making. i think it is part of the case. he has to make in november, there is an audience for that. there's also another group of voters they need to reach that finds all that a little abstract and needs to know more about his plans to make their economic life better. but in terms of kind of putting a stake in the ground and linking international domestic struggle. i thought it was affected very eventful tim, you're are presidential historian, big picture. >> how important historically, how sick deficient potentially is this speech by the president well, the very fact that it happened 40 years after an, another iconic moment at pointe-du-hoc allows us to see the differences between 1984 and 2024 in 1984, ronald reagan was trying to reassert the moral character of the american commitment to the world that was a time when some in our country were arguing that there was a moral equivalence between the soviet union and the united states and so ronald reagan used that iconic place and the fact that he was standing in front of 62 heroes who had scaled pointe-du-hoc 40 years earlier to make a point about the fact that when the united states came to europe, it came as americans came as liberators, not as conquerors thus contrasting the united states with what the soviets had done in their empire ronald reagan had a second objective in 1984 in 1983 had been a very tense year in the cold war. >> indeed, it was known as the beginning of the second cold war. in 1984 ron reagan actually wanted to send a signal to the soviets. we americans don't want war. we fight them when we have two, but we don't want war and then ronald reagan made a point in the speech at pointe-du-hoc to talk about the 20 million soviets who had died in world war ii 40 years later the president of the united states uses that same sacred ground to make a point about us and our character. this speech was a lot about character. the character of america perkins. it, their best. he talked about the sole survivor of d-day who was in front of him and talked about the importance for that hero of his band of brothers of those that he was fighting for his country of course, but he was also fighting for those around him and for those who may had lost. and the president made a very, very poignant point we mustn't forget the fact that we are part of a community, that we should care about each other, that we should care about others more than ourselves, and that, that is being american. now he didn't mention donald trump's name. he didn't have to. >> but it gave a sense that he is in some way framing the choice, not between his character and donald trump's character. >> but two between donald trump's character and the character of america at its best. and that character is personified are was personified by those 225 rangers who scaled pointe-du-hoc 80 years ago. so that shows you two things. one, the difference in the campaign's 40 years apart, but also the difference in the challenge the country faces. and the us my two presidents of a sacred moment in our history and of sacred ground to make the case to the american people about the importance of morality in our times good point, general clark here, the former nato supreme allied commander europe military expert right now on this panel, this is certainly hallowed ground as we all know, more than 70,000 allied troops died during the invasion of normandy 80 years ago. >> how did you view the president's speech and didn't strike the right tone? amid this backdrop i think it was a very, very powerful and even a brilliant speech roof powerful in the sense of the setting. >> the avocation of the rangers. i was in the pentagon as of colonel, i listen to ronald reagan's speech in 1984 but the boys are ponto hawken, i had around me group of captains and majors lieutenant karl was working for me for the army chief of staff and we had tears in our eyes when we heard reagan talk about it. biden speech will evoke very powerful, very strong support from the men and women in uniform and the united states page it is evocations of ronald reagan, its advocation of what america military stands for. as far as the allies are concerned, i think they should be very reassured by this. you know, the policy and confronting putin is it's evolving we're getting a little more forward. we're pushing on putin a little bit more. the white alice in recent days is an authorized, the ukrainians to use american weapons to strike back against in russian territory and to shoot down russian aircraft over russia that are threatening ukraine. these are significant it moves, putin can hear it now in the rhetoric and he can see the response. so i think we're moving to tighten the noose on mr. putin and his aggression in ukraine step-by-step, carefully, bringing the allies together. i think it was a really powerful speech, just the right time, just the right moment. and obviously, he's got the mantle of ronald reagan behind him. so i think it has some enormous domestic impact as well. >> good point leah, europe presidential historian as well. you teach at the johns hopkins university. there was certainly a lot of focus on ronald reagan speech on that very spot. 40 years ago during the 40th anniversary of the de d-day. d-day invasion. do you think this speech by president biden lived up to that legacy? >> it had to live up to the legacy and it's not just about is this this kind of broader legacy of modeled reagan, but it's also, i think a soft launch for the second stage of joe biden's presidential campaign. we know that the first stage of the campaign was the battle for the soul of america. but one of the things that let me put the biden administration has realized is that that same argument is not hitting in the same way with american or global audiences. >> i think what we're seeing here now is a twofold attack. >> one, this idea of democracy abroad and democracy the connecting this idea at the international and the creeping idea, right? harkening back to this two ideas that mama graven talked about. but the idea of russia, the power of russia, the increasing aggression of russia, but also harkening to ideas of china, right? so just defining these very, very different ideas of what are allied powers? course water access power. so again, reassuring, i think allied powers but also it is doing the work. think of reminding people at home that there is a connected community of what democracy means one of the things that we know is that democracy within the united states, also globally, but democracy within the united states is in crisis as people as the rest of the panel has already mentioned, donald trump didn't need to be mentioned because he was evoked in the ideas that joe biden talked about. so this is an attempt, i think not just to remind people about what does democracy mean, how democracy is something that has to be fought for remade over and over again. >> but also to speak ideas of democracy. >> they were incredibly popular on both sides of the aisle. so he's bringing up this legacy of ronald reagan. and i think it's an important launching part for the next phase of the camera we heard the president once again say that the young men who stormed point to hoc at these other areas of normandy and helped turn the tide of the war. >> the mission matters more than their lives. they all believed that, and that's why the u.s. and the allies turned the tide of the war and eventually defeated nazi germany within a year after normandy will watch all of this together with all of you to all of the panelists. thank you very, very much. we'll be right back with boromir's the assignments are going on. >> and the tornado here. >> i'm thinking i'm going to die and i thought that was it. >> filing earth with liev schreiber sunday at nine on cnn shipping trucks advanced kamer 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a terrible precedent for our country. does that mean the next president does it to them? that's really the question. it's terrible, terrible path that they're leading us to. and it's very possible that it's going to have to happen to them our let's discuss with our cnn political commentator. sure. michael singleton and former special assistant to president biden, megan haze. sure. michael trump is talking about revenge while president biden is honoring the greatest generation during the 80th anniversary of normandy. it's, it's a really a split-screen, very different points mean it isn't obvious contrast wharf and as they say revenge is bittersweet, but i think one way to get revenge is to showcase one success and their ability to govern effectively. the former president is making the case that he can do better on the economy, better on the immigration allow those things to be your revenge. we know right now that china, one of our greatest adversaries, is really attempting to use served united states lead around the world attempt to showcase at the us is still that beacon of hope for other democracies, particularly young democracies that are still trying to figure out their way. so i would advise the former president changed the rhetoric to say revenge will be success. >> what do you think? >> i mean, i think that the contrast here is, could not be more stark and today he's honoring people. he's saying that the demarc to preserve our democracy, we have to think paths ourselves i wasn't thing for the greater good, something that former president can't seem to do. he continues to talk about how the election was stolen from them. everyone's out to get em and he's gonna go and be revengeful the retribution i just think is related to seven, i don't actually think that it's going to resonate with voters in november. >> it is one thing to talk from trump's perspective, to talk about revenge are getting even with his political enemies, it's one thing to do that it's another thing to talk about the substantive economic issues national security issues facing in the united states. he seems to want to talk more about revenge though. >> wolf. >> people want to know what are you going to do to make their lives better? i think there is a legitimate case to make to the american people that, hey president biden is a nice guy, but maybe has handled things as great as we would have light. maybe we need to go in a new direction. people are yearning for that. and i think it is one area where when you look at all the available data that the former president does lead on the academy on immigration, on foreign policy, even some issues of infrastructure. people said, hey, we think trump may be able to do a better job leading the country forward. talk about those issues. >> can you should have a conversation then on the issues and not what affected him personally and talk about the patient, it's just it just as a weird contrast that he just continuing to talks about himself and not what he can do to make americans lives better. >> what did you think if president biden speech? >> well, i thought it was a great speech while for me right now, we're facing some uncertainties internationally with russia, china in particular, a russia and ukraine china and taiwan. a lot of military experts in an analyst are wondering what posturing china would do if they're actually enact some of those posturing what does that mean for the united states? and so i think right now we're seeing a democratic recession across the globe. and so to see president biden speak to the past, but also speak to the challenges ahead, i think was really important. >> i thought it was significant that what we heard 40 years ago for i'm old reagan was very similar to what we heard from president biden today. >> yeah, absolutely. and i think that the president continually meets a moment on these big speech that he gives. i've traveled with them on, doesn't these foreign trips and you always meet the moment on these speeches. he totally encapsulated the moment of the democracy is bigger than just us. and i think that that was conveyed. i do think that it's interesting we're seeing that we're, you know, we're still saying the same thing 40 years later but if history repeats itself, so here we we're really made it clear that he believes this is president biden, that the us has a direct obligation to help ukraine right now when it's clear that if former president trump is moving away from that much more isolation is policy. >> yeah. >> so this is an interesting dichotomy here, wolfe, i do agree with president biden that we do have an obligation to help ukraine again, i mentioned democracy session. we're seeing the number of democracies globally decline. >> that's a very, very serious problem, has a lot of societies are leaning more towards nationalism and populism and part because did you have a lot of people in many of the western countries, including the united states, who feel that aid is going to other places and not really addressing their plight. >> we have to be able to figure out a way to address the plight of those who are struggling while still maintaining our mandate internationally. >> i just think this yesterday, that moment with the veteran end zelenskyy was perfectly encapsulated where he was like, thank you, sir, in zelenskyy they turn to him and said, thank you for saving europe. i just think that really encapsulates what are older generation really feels about democracy and feels to what to your point if what they're saying, and how important investing and helping other countries is dropping his supporters keeps saying, we have to make america great again, the president pointedly, without mentioning trump by name said in his speech, i refuse to believe america's greatness is a thing of the past. i thought that was significant as well, guys. thank you very, very much. michael singleton, megan hayes, still ahead this our hunter 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biden, as they look to counter yesterday's testimony from hallie biden, she's hunter biden's sister-in-law-turned-g irlfriend. she detailed their past relationship and how he introduced her to crack cocaine and how she disposed of the gun at the center of this case back in 2018, meanwhile, president biden told abc news, he will respect the jury's verdict in his son's trial. listen let me ask you, will you accept the jury's outcome, their verdict, no matter what it is? yes. >> and have you ruled out a pardon for your son? >> yes. >> you have cnn senior justice correspondent evan perez is outside the court for us, and cnn legal analyst, former us attorney michael moore is joining us as well. >> evan, what's the latest that we're hearing from inside the courtroom? >> well, what if the fact that the prosecution has rested after ten witnesses, four-and-a-half days of testimony really a lot has been settled, a lot of testimony has been heard by this jury over the last four-and-a-half days over really, not very much. i mean, there is not much in dispute in this case. the fact that a hunter biden bought a gun on october 12th and 2018, that's not in dispute. the fact that he was struggling with drug abuse drug addiction during that period is also not in dispute. what really is come down to is whether the defense and they're their case, which is just now getting started whether they can focus a jury on the fact that the prosecution has not provided any evidence hunter biden used or was using drugs in october around the time exactly. around the time when the gun was was bought. again, october 12. and tibur 23rd, when hallie biden testified that she found the gun in his truck panicked, tried to make sure that her kids couldn't find it disposal have it in front of a supermarket garbage can and then that's where we are. but that's why this case exists. so we expect that in addition to naomi biden, who we just saw arrive here at the federal courthouse, 100 biden's daughter. we also might hear from jimmy biden, the president's brother, who helped pay for some of his drug rehab. and so that's the case. that's going to be brought by the by the process secretion. they're going to take this case into next week before the jury finally makes a decision was interesting, avid standby, michael the jury to follow hallie biden this testimony very intently. based on all of our reporters are inside the courtroom, how much of an impact do you think her testimony had on the jury i'm glad to be with you all if. >> this i think it was significant. >> you've got a situation here where the witnesses, both for the state and now for the defense, for the government, the defense are people of character there are people who are respected in the area. they're certainly the biden name is no secret there that area. and so to have hallie biden men and talk in sort of lay out what she saw, what she did when she was exposed to what she participated in, in some respects, these are this is this is significant and it was a bad day for the defense to hear that, and a good day for for the government it's a now, the question will be in the problem for biden, i think is that about everybody that he's around? it seemed at the time that he was it's some type of relationship with he was either exposed or using drugs with that that's a problem for him because the crime does not center on whether or not he just happened to have a crack pipe. in his hand at the time that he checked the form when he bought the gun. but they're telling a painting a bigger picture of the troubles he was dealing with what his life was like she filled in hallie biden that is filled and a big part of that story yesterday. >> yeah. evan, you've been inside the courtroom every day. what's it like during the course of that really explicit testimony that we're hearing will may you can see the jurors really sit up in their seats taking notes. there are times when again, over 4.5 days there has been just an overwhelming amount of testimony from the prosecution you can see sometimes the jurors are falling asleep but during the testimony of hallie biden, during the times that the prosecutors have played hundreds own voice from his audio book, more than an hour of it. you could see them paying very close attention. and you can see also that his family members, in some cases our very upset about what they're seeing in some cases jill biden, the first the first lady, just avoids looking up at the screen when pictures of her son are shown where he is passed out with a crack pipe in the background. this is very tough stuff for the family get here, and that's what we expect to continue next week when perez michael moore to both of you. thank you very, very much. still ahead. a d-day veteran tells volodomyr zelenskyy than quoting now, you are the savior, are the people. and now ukrainian president takes the world stage and in renewed fleet for weapons and strong alliances we'll be right back 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you or a loved one who has been diagnosed with mesothelioma call us now russia's war in ukraine is looming large over the d-day commemorations in europe and volodymyr zelenskyy is making sure world leaders remember the ukrainian president address france's parliament de this morning, telling lawmakers that europe is no longer at peace. >> he also accused russia's vladimir putin of crossing. a red line after red line. just like hitler did. and later in paris, zelenskyy sat down with president biden, who announced the new aid package for ukraine and also did something that world leaders rarely do. >> he publicly apologized, blaming what he called some conservatives in congress for the delay in providing military assistance to ukraine. >> the ukrainian leader thanked president biden and stress the importance of continued us support. listen and our meeting here is symbolic it's very important that you stay with us this bipartisan support with the congress. it's very important that in this unit, united states america, all american people stay with ukraine, like it was during world war ii how united states helped to save human lives, to save your let's bring him cnn senior international correspondent fred pleitgen. >> fred, you've spent a lot of time in ukraine covering this work. what do we know about the new aid package that president biden just announced that we'll be going forward to ukraine yeah, the six aid package, president biden says, since the aid has been flowing again from the united states, there's certainly some pretty interesting and important things in there for the ukrainians wolf, one of the things that the ukraine's have been talking about in volodymyr zelenskyy also said in that very short segment that we saw there with president biden earlier today is the need for more air defense. >> and one of the things that's in that aid package, there is more interceptors for the air defenses. this of course wolf very important for the ukrainians, not just to keep their city safe as they say from russian missile attacks, but also right now on the front leinz the russians have been much more capable at using their air force to drop aerial bombs on the frontline positions where the ukrainians are at. they say they need more air defense capabilities. and of course also more air defense missiles to try and keep those russian jets away. the other thing that's also huge ticket item for the ukrainians is artillery pieces were in there, but then also ammunition for artillery and that of course, we've been talking about, it's so much has been a huge deal for the ukrainians. they had what they called their artillery starvation when that us aid wasn't flowing. now of course, there's a backlog of the artillery ammo that the ukrainians need again now on this new aid package, there are some more artillery shells also coming. ukraine's way. they are of course burning through a lot as the russians firing at them ukrainians trying to retaliate, trying to hold up those russian advances. and then also armored vehicles. part of it as well. so important on the battlefield right now as the strikes by the russians get heavier and heavier, wolf, as you know, afraid russian president putin was not invited to these the current d-day events due to the war in ukraine in the past, russia, which was then the soviet union, a key ally of the u.s. or the other allied coalition during world war ii. and the fight against nazi germany. but the russian president today still made his voice heard, tell our viewers what he said yeah, he certainly did. >> it was that the st. petersburg economic forum, which is extremely important for russia, extremely important for vladimir putin. he gave his keynote speech there. he's actually still on a panel a debating right now. and there were two things that he was quite bullish on. actually, one of them was the russian economy, which of course is one of the most sanctioned in the world he said that economy is still going strong. of course, the data seems to show that as well. one of the things that the russians have been saying is they believe a country of russia size simply cannot be isolated on the international stage. of course, one of the things that the us wolf has been so concerned about is china apparently a giving assistance to the russians? not necessarily as far as weapons are concerned, but certainly for components that can be used to manufacture weapons. those are something that the us has been talking about a lot. the russians essentially talking about a new world economic order as they put it, but then also as far as the battlefield is concerned, wolf vladimir putin still extremely bullish as well, saying, right now the russians don't need mobilization the same time. also saying that the russians are advancing wolf fred pleitgen reported for us from berlin, fred, thank you very much coming up. >> how israel is now responding to the international backlash after the idf's deadly drake 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says it was quote, a precise intelligence-based strike that targeted hamas militants, cnn's paula hancocks is joining us live from jerusalem right now. update our viewers, paula, what do we know? >> well, well, if we know that the white house is speaking to israel saying that they want more details about what had happened, saying that israel has the right to fight against hamas. but the way it does so matters. now there has been condemnation from the un secretary general and others. we know that when it comes to these unrwa buildings, at least 180 have been targeted since october 7. we also know that a another un linked school has been hit by an israeli air strike. this one further north in al shati camp, three killed their dozens injured according to the idf, they say there was a container that they were taught oh, getting that had hamas militants operating out of it. we are hearing from those on the ground in central gaza that the intensity and the frequency of these israeli strikes makes it feel at this point as though it is the beginning of the war against saying just how intense the attacks have been over the past week, we'll paula hancocks reporting for us for of jerusalem. paula, thank you very much into our viewers. thanks very much for joining me here in the cnn newsroom. i'll be back 5:00 p.m. eastern later today for a special two-hour situation room stay with us inside politics with dana bash starts right after a short break i'm dr. sanjay gupta hosted cnn's chasing life podcast family mealtimes it is sacred time and our home. >> it's a chance to talk and to reconnect, especially during busy times and research shows that eating together benefits family members of all ages. but a particularly helps children's mental and physical development now, frequent family meals are associated with higher self-esteem resilience, and academic performance, and also lower rates of depression obesity in high-risk behaviors but here's the issue. the american college of 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