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Transcripts For DW Check-in - On Potsdamer Platz In Berlin 20180115 02:30:00


globe trotters steve hamish sent his regards from austria. first i want to get up this building to get a panoramic view of potsdam up lots of. europe s fastest elevator takes you up to the twenty fourth floor in twenty seconds clacked . one hundred meters up you can see that potsdamer platz is at the heart of the city there you ve got the right start building the brandenburg gate the philharmonic. that you re gonna slide to group locks and to nice recognize the t.v. tower. and. the back around the cafe is the perfect place to take a little break and enjoy the view. during the golden twenty s this
was the place to be there are luxury hotels fashionable restaurants movie houses and theaters but during world war two parts them up lots was almost an entire league destroyed and it took close to half a century to rebuild it. this is part of some other plots as we now know it. back in the one nine hundred twenty s. this intersection was already a hive of activity until bombs pounded into rubble in the second world war. then it became a wasteland in the middle of a divided city. when the berlin wall went up in one thousand nine hundred sixty one which so much let s became part of a closely watched no man s land known as the death strip. the first segments of the
modern architecture and modern art go hand in hand these are boxers. and this style church is called galileo. but one of the hidden gems here is found behind these historic house which is home to the dimer art collection. art historian catching hodges ellis giving me a special tour you know dime lawyer doesn t just build cars they collect modern art . that is and was put about this is a large photograph by a chinese artist named jungle who and you can see him on this large photo it bears the title me and my teacher. the collection is dedicated to contemporary arts and features pop art to. get out
by exactly how to harness it to mercedes models by andy warhol we commissioned them for the hundredth anniversary of the automobile in one thousand nine hundred six. and that s. this picture by billy baumeister was the first to be purchased for the collection in one thousand nine hundred seventy seven. the bomb i saw it almost it was a very prominent abstract artist in post-war germany that s why we see this as an important work for our collection it s a cornerstone that s why that was the cornerstone how did it continue how big is the collection now. hard to have. we now have about two thousand seven hundred artworks by some six hundred german and international artists both male and female but we collected all kinds of our own photography painting in. still ations video
art. video we have no restrictions at this but it s kind of like when. there s a new exhibition twice a year and it doesn t cost anything to get it. and during our free of charge what better way to pass a where are they coming up we ve got plenty more tips on how to explore berlin while keeping warm and holding on to your you re. not far from. you ll find the topography of terror documentation center in winter most of its outside areas are closed for the indoor permanent exhibition is open it documents the crimes the nazis planned on this site and committed across europe. the headquarters of the stoppel and s. s. were here until nine hundred forty five so it was the nerve center of the nazi regime. it s important to.
speak for history. the goods are part of what sometimes it is. and there is the story. like all nazi era on the morial sites it s free of charge. really in the city palace is being rebuilt at the heart of the city in front of it stands a giant angular structure the whole box here you can find out about the history of the palace also free of charge. animated exhibits show how the ambitious project will look when it s finished the historical facade encloses a modern interior. box already houses some of the exhibits that will later move into the palace the ethnological collections of berlin s museums very much in line with the endeavors of german explore alexander for whom was whose name the new palace bears. the old forum is set to open in twenty nineteen.
be wonderful. the money you saved on tickets you can easily blow on pots them up lots in the casino. the cinema. the clubs or the theatre. or you can go on a little shopping spree this mall has over one hundred stores. it s also where you can find berlin s best sundays or at least the biggest. and italian masterpiece here in early.
if you don t want to use your data plan while exploring the area no problem sum up lots was one of the first places in the city with a free public why fight another. graine thing about having a good internet connection is that it makes him super easy to keep in touch with the folks back home maybe by sending them a little video that s exactly what our viewer carlos from poland did he spent three weeks traveling in morocco with his wife and they captured the best moments on camera and they were kind enough to share them with us so here it is our e-mail of the week.
the less windsor tends to be dark and dreary but for ten days in february the stars are shining brightly that s one berlin hosted annual international film festival the burly molly right here on pot some on plots you can encounter some of the world s biggest movie stars in the flats and it s the place to be first to you and celebrity status from around the globe. every year in february the theater on potsdamer platz turns into the belly non of pop. stars who have already graced the red carpet here in berlin include catherine deneuve. and ella b. cruz. you jackman. robert pattinson. berlin love celebrities and they love. film buffs are already
on rolling their sleeping mats to make sure they can get tickets some tickets are sold online but most are available at the box office three days before each screening that means. i one radio was frail is bad. i have in front of the queue really has its own feel it has its own energy and so that also gets translated into the film festival it s a very different cinema experience it s not about popcorn but about real film buffs coming together. speaking of popcorn one of the many berlin film festival sections is coen airy cinema first a movie featuring food is screened and afterwords gourmet chefs serve a menu inspired by. if that s too straight laced for you it s off to the bradley not a party they take place all over the city. this is where the industry insiders meet it s all about scene and b c. it s
also ideal for autograph hunters there s just one judge you need an invitation or put on your glad rags and take your chances it might work but more getting there can be quite slippery. and even if it s not really knowledge time putts some up lots is the place to be for film buffs welcome to the sony center. at the imax cinemas you can watch three d. movies and films in the original. and if you want to dive into the history of german cinema in t.v. you can find classics costumes glamour and lots of fun facts at the film museum.
from the start of the silver screen up until the present day he took and knows every last detail about the collection like about the first recorded moving pictures for example. or homage to metropolis the nine hundred twenty seven dystopian masterpiece produced by fritz learned that back in the days of serve yours and critics throughout the world. it went down in cinema history and inspired influenced many directors because it s now when you know schools world heritage list. so much to learn did you know the first ever academy award for a male lead went to a german silent movie actor. they. went to a million things in one thousand twenty nine for the one nine hundred twenty eight twenty nine season at the time people wanted all aware what an important award it
would become in later years. so. that. the museum also houses a real muslim in detroit sanctuary she still considered a fashion icon today and one of berlin s most successful cultural exports. will be exhibit reveal any secrets about melinda dietrich even to die hard fans. bending over. permanent exhibition shows some aspects that interest younger visitors. such as the fashion icon the woman who wore trousers in the 1930 s. you didn t see them in the west german parliament until the one nine hundred seventy s.
. plenty of rare insights into marlene this private life here like her makeup case given to her by director he was a fun stand back i could use one of these from my travels. talking about cinematography our globe trotters steve has regularly supplies us with amazing images from his travels and this time he and his travel companion chris and addison are even that far away from here there and austria as winter wonderland. in austria i m here with christine and it s pretty much revenues who will be skiing for the past. i m in a life and what better place where not the largest series are in austria but we re also going to be showing you things to do with the season and without ok let s check it out.
so let s see how kristen is performing. it s looking good so far. it was a cool thing about seeing you getting on top of all these beautiful mountains and you have this view. pristine on the first day of steam. much. pressure how you re doing swell so well. all right next thing on our list is nights lead to. some real. feeling slightly.
begins today we are in whole fierce and this is a big one hotspot we re going to get this for the track. good luck you ll get. there early and that s fearful and but the most fun part is the shooting. the most awesome thing of doing all these sports is you make up for the food you eat up to it. so we end this vague. with a torch what. route.
is it from the ski set this. night has fallen over upon some of the lockers which means it s cocktail so. there are plenty of options around the square but i know exactly where i want to go . into fragrances at the ritz carlton hotel bar with the rather unique concept of. the cocktails looks to tackler and tastes amazing there s no many on here if you want to order a drink you have to smell your way through a perfect gallery if you like one of the scent the mixologists will shake you a cocktail based on it. it is bar manager are intending heights and. he came up with the idea and the poetic descriptions of the feelings associated to the fragrances and cocktails. until you see
in the buckingham palace it s all been fun and relaxing and voile. thanks i m going for the bolder e.l.t. blue actually got a blue t. in it and a lot more besides. time to taste it. wow it really comes close to the fragrance is. delicious. how big a role does your nose play in your sense of taste the present. it s a seventy percent if you have a cold you can t taste any more because the nose removes all the aroma must be also or if your favorite bar generally serves drinks that are too sour you can take vanilla purview molong spray it on your hand drink your drink and it will taste sweeter and vice versa with lemon perfume what would you add to. what or you just
make friends with the barkeeper i think i ve done it but even better than the. fine art film and fancy cocktails this day has certainly is that is all my senses but now it s time to head home and lucky for me that could not be easier no matter where you re going from pot some outlets chances are good they ll be a bust and or a new bundle take you straight there see an exciting.
the first. the be. the be. going. to close. the book.
freedom freedom of art. a multimedia project about artists and their right to express their views freely. d.w. don t come to freedom. cut the whole d w one up. for in focus global insights the news outlet for local heroes. the double looks made for minds. fight the new season of radio crime thrillers. investigative cases that will keep you on your toes. at the best idea ever so every young person leads us into crime fighting a sad tale afraid to let friends. crime fighters. germany state by state. the most colorful.
the earliest. the most traditional. find it all at any time. check in with a web special. take a tour of germany state by state on d w dot com lead. playing. on civilians during which the situation escalates players no longer carrying first global player with ruthless calculation military leaders work up to the extent of the most acclaimed control of the airspace as opposed to submitting the flame technological to. the conflagration mass destruction play. area blowing from get me going to hiroshima

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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20190702 00:30:00


for sandhya patel, michael finney and all of us, thank you for watching tonight. tonight, several developing stories as we come on the air. the deadly plane crash. breaking news about the ten people killed, including two pilots and four members of the same family. the small plane slamming into the hangar. the new images coming in. and what authorities have just found out. the mystery death of a major league baseball player. what authorities are saying tonight. president trump back home after that historic meeting with kim jong-un. now a report claiming the white house may allow north korea to keep its nuclear stockpile. and just moments ago, the martha raddatz standing or iran. outrage at the border. a secret facebook group discovered. current and former border agent sexist jokes. the investigation tonight. violent protests erupting overseas.
police firing tear gas. demonstrators storming a government building. the urgent manhunt tonight for an escaped killer, cutting off his ankle monitor and vanishing on the last day of his trial. the jury returning a guilty verdict without him. and the 15-year-old tennis star at wimbledon, defeating her idol. what she said during their meeting at the net. good evening and it s great to have you with us on a busy monday night. i m cecilia vega, in for david. and we begin with what the ntsb has just revealed about the deadliest plane crash in texas in 30 years. the small beachcraft twin-engine plane slamming into a hangar, just moments after takeoff, its fuel erupting into a fire ball. two pilots and eight passengers onboard. no one survived. now, new images just coming in from inside that charred hangar. and tonight, we are learning that a family of four were among the dead. but now, questions remain about why the plane crashed so
abruptly. abc s marcus moore starts us off at the airport in addison, texas. reporter: tonight, these images show the intense flames, thick smoke and a desperate effort to help after a twin-engine plane fell from the sky. investigators say the beachcraft be-350 was carrying two crew members and eight passengers when it went down shortly after takeoff from this small airport north of dallas sunday. the plane slamming into an unoccupied hangar and then bursting into flames. everybody just stand by, we had an accident on the field. reporter: emergency crews rushing to put out the flames that engulfed the wreckage. the crash leaving a gaping hole at the top of the hangar. the airplane had gotten airborne and then veered to the left of the runway and then started to roll to the left, and it was in the process of rolling when it collided with the hangar. reporter: there were no survivors. among those killed, a family of four from plano, texas. the school where one of the children attended confirming the siblings, their mom and
stepfather all died in the crash. the plane was headed to st. petersburg, florida. the ntsb says they recovered the cockpit voice recorder, but other crucial evidence was destroyed. unfortunately, due to the extensive post-impact fire and damage incurred during the impact sequence, other systems are virtually destroyed. and marcus joins us now live from the scene of that crash. marcus, we just heard the ntsb say they recovered the cockpit voice recorder, but this plane did not have a flight data recorder? reporter: yeah, cecilia. as you know, this type of plane does not require a flight data recorder, and that s going to make it harder for investigators as they look into this deadly crash. now, the cockpit voice recorder, however, it is already in washington being analyzed and investigators are listening to the background noise, hoping it will lead them to a critical clue that can help them figure out what brought this plane down. cecilia? a lot of questions there. okay, marcus, thank you. we ll turn next to that
breaking news. the mysterious death of a major league baseball player. angels pitcher tyler skaggs found dead in his hotel room in texas. he just pitched a game on saturday. he was only 27 years old. abc s eva pilgrim has the details coming in. reporter: tonight, tragedy hitting major league baseball. just hours ago, 27-year-old los angeles angels pitcher tyler skaggs was found dead in his hotel room. medics respond, medical energy. hilton southlake town square. reporter: skaggs was in dallas, his team going up against the texas rangers. he had just pitched saturday night. but this afternoon, police were called around 2:00 to his hotel. the pitcher, unresponsive. possible death investigation. reporter: skaggs was pronounced dead at the scene. he leaves behind a wife he married just seven months ago. the angels organization releasing a statement, saying, tyler has and always will be an important part of the angels family. our thoughts and prayers are with his wife, carli, and his entire family during this devastating time.
support now pouring in from his rivals. he wasn t a guy i enjoyed having to go up against. obviously he gave all the teams i coached fits. just awful to think that that s not going to be around anymore. reporter: tonight s angels/rangers game has been canceled. police say they do not suspect any foul play. cecilia? okay, eva, thank you. we ll turn next tonight to president trump confronting two nuclear threats, iran increasing its stockpiled uranium in defiance of the iran nuclear deal, though the president pulled the u.s. out of that deal a year ago. today, he said iran is, quote, playing with fire. this comes after that historic meeting with kim jong-un. now a new report claims the white house may allow north korea to keep its nuclear weapons. here s abc s chief global affairs correspondent martha raddatz. reporter: for weeks now, iran has been building up its stockpile of nuclear material and today, for the first time, it has passed the limits set in the landmark nuclear deal
negotiated by the obama administration. the move comes a year after president trump pulled the u.s. out of that deal. today, he was asked if he has a message for iran. no, no message to iran. they know what they re doing. they know what they re playing with. and i think they re playing with fire. reporter: the president has called for new talks, but iran is showing no sign its leaders want to negotiate with trump. iran, one of two nuclear challenges facing the administration. the other north korea. my friend. reporter: over the weekend, trump becoming the first sitting u.s. president to step foot on north korean soil. the hastily arranged meeting at the heavily fortified demilitarized zone which divides the north and south. kim jong-un telling donald trump he never expected to meet him at this place. and with that, history was made. trump giving an open invitation to the brutal dictator to visit the white house.
i would invite him right now. to the white house. absolutely. reporter: but trump and kim have, of course, met before, twice. in singapore and hanoi. neither meeting resulting in any progress in denuclearization. okay, martha raddatz joining us now from washington. and martha, the new york times is reporting today that the trump administration has a new idea for north korea, a nuclear freeze with no requirement to immediately get rid of the weapons it already has? reporter: exactly, cecilia. but that story was promptly dismissed in a tweet from national security adviser john bolton, calling it a reprehensible attempt by someone to box in the president. bolton adding, there should be consequences. but cecilia, as you know, bolton was not with the president at that impromptu meeting. he is tweeting from mongolia. cecilia? indeed he was. martha, thank you. we ll turn next to the outrage over the border. immigration officials tonight launching an investigation into a secret facebook group where border patrol agents allegedly
joked about the deaths of migrants and posted vulgar illustrations about members of congress. it comes as members of the congressional hispanic caucus today made their way inside one of the most troubled detention centers. abc s will carr has more from the border in san ysidro, california. reporter: tonight, customs and border protection is investigating what it calls disturbing and completely inappropriate posts allegedly made by border patrol agents on social media. propublica just published the vulgar and threatening posts after the nonprofit found a secret group on facebook allegedly comprised of roughly 9,500 current and former border patrol agents. drowned salvadoran and his young daughter. one comment suggests the photo had been edited because the bodies appeared too clean. other posts include graphic images suggesting sexual and physical violence against members of congress. one member encouraging agents to throw a burrito at congresswomen veronica escobar
and alexandria ocasio-cortez, part of a delegation touring two texas cbp facilities today. ocasio-cortez was just asked about the posts. in that last facility, i was not safe from the officers in that facility. reporter: tonight, the border patrol s chief of operations is defending his agency, but not the comments. don t let the actions of a few be representative of the whole, is what i would ask. and will carr joins us now from near the u.s./mexico border in southern california. will, immigration officials opening an investigation. they say any agents who may have violated agency conduct policies will be held accountable. reporter: that s right, cecilia. the chief of the agency says agents will be held accountable, according to the code of conduct, regardless if they were on or offduty. it comes as members of congress tell us they plan to launch an investigation, and president trump just weighed in, he s calling border patrol agents patriots. cecilia? okay, will, thank you. we ll turn overseas now to
hong kong. tens of thousands again taking the streets. protesters storming a government building there. riot police responding with tear gas. dozens reportedly injured. the protests spilling into the streets and turning violent. here s abc s foreign correspondent james longman. reporter: with makeshift battering rams, protesters smash through the glass, storming hong kong s legislative building. inside chaos, as they make their way to the chamber, spraying graffiti on the walls, their anger scrawled over the city s emblem. holding the building for hours, until midnight, when riot police descend. ngt e owowin tst police batons take on the umbrellas that have again become a symbol of this cause. their anger growing for weeks over a proposed extradition law which would deport citizens of hong kong wanted by beijing to face mainland justice.
tonight, hong kong s leader, carrie lam, condemning the violence, but in a possible victory for protesters, says the bill likely won t come into law. whilst these protests have perhaps killed an unpopular law, hong kong s long-term future in the shadow of an increasingly authoritarian mainland china, is still in the balance. cecilia? incredible images there. okay, james, thank you. back here now, to a deadly poison scare at facebook. authorities say sarin may have been discovered at the company s mailing facility in the san francisco bay area. hazmat crews on the scene. police and fire closing off the area. facebook says it evacuated four buildings. authorities say a test came back negative for sarin. the company is cooperating with authorities in that investigation. we ll turn next to the severe weather, as we head into the fourth of july. in the past 24 hours, a barn ripped apart by a likely tornado in caneville, illinois. severe thunderstorms in connecticut and long island, killing two people. these images coming in from islip, new york.
and the temperatures are now rising with a heat wave on the way for parts of the northeast. abc s chief meteorologist ginger zee is tracking it all. hey, ginger. reporter: hey, cecilia. why is the heat a big deal? because it was so late. from the great lakes to northeast, we just saw our first 90-degree temperature, almost a month or m cities. and now dive into this picture with me, because that jet stream, it is far north. and what it means tonight? severe thunderstorm watches from montana to minnesota. i was just watching some of the radar near austin and rochester, minnesota, firing up tonight. those are for damaging winds up to 70 miles per hour. but look at that heat. the heat indices up in the mid-90s from nashville to washington. and wednesday, it only builds. we re talking about air you can wear, cecilia. 100, the feels like in nashville. 104, tallahassee on wednesday. not fun. ginger, thank you. next, to the troubling portrait of joe biden s younger son. hunter biden opening up to the new yorker magazine about his foreign business dealings and his tumultuous personal life, including struggles with addiction.
all of it likely fodder for attacks on his father s battle for the white house. here s abc s linsey davis. reporter: in the incredibly candid interview with the new yorker, 49-year-old hunter biden lays bare his struggle with drugs and alcohol, recounting this moment at his father s rally in philadelphia back in may. the biden family is ready. and we will do this as we always have, as a family. reporter: hunter biden noticeably absent that day, telling the new yorker, it s heartbreaking for me. it s killing me and it s killing him. dad says, be here. mom says, be here. but at what cost? hunter says he skipped the rally because he d become the subject of negative stories. now, in wrenching detail, he opens up about his spiral into addiction, including at least five trips to rehab. there s addiction in every family, he says. i was in that darkness. i was in that tunnel, it s a never-ending tunnel. you don t get rid of it. you figure out how to deal with it. he shares multiple harrowing
experiences, from trying to smoke crack by stuffing it into a cigarette, to getting discharged from the naval reserves after testing positive for cocaine, to having a gun pointed at his head while trying to buy drugs in a homeless encampment. and he says he relapsed after the 2015 death of his older brother, beau. soon after, he also struck up a brief romantic relationship with beau s widow. then, in may, hunter biden proposed to another woman, after knowing her for just one week. did your son hunter get married? yes. yes, he did? reporter: and then there s the matter of hunter biden s business dealings. questions about whether he leveraged his father s name to win business in ukraine and china, where hunter accompanied his father on an official trip in 2013. president trump is calling for an investigation. 100%, it a disgrace. reporter: there has been no evidence joe biden used his influence to help his son. hunter says he and his dad only spoke once about rukraine.
dad said, i hope you know what you re doing, and i said, i do. and linsey davis is with us here. it seems hunter biden was very much aware that he could become a liability for his father s campaign? reporter: and it s very clear they are trying to get ahead of all of this. critics are already asking questions about hunter and his business ties, cecilia. okay, linsey, thank you so much. there is still much more ahead on world news tonight this monday. the urgent manhunt for an escaped killer on the run. the fugitive cutting off his ankle monitor and vanishing on the last day of his trial. just how long did it take police to realize he was missing? and the 9-year-old girl critically injured by an illegal explosive in her home. the device going off in her hands. what police are now saying. and the scare in the air. the pilot losing his engine, coming in for an emergency landing in the middle of the desert. landing in the middle of the desert. n t mean going back to the doctor just for a shot. with neulasta onpro. .patients get their day back. .to be with. . family. .or just to sleep in. strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. in a key study.
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reporter: federal marshals tonight say they need help finding this man, 25-year-old rene carrillo, who skipped bail and disappeared the very night before a texas jury convicted him of murder. anybody that is associated with him, we re going to be contacting them. reporter: this surveillance video is from the night of the killing in october of 2017 outside a dallas strip club. you see carrillo get out of a white cadillac and shoot into this white mercedes, killing the young man in the passenger seat. the jury gave him life in prison. how he was able to run is now a huge concern. his ankle monitor had been cut off and destroyed on the side of the road in terrell, texas. reporter: during his trial, carrillo was out on a $100,000 bond and required to wear the ankle bracelet. there were issues as far back as december, when the bond holder says carrillo had already once failed to check in. i did not set the bond for this case, the assigned judge at the time did and it may very
well have been appropriate, i m not second-guessing that at all. reporter: police say the company that tracks the ankle monitor told them that he was tampering with it around 11:00 p.m. the night before the verdict and then removed it soon after, but police say they didn t see the notice for this until the next morning. cecilia? a lot of questions there. okay, steve, thank you. when we come back, the small plane crash in the desert. the view from the cockpit. the plane going down after losing its engine. and the 15-year-old tennis star at wimbledon and what she said after defeating her idol. i have the power to lower my blood sugar and a1c. because i can still make my own insulin. and trulicity activates my body to release it like it s supposed to. trulicity is for people with type 2 diabetes. it s not insulin. i take it once a week. it starts acting in my body from the first dose. trulicity isn t for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don t take trulicity if you re allergic to it, you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2.
stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have an allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases low blood sugar risk. side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, belly pain and decreased appetite, which lead to dehydration and may worsen kidney problems. i have it within me to lower my a1c. ask your doctor about trulicity. to take care of any messy situations. and put irritation in its place. and if i can get comfortable keeping this tookus safe and protected. .you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparationh. get comfortable with it. .you can get comfortable doing the same with yours.
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and to the index now. starting with a warning ahead of the fourth of july. authorities say a 9-year-old girl in philadelphia is in critical condition after an illegal explosive device blew up in her hands. she suffered injuries to her arms, body and face. investigators say her father purchased those devices. he is now facing possible charges. take a look at this one. a terrifying view from inside the cockpit. the pilot of a small plane losing his engine, forced to make an emergency landing near ludlow, california. the plane going down in mojave national preserve. thankfully, the pilot and the passenger were not hurt. but the nearest road was about a five-hour hike away. a medical chopper airlifting them back to the airport. and the teen tennis star at wimbledon. 15-year-old cori coco gauff defeating her idol venus williams in the first round of the tournament. the teen says she s grown up in awe of venus and her sister serena. i was just telling her thank you for everything that she s
done for the sport and she s been an inspiration for many people and i was just really telling her thank you. gauff had a science test the day before her wimbledon qualifying match. she says several of her teachers had no idea she even plays tennis. they sure do now. you can watch coverage of wimbledon on espn. and when we come back, a world cup holiday? team usa telling fans, go ahead, take tomorrow off. take tomorrow off. corey is living with metastatic breast cancer, which is breast cancer that has spread to other parts of her body. she s also taking ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor, which is for postmenopausal women or for men with hr+ / her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. patients taking ibrance can develop
low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection, liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include low red blood cell and low platelet counts, infections, tiredness, nausea, sore mouth, abnormalities in liver blood tests, diarrhea, hair thinning or loss, vomiting, rash, and loss of appetite. corey calls it her new normal because a lot has changed, but a lot hasn t. ask your doctor about ibrance. the #1 prescribed fda-approved oral combination treatment for hr+/her2- mbc. oral combination treatment but in my mind i m still 25.
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finally tonight, we ve got it. world cup fever. team usa takes on england in the semifinals tomorrow. if you have to work, the players say, tell your boss you re not coming in. here s abc s adrienne bankert. go usa! reporter: tonight, world cup excitement at a fever pitch on the eve of that do or die semifinal. usa versus england. i ve got to say, america have got that ruthless streak of wanting to win. usa! usa! reporter: american fans sporting their red, white and blue from times square to france. go usa! go usa! go usa! go usa! reporter: even oprah joining in. goal! u.s.! reporter: the indomitable megan rapinoe explains what s behind her bold celebration pose to our robin roberts. you re sort of on the stage, so, i guess i m looking at myself as a performer and trying to entertain. reporter: england is a worthy opponent. tuesday s showdown will feature powerhouses ellen white and lucy bronze.
team usa hopes fans at home will get some time off to watch the game. everybody s been super stoked and has been getting out of work to cheer us on. reporter: counting on love from the states and here in the stands as they aim to move oshi. they rock. we follow them anywhere. reporter: adrienne bankert, abc news, lyon, france. we will be cheering the team on. thanks for watching. i m cecilia vega. hope to see you right back here tomorrow night. have a great evening.
now at 6:0, 0 hear from the man seen in this video the victim of a targeted attack trying to get justice with the help of a bay area lawyer. gone from pumping premium down to the regular. just to be able to afford to fill up. changing habits because of changing prices. california s gas tax went up again today. it s something voters wanted to happen. hello, everything starts going wrong. i m michael finney, ahead on 7 on your side, shouldn t new appliances work? go! go! in the midst of protests in brooklyn a journalist is caught in the middle. tonight he s telling abc 7 news how it felt when he became the target of a group we ve seen do damage before. just when i thought it was done, it wasn t.

Report , Meeting , Iran , Martha-raddatz , North-korea , Stockpile , White-house , Kim-jong-un , Investigation , Group , Border , Protests

Transcripts For MSNBCW Andrea Mitchell Reports 20150604



massachusetts, even speaking about beheading them. after scrapping a plot to behead political activist pamela gellar. nbc s pete williams has details. investigators say when boston police and fbi shot 26-year-old raheem tuesday, they feared he was about to board a bus carrying a knife preparing to attack police officers. fbi, concerned about his jihadist social media postings had him under surveillance. court documents reveal fbi was watching when he went on amazon twice last week and bought three military style lives with long blades. four days ago, court documents say he told two other people he planned to behead a victim in another state. law enforcement officials say it was pamela gellar. in a written statement a, she says they targeted me for violating sharia laws. he was heard on the phone saying he changed his mind. fbi said he told a friend quote, i m just going after the boys in blue because it s easiest target. he was talking to wright on the phone who was charged for destroying evidence by getting rid of the cell phone. what more do we know about who else might have been involved in the plot? do they have another suspect? reporter: probably not right to describe this third person as a suspect. there s a person in rhode island that has been under fbi questions for the last couple of days taken into custody for questions. the court document that came out yesterday said last sunday when raheem was talking about attacking the woman in new york there were two with him on the beach. one was david wright the person in court yesterday, and the third person in rhode island. no charges have been filed against that person yet. we ll see what the next few days bring. what about the whole relationship between the police and community. unusual they would bring the community manyin to watch surveillance video. what was said about his family about being shot? reporter: his brother immediately went on facebook and said his brother was on the phone talking to his father at the time and he was shot in the back. the people who have seen that video, people in the community have come out and said he wasn t on the phone, wasn t shot in the back. they say we don t know what he was doing with the knife. there s two reasons police did this. they had a shooting here recently. they did something similar to keep the community calm and let them know what happened. secondly, it s important for police around the country to have significant muslim communities, to keep good relationships with them. they realize if police are viewed as the enemy, they re not going to know enough about what s going on in that community. two reasons really for that. thanks so much pete as you continue investigating this happening in boston. for more on this i m joined by former fbi executive assistant director now president of crowd strike services. thank you very much sean. tell us what we ve learned from surveillance. the fact he was under 24/7 surveillance and had been for some time. pete reported that yesterday at least 100 if not more are under that kind of surveillance. how extensive is this? to have him under 24 hour surveillance indicates to me he was somebody of extreme concern. fbi prioritizes people they re investigating. to use those types of resources is quite substantial. they had some concern. for them to approach him out in this open area like this kind of suddenly indicates there was change in his behave a your. they certainly felt he might go operational. there was danger in the community, some threat to the public safety which is why the fbi did that. the point you make hundreds involved in following the jihadi rhetoric. they re online talking about violent acts talking about fighting against police officers killing police officers and innocent citizens. to have some impact to spread their cause. this is a very new dynamic for the u.s. government to make sure that they re protecting the citizens of this country in a way that also balances the privacy and civil liberties of the average citizen. and and there s so much we don t know frankly about what the government is and is not doing. new york times has broken the story in the last hour about expanded surveillance by the nsa. internet spying to try to protect americans against hacking, particularly from foreign governments. it s hacking at the borders, and it s also surveillance that could include surveillance into isis threats and followers. how do we know what the nsa is doing? number one, these are warrantless searches. this had not been debated publicly. i don t know how much is informed to intelligence communities. there s concern in the public about the public s ability to communicate freely. american public is also concerned about their safety. these threats are widespread. there s clear intent. isis, al qaeda and other terrorist organizations are looking to have impact here. this is one of the areas there will constantly be a balance between the privacy and security. we re never going to have 100%. it s going to require congress the citizens of this country to weigh this out and discuss hit and determine what is acceptable as it relates to people remaining free in their ability to communicate but also a sense of security to live as we do as americans. but you know from what i understand this whole warrantless wiretapping did not was not affect added at all. over the debate we had in recent weeks and months coming to head sunday night, monday and tuesday with the election with the ex piration of patriot act and scale back of meta data and phone records. we re learning also from edward snow den and the new york times this is a new warrantless search no one knew about. you re talking about ability to try to put pieces a puzzle together. the ability to collect data. just phone numbers, times of calls being made. often times it s not known who might be involved in a particular situation. you ve got to go back and look weeks or months in the past. what hah congress is talking about now, maintaining that data within the telephone companies, requiring government to come forward with a subpoena or judicial process. i think that affords people who have been adamantly opposed to this some level of protection. it will certainly have an impact on the ability to expeditiously put those pieces of the puzzle together. trying to weigh balance of privacy and security it s going to require hard choices. if in fact we see an attack where something may have been able to be prevented there will be questions asked and fingers pointed. our government s primary responsibility is protect citizens. that s a dangerous, often times difficult and challenging situation. it s something that s going to be required of us going forward. it seems to me while everyone was focused on collection and possible privacy concerns about mass bulk collection of meta data phone records, here we re learning there was warrantless surveillance of e-mail traffic which is a lot more personal and immediate. yeah. so you know what adversaries have moved. technology changed the way law enforcement does its business. the ability for these groups. isis al qaeda, other groups trying to inspire young disenfranchised people to take up arms to american soil they re using twitter and social media to barrage these people with a message to go fight and kill. this is a dynamic change in law enforcement. we ve seen technology increase, risks inkriescrease and threats continue to increase. it s costing taxpayers money to defend this and also what appears to be continued erosion of safety and security. this is going to be a long debate and require, again, all parts coming together. government, legislator executive branch private sector to weigh out what s acceptable and what s not. certainly people s security while a significant concern, we ve got to maintain privacy as well. sean henry, thanks for being with us today. speaking about security the pentagon says a military lab may have sent as many as 51 samples of live anthrax sent, twice the number they originally thought. we re acting with urgency on this matter. i ve directed all testing are day on stay on. we re going to do it until we get every single one complete. this is not going to be a 9:00 to 5:00 endeavor. we re going after it very very as fast as we can. jim joins me now. mick how did they though the know immediately how many were involved? what is the deal with the pentagon adding on to extension of this? before we go there, i d like to say your lead-in was right on the mark andrea. a short time ago, pentagon officials announced they ve add added another state and lab. that brings the total number of labs that may have received active anthrax spores to 52 in 15 state district of columbia. they re looking back testing samples back to 2005 ten years ago. they re finding live anthrax sample samples. as a matter of fact, they ve found ten in four sebparate batches. give them credit for reaching back that far finding these samples. why did it take ten years to detect some samples made it through the system that was supposed to kill them? it s pretty stunning especially when we realize mick. you know as well as anyone the fear of anthrax after 9/11 the attacks on net leaders as well as the postal people who died from the post office and of course the attack right at nbc. i think in that case the pentagon was totally tone deaf. they ve known about this for some time. it broke publicly just a little less than two weeks ago, yet it took them nearly two weeks to come out and talk about it publicly. it s as if they didn t realize the kind of fear that a even the word anthrax strike of hearts and minds many americans. so they acknowledged they probably were a little late off the mark. they still contend that even going back and looking at these batches that the public was never in any danger. andrea, this is one of the reasons. when you talk about anthrax shipment this is it. it s a one milliliter vile which according to to private and public experts is very diluted, very small. in fact poses no direct threat to any human being in relatively good health. that s one of the reasons they think the public has no need to worry. nevertheless there s a major concern again about why this wasn t detected earlier. so far liveles samples in four batches. they have 400 batches yet to examine. mick as your friend, i m worried. if you re not, put that down. this is not anthrax. it s actually fruit juice. i feel better about it. yeah. they wouldn t trust me with anthrax. i wouldn t either. thank you very much. we are getting our first look at the arsenal of weapons. an arsenal, incredible arsenal of weapons the fence jumper gonzalez had in his car. take a look at this. these are pictures from authorities what was allegedly found in his car the day he jumped the fence. they then found several automatic guns ammo machetes knives tom ma hawks, pictures of knives when he entered the white house and found in his car are now filed in texas court. the army veteran was able to make it to the east room of the white house before he was tackled september 19th. obamas were not home at the time. prosecutors say gonzalez should serve at least 21 months in prison. 11 days from now, jeb bush is going to make it official and become number 11 in the republican race for the white house. what a waits him coming up next. plus ready for liftoff. rick perry hopes the second time around will be more of a charm as he prepares to launch his presidential campaign moments from now. you re watching andrea mitchell reports only on msnbc. when it comes to good nutrition my daughter s an expert. hi dad. she s a dietitian. and back when i wasn t eating right she got me drinking boost. it s got a great taste, and it helps give me the nutrition i was missing. helping me stay more like me. 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[music] defiance is in our bones. new citracal pearls. delicious berries and cream. soft, chewable, calcium plus vitamin d. only from citracal. . i want to get the legal part of this out of the way. i m seriously considering the possibility of running for president. running for president in 2016. the focus is going to be about how if i run if i do go beyond the consideration via candidate, i ll have to show who i am not to make a point, there are motivations for every candidate. mine would be to win. he s finally ready. jeb bush is going to make it official 11 days from now. that s the same day by the way hillary clinton is touring iowa and new hampshire after her reboot relaunch. the former president of the american conservative union and supporter of jeb bush from florida joining me from miami. thank you al for being with us. great to be with you. there has been a lot of talk in republican circles and nationally in political circles that jeb has fallen back. that he was considered front runner leader of the back and not actually been clicking as much as he should, that he waited too long with all the talk about sticking to this timetable more because of the super pack and the way he set up the legal roll out. tell me what do you think he needs to do to get back into the front reigns? he s where we thought he would be. the word is patience. we knew it at the beginning of the journey. we knew it was the name recognition, bush family. he s a former of the great state of florida. based on what jeb says and getting to know him personally, i think all of that begins to change. the goal is to peak in november and december. plenty of time good patience. more time goes by and it s less about the bush name and more about jeb the governor. i feel pretty good about where we are. the real challenge is heading up to the first debate. we ve got five or six candidates pretty sure to make it. you ve got a field of eight candidates who have got to figure out which four make the cut. that will be the first defining moment in the campaign in august. i think so far jeb is exactly building a great team great campaign structure. resources are going to be enough to do the job he needs to do. no one is better placed than him. in most polls he s in first, second place. you know he s the only one that s had to bear the burden of what others in his family did before him. how can you not t be happy where he is? let s look at the fox news poll among adults he s basically tied with scott walker. ben carson as well all within the margin of error. he s trailing in iowa. rubio coming up strong as well. what about marco rubio and the competition between two favorite sons of florida and two one hisspanic hispanic, one hispanic routes through family. how do you make that decision? you clearly decided you stick with jeb. doesn t rubio hurt him as the next generation candidate? you and i talked about this before. rubio may be the best campaigner. the person to be a great president is jeb bush. that s how i made up my mind. i see this long journey going forward. it s going to be a contest between jeb bush the adult, guy ready to be governor and four great young talented three members of the senate and and one governor. really between scott walker and rubio, rand paul and ted cruz they re going to try to sort out who s the leader of that pact that waves the flag of tomorrow. so i think marco s biggest challenge is not jeb yet. he s got to figure out how to become the leader of the four strong candidates. i don t think marco s views need to be on jeb. it needs to be on other folks that have the same mantle of tomorrow he s trying to carry. as i said, i feel really good about where jeb is. rick perry announces today. what do you think his shot is? to be fair to rick he s a better candidate today than he was in 2012. politics is a tough place. i remember george romney great candidate, rumored to be the front runner. made a misstatement about vietnam and that ended that. that happened to rick perry last cycle in the debates he had a stumble. he looks good. he s energetic. he s got a challenge in that guys who run before usually in past cycles have had a good chance. this cycle i think most republicans are looking for a new person to be president who hasn t run before. his biggest challenge as well as those of rick santorum and others is overcoming that. he s doing his best. al thank you very much. good to see you again. likewise. in california some of the beaches are shut down along the coast. we ll tell you why. you re watching msnbc. audible safety beeping audible safety beeping audible safety beeping the nissan rogue with safety shield technologies. the only thing left to fear is you imagination. nissan. innovation that excites. you are looking at two airplane fuel gauges. can you spot the difference? 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(charge music) you wouldn t hire an organist without hearing them first. charge! so why would you invest without checking brokercheck? check your broker with brokercheck. some weed killers are overzealous. they even destroy your lawn. ortho weed b gon kills weeds. not lawns. our label says it. your grass proves it. get ortho weed b gon. the label tells the story. ortho home defense gives you year long control of all these household bugs - roaches, ants, and spiders. spectracide gives you year long control. of just roaches. their label says so. got more than roaches moving in? get home defense. the label tells the story. for the third time a stretch of southern california s coastline is scarred with tar balls. officials are working to clean up the mess on the los angeles county beaches including long beach where officials held a news conference this morning. there are people on our beach now. we re well ahead of the game and making progress. in the next 24 hours we are from prepared for additional tar on our beaches. tests will text if the tar balls came from last month s santa barbara spill. halle jackson covered the santa barbara mess. what do they know so far? not much. this is deja vu. this is the third time in the last week we have seen tar balls on the prettiest beaches. long beach and zuma earlier this week near malibu and from manhattan beat. they re testing these you might call them patties to see if there s a link to santa barbara leak a couple of weeks ago. this is a different consistency from what we typically see. you often get tar balls on the beaches. that s not unusual. they re small, hard usually the size of a dime or quarter. the concern here these are bigger than you typically see. they have a different consistency. it s more malable. these chunks and pieces are bigger. s that why you see environmentalists environmentalists and crews concerned. this is unusual. what effect have we seen on birds or animals? a little bit. the real concern is what happens down the road if this continues to wash up. this is something repeatedly from the north to south. environmentalists are concerned about the potential impact. they found out any time i don t see unusual amount of petroleum in the ocean, it is cause for concern. halle jackson, thank you so much. back here in washington new questions about the brutal murder of a prominent d.c. family and long time house keeper. investigators zeroing in on a man with close connections to the savopoulos family. reporter: police say the man they re now focussing on is jordan wallace, former assistant to mr. savopoulos. according to court documents obtained by nbc news he changed his account about the story regarding the $40,000 and ransom money. today the washington post says wallace exchanged texts and sent back and forth messages about the bag. the woman responding [ bleep ] i wonder how much it is? wallace texted $40,000. the woman texted back saying jesus. d.c. police are focussing on this man, 28-year-old jordan wallace. mr. savopoulos tantdassistant and personal driver, the man that delivered the ransom to the home. wall wallace admitted he lied including where he received the package, where he left it, and where he was told to get it. detectives obtained a search warrant for wallace s calls, texts, locations sunday may 10th three days before police believe the terrifying ordeal began. nbc news is unable to reach wallace. he hasn t been charge add in this case. daron wint is the only suspect charged in the murders. investigators are also focussing on records from three cell phones stolen that may lead to another killer. documents show police believe the killers forced their way into the mansion breaking a window pain, kicking it in. a shoe or boot print is visible on the outside. police are searching for the footwear that matches that print. does it belong to daron wint? there would be a lot of blood at the scene. if he was wearing shoes different than the one on the door that would indicate there s at least two perpetrators. the soavopoulos family has two teenage daughters who are left to grieve. reporter: they re looking inside the car daron wint was arrested in and box truck he was following. those items were escape withes that could have been used in the murders, did duct tape to bind hands and feet and digital video record tore restore and capture surveillance video from the home. it s unclear what if anything of that evidence has been found. thanks to peter alexander. with time running out to find more survivors from the capsized ferry ship cranes are used. 360 are missing. 14 are known to have survived including the captain and chief engineer both in police custody. they re facing questions about why the ship caught by a passing vessel security camera before the accident, didn t take shelter from the storm that apparently sank it. there were severe weather warnings. up next a heart felt tribute from a wife to her husband. you re watching andrea mitchell reports only on msnbc. fish oil. but when it comes to omega-3s, it s the epa and dha that really matter for heart health. not all omega-3 supplements are the same. introducing bayer pro ultra omega-3 from the heart health experts at bayer. with two times the concentration of epa and dha as the leading omega-3 supplement. plus, it s the only brand with progel technology proven to reduce fish burps. new bayer pro ultra omega-3. your pet. could you love him any more? 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(laughs happily) more tennis balls. sentry® fiproguard® plus - available at these retailers. you re watching the stage in addison addison, texas. we ll bring you this the moment it starts. meanwhile, on facebook powerful social media. a wife is sharing about the loss of her husband. she writes about grief, steps forward and how to deal with the death of a loved one. her words are deeply personal painful and somehow remarkably hopeful. it presents a choice. you can give into the void emptiness that fills your heart, lungs, constricts your ability to think or breathe. you can try to find meaning. i want to choose life and meaning. it s been 30 days since she buried her husband, 30 days she says she s lived 30 years. the mother of two talks about gaining profound understanding of what it is to be a mother through the depth of agony i feel when children scream and cry and from the connection my mother has to my pain. she has tried to fill the empty space in my bed holding me each night while i cry myself to sleep. she s holding back her own tears to make room for mine. we learned she was in the ambulance with dave that day. we now know dave died immediately, i didn t know that in the ambulance. i still hate every car that the cannot move to the side every person who cared more about arriveing at their destination a few minutes earlier than making room for us to past. the woman that encouraged others to lean in writes about learning to lean back a little to accept help. her words, open manifesto about grief and experience of death so unexpected. a friend told her to bang the word sorry. to tell myself over and over this is not my fault. so many have shared her essay. mark zuckerberg bringing your ability to find meaning and clarity is inspiring. colleagues and friends often don t know what to say to someone that experienced such a tragic loss. she shares those lessons too. don t insist everything will be okay. acknowledge it is not. a simple how are you? is better replaced with how are you today? above all, she shares gratitude, real gratitude for things i took for granted about life. as heartbroken as i am, i look at my children and rejoice they are alive. i appreciate every smile and hug. her next birthday will be difficult, she says but i m determined to celebrate in my heart more than ever before. the words she ends on from an upbeat u2 song there is no end to grief and no end to love. i love you dave. kate snow nbc news new york. and mourners are now beginning to abegin ing to assemble outside legislative hall in delaware to remember beau biden, son of vice president joe biden. he passed away last weekend after losing his long battle with brain cancer. he was only 46 years old. president obama will deliver beau biden eulogy saturday at a public mass. chris cillizza and susan page and casey hunt live in addison, texas. casey, first to you. you re there in the airplane hanger. what we re seeing now is rick perry s wife. why does rick perry think the second time around will work given the disastrous campaign last time? well andrea he feels as though he s done a lot of preparation, he s fixed the mistakes he made last time, that he now understands the demands and the campaign. he will say his back was not well in 2012 and that contributed. i think andrea he wants a shot at redemption in many ways. this is a little about what that s about. the country remembers him for that oops moment. i think he wants to be remembered for something other than that. this announcement is toe us canned on his military experience, which is something he talked about in 2012 but not the focus of his campaign. you have a number of veterans he has legitimate and authentic personal connections with. marcus latrell who was famous in the movie. he tried to deal with the fact he had lost friends. he feels the perry s took him in. if you think about it in a political contest, veterans do vote. there s not a will the of other veterans in this race. lindsey graham senator from south carolina is the only other one at this point. that a underscores all of this. you re going to see him try to make appeal to that community as he goes for this second is chance. susan page where does he fit into the now 18 and counting potential candidates? bigger field than last time around stronger than last time. he was instantly number one in the poll last time. that s not going to happen this time. he s battling to make sure he s not in the top ten category. he continues to have assets as we were just hearing. for one thing, he s got the experience running for president. that s a hard thing to do. that s what he learned last time around. he understands what the process is like. that s an asset for him. he s got a jobs record in the ex texas. there was analysis of job creation analysis of all running for president. rick perry had the strongest record compared with trends going on at. texas is controversial in the larger scheme of things. hillary clinton is there this afternoon speaking on voting rights. texas has the worst voteing rights according to advocates. she s making that counter point to rick perry s record as governor. chris? absolutely. as every candidate does in texas, raise money in texas. it s one of the big donor states in the country. when i look at perry candidacy, it feels he s running almost more for himself than anyone else. he does not feel he was able or gave his all last time around. he does not like the impression he left. he does not want that to be the lingering last impression people at national level have of him. he recognizes candidacy far more of a long shot than last time. he s not as well positioned. he wants to run a credible serious campaign and see what happens. if he runs a serious campaign and winds up never challenging the top tier he actually might be okay with that. what do you all think about jeb bush s now announced announcement june 15th? first he s going overseas then come back and do this kickoff monday june 15th when clinton is in new hampshire and iowa? i ll be brief. i just heard about this. i think it s somewhat ridiculous. we ve known bush was running actively for months. the idea he s going to coordinate and raise money for super pact and do everything a candidate does and somehow not be considered a candidate speaks to huge holes within our campaign finance laws. the federal commission is not actively working. i don t think there s a solution any time in the near future. jeb has stretched the limits of not a candidate or exploring candidacy to rational limit. we see rick perry getting on stage. this is a campaign rally, traditional campaign rally. airport hanger. it s a little retro. it s exactly what you expect in a texas campaign. they did do a video which we showed a clip of. he was introduced by his wife. now let s hear the former texas governor as he goes to the podium. longest serving governor in texas history. now, again, running for president. [ cheers and applause ] thank you. thank you very much. i love you honey. i was born five years after the end of a global war that killed more than 60 million people. i m the son of a veteran of that war who flew 35 missions over war-torn europe on a b-17. [ cheers and applause ] when dad returned home he married mom, they started a life together. they were tenant farmers. they were raised during a time of great hardship, and they had little expectation beyond living many peace, putting a roof over our heads and food on our table. home was a place called paintcreek. too small to be called a town. it was the center of my universe. for years, we had an outhouse. mom bathed us on the back porch in a number two wash tub. she also hand sewed my clothes million i went off to college. i attended paintcreek rural school grades one through 12. played six man football. was a member of the boy scout troop 48 became an eagle scout [ cheers and applause ] i went off to texas a&m where i was a member of corps of cadets got degree in animal science. i was proud to wear the uniform of our country as an air force officer and aircraft commander. [ cheers and applause ] after serving, i returned home. i returned home to those rolling plains and big old sky of west texas and returned to farming. there is no person on earth more optimistic than a dry land cotton farmer. we always know that a good rain is just around the corner no matter how long you ve been waiting. the values learned on my family s cotton farm are timeless. the dignity of work the integrity of your word responsibility to community, the unbreakable bonds of family ask and duty to country. these are enduring values not the product of some idealic past but a touch stone of our life in smallest towns and largest cities, in booming suburbs. i ve seen american life. i ve seen it from the red dirt of a west texas cotton field, from a campus in college station, texas, from the elevated view of a c-130 cockpit and from the governor s office of the texas capital. i a had the great privilege to serve a rural community in the texas legislator, and i led the world s 12th largest economy. [ cheers and applause ] i know that america has experienced great change. what it means to be an american has never changed. we are the only nation in the world founded on the power of an idea that all are created equal that they are endowed by their creator with certain rights that among these are life and liberty and pursuit of happiness. our rights come from god not from government. our people are not the subjects of government but instead government is subject to people. it has always been the case. there s been a social compact between one generation of americans and the next. to pass along an inheritance of a stronger country full of greater promise and possibility. that social compact has been protected at great sacrifice. it was never more clear to me than when iing took my father to the american cemetery that overlooks the bluffs at omaha beach. on that peaceful, wind-swept setting, there lies 9,000 graves including 45 pairs of brothers 33 of whom are buried side by side. a father and a son, two sons of a president. they all traded their future for ours in a final act of loving sacrifice. that american cemetery is no accident. each headstone faces west. west over the atlantic toward as the nation they defended the nation they loved, the nation they would never come home to. it struck me as i stood in the midst of those heroes that they look upon us in silent judgment. that we must ask ourselves, are we worthy of their sacrifice? [ cheers and applause ] [ cheers and applause ] the truth is, we re at the end of an era of failed leadership. we have been led by a divider who sliced and diced the electric pitting american against american for political purposes six years into this so-called recovery. i might add our economy is barely growing. this winter it actually got smaller. our economic slowdown is not inevitable. it happens to be the direct result of bad economic policy. [ cheers and applause ] the president s tax and regulatory policies have slammed the door shut of opportunity for the average american who s trying to climb the economic ladder resigning the middle class to stagnant wages to personal debt to deferred dreams. weakness at home has led to weakness abroad. the world has descended into a chaos of this president s own making. while his white house loyalists construct an alternative universe where isis is contained, that ramadi is merely a setback, where the nature of enemy can t be acknowledged for fear of causing offense, where the world s largest stake sponsor of terrorism can be trusted to live up to nuclear agreement. no decision no decision has done more harm than the president s withdraw of american troops from iraq. let no one be mistaken. leaders of both parties have made grave mistakes in iraq, but in january 2009 when barack obama became commander in chief, iraq had been largely pacified. america had won the war, but our president failed to secure the peace. [ cheers and applause ] how callus it seems now as cities once secured with american blooded are now being taken by america s enemies all because of a campaign slogan. i saw during vietnam, a war where politicians didn t keep faith with the sacrifices and courage of america s fighting men and women, men were ordered into combat without full support of civilian commanders. to see it happen again, 40 years later, because of political gainsman ship and dishonesty is a national disgrace. my friends, we are a resilient escape country. you think about who we are. we ve been through a civil war. we ve been through two world wars. we ve been through a great depression. we made it through jimmy carter. we will make it through the obama years. we will do this. [ cheers and applause ] the fundamental nature of this country is our never people never stay knocked down. we get back up. we dust ourselves off. we move forward. we will do it again. i want to share truth with fellow americans. start with this truth. we don t settle for a world that shrinks responsibilities. we don t have to apologize for american exceptionalism or western values. we don t have to accept slow growth that leaves behind the middle class that leaves millions of americans out of work. we don t have to settle for crumbling bureaucracies that target taxpayers and harm our veteran. we don t have to resign to debt, decay and slow growth. we have the power to make things new again, to project america s strength again and get our economy going again. that is exactly why today i m running for presidency for united states of america. [ cheers and applause ] thank you. it s time. it s time to create real jobs, raise wages, to create opportunity for all. to give every citizen a stake in this country. to restore hope real hope. real hope to forgotten americans. you know there are millions of middle class family who is have given up hope of getting ahead. millions of workers out there who have given up hope of finding a job. yeah, it s time for a reset. time to reset the relationship between government and citizen. [ cheers and applause ] think of arrogance of washington d.c. representing itself as some beacon of wisdom with policies smothering this vast land with no regard to what makes each state unique. that s just wrong. we need to return power to the states and freedom to the individual. [ cheers and applause ] today our citizens and entrepreneurs are burdened by overregulation and unspeakable debt. debt is not just a physical nightmare. it s a moral failure. i want to speak to the millennial just a moment. this massive debt passed on from our generation to yours. this is breaking of a social compact. you deserve better. i m going to offer a responsible plan to fix the entitlement system and stop this from your generation. [ cheers and applause ] those americans dround ss drowning in personal debt can t live up to cost of living. i came here today to say i hear you. i know you face rising health care costs, rising child care

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Anderson Cooper 360

And made us understand then yes, we might be able to still have freedom and democracy, but only if we fight for it and only if we are prepared to die for that kind of ideal, it s incredibly profound and it s never that cliche has never meant more than it did this d-day we re not for their sacrifices and the sacrifices and so many, none of us would live the lives that we are living today. christian amanpour. thank you so much thank you. addison were on the year since world war ii, many us president is found or d days heroes, remember the crucial invasions as tom format takes a look at how past presidents have commemorated this day the fighting scarred the beach, the graves mark the land. and ever since american the presidents have remembered d-day ronald reagan gave what many consider the greatest salute to the young troops already old at the 40th anniversary in 1984 these are the men who took the cliffs

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Transcripts for CNN Anderson Cooper 360 20240604 00:59:00

it s neil said jack happy birthday anderson cooper. i remember you being friends with my son mark, yes. i dalton coming over to the house when you adjust 16-years-old? so when you re honore and your birthday, here s a song for you not happy birthday. addison nights waited for because you re not a baby anymore turned, into the hands of this guy we ve ever seen happy birthday at the sun if we smile sweet surprise it says get you grown up before. very turned into a handsome guy ever see

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