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the apple app store, android and good morning. welcome to cnn this morning. >> and i'm, as vole rosamira's and for amara walker, here's what we're working on for you this morning. commencement controversy in just hours, president biden is set to give a speech at morehouse college and a move that is dividing the campus. we are at morehouse college with the latest plus a look at the president's plan to win back black voters and tributes for cnn political commentator and gop presidential campaign veteran alice stewart, who died suddenly yesterday. a look at our life and work ahead plus more controversy surrounding the rest of the world's top
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golfer and kentucky. and you investigation underway after the officer's body-worn camera, apparently was not recording and new coronavirus virus are on the rise as we head into a busy holiday travel week, we talked to a doctor about the emerging new threat from the so-called flirt variance president joe biden will deliver a commencement address. the morehouse college is class of 2024. this morning, the president arrived in atlanta yesterday, stopped at a local restaurant to speak was in voters he's struck. let's call it a confident tone, calling trump a loser. >> and he's trying to allay and he fears about his own poll numbers here, about how we're behind in the polls so far the polls had been right once now, what look, we're all were either tie are slightly ahead, are slightly behind, but when i look at is actual election results election results are in a primaries. >> we put the primaries well, mr. trump has he doesn't have
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an opponent, but he lost some hundred and 20,000 votes in pennsylvania, didn't vote for him i voted for a woman is no longer in the race hey is pulling back no punches his weekend in atlanta is all part of an effort to drum up support among black voters. a key demographic and is 2021, however, his appearance at morehouse is expected to draw some resistance. college students across the country. they are protesting his continued support of israel's military campaign. gaza and happen for weeks. cnn's nick valencia joins us live from the morehouse campus. >> nick. >> what's the mood on campus right now yeah hi, good morning, isabella in victor, the mood is one of excitement here and it's already packed out. >> the commencement doesn't start for another three hours, but you could see this long line of cars that is queued up here since early this morning. this is probably one of the most anticipated commencement speeches i've ever reported on. i can't remember the last time we talked about a graduation ceremony this month here we are
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president biden getting the invitation from morehouse college back in september, formerly accepting the invitation in april, amid a an eruption of pro-palestinian protests across the country. those protesters calling for a ceasefire in gaza, something that the president has not supported. so there's some anxiety a little bit of anxiety about what but potentially could happen during his speech over the weekend, we saw student activists take to social media to encourage graduates to turn their back on president biden during his commencement speech, they say, as the president has turned his back on palestinians so far though, no signs of demonstrators, just really happy families and graduates smiling. this is a huge day for them here. and one that is already getting underway here, despite it being hours hours away. >> isabel victor. >> all right. nick, we've got to remember that the president is not the star today. it's those 470 more house men who are graduating. we of course, waiting for the speeds but this is a very big day for them. we'll check back with you,
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nick valencia there on the morehouse college amen amen. thank you very much joining us now. washington correspondent for the atlanta journal constitution t of mitchell tia, good morning to you. so i'll reporting is that the white house has consulted with several morehouse alumni who are close to the president in the party. eddie glaude, junior, chair of the princeton air african american studies department. j. johnson, former homeland security secretary, birmingham may aranda would fin montgomery mayor steven reid among others, and cedric richmond helped out as well. what does the white house believed that they must accomplish today? >> well, in also the biden administration's sent emissaries to morehouse to speak with students since in liters on campus currently, yeah. i think for the biden administration for president, biden, number one, i think he wants to have a speech that resonates, one that is seen as successful, one where he's seen
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as charismatic. one where he's seen as intune to what the needs of those graduates are as far as uplifting them and not just delivering a run of the mill campaign speech to your point. this is about the graduates and i i think one of the things that biden has heard, some of the pushback is about we want someone who's not coming in just to give us a campaign speech into grandstand. we want someone who's going to help us celebrate our commencement in addition to i do think they want him to address the conflict between israel and hamas in america's role in it. this will be an opportunity for biden to explain himself and try to earn points for people who may be skeptical of the us approach currently, i've spoken with over the last couple of days, several morehouse alumni who say they expect protests mean even some who were there on campus
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speaking with those students ahead of the president's visit. they don't expect that he'll be shouted down or heckled during a speech. but if there is a let's say, a show of disapproval where some of them turned the chairs to turn that back is that bruise going to last more than a day or two if we think back, there have been protests, people shouting down the president. we don't remember a lot of the specifics there, but it's this one different? if even it's a silent protest today? >> so i think a silent protest is the best that president biden can ask for it. because what they don't want is the spectacle of people shouting him down, not allowing him to get through his remarks they don't want the spectacle of people being arrested. they don't want the spectacle of perhaps the ceremony being shut down early because of
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disruptions. so people walking out or turning their back, i think to them, it's like the best they can ask for a happy medium so to speak. and i think that would allow biden to at least get his words out for those who are willing to listen. and there will be a lot of media coverage as we know of his remarks so as long as he's able to give them i think biden would be satisfied with that, but yes, there will be coverage. i think it also depends on how widespread the protests are. it's a difference between a few dozen people standing up and turning their back between a few hundred graduates standing up and turning their back as well. >> the political motivation for accepting the invitation for more houses clear. the president has worked to do among young voters. he has worked to do among black voters. and of course, georgia is a swing state, so you put all those together on the campus today. let's take a look
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at the latest new york times sienna college poll. this is among black voters in battleground states in a head-to-head between the president and former president. if we don't have it up, i can tell you what the result is. is this shows that former president trump has 23% of support among black voters head-to-head in battleground states from your reporting, is that more of rejection of the president or an endorsement of the former president i think it's more of a rejection of the current president. >> and concern about the humanitarian crisis in gaza. i think these are voters that are still get double for biden's, so to speak especially as we know that president trump has not been popular among young voters and among voters of color, particularly black voters so i do think these voters are winnable for
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president biden but the conflict in the middle east, the conflict between israel and hamas is a tough spot for him because at the end of the day, he can call for a ceasefire if he wants, but he can't make a ceasefire happen. that's up to prime minister netanyahu and the leaders of hamas, so to speak. so it's a tough position for him and it's one that the other to add has taken advantage of. i do think the polls haven't always been accurate in putting the finger on the pulse were black voters are recently. so we've got to take it with a grain of salt. you saw that recently, for example, with the maryland senate race in that democratic crime i married i don't know if at the end of the day president trump can really get 25%. >> i want out of every four black. >> i don't know that any even
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republican strategist i've spoken with about that poll believes it's going to end up that way, but it's still is a remarkable number considering early voting starts in some states at the end of september. >> so we're not so far away from voting, but now i don't know that many people believe he's gonna get a quarter of the black vote last one for you here. let's talk about president trump. he received the nra endorsement in dallas last night and he said something that is getting some attention. i want to ask you about it. here's what he said. >> fdr 16 years, almost 16 years. he was four term. >> i don't know. are we going to be considered three term or two terms? you tell me, ronnie, what do you so he's talking, about three terms now in the past, he said he's not going to challenge constitutional term limits. is he just playing with the audience here or after january 6? can anyone afford to just dismiss it as a joke? >> yeah. that was gonna be my point. i don't think we can afford to dismiss what the
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former president says because it's one thing to say, oh, he's just talking, it's you know, these are just worse. these are just pandering to an audience but he could be the president. we were just talking about polls that shows president biden not doing so well we know that based on the polling, based on what we're hearing, there is a chance trump can return to the white house and therefore, everything he says about how he would conduct himself as president needs to be taken seriously. and i think he does need to clarify now, if he believes that the constitution would allow him to run for a third term that's fine for him to believe that, but i think the american people need to know that in need to understand that they can take that into consideration as they go to the pole or here may believe that, but the constitution doesn't, doesn't show that doesn't prove that to be true to mitchell lana journal
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constitution, joining us from washington pc this morning. thanks so much turning now to the middle east where israeli war cabinet member benny gantz is setting out an ultimatum. >> he's demanding that prime minister benjamin netanyahu and the cabinet lay out a plan for the war against hamas kant says of netanyahu's war cabinet does not meet the demands by june 8. he will withdraw from a government. >> netanyahu rejected the threats and gantz conditions would hurt israel. meanwhile, us national security adviser jake sullivan is in israel today to meet with netanyahu and other senior israeli officials that discuss ongoing hostage negotiations and address. of course, the humanitarian crisis in gaza this comes after sullivan is meeting with saudi crown prince mohammed bin salmon in saudi arabia cnn's camila to chalice joins us now from washington. so tell us about the meetings today. >> well, the primary focus of sullivan is meeting with officials and israel was to discuss the israel and hamas conflict. and we are told by white house officials that some
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of the subjects that they discussed was the humanitarian aid crisis in gaza. they also discuss the possible release of hostages and how those negotiations have stalled called and how they want to keep it ongoing. and we're also hearing that sullivan is trying to make a more concerted argument when he's meeting with officials and israel to talk about rafah and to really convince and make a strong argument to the officials in israel that they need to have a more concise and targeted approach when it comes to their military operations in rafah and how they want to go after he after hamas because they say that if they go in with not a more concise and more precise approach then it could lead to more innocent civilian lives being lost. now, victor, as you mentioned, sullivan is also just earlier today, met with officials and saudi arabia and we're being told that in that meeting they discuss them points of peace. they also discuss the importance of a two-state solution and how they want to work towards that is about victor, back to you.
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>> let me another challenge. thank you. >> we are mourning the sudden loss of a treasured member of the cnn family this morning. >> straight ahead, we look back on the life and legacy of late conservative commentator alice stewart, plus a bombshell scene investigation. what hundreds of hours of video from multiple sources reveal about the aggressive offenders and violent pro-palestinian protests on us ucla's campus. we'll get into that major pain in the plains was expected today, meteorologists at least a rava, is tracking that severe weather threat for 30 million people. >> that's up ahead on cnn this morning. >> more than $500 million in art stolen me, saw what turned out to be the biggest archivist in history. you can't help but wonder if this why some sort of fee inside job, how would really happen with jesse l. martin tonight at nine ansi-c? not the bell. an assault way six foot long except we add on a all new foot-long zach kick.
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fraser, franck, franck, bread. how are you? fred fuel up to seven brain health indicators, including your memory, joined the neretva brain health challenge. this is a secret. >> secrets and spies premier sunday, june 2, attempt bomb cnn welcome back. we have some sad news to share this morning. >> cnn political commentator and republican strategist, alice stewart died saturday. she was 58. >> alice was a longtime fixture on cnn and on this show, she was on countless political panels cnn's dana bash takes a look at her life and her legacy alice stewart was a treasured member of the cnn family since 2016, because it president mixture on cnn's political panels for the better part of a decade using her even tone to bring sharp insights and analysis to viewers regularly wow, regard to the drawing on years of her experience working
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on high-profile republican campaigns. and maria says we earned the respect of her peers as a conservative strategist in called on time and time again to support candidates and their pauses. >> and the one she believed in, she brought a boundless well of energy to what's often grueling work in the trenches of national politics alice's career started in journalism, working in local news in her home state of georgia. and as a news anchor and little rock, arkansas, alice stewart and press secretary that's. where she decided to move into politics becoming a spokesperson for the states, then governor mike cauce be when he ran for president in 2008, she joined his campaign as press secretary, spending untold days and weeks trudging through the iowa winter, helping deliver how cubbies insurgent campaign, a victory jury and the 2008 iowa caucuses years later after joining two more presidential campaigns and the 2012 cycle, michelle
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bachman than rick santorum. she returned to hug one side for the 2016 run for the white house unlike donald chapter one last campaign or ted cruz in 2016 stewart came to cnn. >> even evangelicals that i talked as a conservative commentator, stuart joined her fair share of contentious debates on our air his past sins and say, as long as that's in the past, let it stay in the past. it's no secret that we live in a time of deep political division alice was never divisive. >> she was a fierce debater, but she prized civil discourse and walk the walk, the potential downfall stood her ground and express your point of view. >> what are wisdom never angry about it just friday night hours before her unexpected passing, she was on the situation room with one wolf blitzer. alice was always smiling her megawatts smile on camera and off. she was so kind and thoughtful, cutting flowers from her garden to bring two
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colleagues in the makeup room just to make their de of bit nicer that was alice alice stewart will be deeply missed and never forgotten. nay, her memory be a blessing dana bash cnn, washington back with us now is two michel washington correspondent for the atlanta journal constitution. and you recently had alice on your podcasts people often when someone passes, they say the nice things. all of these things are just emblematic of coup. she was just kind thought four sharp passionate tell us about your experience with them yeah. >> we we just had are the politically georgia podcast, not only because we were looking for more guests who can represent the republican party and conservative way of thinking. but in a way that
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communicates to a general audience, in a way at is still still honors democracy in honors rule of law. and alice embodied that but she also had that georgia connection born and raised in metro atlanta it being a graduate of the university of georgia and someone who as dana noted in that package, started her career in georgia. so we were so happy to have her on as a guest. and of course, she was just as amazing and insightful and decent and personable as everyone knows her to be in me and my co-host said we can't wait to have her back because she has so much knowledge and it really does come as a shock in a surprise that she's no longer with us. it is really sad news. >> yeah. and as dana said, she will be deeply missed. tim
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the plan that's right for you at trust and we'll dot com. >> i'm katie go in washington and this is cnn close captioning brought to you by feel away, optimum enhanced calming for cats. have your cats sprays outside the litter box, fights with other cats were scratches the furniture, they could be telling you they're stressed to help them feel more calm, try feel away. >> optimum rudy giuliani has been ordered to appear before an arizona judge for his part in the alleged scheme to overturn during the 2020 presidential election former trump operative was served with the indictment at his 80th birthday party friday night. >> that was just hours after giuliani was taunting authorities on social media
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after they had struggled for weeks to find him a spokesperson says, giuliani was unfazed by the timing and is looking forward to vindication in court a wildfires now threatening a national forest southwest. >> this is taunting national force in chandler, arizona, 5,000 acres of already burned up for first being reported saturday morning at as according to the national forest service officials, you you would think they didn't have to ask this, but they have to they are asking people not to fly drones in the area will air tankers like this one are being used new, details about those violent university university protests. a cnn investigation has uncovered that many of the ucla campus counter protesters were from outside groups. they were not students. >> cnn investigative correspondent can law is there in los angeles speaking with people involved in the conflict? >> this is the worst violence of any of the ongoing college
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protests ucla worth counter protesters used sticks and boards against a pro-palestine encampment it was more than three hours of unrestrained violence the night of april 30th to injuries and bloody seeds its campus security enforcement allowed it to continue. they were there spraying. there are they're pulling barriers and they were we're there to very clearly do some serious harm to the students who were on campus. >> when you look at the counter protesters how many of them were ucla students? >> i would say basically none of them. >> who are the most aggressive offenders, a cnn investigation of hundreds of videos from multiple sources versus shows many of them are outsiders, not ucla students. among the people who showed up that night, far-right. agitators with no apparent connection to the middle east war. others driven
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by pro, israel beliefs among them, this man he strikes a pro-palestine protest or with a long white pole and as part of a mob that pummels the man as he falls to the ground he's seen in multiple videos wearing this white mask striking the barriers, throwing objects into the encampment without his mask, we see who he is 18 year-old, e-dawn one of beverly hills, a senior at a local high school, come inside to the kitchen. >> how do i get inspired? >> i spoke with his mother. >> hi, there. are you sure rock high? hi. i'm let me introduce us. >> she did not want to be on camera. okay. quickly identified her son from this picture at ucla that night. she described in detail how her son found the mask and pull on the ground and said he was defending himself in this fight. on her facebook page,
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aidan owns mother posted and circled a screen, grab of her son from a local tv station. she wrote in hebrew. >> edan went to bully the palestinian students in the tents at ucla he, dan's mother and father proudly support israel and defended their son's actions at ucla, saying he is heading to israel to join the item yes after our interview, she texted to say e-dawn denies being at ucla older men were also at the front of the violence tom bibiyan recorded pulling like rack plywood kicking protesters, throwing cones at the students in the encampment water bottles at protesters, and yelling, explained we went to ask bibiyan why he'd gone to the campus that night. >> hi, mr. mr. bibiyan? yeah. >> that off you don't have permission to record me. >> bibiyan was wearing the same jacket he had on in the video from ucla he's a los angeles
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resident with age 42, seen at a 2022 pro-trump protests outside the law los angeles fbi office he did not want to explain why he's on video doing this. >> you're being a little rude and i'm going to call the police if you'd only sure okay. >> we identified not just tom bibiyan, but other order men who had no apparent affiliation with ucla. i mean, you've seen them at how many other events? >> lots of different events, school board meetings, city council meetings. >> angie gabon is a los angeles area public school mom, who's been tracking right-wing protesters in our area. the group who she he'd seen protesting gay rights in public schools were drawn to ucla that night, their evolution an avenue tonight man down, man down, building we're clearly at ucla that night. there's no evidence these men participated in the violence. >> your governs the jews, song bad cover your ears. >> the man who was live streaming, narc palyan appears
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to be a persistent agitator who posts anti-jewish tropes on his social media accounts ucla he stood with the pro israel crowd. >> i am qian law from cnn. pollyanna claim to us that he has a child at ucla, though a student didn't accompany him that night. >> and that he had good intentions i was definitely keeping the peace. at least trying to he weren't there to make it worse? no, of course, i was in there to make it worse hate to say it, but i was expecting us to start working on an obituary the next day because i thought something that serious would happen to this students in the encampment you feel like this one, based on the way they were cheering when the police arrived tuesday night i think they might feel that they one we reached out
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numerous times. >> the ucla police department with specific questions. we did not get a response about the response that evening or the follow-up investigation. we also so reached out to chp and lapd and both of those agencies referred back to the ucla police department saying it is the lead agency killing law, cnn, los angeles a great explanation on investigation into what happened that day at ucla qian law. thank you. >> 30 million people are at risk for severe weather today in the us, meteorologists, lisa rafah, it's timing out those threads. one cnn this morning is baxter, correct? >> the trump hush money trial gavel to gavel coverage, the only cnn can bring it to you. legal insight, expert analysis real-time updates live from the courtroom follow the facts, follow the testimony, follows
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unselect battery lawnmower sets real still he'll find yours. i hanako montgomery in tokyo, and this is cnn knew this morning, 30 million people acro the central us and southeast are at risk for severe weather with damaging wind gusts, hail, and isolated tornadoes possible cnn meteorologist, at least iraq alpha is with us now. all right, so where's the highest risk were really got bull's eyes on the central plains today, most of kansas is really on a pretty high riskier for severe weather. it is moderate. we've got that level four out of five there. you see that red bull's i includes places like wichita and dodge city. that's where we're looking intense winds upwards of 100 miles per hour are possible, very large hail and a few tornadoes. the
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risk does spread up into the dakotas, as well as we go into the afternoon. now, the damaging wind thread is going to be the biggest threat by far, we're looking at this line of storms that can bend that conform and that could pump these wins 200 miles per hour get that hail can be up to the size of tennis balls possible. right now, we're not finding too much yet, but once that day time heat and humidity kicks, that's going to really fire up these storms fueled, told under storms and ones that can really pack a punch with those damaging winds. so something that we'll have to watch very closely today as some of these wins could be pretty destructive. >> all right, at least rafah. thank you. >> this morning, there's new information on the arrest of top rank golfer scottie scheffler, the mayor of louisville, says that there is no body camera footage of the arrest, which happened friday as scheffler was and route to the pga championship, the world number one golfer will play in the final day of the tournament today ahead of a possible court appearance tuesday, cnn's gloria pazmino has more from
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louisville well, victor, isabel, we had a significant development on saturday when we heard from the mayor of louisville who told us that there was no body cam video showing the beginning of the interaction between scheffler and the arresting officer. >> now there's plenty of video from this incident. in fact, we've seen the footage shortly after scheffler is put into handcuffs and taken away. that was captured by an espn reported that was on the sea in and we do know that there's other footage, both from a dashcam video that's been obtained as well as other surveillance cameras in the area. but the mayor was very clear. what does he said that there is nothing yet that shows the beginning of the interaction? now that's critical because both the lawyer and scheffler have said one thing, and the police department have said another. the police department said in its incident report that scheffler did not listen to the
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orders of the police officer and that as he continued to move through traffic towards the entrance to the ofcourse? that's when he dragged the police officer who was injured as a result, that police officer was taken to the hospital to be treated, and that is the result of that felony charge, that scheffler is now facing arguably the most serious of the charges listen to the mayor a detailing just how much video they have and when he thinks it'll be released the officer did not have a bodycam footage turned on during the incident we will release footage that we have well, we do not have any to my knowledge, we have not yet had discovered any video of the initial contact between mr. gillis and mr. officer gillis and mr. scheffler. >> there is some footage from across the street of a fixed camera. when mr. scheffler was being arrested and we will police that footage in the
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coming days now, scheffler has been surprisingly not affected in terms of his game in his performance at the championship. >> and we did hear from his attorney, who has continued to say that this was all a misunderstanding that scheffler did follow the instructions from the police officers and that he is a cooperating with the investigation. >> he was directed by traffic control officer to go around. i stopped bus and to proceed into the grounds of baja. never at any time that he disregarded any officers directions. he followed another traffic control officers directions as to how to proceed. >> now, one thing we have been asking questions about is whether or not that police officers should have had a bodycam are rolling on his his person what the department policy is regarding bodycam footage and whether or not any
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rules were broken here. should that camera have been rolling so that it could have captured this interaction? we are asking more questions about that in the meantime scheffler is scheduled to be arraigned on tuesday. >> victor isabel more your pazmino. thanks so much for the report coming up. what a new study of the drug wegovy reveals about weight-loss side effects and heart-healthy today has president biden courts black voters and the trump trial reaches a pivotal moment. trump vp hopefuls dr. ben carson senator john fetterman join jake plus congresswoman jasmine crockett on house fireworks state of the union live this morning. good make your dream car a reality
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that's the certainty of four imprint.com imprint four certain. >> i'm kevin lip ttac at the white house. and this is cnn closed captioning brought to you by guilt visit guilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands has the designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices you every day, hurry. >> there'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% or so of guilt.com today welcome back. >> well, right now according to the cdc covid cases are we're at an all-time low in the us, but justice we're gearing up for the summer, new variants, they are emerging. dr. jane morgan cardiologists and the executive director for health
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and community education at piedmont health care in atlanta. she joins us now. thank you so much for being here. we always love picking your brain what there's all this buzz about flirt variants how concerned should we be? we've got these new variants that are out there and they are taking over about 32.5% of the cases that we have. so one of them is 25%, the other in this kp family is 7.5%, they seem to have the same symptoms, but they are overtaking the previous variant, jn.1. so probably have a little bit better ability to evade immunity and to be a little bit stronger, a little bit more contagious. >> so we're keeping an eye on it and they're part of the omicron family. >> this is still the all macron families glowing, believa-bull. write this and we're still in omicron and how much protection should we expect to get if we're up to date all right. >> vaccination. and so that's what we're trying to figure out. and that committee, the
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advisory committee, will meet in june to try to determine what needs to be covered for the fall vaccines, but also if you have had your vaccine within the last three or four months or recently been infected. kind of the same types of recommendation. you are probably in really good shape and as a society, we've got pretty good immunity. we're not sort of naive to this virus any longer our bodies, but we'll see what happens because as our immunity buildup, it, we tend to push the virus more into the fall and winter months as we've seen, the summer surges now, fall and winter where it can really lee take hold and join his brothers and sisters that other types of viruses that we see flourished in the winter. >> some improvements should be done in terms of vaccination rate. did i see that right in the 20% a lot of improvement can be done. >> were pretty low, right? we're below 25%, so we have a long way to go. so tons of it
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improvement, but hopefully there'll be better adoption as we move forward, because these, these viruses continued to evolve and the omicron family, large and prolific. and we really don't know at what point with that it might shift let me shift gears now into bird flu. a lot of people have been talking about this. they're worried about this. what's the deal? what has happened with cows, right? that wasn't on anyone's radar. we knew about chickens, we knew about pigs but now we're seeing it in counts, right? why has that concerned public health experts? is concerning? because it's another level of evolution generally this is in birds and birds pass it amongst one another. >> now we're seeing it in cows. the cows are contracting it from the birds. but what we're seeing in all of these herds is that the cows are passing it from one to another. so it's gone to the next evolutionary stage. and after that, that is humans. and we already see one case were cows have passed to humans texas in
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texas and we don't want to see human to human transmission was interesting about cattle, is that the receptors for this bird flu the cows have both the bird receptors and the human receptors. so they are very interesting reservoir that are bridging birds to humans. so we're keeping a really close eye on it. we really don't want it to get into humans and then have the ability for human, right? >> if they get human flu and berg to mix it together, that's an issue well, it would be remiss of me not to ask a cardiologist about this wegovy news as long-term study, put out by novo nordisk about semaglutide would go v i'm showing some pretty stunning health benefits. what were the key takeaways here? >> he takeaways is we're looking at patients with heart disease and obesity, but with our diabetes. remember these glp-1s have been developed for diabetes. so all the initial studies were in obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. so now
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we see it without diabetes and we still see these heart benefits. and that study was done specifically with wegovy previously there earlier studies were done with ozempic's, so there seems to be cardiac benefit even in patients are not losing weight. >> still, cardiac benefits from these drugs remains to be seen. >> i remember what gobi is given a larger dose than ozempic. so it could be a dose effect. these are really still well the same molecules and so much to talk about there, but not out of time thank you so much. >> we'll be right back can the riva support your brain health? very janet, hey, eddie. now,
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better treatments for all timers. >> cnn's chief medical correspondent, dr. sanjay gupta investigates in the documentary, the last alzheimer's patient for me, here's tonight. here's a look in the five years of making this documentary, the 20-year-old newlyweds i've met with patients all around the country who were diagnosed or at high risk for this devastating disease, do remember this time in your life, my it made me really start to think about my own brain i have a family history of alzheimer's as well sometimes i feel a little rusty but sometimes i worry that i make mistakes that maybe my friends family are too polite to tell me about your body composition. so that's why i decided to do something quite personal. >> your muscle mass, your body fat, quite revealing. >> that wasn't quite right. >> i went through a battery of tests to assess my own risk. >> it's like we get a cholesterol test every year and check your blood pressure th

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