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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  May 2, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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right now, the search is on for a killer after a string of stabbings at the campus of uc davis, and what is being done to
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secure the safety of students and staff and who is behind the attacks. and what happens if the united states defaults on the debt? president biden and kevin mccarthy are set to meet. and now, since 2007, the writers have gone on strike, and how it could affect your favorite shows. we will monitoring all of these stories and more coming in to cnn news central. all right. we have news just into cnn. the biden administration, we have just learned is making plans to send an additional 1,500 active duty troops to the u.s./mexico border in anticipation of the influx of migrants from the title 42 health authority expiring next week. title 42 allowed the u.s. to
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deport people immediately on covid grounds. this is all coming from sources familiar with the planning to cnn. i want to go to priscilla alvarez to get the latest details on this. and priscilla, what have you learned? >> well, john, this is a common occurrence when we anticipate a surge at the u.s./mexico border. we are learning that the defense department plans to send additional active duty reserves in support roles. there are currently around 2,500 national guard troops already along the u.s./mexico border. the u.s. officials said that at the request of the department of security, dod is going to require an additional increase of 2,500 personnel for cpb for monitoring and data entry and warehouse support, and we should note that it is not in the law enforcement capacity, but as you
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said, john, it is part of the administrations's plans as they anticipate the lifting of title 42. with that, the influx of migrants at the u.s./mexico border prompting them to take additional measures in the coming days for those numbers, and which by the way, we have seen an increase of which a source said they are seeing 7,000 daily encounters which is a number that is going to be climbing in the coming days according to their projections. >> rosa flores was among those people who had just come over. thank you for staying on top of this, and keep us posted. kate? >> the uc davis campus has been on alert since there have been two victims stabbed and have died and now a third stabbing. the most recent attack was just last night, and the police say that the woman who was stabbed is in critical condition.
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the third stabbing was thursday, and the victim was a 50-year-old man who was found a half mile from campus. saturday at another park, a uc davis student was stabbed to death. nick watt is back with us on this once again. nick, do police have any information about a possible suspect? what are you learning? >> well, the headline, the frightening headline is that the police do not have a suspect in custody at this point. it is unclear whether they are looking for one person or multiple people. they have not officially tied the three incidents together, although they are saying that there are obvious, obvious similarities. the brutality and the weapon, the knife. now, there was a shelter-in-place order issued overnight while the police searched around the area of the most recent attack, and the woman stabbed through her tent over midnight, and the police
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say they have finished the search, and have not found a suspect, but described as a man wearing sweatpants and a brown backpack with curly hair. and now this little town would not see two murders in a year, and now two in a week. the first victim is known for spreading the words of love, compassion and peace for anyone who would listen. and the second victim is a computer science victim who was seen riding his bicycle home after an awards ceremony. take a listen to what his father had to say. >> he was just six weeks away from graduating. this was his last quarter. he was so proud, and so happy and so thankful. he said, "thanks, mom and dad,
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you paid all of my tuition. you did it." >> reporter: and now the local fbi is helping the local law enforcement, and any video that might have caught a suspect leaving the scene. and the three victims were very different and no pattern there. >> than you. >> and now we are joined by todd henry of the california police department, and deputy, thank you for being with us. you heard the report from nick watt there, and do you have any leads this morning? >> yeah, thank you for having me here today, john. at this point, we do not. obviously, we have brought in a almost every law enforcement agency in our country and
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surrounding counties have brought in hel, and the fbi and we are following a multitude of leads, but so far, nobody has been identified. >> how confident are you that it was carried out by one person? >> it is still too early to be able to connect the crimes. it is obvious that the brutality of the crime, it is hard to tell at this stage. >> any sign that they were carried out with the same incident? >> all three of the incidents were stabbing attacks. at this stage, it is hard to tell whether it is the same knife, but the severity of the
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attack was very similar. >> so there had been a shelter-in-place order overnight, and that has now been lifted. what's your message to the public, people in the community? >> well, i think they it's twofold. one, we are bringing in every resource and working around the clock to be able to the second ernlgt ta is similar to this is to be sfrp and stay aware of your surroundings, and obviously, the pub slick a by part of the evidence, and potential suspects we have multiple ways the reach out, and we ask them to. >> can you quantify how many tips you are receiving? >> at this stage, it is in the
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hundreds. >> any connection whatsoever in either the -- and we keep saying no obvious connection of the victims here, but anything at all? >> yeah, there's two of the incidents took place in a park which is usually unusual for this type of an attack. and the last one took place in daytime in open space. that is the most concerning part of this to us. >> if you have any information, share it with the police. sara. hollywood writers are walking off of the job after no deal was reached between the
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hollywood executives and writers in this era of streaming. how much you have also and may knee tis i-- notice with your favorite shows. and also, bodies found in okoklahoma. and what was with that cata ta king over the met gala. >> woman: safelite came to us. >> tech: hi, i'm kendrick. >> woman: replaced our windshield, and installed new wipers to protect our new glass. that's service on our time. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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as of this morning, more than 11,000 tv and movie writers are on strike halting multiple productions and delaying new seasons of some of your favorite shows, and what this means is late night tv shows will see the first impact, because they rely on the writers for realtime writing. and also with other shows like "big brother" and "the boom" vaulted in the void to f. from netflix to disney plus, they have shows readily available, and they can offer new content for quite some time.
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as for the last strike in 2007, it left a mark, and cost roughly $2.1 billion after that strike lasted over 100 days. and right now, the media and tech companies are grappling with weak advertising market that has driven the stock prices down, and driven them to cut cost and the labor forces. and the writer face a tough reality, too, because the tough market and combined with lower pay is making the situation unsustainable. 90% of the writers guild voted in favor of the strike just last year. sara. >> thank you, kate. the show runner of the show "adam ruins everything," adam conover, and since you are known for ruining everything, is this your a fault? >> well, i am off of the clock, and i'm not ruining anything at the time being, except for maybe the profits of the companies. >> all right. explain why you feel like it is
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so important that this strike goes forward and that it has to happen now? >> so, the studios and the streamers have tried to turn television writeri i i i ing fr career into a gig job. they are spending more money to make the shows and making more profits than ever, but the writers are making less money, and employing us for less time, and if you are looking at the proposals that rejected that caused to us go on strike, it would have been proposals to protect us and employed not just by the day or the weeker to month, but that we can build a sustainable life in new york or los angeles or where ever we live and not to live in procarety, and we are fighting for a stable life like all workers. >> we are showing the sticking
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points. can you give us what some of the sticking points are, because 98% of the writers were in favor of the strike, and what is it that you are not going to compromise on? >> the writers room, and this is where the writers get together and break a story and write scripts. the companies are trying to eliminate it, and make the room smaller, and employ us on a freelance basis and rather us stay home and email in the script and we cannot make a living that way. and we want a writer's room on every show, and that is a sticking point. we want to make sure that the writers are paid the same on streaming as television. my first show was for trutv and the second show was for netflix, and the second show had the same
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way, and on netflix, no minimums, and residuals are less than 1% under broadcast, and that is true for everybody in late night, and true for the screenwriters and true across all of the worker a yas. >> what about those who run the industry, and say, times are changing, and we are not making the money that we once did, ale though some of us argue that the shows are great. what would you say? >> i would point out that david zazlov was paid $250 million last year, and a quarter of a billion, and that is about the same level of what 10,000 writers are asking him to pay all of us collectively. so i would say that if you are paid $250 million and ted
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sorantz made about $10 million last year, and it is ridiculous to be paying that they cannot make it, because i know people who have had to go on assistance, because they can't go on the year, and they have lost their homes. and it is the people who are making shows for them that are making less. >> adam conover, you may have ruined everything, and maybe you ruined my career, but thank you for coming on and being honest with me. i think that i need to be in the writer's room, john. >> you earned it there. one week ahead, the debt ceiling will need to be looking at what
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is one month from now, it is to expire. phil mattingly is at the white house, and so they set a meeting, phil. is that meaning progress on positions also? >> no. not at all. that is all i got, john. no. >> okay. >> and so this is the reality at this moment to some degree, the positions in some wake of the president's phone calls to the top four congressional leaders to set the meeting from one week today that they want to have a longer fiscal and budget issues. speaker mccarthy was traveling in israel yesterday made it clear that they understand that the house-passed legislation which would contain significant cuts to go with or to be part of a debt ceiling which is unlikely to be signed by a democratic
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senate is a starting line, and this is the starting line of discussion, and the president said he would not meet with mccarthy with the debt limit, and he is still going to do this with the big four congressional member, and sitting down is going to start the process. but this is the process, because there is a limited amount of time to complete the process and avoid the catastrophe. and janet yellen said that it would have an acute and almost immediate effect on the families. this is something that has never happened in american history. the way out of this, and this is a real problem right now, nobody is actually sure. the obviously two positions are not compatible, and not a way to
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have negotiations of white houses in the past, as they looked to set up the meeting, they made it clear they are not talking about that sglrnlgt and the fiscal budget and spending process. that is the traditional off ramp, and how do you for mallize something that gives everybody a win, and that is speaker mccarthy, and how much leeway to make that deal related to that, and of this sequence dance that plays out in this type of ne gosch i.c.e., butt -- negotiation, and there is not a lot of time, john. >> right. the market is not happy, and it is down more than 500 points just before 11:25 a.m.
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it is tough times here. kate? >> more than seven bodies were found at the home of a convicted sex offender on the same day he was due at court. what authorities were finding there. and now, american airline pilots have organized a strike. what is behind that move and what happens now. inspired by, created for and powered by youou. ♪ you're doing business in an app driven, multi-cloud world. that's why you choose vmware. with flexible multi-cloud services that enable digital innovation and enterprise conol, vmware helps you kp your cloud options open.
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the coronation of king charles saturday morning. and now, the third stabbing near the campus of uc davis. a woman is in critical condition after she was stabbed multiple times last night. two other victims a 50-year-old male and a uc davis student were killed in earlier attacks. the police have made no arrests, but they did provide new details of the suspect. they describe him light complected male, thin build from 5'6" to 5'9" tall, john. and now, there were seven bodies found on the property of convicted sex offender jesse mcfadden who is also believed to be among the dead. he was believed to in connection
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with the missing teens brittany brewer and jesse mcfadden. we have the latest now out to you, lucy. >> reporter: we know that the two teenagers were last seen near the town of henryetta. they were believed to be at the home of a convicted sex offend er known as jesse mcfadden. they went there, and found seven bodies. no details of how long the bodies had been there, and they said, no suspect at large, and no threat to the community. there was a separate missing
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person's alert on the facebook alert regarding to ivy webster's disappearance. she was at a friend's home, and the family reached her, and the father did speak to brittany brewer and the father. >> i am lost. i don't know, i feel like she is going to walk up behind me or next to me, and it has not sunken in that she is gone. >> they are taking it hard, and words can't. it is a lot of crying and only daughter in a house of boys. my mom is upset and truly horrible, and it is tragic, because we have known this family for two years now. >> reporter: obviously the community is devastated and a
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vigil for the students at the school, and also another more bed by -- morebid twist is that mcfadden was supposed to go to trial, and a warrant was issued from charges stemming in 2017 when mcfadden used a cell phone to exchange photos with an underaged girl while he was serving time for a rape conviction. and the parents said that they were shocked to hear of his past, and that he was out and about. >> thank you, lucy. and now, the biden administration is sending some
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troops to the border to help with the sudden influx of migrants coming to the border. they believe that tens othousands of migrants in mexico are hoping to make their way across as soon as title 42 is lifted. this policy was put in place by then president donald trump which made it easier for the. go to expel migrants, and it is set to expire next week. rosa flores is in el paso to join us once again. rosa, when we last spoke to you, you were surrounded by lines of people, and what are you hearing from them? >> reporter: let me show you around, kate. as we pan and go around the block, and you can see the magnitude of this. there are hundreds of migrants around this, and just one city block here by this catholic church. i should add that there are multiple, multiple of these shelters around the city of el paso. we were at another location
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yesterday, and the scene was very similar, hundreds of migrants. now, of course, the obvious question is title 42 is still in place, so why are there so many migrants in the streets of one american city right now? this is what we have learned from both to migrants, and the community the leaders, and also official on, and there are 40,000 migrants in four northern mexican cities waiting for title 42 to lift. now, when you are thinking o, that thousands of individuals from various countries around the world who have been waiting for may 11th, title 42 to lift so they can cross over into the united states and not be immediately expelled. well, there is frustration, and a lot of them have decided to go ahead and cross into the united states. that's why we are seeing this
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magnitude right here, because there is a mixture of migrants who turned themselves into the u.s. authorities and others who decided to enter the country illegally. i should add this point, because the city of el paso is under a declaration of disaster which is freeing up money to help the individuals, but kate, the moneys are for those who turn themselves into the authorities, and not those who decided to enter the country illegally, kate. >> next week, the landscape is going to change when the policy expires. sara. >> it is remarkable the number of people you are seeing there. and up next, the pilots of american airlines have voted to authorize a strike. what happens now and when and what does it mean to you? ready to pass a torch? jay inslee says that he is not going to seek a fourth term. we will ask him why when he
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ready to pass the torch is the message from washington governor jay inslee saying that he is not going to run again. he is the second governor to serve three consecutive terms. he ran in the democratic presidential primary to combat climate change, and an issue that he is likely to champion as he is wrapping up now nearly 30 years in elected office. why is he heading out? governor jay inslee joining us now. you said the first term as governor instead of the fourth
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term for you is better to or the state. why is that? >> well, we have had the dynamic term with me at being the best positive changes in a decade. and so it is like the bird strong or the good pick. to under go to changes in our state, i think that we are ready for the changes. we are the second best in the n nation, and i have 20 months to make it number one. >> i have to ask you what you have been focusing on. climate change you have been pushing on, child care, criminal
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justice reform, and gun violence and the things that you highlighted that you are not going to be seeking re-election and continuing to push on the issues once you leave office. why are you going to have more of the impact outside of the game than on the inside? >> well, i believe it is a different role, and i have not thought about it, and it is a concept at the moment, but i think that i will be in a way changing a role from execution to inspiration. i think that both can be of value. i hope that there is a role that i can help to inspire other leaders in other states to move forward as our state has moved forward. we have a template for success in our state where we are growing our economy like crazy, in part, because we are developing so many new high-tech industries in our state. yesterday, in everett, washington, we saw the highest
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unveiling of the largers hydrogen fuel plant in the nation unveiled. so we need to go with more inspiration. >> and when i speak to members of congress retiring, there is an element of recently that politics is so divided, and the nation is so divided that you run out of steam. any element of it is not the politics of when you started 30 years ago, and you are kind of over it? >> not for me. i am just as energetic, and i am looking just as forward to going to work as i did on the first day. we have a community with more polarization, ideologically and otherwise, but i love what i am doing. i love to work with people to help them to realize their ambitions. i told you about the plane yesterday, and in moses lake where we are going to be building the best silicone battery, and i got the shoot hoops with the little
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championship team in tiny little eastern washington who had the first championship in the history of their town. no, i love this job. i feel energized and i will be pulling on the plow for the next 20 months, because i have a lot of work to do. i feel it is a great opportunity to serve. >> let me ask you about that, because something that matters to every state, every governor and every constituency, and the fight over the debt ceiling, and you have the republicans demanding the spending cuts, and president biden standing firm that he does not want to negotiate whether or not to extend the debt ceiling, and the meeting at the white house coming, but you have the political parties staring at each other in the moment, and you have a new warning from the treasury secretary of how bad this is going to be and sooner, and the president at a point where you believe he is going to have to negotiate, governor? >> no, and i will tell you why, president biden is right. on what world do to republicans think that we live in that they are going to default on the
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obligations of the united states? we are the most stable, confident forward-looking nation in human history, and to think that they would be saying that we are not going to be paying our debts is insane, and i hope they come to our sense, and one thing that might bring them to their senses ultimately is to look at what happened last time we went down the road with newt gingrich. there is a benefit of age, and one of which is experience. when they tried this tact in the '90s, they went down in flames. that'll happen to them again. so i am hopeful that as the deadline appears, they will recognize the political doom they will experience if they continue down this road, and wiser heads will prevail and i am hoping that is the case. >> okay. governor, get back to work, and thank you for coming in. sara. american airlines pilots say
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they are ready to strike if there is no agreement on a new contract, and the pilots are going to begin picketing at major hubs ahead of the busy season, and that is a union representing 15,000 pilots. cnn correspondent pete muntean is joining us. tell us where things are standing now. >> and things are tense, sarah, and they have been for years, and the american pilots are fighting for a new contract with the airline, and now things are coming to a head, and the american allied pilots association, they have voted to authorize a strike if necessary. that is key. and more on that in a second, and the allied pilots association, and 99% of the union voted, and 96% voted in favor of a strike. now, pilots have been picketing at some major hubs across the country, and the thing to remember is that there is a long
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path to a strike, and numerous steps have to take place, and not to mention mediation with the u.s. government and/or congress could step in, and american airlines underscores, no impact to operations because of the strike authorization vote. this is the statement from american airlines. we understand that a strike authorization vote is one tof te ways that the pilots respect the message to get things done. and so the talks continue right now. and i spoke to a captain for american airlines and the spokesperson for the allied pilots fighting for better pay and conditions and better work, and set in backdrop of summer travel where we are set to see headaches and a huge amount of passengers returning to flying.
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listen. >> the schedule is pushed to the limit, and the pilots are pushed to the limit, and the passengers are pushed to the limit. this thing is under so much pressure here, and everybody knows it. the only uncertainty is the uncertainty of the summer schedule, and it is crazy. >> this tactic of the authorization vote is a tried and true maneuver. delta tried it and they got a new contract with their airline in march. and delta trying it, and southwest will today vote to possibly authorize a strike. we will see it here, sara, a lot of tensions mounting in the airline industry, and do you want the pilots to be happy or disgruntled going into the huge summer season. >> wow. remember when you were promised to fly me and my cessna, we may
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benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter. this morning u.s. surgeon general laid out a strategy for what he has called an epidemic of loneliness. he says rebuilding social connections should be a top health priority. people who report being lly are more likely to experience heart disease and stroke. senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen joins us now.
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we talked about the op-ed, but now we see the framework. what's in it? >> right. he talked about his own experiences with loneliness. he talked about how we're wired. we're wired to connect with each other, but the modern world doesn't always lend itself so that. so he has a report out that he did after his column and it has some specifics. he wants the government, he wants private sector families, individuals, to think about how to make us more connected he said that we should invest in groups that bring people together. put money into making that happen. trade health care providers to recognize loneliness and establish digital safety standards. tell social media companies you need to have standards so that people will feel more together than apart. now some of this gets to the very fabric are of what our society has become. this would be hard to reverse, but this is his blueprint for starting down that road. >> do you have any advice on how
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we can look for signs in serious or chronic loneliness in ourselves or others? >> so the surgeon general talked about how sometimes loneliness people seem withdrawn. sometimes they are irritable. it doesn't always look the same. but he had advice on what to look for. >> i think the time you get concerned is when you start feeling experiencing a feeling of loneliness. if you feel lonely, call a friend. then it goes away or you get in the car and see a family member, that's okay. that's loneliness acting like hunger or thirst. when it persists, that's when it becomes harmful. >> it's interesting how dr. mur emphasized our need to be connected, we are wire d. we need it like we need food and water. >> thank you very much for that. >> do you want to hang out after work? >> forget it.
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there you have it. thank you for joining us. this is cnn news central. "inside politics" is up next. this is a tempur-pedic mattress and it's designed to help make aches and pains... a thing of the past... because only tempur-pedic uses our onene-of-a-kind, incredibly adadaptive tempur® material... to relieve pressure points and support your body, in a way no othther mattress can. molecule by molecule, and millimeter by millimeteter. all night. every night. now is the perfect time to experience the mattress ranked #1 in customer satisfaction by j.d. power, four years in a row. learn more at tempurpedic.com. your shipping manager left to “find themself.” leaving you lost. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates tching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire
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we moved out of the city so our little sophie could appreciate nature. but then he got us t-mobile home internet. i was just trying to improve our signal, so some of the trees had to go. i might've taken it a step too far. (chainsaw revs) (tree crashes) (chainsaw continues) (daughter screams) let's pretend for a second that you didn't let down your entire family. what would that reality look like? well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch.
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- [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? a literal ton. call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020. hello. welcome to "inside politics." i'm john king in washington. thank you for sharing your day with us. a big biden

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