Skip to main content

tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  May 1, 2024 2:00am-3:00am PDT

2:00 am
plus, buy one unlimited line and get one free for a year. i gotta get this deal... that's like $20 a month per unlimited line... i don't want to miss that. that's amazing doc. mobile savings are calling. visit xfinitymobile.com to learn more. doc? let's run are those who can't closed captioning brought to you by gilt visit gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands has the designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry. >> they'll be gone in a flash. designer sales that up to 70% shop gilt.com today, you think that our democracy is at risk. >> we have to be very concerned this is a damning report for the president why do you think he's doing this? >> and can he be talked out of wood republicans be willing to who support this aid package, we need a functioning legislative branch are you willing to let people in the west bank vote why do you think
2:01 am
so many republicans have down this? do you think he's guilty? >> the lead with jake tapper weekdays it for on cnn this is cnn breaking news all? right 5:00 a.m. here on the east coast. welcome to cnn this morning, i'm kasie hunt. we're breaking news, violent clashes ongoing at ucla between pro-israel and pro-palestinian protesters. this after school officials declared the protest encampment, their illegal and has increased security on campus video from the scene. you can see protesters throwing a wooden pallet, fireworks parking cones, even a scooter is clashes have been ongoing for hours with minimal police intervention, but the chancellor of ucla has now asked for the lapd assistance, a spokesman for the la mayor tweeting a short time ago, quote, lapd is responding immediately to chancellor blocks request for support on campus during me now to discuss cnn, senior national security analyst, juliet. juliet. good
2:02 am
morning from what we can tell from the pictures coming out of ucla we don't know that police are involved in the clashes there at this point, but we do have a tweet, just a few moments ago from the lapd hq that says that the request of ucla, due to multiple acts of violence within the large encampment on their campus, the lapd is responding to assist ucla pd and other law enforcement agencies to restore order and maintain public safety. so of course, we are seeing it seems a clear risk fonts here, but this has taken some time yes. >> and it shouldn't i have been arguing the last couple of weeks. look, whatever our politics are, these universities and colleges have a responsibility to protect all students, including those who are protesting so long as the post-it protest is lawful, which we've had in this case at ucla. ucla was sort of
2:03 am
ratcheting up. it's it's potential actions against the protesters in anticipation of a graduation, i think they wanted to clear it out. but they weren't there yet. so in the meanwhile, it appears just based on what we're seeing so far, it's still early that the protesters, the palace, the palestinian protesters are protesters for the palestinian cause we're left relatively vulnerable for others to come in and attack them. it's that kind of vulnerability that law enforcement and colleges and universities have to get serious about now as well as these temperatures are increasing between the two sides. and i can't honestly i can't believe how exposed they appear just from the pictures and then it's taken this long to get the lapd in or to get a request in. this is this is this was avoidable. had there been just a security perimeter around these protesters?
2:04 am
>> yeah. when you say you can't believe how exposed this or can you just expand on that? i mean, what do you mean by that? >> let's look at the protest is just a natural part of colleges and universities. and as i, as i've been making clear for the most part, throughout the united states these protests have been going on. peaceably peacefully without a lot of conflict, with a lot, a lot, without a lot of the drama that said we saw at columbia. now we're seeing at ucla and part of that was because it was treated as a vulnerability for these colleges and universities. so they would secure perimeters allow protesters two exert their first amendment rights to complain about what about policy? is whether israelis are the united states that was manageable. but it requires a security protection and perimeter around these kinds of protests because we know that others counterproposal may go
2:05 am
after them. and so it just in terms of my surprise, ucla actually the truth is casing ucla have been really a great job as i looked across the nation about what schools were and weren't heating up. ucla was not hitting up ledger. they'd handled the protests successfully. they'd worked with student groups. they had been able to relatively isolate even the encampment's now but they did not secure the perimeter sufficiently. we'll find out what kind of security they had beforehand then now have to now have to ratchet up all in calling the lapd juliet, the other development we had overnight, of course, was that over at columbia? >> at the nypd went in to hamilton hall to clear that out using some distraction flash bangs and then going into the building and colombia had this to say, they said, quote, after the university learned overnight that hamilton hall had been occupied vandalizing,
2:06 am
blockaded. we were left with no choice. and then they say this. we believe that the group that broke into an occupied the building is led by individuals who are not affiliated with the university. >> i i'm curious. >> first, how they learn this. i guess it comes in the context of arrest, but also what it says about the protests there and what questions we should be asking about what's going on at uc yele exactness of this. >> so there have been some disputes about that that representation we know that the student reporters at columbia sort of pushing back on that narrative that is being disclosed by columbia university regardless the arrest, will tell us who in fact was in the building. this will be true at ucla so once again these are if you can just take the emotions out of this as we should, these are simply security vulnerabilities that colleges and universities and local police have every capacity to be able to secure
2:07 am
beforehand so that that gets to something called access control ucla used to live right next door to ucla. it is it would be hard to do access control in all areas of ucla, but you can certainly do it in areas where there are in campus encampments or protesters. and these outsiders who may, depending on their number, who come in, are obvious the motivated not simply by their desire to make an issue, but to use the college or university as a focal point for their own activism that the college or university owes them those outsiders, nothing but there's always a, but we delude ourselves. or we shouldn't think that it's only the outsiders. these are for the most part because i've been working on this issue throughout the country now in terms of college universities for the most, these are student led movements. they represent something that students feel very passionately about. it
2:08 am
represents divisions within the united states populace at large and colleges have to really think about the kind of outdoor one allowed their students in terms of protests while protecting them both from outsiders, but also now counter protestors that we're seeing at ucla. we've been my personal feeling is we've been a little bit too shy. colleges and universities about using law enforcement appropriately, not to condemn the protests but to protect first amendment speech and students who might feel vulnerable because of these protests. >> yeah, well, and of course we saw colombia tried to avoid it because it was seen escalatory initially, but then as we saw, they decided that again, i think you made some important distinctions. we want to continue to make those distinctions between students who were peacefully protesting, something that they believe strongly in people who are engaged in harassment violence, vandalism, et cetera. juliet absolutely. thank you very
2:09 am
much. >> i'm coming up here. we're going to have more on new york city police clearing columbia's campus and removing protesters from hamilton hall. and we live on the ground there and while you were sleeping, a near-total abortion ban took effect in the state of florida a florida man is hospitalized, infected with anthrax sunday this became the bureau's number one crying to sell how would really happen with jesse l. >> martin sunday at nine on cnn fashion moves fast. so we partner with verizon to take our operations to the next level with a custom private 5g networks, we get more control the production efficiencies, and greater agility. that's enterprise intelligence. >> it's your vision, it's your verizon. >> yeah, introducing ned's plaque psoriasis. >> he thinks is flaky red patches are all people see oh tesla is the number one prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis. >> oh tesla can help you get clear. >> don't use a tesla if you're
2:10 am
allergic to it. >> serious allergic reactions can happen oh, tesla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. some people take me the tesla had depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache live in the moment asked your doctor about oh, tesla, can the riva support your brain health mary janet, hey eddie, know, fraser, franck. >> franck, bread. how are you fred fuel up to seven brain health indicators, including your memory, joined the neretva brain health challenge row sparks engineered for the spontaneous, a dual action formula with the active ingredients of viagra. >> and see alice faster acting and long-lasting grabbed the moment get started at row.com slash sparks, not flossing. well, then add the wo of listerine to your routine. new science shows listerine is five times more effective than floss and reducing plastic above the gum line for a cleaner, healthier mouth this three
2:11 am
field, the wo good morning with the collapse good. >> good. good yeah strike down, collects chewy group by for fast and gentle constipation relief. >> and as little as 30 minutes. making your good morning even better with all collapse sublet, x scrubs got blood scrubs, athletic scrums. i've let ics came out with a scrub line. >> these frogs are flexible, comfortable, and then easy to move them. they just fit so right now, you can get your first scrubs set for just $19, baby five lakes, this tiny home trend not for me. >> now, this is more like it the same goes for my foot worth why one hands-free with wide fit sketcher slipping just step in and go without bending down or touching my shoes, white bit hands-free skechers, slip ends, you're calling some people find there's at an early age others later in life no matter when you find it. >> instead of yourself, lucky because it becomes your everything are calling was to
2:12 am
build trucks. >> and that's why truck or what we do we put our everything and every truck so that when you find your calling nothing can stop me from answering it today. at america's beverage companies are models might still look the same, but they can be remade in a whole new way. >> thanks to you. >> we're getting bottles back and we've developed a way to make new ones from 100% recycled plastic, new bottles made using no new plastic. >> you'll be seeing more of these bottles in more places. >> and when we get more of them back, we can use less new plastic bottles are made to be remade higher shipping rates may be the cost of doing business. >> but at what cost turned shipping to your advantage with low-cost ground shipping? from the united states postal service when migraine strikes,
2:13 am
you're faced with a choice, except the trade-offs of treating or push through the pain and symptoms. >> we've you rally, there's a another option. one dose quickly stops migraine in its tracks treated anytime anywhere without worrying where you are or if it's too late, do not take with strong cyp 3a4 inhibitors, allergic reactions to now they can happen. most common side effects are nausea and sleeping, migraine pain relief starts with you ask about uvalde. >> learn how abby could help you save. i'm sunlen serfaty in washington in this is cnn welcome back. >> we're monitoring violence is broken out among protesters at usu out at ucla. but meanwhile, in new york, an uneasy calm has come over columbia university this morning after police cleared the campus of protesters there, the nypd says more than 100 protesters were arrested last night at columbia and the city college of new york. most of the arrests were made at
2:14 am
columbia and that includes about two dozen protesters who police say tried to prevent officers from entering the campus it looks like they've opened the window, they got in. they got late last night. the nypd was able to enter hamilton hall, as you can see there through a second floor window. that's the building, the pro-palestinian demonstrators. i have occupied since early tuesday morning once they were inside, officers were able to sweep the building where the bulk of last night's arrests were made. cnn law enforcement reporter mark morales is outside the columbia campus. this morning. mark, can you take us through what the scene is like on campus right now? >> well good morning, casey. and if you're out here, you notice what you mentioned this this com that's that's out here behind me. you'll see a couple of nypd vehicles. you'll see some officers standing guard, but this is a stark difference from what this was like just a few short hours ago every inch of pavement here was
2:15 am
covered with a student or a demonstrator. and when you thought that there was no more room, you just see scores of more hawaii pd officers showing up wearing riot gear. you'd see these big armored vehicles. what you really saw was the muscle of the nypd showing up this was really the culmination of for all the stress, all the anxiety, all the wondering of when columbia was finally going to call the nypd, and that happened a few short hours ago thank you said it took the nypd just under two hours, two get into hamilton hall, clear the building, clear the encampment and while that was happening, they were also clearing an encampment nearby city college of new york. now for the entire evening, all together, they're law enforcement sources were telling following me that there were over 100 arrests. that number is expected to increase and what you really saw here was tactical job done by the nypd where they entered in at multiple entry points,
2:16 am
including through the window here at at hamilton hall where they were able to get in and part of that strategy was what they call shock and all to show so much force and intimidation patients. so that they wouldn't have any of the protesters that were inside that would think to attack them or start some sort of a scuffle. and that seems to have worked because the arrests that we're the protesters, people that were taken into custody, there seems to be no injuries, no scuffles like that we are expected to hear from new york city mayor eric adams and the nypd officials this morning at a press conference, 9:00 a.m. the last we heard from them yesterday, they were talking about out how there was this professional agitator professional demonstrator element that was mixed in with a lot of these students. and from what law enforcement sources of told me, there was a heavy presence of people that were not affiliated with the university as part of this
2:17 am
demonstration. mark, i know columbia has asked for this presence to remain through graduation. what kind of thought has to go into that in terms of preventing what you were just outlining, it sounds like they successfully avoided significant clashes with the police. last night. i it does there is a period of time here before commencement right. >> and that's all by design. the last time, but this cabin was cleared it didn't take very long for another encampment to come around and take shape within the university. and that's really what they want to avoid because the last think the university and the last thing frankly, anybody wants is for another seem like last night to play out again all right. >> mark morales for us in new york. mark, thank you very much. >> all right. i'm not next. we're gonna have more on a breaking news, chaos erupts on the campus of ucla as protests are in violent overnight, we're going to hear from a student, they're up next so this
2:18 am
playoff, great teammates trust each other. we're going to do a trust, stand up, trust what you're seeing outdoors okay. told you use a dummy giant so much they are the men and women building are babies next generation submarines de are giant and what they do because they work in a place we're, they can grow where they can learn the skills to build careers as powerful as the beast they four we built giant because it to build one came missing out on before you were preventing migraine with cuba. >> remember the pain, the puri the canceled plans and logan me now, you'll never truly forget migrate the queue lifter
2:19 am
reduces your tax making zero migraine de is possible if the only pill of its kind, the block cgrp and has approved to prevent migraine of any frequency to help give you that forget you get migraine feeling, don't take it allergic to q liptak, most common side effects are nausea constipation, and sleepiness. learn how abby could help you save heel up there that forget you get migraine medicine, rice diabetes there's no slowing down each day is a unique blend of people to see and things to do that's why you choose glissando to help manage blood sugar response uniquely designed with carb steady glue, sirna, bring on the day not flossing well, then add the wo of listerine to your routine. >> new science shows. listerine is five times more effective than floss every juicing flats above the gum line for a cleaner, healthier mouth this three feel the world sometimes the lots of bipolar depression feel darkest before dawn with cap later, there's a chance to let in the light cap later is proven to deliver significant relief across bipolar
2:20 am
depression unlike some metal this is the only treat bipolar one kept lighter treats both bipolar one and two depression. >> and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain, we're not common, call your doctor about sudden mood changes. >> behaviors are suicidal thoughts antidepressants may increase these risks and young adults, elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. report fever, confusion, stiff, or uncontrollable muscle movements which may be life-threatening or permanent these aren't all the serious side effects calculator can help you let in the light as your doctor about capital find savings and support at kept blight a chances for plane crash, 111 million. >> you're not continue so salt tonight's right never waking up from anesthesia one and 185,000 valley, your parking or to see how it goes but why stress about the unlikely does a killer clown worry about being struck by lightning while winning the lottery? sure it out. but your odds of falling victim to online crime are one in for, you need ora, you, your family, all protected from scary online stuff? protect
2:21 am
everything your family does online with aura when we say it will be on time, they expect it to be on time, turned shipping to your advantage expectations with reliable ground shipping thanks, bran and they're all coming? those who are still with us, yes. grandpa! what's this? your wings. light 'em up!
2:22 am
gentlemen, it's a beautiful... ...day to fly. imprint in brynn for certain. >> i'm dr. sanjay gupta. >> and this is cnn welcome back. >> let's get back now to our breaking news out of los angeles, the lapd have now arrived on the campus of ucla and we have new video just in showing the force of the officers standing just outside the encampment. they have not moved in yet. these are live images from the scene for several hours now violent clashes have been ongoing between rival protest group groups, counter protesters arriving just before midnight, trying to take down a pro-palestinian encampment. an editor with the daily bruyne at ucla, explained to cnn how things escalated from there there has been some pushing and
2:23 am
shoving and policy evenings. we know that paramedics were called, but it's the first time that we've seen anything like what we're seeing on the scale as evening, it's also the first time this evening that campus security, there are about 30 hired security people on the site. have withdrawn cnn's max foster just spoke with that student from ucla in the past hour and he joins us now, live in london max, good morning to you as you have been covering this, what else did we hear from that student who clearly was in their dorm room, as you conceive, it seemed familiar with what was going on what we're trying to get a sense of what was going on. and he was describing what we were seeing in the pictures. he said it was very violent on the ground, yet to withdraw his reporters from the scene. they talked about pepper spray being coming from encampment towards the counter. protesters who were trying to pull those barriers down on a lot of concern, a lot of tension, not a concern that it could blow up into something at any moment.
2:24 am
we also spoke to a report on the ground. he said he was surprised no one had been injured or killed up until this point, which does raise the question, why aren't the police there dylan winwood described how the universe as california has its own police force if they want to bring in the lapd, they need to invite them in. they had done that hours before but the lapd hadn't arrived eventually, of course, they did arrive. so that's a very good sign, but who's in this counter group? we have seen those pro israeli flags, but i asked then about exactly who he thought made up the entirety of that group we know very little about the counter protesters, lots of them have shown up heavily masked, are wearing balaclavas as well. we know that in recent evenings this week, many of the counter protests that have shown up overnight have showed up with israeli flags and have promised to come back. but we also know that they were at various points chanting usa
2:25 am
this evening as well so we just don't know who they are. at the university earlier today, threatened to arrest any outside actors who came to campus we believe that many of the counter protesters who were on campus now and who are throwing those fireworks? aren't members of the university community as well so that could feature into the police response so we know how this all started. >> don't casey? it was a pro palestinian groups trying to support the people of gaza, but the longer it goes on, the more it blows up and more people are involved. and that's why people are saying the police really need to get a handle on this, right? >> well, and the violence that we've seen over the course of tonight has been a particularly troubling the focus, of course can continue to be there max foster for us in london. max. thank you very much for that. >> thank you guys. >> coming up next here, dueling demonstrations as we've been discussing, facing off at ucla with tensions escalating to a dangerous level, plus a near total abortion ban. now what effect? act in the state of
2:26 am
florida how we'd really happy with jesse you, martin, sunday's at nine on their tech allergy relief works fast and last a full 24 hours so dave can be the deliverer. dance okay. >> dave let's be more than our allergies seize the de with zyrtec if you have moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's disease, put it in check with rent folk, a once-daily pill when symptoms tried to take control, i got rapid relief and reduced fatigue. >> we print vote. >> when flares kept trying to slow me down, i got lasting steroid free remission with or invoke share when my doctor saw damage, grin voc helped visibly reduce damage of the intestinal lining, check for both uc and crohn's rapid symptom relief lasting steroid free remission, and visibly reduced damage check check and check. we're invoking lower your ability to fight infections including tb
2:27 am
series factions and blood clots, some fatal cancers including lymphoma and skin heart attacks, stroke and gi tears occurred. people 50 and older with a heart disease risk factor have an increased risk of death serious allergic reactions can occur tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant what you and crohn's and check and keep them there with rinpoche asked gastroenteritis? >> apologists about when voc and learn how avy can help you save. >> i have type two diabetes, but i'm managing ladle pill with the big story to tell. i take once jati easy jodie it's worked 24/7 in your body to flush out some sugar and four adults with type two diabetes and heart disease, giardia is can lower the risk of cardiovascular death serious side effects include ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration that can lead to several worsening of kidney function and genital yeast or urinary tract infections are
2:28 am
rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could have stuff dragons and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction, you may have increased risk or lower limb loss. call your doctor right away. if you have symptoms have been section in your legs or feet taking jordan's with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar rallies everyone. our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition are strength and energy ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals nutrients for immune health, and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein power e trades easy to use tools make complex trading less complicated custom scans hope you find new trading opportunities while an earnings tool helps you plan your trades and stay on top of the market. e-trade from morgan stanley arthritis, pain we say not today. tylenol eight hour arthritis pain has two layers
2:29 am
of relief. the first is passed. the beckett is long-lasting. we give you your day bag so you can give it everything. tylenol. number one, doctor recommended birthright as pain, lactate is 100% real mouth, just without the lactose delicious to just ask my old friend kevin. now, unlike and join the call one while watching the game who's winning no idea. real milk reel, delicious. >> and don't forget to try some delicious creamy lactate ice cream what is that mammal wow, it's marked out if you have graves disease and blurry vision, you need clear answers. people with graves could also get thyroiditis these are ted, which may need a different doctor, find a ted is specialist at is-it ted.com our biggest challenge, uncertainty hidden fees, surcharges. >> who knows what to expect,
2:30 am
turned shipping to your advantage. >> keep it simple with clear upfront pricing, with usps as grounded vantage not flossing well, then add the wo of listerine to your routine. new science shows. listerine is five times more effective than floss at reducing plaque above the gum line for a cleaner, healthier math this three, feel the world. >> the trump hush money trial gavel to gavel coverage, the way only cnn can bring it to you, legal insight, expert analysis and real-time updates live from the courtroom follow the facts, follow the testimony, follows. cnn all right. >> back now to our breaking story out of california overnight pro-palestinian protesters and counter protesters faced off on the campus of ucla. the pro-palestinian group, using umbrellas, plywood, and barricades to try to hold the ground around the encampment. we have seen people throwing bottles, palettes, traffic cones, even a scooter, several
2:31 am
fistfights have broken out the mayor has now said that lapd has arrived on the scene, but this could go on for several hours with no police in meanwhile, at columbia university, the campus now clear of protesters late last night, the police were called to remove demonstrators from hamilton hall in the encampment outside protesters had barricaded themselves inside the building with chairs, tables, and vending machines, and dozens were arrested. joining me now, adjunct associate professor at columbia university hagar chemali. hagari. good morning to you you for being here. clearly the university was trying to avoid taking the step with the police they had spent days negotiating with these protesters after they felt a previous call to the police has led to an escalation they now have said in a statement that they believed that there were some outside activists in this group that took over hamilton hall, that it was not just students.
2:32 am
what is your understanding and what have you been hearing and absorbing as you've been on campus well, thanks, casey. >> first of all, you make a very important point about the fact that the administration had been negotiating with the students for over a week and the view was that after the arrests that took place about ten days ago, two weeks ago? and the backlash that ensued, the administration tried to take a different approach. so if you can i mean, they were navigating really uncharted territory here and going this women going that way and the negotiated really in good faith from what i saw as a faculty member they were updating us multiple times a day, not just every day, multiple times a day. we were getting emails from me the administration, talking about the progress that they were making with the students that they were hopeful that was very clear as a professor that they were trying to do everything they could to avoid bringing the police back. but at the end of the day they were not only they were not only breaking column gives rules by staying there, but they were preventing kids from studying for their final exams.
2:33 am
this is the week of studies of studying and finals and jos into next week as well. they were disrupting everyone at their dorms at the in front of the library and so on. and also critically, they were encamped in an area that was there for graduation. and you wouldn't have been able to hold graduation with the encampment there, even though this is a minority of students. now on the question about the outside agitators, columbia has had this problem since the beginning, where there have been outside agitators either invited onto campus by students or who've taken advantage of these young impressionable minds as it were on you saw colombia tighten the security, but we already had one instance of students who were suspended for inviting speakers who were tied, one of whom was tied to a us designated terrorist organization. and colombia said, you can't have them speak. they went ahead and did it anyway privately in their dorm room. and then those students were suspended. so it doesn't surprise me that there might be some outside influence here we're looking at, we've been looking at pictures that have come in over night from ucla where the protests have
2:34 am
turned violent between protesters and counter protesters. >> the police have now the lapd has now been called in there when you see these images mean how do you understand columbia did manage to avoid this kind of a scene? i will say that which is interesting here you can see a protest or throwing a traffic cones. we know that they also through scooters as well. and again, the la mayor saying that the lapd is on the way there. it seems like ucla also had made the decision to try to avoid police involving themselves here, but clearly they had no choice if after this yeah, actually, when i saw what was happening at ucla, it made me view what happened at columbia as everything being in a much more organized, controlled fashion on the part of the administration because they really did do everything they could to avoid things escalating, are things getting violent? >> i mean, in this case
2:35 am
finished, you have protesters who have crossed the line into violent protesting. and once that happens, you at whether it's university by the way, whether it's a university or a public park or anywhere, you have to crack down on that. you can't allow protesters to become violent. so the fact that it lasted for a few hours before the police was invited onto campus confuses me a bit because then you're only lending it vulnerable to something really dangerous happening to solve these students. so that chocolate, one of the things i do understand from columbia sayyed is that once the decision was made, that when students took over the building, which by the way, was clearly planned on their part. that if they had reached this point, they were not leaving. they wanted to take over that building and barricade themselves in and so on. when the, when the university made the decision to move ahead and invite the police on campus, they did so very quickly. and from what i understand from law enforcement, that is very typical, that sooner the better in order to avoid things from devolving into chaos hagari, you're a graduate of barnard college. >> and yesterday, the schools
2:36 am
president lost a faculty wide vote of no confidence, and that was in the wake of some suspensions of students who had protested. >> do you agree with that decision and what is your sense of where the faculty of many of these universities are kind of collectively as this unfolds yeah. i'm glad you asked about that i thought that the president barnard did a great job. >> i really do and moving, navigating this time periods since october 7, these professors and i have to say i'm in the minority, i believe i'm in the minority at columbia. >> i don't think that i or silent jordan, but i'm not certainly not allowed majority at barnard, the president earlier this year put a ban on a lot of political speech and pro-palestinian speech on campus and so for example, professors were barred from pudding outside their office. some kind of poster or statement that lead one way or the other. and the reason for
2:37 am
that is that they didn't want students. these are these are offices that students are going to for office hours are for questions or meetings and they didn't want students feeling intimidated because of one leaning or one view or the other. and frankly, i agree with that decision. it's one thing for a professor to speak out or to read you search something and write something that's thoughtful and publish something. and it's completely different for professor to slap some kind of statement that's very sided on their office door when they are teaching a wide range of students, they it doesn't help keep the dialogue open or safe for hello students. so that's what they were mostly upset about. >> i disagree with it, but it feels like i'm in the minority hagar, there's a lunch i agree with the professors understood. >> understood. there's been a lot of discussion and you can pick it up on the page of the front on the front page of the new york times today about comparisons to 1968 and particularly people now baby boomers who lived through those
2:38 am
protests, what they how they viewed them. >> do you think that these scenes, obviously it's the same building at columbia? some of the pictures feel not dissimilar i do think there are some significant differences. i'm curious how you view that well, i think the students definitely view it like their own 1968 and i've heard, i've been hearing them make that reference numerous times and this is their vietnam and they're on the right, the right side of history. and i think it's important to let students explore that and have debate and freedom of expression. >> i don't want to come off as though students shouldn't protest on campus, they should. and the beautiful thing about this country and about being at columbia where this kind expression is encouraged, if anything but in my view as somebody who works in foreign policy and history is a big part of that to me vietnam was completely different. you're talking about there was a conscription of american soldiers. you'd soldiers abroad
2:39 am
dying and you had a us government that was falsifying information to make them warm, more palatable to the public. this is a completely different situation, but i do think that the students they see that history of activism and i do think that for them it felt like this moment, but i don't believe it will land the same way. in my view if they really want to end the war in, they would be marching in washington and by all means do it. i think that if they focused their message on ending the war on on the catastrophic humanitarian situation in gaza. and they find many allies in that if they were to call for the hostages to be released, they find many allies in their, in their cause. but the way they had a lot of language that was very violent, that incited violence, calling for an end to fada saying resist the colonial power by any means necessary. they, a lot of hateful language. i saw a lot of students sending me messages about keeping zionists out and sign is not allowed and social events and so on and so what
2:40 am
they're doing then is just creating a hostile environment for their peers. and that sets not the same of what the protesters at vietnam did. so, but pc that comparison, i just don't think history will show that it'll play out that way. >> all right, hagar chemali adjunct professor at columbia. thank you very much for your time this morning. i really appreciate it overnight. >> this florida went from being a key access point for abortion services in the south to the home of one of the strictest abortion laws in the nation. florida's six-week abortion ban is now in effect, making it a felony. to perform are actively participate in abortions past that point the new law does include exceptions for rape, incest, and to protect the life of the mother, but they're limited in scope and subject to conditions. vice president kamala harris set to place the blame for the loss squarely on former president trump during a visit to jacksonville later today. >> before florida voters have a chance to overturn the law with a referendum to enshrine abortion rights in the state's constitution. >> that's going to be on the ballot in november, joining me now to discuss new york times religion and politics reporter
2:41 am
elizabeth diaz, also the co-author of the new book, the fall of roe and the rise of a new america. elizabeth good morning to you. thank you so much for being here. >> what is the significance of the ban going into effect in florida considering there is such limited access in the south to abortion. >> now it's really remarkable. i was thinking earlier this morning, i mean, it was almost two years ago, tomorrow. i think that the supreme court decision that would overturn roe leaked and america from literally two years ago this morning to today is just so absolutely different and a state like florida represents that in such tangible ways because mississippi case which overturned roe, there was already very limited access to abortion right? in mississippi. there was only one clinic, but in florida, there's dozens of clinics you know, tens of thousands of abortions. there until today each each year and the switch i mean, there's no
2:42 am
where are so many women who still are going to be seeking abortions? where are they going to go? they're going to be driving in some cases, 51014 hours to virginia. maybe they're going to have to go really out of the entire southern region which was the whole point for the anti-abortion movement. but also you think back to two years ago i remember talking with some activists anti-abortion activists about how euphoric they were thinking about the fall of roe but the entire political situation is different now, and the cost to them and the backlash that has come is really strong even in a place like florida, which is right. yeah. president. well, and i think we should underscore to six weeks. most women don't know they're pregnant when they're quote, unquote signaling is pregnant. no. >> you would have maybe just it might have just occurred to you that you should perhaps a test for that or something along those lines. this of course, raises a lot of questions about enforcement and who is
2:43 am
potentially at it held accountable are is it women is it doctors there was interviewing time magazine published yesterday with former president donald trump presumptive republican nominee. and he was asked this by the report, or do you think states should monitor women's pregnancies? so they can know if they've gotten an abortion after the ban and trump said, i think they might do that. again, you'll have to speak to the individual states what should american women take away from that well, actually if you think back, this is something president trump former president trump more than hinted at when he first ran for president 2016 if you remember, there was the quote when he said it was asked about, should women be prosecuted? >> for having an abortion and should they be, or should they be punished for having an abortion? and the answer was yes and so in some ways, like there could be like, oh, my goodness he can't leave. he said this in this interview.
2:44 am
but also he's kind of been saying what his agenda was on this for so long even though now he knows the policy tickets are so bad for republicans on this. so he's been trying to kind split that difference and he's been actually very vocally against his anti-abortion. the leaders of that base for him saying like, no, he's not going to be with them at least so he says right on supporting a national ban but i think you what we document in our book is really showing which is coming out in june is really showing what didn't you not see like what were we not maybe as a country paying attention to over the last decade that really got america to this moment, that got to a place where you're florida, please like florida, which was what abortion rights activists considered a haven in the south for access, is going away. >> and we're going to have some new numbers out at 6:00 a.m. this morning here at santa income showing the depth of why donald trump thinks that this
2:45 am
particular issues so bad for them electorally, elizabeth diaz, new york times report and coauthor of the fall of roe and the rise of the new america. thank you very much. i really appreciate it. >> all right up. next more on news as payoffs are rubs on the campus of ucla and protest turned violent overnight. plus new comments from donald trump about political violence. what he said, and more importantly, when you didn't say how this season's series has gone back wall, you have to respond i'm going to see a high level chess match, game five, celtics, mavericks, clippers coverage begins tomorrow, which seven nba playoffs presented by google pixel with around one coverage presented by nerdwallet on tnt, not flossing. well, then add the wo of listerine to your routine. >> new science shows listerine is five times more effective than plus at reducing plaque above the gum line for a cleaner, healthier mouth. this three, feel the wo i brought in a juror max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who
2:46 am
tried me felt more energy and just two weeks here i'll take that ensure max protein, 30 grams protein one prim sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals, and a new fiber blend with a prebiotic 10,000. my next month, i we won't know unless we try right? how long have we waited for something like this will have to alert suppliers, coordinate shipments already alerted, already coordinated, every supplier sees changes as they happen. >> since when can we just scale up mid-cycle since we brought in vdo people who know know vdo salon pos, lot of gain flex, but super thin flexible patch with maximum otc strength light again, that contours to the body to relieve pain rightwards hertz did we mention it really, really sticks salon pass. >> it's good medicine higher shipping race may be the cost of doing business, but at what
2:47 am
cost? turned shipping to your advantage with low-cost ground shipping from the united states postal service with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, my skin was no longer mine. >> my active psoriatic arthritis joint symptoms held me back don't let symptoms define you emerge as you with trump via most people saw 90% clear skin at four months. >> and the majority stake clearer. i've five years from phi is proven to significantly reduce joint pain, stiffness, and swelling. it's just six doses a year after to starter doses, cbs allergic reactions may occur, can fire me increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms for if you had a vaccine, are planning to emerge as you emerged rem fired ask your doctor about trump via own till you came, put that right in that watch me with cascade
2:48 am
platinum fp plus i have my dish game. >> i just scraped load and i'm done in that dishwashing that dishwasher only flatter plus is packed with more dawn to remove up to 100% of greece and food residue, get the height hi standard of claim even in your machine clean enough for you. >> yeah. you ready? -showtime. this is gonna be epic. [ barking ] it's what the poster said.
2:49 am
do you want to make out or? nope. i meant yes. he's a bon garçon. i give amazing sponge-baths. can i get a room? [ chuckling ] ♪ ♪ chef's kiss. certain i'm omar jimenez at columbia university. and this is cnn closed captioning brought to you by pitcher's hands-free slip ins. neil, hands-free skechers, slip and sandals light comfy sandals. you never have to touch or bend down to put on the exclusive heels. drop guides are put into place skechers, slip and sandals welcome back, lapd now, lining the encampment of ucla after arrival, protest groups broke out into violent clashes overnight. >> this is just the latest escalation on college campuses
2:50 am
across the us. so it's a significant one lawmakers on capitol hill have been expressing their frustration as these protests have grown out of control smashing windows with hammers, and taking over university buildings is not free speech. >> it is lawlessness anti-semitism is a virus and because the administration and woke university president's aren't stepping in, we're seeing it's spread we have to act. >> everyone is entitled right to protest, but everyone is also entitled to feel safe, especially on a college campus. i do not support taking over buildings that is not appropriate to your mitchell is washington correspond for the atlanta journal-constitution and she joins us now to you. >> good morning. thanks for being here are stephen collinson here at cnn, also writes about how these protests could affect us in an election year. he says dramatic campus protests are injecting an inflammatory new element into
2:51 am
an election year that is already threatening to stretch national unity to a breaking point. and these images out of ucla seemed to really underscore that how do you think this and it's going to raise questions for president biden as well as to how he should respond. what are the conversations? what's your report? printing about what's going on in the white house, what's going on behind the scenes and capitol hill about what to do about all this. >> so there's another example of the partisan divide, even in the rhetoric you just showed on the right there constituents aren't demanding as much nuance as democrats are facing so republicans are able to just say these riots are anti-semitic and they're wrong and they should be clashed and protest. you mean? yes, i'm sorry, the protests are wrong and should be it should be quashed, whereas democrats yes, they're able to say they're wrong and they should be quashed. >> but they also know that there's a progressive sayyed
2:52 am
to their party that once the acknowledgement that the protests have their roots in concern about the humanitarian crisis in gaza. and so they're trying to be measured and as a result, democrats defining it a no-win situation because they're not going far enough for some of their voters, but for other voters, they're going too far in condemning the protest. >> well, i mean, columbia is a very kind of on-point example of that because you had a group of jewish democrats who went and stood in solidarity, walked with jewish students that were democrats. many of them, one of them was on tv yesterday saying that some of his own colleagues were throwing fuel on the fire and ilhan omar, remember the squad has a daughter participating in the protests, went to visit her. you can almost actually physically see the divide and the democratic party. yeah, it's going to be a problem for president biden, particularly if there is no end to the violence that's why there's so much pressure from the biden administration on
2:53 am
israel working with other countries in the middle east to try to forge some type of the agreement, some type of ceasefire to keep israel or try to convince israel not to invade rafah for example it's not just about doing the right thing in gaza at which i think that's the concern of a lot of elected officials, but it's also because the longer this goes on, the worst spot, it puts particularly democrats because again, on the right, republicans aren't facing as much backlash from their base by taking one very rigid sayyed and not feeling the pressure to create nuance in the conversation now, that lack of nuance, i don't think is great. >> for the discourse around these protests and what they're truly about. and trying to reach compromise. but unfortunately it's another example of our politics more and more not being around reaching compromise for people who we should underscore as
2:54 am
much as we're seeing violence this morning, that obviously very, very different from a peaceful protests and the cause itself. >> but there are so many here and we saw this in the michigan primary election with those who voted on declared for whom this is an incredibly emotional issue. what's been going on in gaza. and that is a problem for the president going forward it is, of course, something we're going to have to see if the white house continues to respond to two michal. thank you very much for being with us this morning. i really appreciate it. >> all right. let's take a detour now the time now for sports, the 76 years keeping their season alive with a thrilling overtime win over the next andy scholes has this morning's bleacher report and good morning. yeah. good morning, casey, i tell you why this is a rough morning for knicks, bad. they're having some reggie miller flashbacks right now. the sixers, the first team in nearly 30 years to be down six with under 30 seconds to go and come back to win a playoff game. >> the mega thank tyrese maxey
2:55 am
for the when they were down six when maxi is going to hit this three right here, he gets fouled the four-point play cuts the lead to just two. >> and after josh hart mason one of his two free-throws, maxi comin up. the court, pulls up from 35 big drills it to tie the game. the madison square garden crowd just stunned. >> we would go to overtime the next kind of lose track of kelly oubre junior, their baba's is still somehow gets the bucket that gave villi the lead for good, they would win one 12 to 106 to force a game six. >> and billy tomorrow, maxi up playoffs to your high 46 in the must-win go to my mom or dad was just foreign away savant like i said, seasons on a line me like know how trust just start to get to a spine race. i've been knocking at nitride now all right. >> and baseball he along nine phoenix for the dodgers and a d
2:56 am
bags the start of the game last night delayed for almost two hours because a swarm of bees took over the netting byd home plate. so beekeeper matt hilton would eventually saved the day, taken care of the v problem with a scissor lift and vacuum the ground, giving him a standing ovation and as. a reward for his hard work, hilton then got to throw out the first case the hilton he was in his six-year-old t ball game and surprise arizona, 45 minutes away when he got the all but what a night for getting to go there be the hero and get throughout the ad played to the crowd, which is amazing. i am terrified to be so he would definitely have been my hero in that situation. congrats to him, forgetting to that andy thank you very much. >> all right. coming up next here, breaking overnight, violence erupts on the campus because of ucla as things turn heated between rival protest groups, we are live on the ground as the situation continues to unfold every piece
2:57 am
of evidence tells a story how would really happen jesse? oh mondo, sunday's at nine on cnn you're calling. some people find there's at an early age. >> others later in life no matter when you find it, consider yourself lucky because it becomes your everything are calling was to build trucks. >> and that's why trump looks are what we do we put our everything and every truck so that when you find your calling nothing can stop. >> you you from answering it if you have chronic kidney disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with bars sega because their places like to be for seeker can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract are generally used infections in low blood sugar a rare life-threatening bacterial
2:58 am
infection in the skin of the perineum could occur, stopped taking for sika and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of disinfection and allergic reaction or ketoacidosis arthritis pain. we say not today. >> tylenol, eight hour arthritis pain has two layers of relief. the first is past, the second is long-lasting we give you your day back so you can give it everything. tylenol number one, doctor recommended for arthritis pain. nothing dems my light like a migraine with nortech ott. >> i found and relief. >> the only migraine medication that helps treat and prevent all-in-one to those with migraine. >> i see you for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults don't take if allergic to nortech odi team allergic reactions can occur even days after using most common side effects are nausea indigestion stomach pain. it's time. we all talk to a health care provider about nortech ott from pfizer. >> okay. everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced
2:59 am
the question or strength and energy ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health, and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein yeah, introducing ned's plaque psoriasis, he thinks is flaky red patches are all people see. oh, tesla is the number one prescribed pill to treat blacks arrive he says, oh, tesla can help you get clears. don't use a tesla if you're allergic to it. serious allergic reactions can happen. oh, tesla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting some people take new tesla had depression suicidal thoughts, or weight-loss, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache may occur. >> live in the moment your doctor about oh, tesla today. >> and america's beverage companies are models might still look the same, but they can be remade in a whole new way thanks to you getting bottles back. >> and we've developed a way to make new ones from 100% recycled plastic new bottles made using no new plastic. >> you'll be seeing more of
3:00 am
these holes in more places. >> and when we get more of them back, we can use less new plastic. >> bottles are made to be remade business. it's not a nine-to-five proposition. it's all day and into the night. it's all the things that keep this world turning. the go-tos that keep us going. the places we cheer. and check in. they all choose the advanced network solutions and round the clock partnership from comcast business. see why comcast business powers more small businesses than anyone else. get started for $49.99 a month plus ask how to get up to an $800 prepaid card. don't wait- call today.

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on