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Former commissioner of flooded Texas county says siren system would have saved lives
Former Kerr County commissioner Tom Moser advocated for a siren warning system about a decade ago. He believes sirens could have saved lives had they been in place.
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•
7:39
Trump's D.C. crackdown is 'very problematic,' says former Capitol Police officer
Former U.S. Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn says President Trump's crackdown in Washington, D.C., could tarnish police relationships in the city.
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•
7:32
Democrat who called RFK Jr. a 'charlatan' says U.S. is vulnerable to next pandemic
Sen. Maria Cantwell, a Democrat from Washington, says Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is "not following the science," like he said he would during his confirmation hearings earlier this year.
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•
5:11
Trump admin 'seems to care very little about autistic people,' says advocate
In making unsupported claims about autism, the Trump administration is "pointing the finger" at parents and making them feel guilty, says autism community advocate Colin Killick.
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•
4:12
Public needs to rise up to fight 'constitutional crisis,' says Democratic senator
Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut worries the U.S. public may not recognize the ongoing "constitutional crisis" if they see Democrats regularly collaborating with Republicans.
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7:03
'Horrifying' mistake to take organs from a living person was averted, witnesses say
At a hospital in Kentucky, a man who had been declared dead after a drug overdose was moving and visibly crying as he was prepped for surgery to donate his vital organs. The surgery was stopped, and the man is alive three years later.
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5:29
News Brief: The RNC Supports Roy Moore (Again) And Trump's Travel Ban Is A Go
The Republican National Committee restores financial support for Alabama's Roy Moore. And, the Supreme Court will allow the Trump administration to enforce its travel ban while legal challenges are heard.
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•
10:22
Kenyan Government Moves to End Violent Fallout
Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga have reached an agreement on a coalition government in hopes of ending violence triggered by post-election fallout. Emira Woods, of the Institute for Policy Studies, and Jeffrey Gettleman, of the New York Times, offer details.
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0:00
A Family's Truth Traced Back to the Slave Trade
In the new PBS documentary, "Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North," producer Katrina Browne follows her family's journey as they learn their ancestors were among the nation's biggest slave traders. Browne and her co-producer Juanita Brown talk about the film and how it changed a New England family's perception of their past.
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0:00
This Palestinian American professor leans on his Quaker faith during conflict
Here's how one professor holds on to the pacifism and silent meditation espoused by Quakers when the world feels like it's on fire.
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15:58
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