for truth we re seeing is no longer believed every time i do a story about these deepfake videos, what strikes me is the quality keeps improving our research are young, spent hours putting these through algorithms to determine with 99% accuracy whether these videos are real, whether they re fake, whether the voice has been altered face has been altered. who on social media has time for that. and a lot of people don t take the time. which experts say is dangerous, particularly in democracies when people are watching these videos and then potentially using the information that here to make decisions about how to vote will ripley, cnn, taipei all right. and the next hour i ve cnn this morning starts right now cnn breaking news breaking news as we are on the air now this sunday morning as severe weather outbreak is unfolding across several states, right now, we re now getting word from texas but at least five people were killed. the extreme storms left to destructive mark n
closed captioning brought to you by meso book.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial, will send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we ll come to you 808 to one 14000 today on inside politics, the final countdown for two days away from joe biden and donald trump face-to-face on the cnn debate stage will bring you new reporting and how the candidates are preparing for the momentous event that could do find the entire race plus the most expensive house primary ever. voters are choosing today between liberal cosmic jamaal bowman and there s more moderate opponent what will the results say about the democratic my over israel and the supreme weight the court is nearly a dozen pieces left and just a few days left until the term ends on them, isn t opinion that impacts now just donald trump. but every present that will ever sit in the oval office on rogerian for dana bash. let s go behind the headlines and inside politics first up 57 hours, that s when
desperately needed to turn it around. so much to get to tonight. and as jake i i sit with you ready for this, let s go to manu raju live on capitol hill. does it seem he has the votes and he s going to get over the finish line? reporter: mccarthy s team is very confident he ll get the votes tonight and be the speaker of the house after this arduous fight within his own party that exposed deep divides, something he s worked several days to bridge believing he s finally got that moment. earlier today after he flipped those 15 holdouts, 214 votes. in order for him to become speaker if all members to vote for a specific candidate he needs 218 votes. but mckcarthy s team has been working behind the scenes to convince some of those hold outs to either vote for him or vote present. that potentially lowers the threshold. at this moment it s still a bit
veneer cracks a bit and you have real conflict and real tumult, those have always been part of american history and they aren t desirable, and it s okay to say they re bad. i m concerned about polarization too. but the language of civil war is designed to evoke this much more extreme, frankly, hysteria and concern and much more extreme response. and if you look at the united states right now, right, like yes, we have deep polarization, deep divides. we often seem to live in alternative universes. but what actually drives civil wars? we aren t regional divided. we re actually less ethnically divided than we were ten years ago because the republican party is winning more black and hispanic votes. you also point out in your article that the definition that people are using of civil war, those who are writing about this, it s different than what people envision when they re thinking about civil war, they re talking about isolated
they re bad. i m concerned about polarization too. but the language of civil war is designed to evoke this much more extreme, frankly, hysteria and concern and much more extreme response. and if you look at the united states right now, right, like yes, we have deep polarization, deep divides. we often seem to live in alternative universes. but what actually drives civil wars? we aren t regional divided. we re actually less ethnically divided than we were ten years ago because the republican party is winning more black and hispanic votes. you also point out in your article that the definition that people are using of civil war, those who are writing about this, it s different than what people envision when they re thinking about civil war, they re talking about isolated groups attacking, like in the 70s there were large numbers of explosions of property, mostly from left wing groups. i thought it was interesting to hear a contrarian view, i wish we had more time, i would love