Transcripts For CNNW State 20240706 : comparemela.com

Transcripts For CNNW State 20240706



beyond imagining. wildfires, hurricanes, extreme heat. >> pour water all over it. >> 2023 was the world woke up to the climate change threat. >> i don't think anybody can deny the impact of the climate crisis anymore. >> what have we learned and what will next year look like? plus, landmark pact. world leaders agree to transition away from fossil fuels, the chief driver of the climate crisis. >> we're not turning back, that is the future. >> but with loopholes, is that enough? and seeing green, as governments around the world struggle to combat climate change, what role does wall street have to play? >> who's got to money? unlock that by being able to make it profitable. >> i'll ask the multimillion investor who's focused on climate change. ray dalio is coming up. hello. i'm jake tapper in washington, where the state of our union is sounding a very clear alarm. we are closing out 2023, the year we may look back on as the time that people started to truly grasp that the climate crisis is here and it is already costing lives and livelihoods. from deadly wildfires to mud slides, devastating floods and soaring temperatures, we saw it all. 2023 was the hottest year in at least 125,000 years, scientists say, as they warn that the world is inching perilously close to the threshold beyond which humans and ecosystems will struggle to adapt. in the u.s., cities in the south and southwest were particularly hard hit with houston, texas, experiencing the longest extreme heat streak of any major city on earth. and drought-stricken maui in hawaii reeled from the deadliest u.s. wildfire in more than a century. ocean temperatures hit record high levels, as well. fueling hurricanes and tropical storms, around the planet, with antarctic sea ice at record lows. world leaders tried to address this climate and came to a landmark agreement to start moving away from fossil fuels, though there are loopholes in that pact. loopholes that many countries will surely exploit. loopholes that will allow them, us, because really there's no them. it's only us, to avoid action. and it's about time, as experts warn next year will be even warmer, causing more violent storms, laheavier rains, more intense frequent heat waves, droughts, wildfires. today's show focuses on this one topic, climate change, is intended as a warning, an alarm about where we are as a world, where we need to be. the opportunities that exist and the peril that awaits. cnn chief climate kocorresponde bill we're has been here to see it all this year. let's take a look at the year in climate crisis. >> science tells us that 2023 was the hottest earth has been in 120,000 years. statering records in ways that are hard to comprehend and creating events that frankly exceed our imaginations. who could have imagined 31 straight days over 110 degrees, even in phoenix. the rate of heat deaths in maricopa county has climbed 25% a year for two years running. and desert cities everywhere are realizing the need to build cooling into public policy. but in the same mega-drought, who could have imagined rirs in the sky dumping so much water on california, that it brought tulare lake back from the dead. >> if you would have stood here for the last couple of generations, you would be watching the sun set over dusty fields of cotton fields, and now it's water. >> this means too much h2 o or never enough, across huge swaths of the nation, forcing farmers and water managers to reimagine how every drop is used or wasted. >> this is the first of what will be many barges that can bring about a half a million gallons of fresh water at a time. >> 2023 forced the economy to reckon with the mississippi river, too low to move food it used to, and too weak to keep gulf saltwater from creeping into irrigation and drinking supplies. and when west maui was the lush venice of the pacific, no one imagined how generations of water theft and invasive grasses would turn the capital of the hawaiian kingdom to tinder. or the hurricane winds that would blow torch the precious town of lahaina into ash in the deadliest american wildfire in modern times. >> it's unrecognizable. one of the most charming, beloved port cities anywhere in the world is just scorched like a bomb went off. >> but '23 also brought lessons in resilience. >> over your neck. keep you nice and cool. >> reporter: for people like archie cleppo, the hall of fame lifeguard who is helping to lead west maui back from the ashes with love and alloaloha, or lik highda lang who lost everything, but decided to stay and rebuild paradise. >> my community and my neighbors and my friends and my church and my job was all still here. so my little village, my little village is here in paradise. >> reporter: heidi and her neighbors are relearning from tragedy and rebuilding stronger than ever. >> these are aluminum, tempered glass. >> reporter: and disaster forces us how to imagine live with nature reaffirmed, breakthroughs also abound by the day. >> you only need a tiny little bit of fuel. >> reporter: scientists have repeated their success in nuclear fusion, nudging us closer to a world powered by little man-made stars and boxes, that use saltwater for fuel and never melt down. >> there's still many, many technology jumps that we need to make, but that's what makes it so exciting. >> reporter: but even if fusion takes generations, the two cheapest forms of energy in human industry are already onshore wind and sun. and with a surge of investment in clean energy storage, start-ups hope to power empire factories with thermal batteries like this. >> 1,600 degrees celsius. so this is hotter than the melting point of steel and it's just a couple feet inside that shell. >> i had a hard time explaining to my kids what nuclear fusion is, but this is just a hot rock in a box. >> exactly. >> reporter: so 2023 also reminded us to expand our imagination, not just for the worst that could happen, but the best. >> the transition is inevitable. it's going to happen. we have the tools we need. we just need to deploy them. >> and joining me now -- >> reporter: not just for the worst that can happen, but the best. >> the transition is inevitable. it's going to happen. we have the tools we need. we just need to deploy them. >> and joining me now is the chief scientist at the nachl conservancy, and author of the fifth national climate assessment, katherine heh-ho. thank you so much for joining us. you say you're shocked about the climate extremes you saw in 2023. what are you expecting to see in 2024? >> i would say that shocked, but not surprised, because this is exactly what we scientists have been predicting for years, and even decades. but when you actually see it in real life with your own eyes, it's different than seeing it in a row of tiny numbers on your computer. so what do we expect for next year? well, we expect decade-by decade, as the world warms, we are going to see more frequent and more dangerous extremes. but every year is like rolling the dice. some years, you see a little bit less, some years you will see a little bit more, but decade by decade, it's steadily ticking up. >> so on behalf of the viewers that are watching us right now, what can we do to change this, to help? >> the greatest impact on our future is by using something that we all have, whether we're 8 years old or 88 years old, and that is our voice. when we call for change where we work, where we work, where we go school, that's how change begins to happen. and i'm convinced that it can, we just can't do it alone. we have to do it together. >> do you believe that earth will ultimately hit this 1.5 degree threshold of warming, at which it will become that much more difficult to struggle to adapt? and if so, what is that going to look like? >> well, 1 1/2 degrees is not a magic threshold, and neither is 2 degrees. the science is very clear. and in the national climate assessment, it talks about this, how every tenth of a degree matters. it's kind of like smoking. there's no magic number of cigarettes that you smoke, but you know that each new pack you smoke carries with it additional risk. so what i know is that we have already altered our trajectory. we were heading for a world that was 4 to 5 degrees warmer by the end of the century, and now we're heading to a world that's going to be 2 1/2 to 3 degrees warmer? is that enough? it still isn't enough. how low do we need to go? as low as possible. that's why we are aiming as hard as we can for that 1 1/2-degree goal. >> a lot of the coverage around climate change can be really discouraging and i don't have to tell you how existentially a lot of younger people feel this crisis. do you see cause for hope, though? >> well, when you ask young people, how do you feel about climate change, the words that you get are, sad, angry,paralyz depressed. and what i say is, first of all, if you feel that way, you're not alone. over two-thirds of americans are worried about climate change. i live in texas, where a recent poll showed that even 42% of registered republican voters in texas agree that climate change poses a threat. and the second thing i tell them is, that is a rational response to what's happening. if you understand what's happening, we should be worried. this is the only home we have. but what i do know is that our future is not yet written. our future is literally in our hands, and i know also, in the words of the science, that every tenth of a degree matters. so what that means is that every bit of warming matters, every choice matters, every action matters, we truly can shape our future. and that to me is the definition of hope. >> thank you so much for being with us. really appreciate your perspective. coming up, he's been warning us about climate change for 20 years. after so much time, does vice president al gore still have cause for hope? that's next. and what a multi-billionaire should be doing to address the climate threat. stay with us. welcome back to cnn "state of the union." i'm jake tapper. world leaders finally address the elephant in the room this month when it comes to climate change. the burning of fossil fuels, that is the primary cause of our warming planet. former vice president al gore has been warning the world about fossil fuels for more than 20 years, and he is still working on the issue. he runs a non-profit devoted to solving the climate crisis. and somehow looking to the future with hope that maybe human beings can change. and joining me now is former vice president, al gore. vice president gore, thanks so much for joining us. so mr. vice president, 2023, officially the hottest year on record. deadly heat waves, catastrophic floods, devastating wildfires. more powerful storms. we've gotten dangerously close to the 1.5-degree celsius threshold beyond which experts say humanity and the planet will struggle to adapt. >> stronger than the tropical diseases and climate and migrants crossing international borders in larger numbers. they were dead right when they warned us about this and so we need to pay more attention to them. if we don't take action, there could be as many as 1 billion climate refugees. the temperatures will stop going up right away and if we stay at true net zero, half of the human cause will fall out of the atmosphere in as little as 25 to 30 years. we have the ability to do this. and it's not impractical, because we now have the cheapest new source of energy in the history of the world with solar electricity and wind electricity and the electric vehicles reached 20% of sales globally this year. we had one gig factory several years ago, now there are 200 and another 400 being built. a long time ago, one of the saudi arabian oil ministers said, we better remember, the stone age didn't end because of a shortage of stones, it ended because something better came along. we've got something better now. we can do this if we just overcome the greed and political power of the big fossil fuel polluters who have been trying to control this process. it's time for people at the grassroots level in every country to speak up and the good news is, that's happening, too so >> so you say we can fix this. what needs to happen? >> we need to break through this blockade that the fossil fuel industry and the big petro states have been using to block progress. and we need to reform this u.n. process, because it requires what they call consensus now which is similar to requiring it to be unanimous if the president of the cop decides that they don't see any objections, then he declares there's a consensus. and that's why it's so important that that person who's in charge of the process not have a direct conflict of interest. we have to make a decision to get passed fossil fuels and start accelerating the shift over to renewable energy and efficiency. this is beginning to happen, anyway, jake. last year, if you look at all of the new electricity generation installed worldwide, it was solar and wind. in india, it was 93%. it's cheaper now. and it creates three times as many new dollar invested compared to dollars invested in the old dirty polluting fossil fuels. so we have what we need. the international agency says that we've got all of the solutions that we need with proven deployment models to keep the emissions in half this decade. and we've got a clear line of sight to get the rest of it done before mid-century. so we can do this. the only thing we need is sufficient political will, but as many pointed out, political will is sitz a renewable resource and these young people around the world are helping the world to renew it. >> that's the good news, but what happens if the world doesn't react? what's the worst-case scenario? >> the scientist who is warned us of these mega-storms and the floods and mud slides and droughts and the ice melting and the sea level rising and the storms getting stronger and the tropical diseases, and climate and migrants crossing international borders in large numbers. they were dead right when they warned us about this and so we need to pay more attention to them now. if we don't take action, there could be as many as 1 billion climate refugees crossing international borders in the next several days. well, a few million have contradicted to this wave of populist authoritarianism and dictatorships and so forth. what would 1 billion do? we can't do this. we could lose our capacity for self-governance. already, we've seen people driven from the places they've always called home, and we're seeing an expansion of areas in the world that are physiologically unlivable now, because of the combination of heat and humidity. they're relatively small areas now, but if we don't act, they will expand to include most of india, large parts of northern south america, the philippines, indonesia, pakistan, the list goes on. the survival of our civilization is at stake. and it sounds dire, but it is dire. but again, the good news is, we can reclaim control of our destiny if we summon the political will and the courage and the moral courage to do it. you know, there's a european politician, claude juncker who said, we all know how to do, we just don't know how to be re-elected if we do it. well, this is why grassroots pressure from people who understand how high the stakes are is the critical element. and the good news again is, people are rising up and de demanding action. your new cnn poll shows that more than three quarters of americans and that's where the real impediment is. >> you say you have to make it profitable to get these new investors behind clean energy. what needs to be done to accomplish that? how do we develop climate-oriented investments that will move the needle in a significant way, and also generate a significant enough return for investors? >> yes, well, think about it o the e republicanans support act we just have to o break the e polit polilitical thatat the fossil l itit's lobbyisists and bags of money, but we can dodo this. >> vice prpresident alal gororek you soso much for r your time t, sisir. >> thahank you, jakeke. >> whahat will it cost thehe wo? how w can we get to step up. dalio has s some ideasas and i' talk to o him next . loving this pay bump in our allowance. wonder where mom and dad got the extra money? maybe they won the lottery? maybe they inherited a fortune? maybe buried treasure? maybe it fell off a truck? maybe they heard that xfinity customers can save hundreds when they buy one unlimted line and get one free. now i can buy that electric scooter! i'm starting a private-equity fund that specializes in midcap. you do you. visit xfinitymobile.com today. welcome back to state of the join. i'm jake tapper. we're focusing entirely on our warming planet this hour, and one big piece of that is big business, and getting corporations on board with the goal of combatting climate change. and joining me now, global macro investor and founder of bridgewater associates, ray dalio. thanks for joining us. you were at the cop-28 global climate summit and obviously nearly 200 countries for the very first time explicitly agreed to transition away from fossil fuels. but i know you focus on the big picture, what's practical. so when you look at what it's going to take globally to fight climate change in terms of who has the money, what their motivations are, and what exactly it's going to take to unlock those funds, what are the answer to those questions. to care about climate change to the degree they're willing to make sacrifices or changes in their behavior? >> it's no longer theoretical. now you're seeing wildfires in my state, you're seeing flooding in states like vermont and nn. you're seeing people have higher electricity bills because we haven't had enough solar and wind. so we can make the argument that transitioning to a clean economy is going to prevent terrible weather events, and also, america should lead. why would we want china or europe to lead in this $9 trillion market. >> we'll put up images of the great salt lake in your home state. this is drying up. this is hitting home. it's not just hitting blue states, it's hitting red states, everywhere. what do we need to get people to address climate change more seriously? >> this has been a big frustration of mine. when i was a member of congress, i was part of the climate solutions caucus, and i was in charge of recruiting other republican members to be part of the climate solutions caucus, because we realized that you cannot really make that significant change without both parties being onboard. the problem with that is, people need to decide whether the issues is more important or the power in washington is more important. people that were members that really cared -- >> investor money. about $200 trillion. only about 0.3% of that money goes into this issue. and so as a result, when i say institutional money, i mean, pension funds endowments, foundations, sovereign wealth funds that have to take care of the population. so think about it as retirement people. and so the issue is, how do you make it economic to get money into that? that's where the real impediment is. >> you say you have to make it profitable to get these investors to put more money behind clean energy? how do we develop climate-oriented investments that are going to move the needle in a sfwignificant way, d generate a significant enough return for investors. >> think about it's your pension fund, and you want to make sure you get paid, you want that pension fund to put money into investments that are going to make money. now, there's a double bottom line there. in other words, the do-good part of it and also the fact that it creates a return. it's going to have to come from that double bottom line. for example, billgate has a climate fund which is called breakthrough energy. and it produces a return from finding the new inventions. it may be solar or other forms of invention, but also, we must recognize that that will not happen at a pace that is needed and so we have to deal with adaptation. in other words, we're not likely to hit that 1.5 degree limit and as a result, there'll be consequences of that. and then what does that mean. that means, preparation for sea levels rising, for temperature changes, and that's going to change the world in ways where countries, much more than almost 80 pblt of the world's population is not living in places that will get those funds. so it's going to have consequences like migration and so on. calculating where you'll get the money from those who can make it, that has to be productivity, the great inventiveness of entrepreneurs and so on, and it has to be the realistic look at how does adaptation to what's coming going to be handled? >> and what do you think the balance should be between mitigation, trying to slow it or stop it, versus adaptation? >> if you were dealing with the whole world and you were willing to have money go to support the whole world with climate, because climate is a world issue, that that would take money away from other countries, which is very theoretical, i think that you would put more money into mission if that's going to take place. and with that adaptation, then you're going to get people dealing with their own particular circumstances and that will motivate money in. i think we have to recognize, it's mostly going to be adaptation. >> one area you're particularly passionate about is the ocean. you and your son mark co-founded ocean-x, which focuses on exploring and protecting the ocean. what is the change in climate having on the ocean beyond raising temperatures? and tell us more about why you think the ocean is so important. >> well, the ocean is absorbing about 90% of the excess heat. and it's absorbing about 23% of the excess carbon that's being produced. it's important. it also has the effect of shifting sea -- currents and so on. so it's going to have a big effect. the ocean is our biggest thing. it's twice the size of all land combined. it's ignored because it's just below the surface, but it has an enormous discovery of what's in the ocean is not only very important, but also very exc exciting, but it's being largely neglected, so we're glad to bring it to the public's attention the way jack cousteau did. >> thank you, rae. are skeptical republicans starting to change their minds on climate change? we'll take a look at the numbers and see what's causing that shift. and what gop officialsls ma bebe willing to o work w with demomocrats on t to address s t crcrisis. ththat's next.t. > fight facacts allll the w . >> ♪ >> you canan find evidenence as back as 1957 t that scieientist back as 1957 t that scieientist working for the oil and gas (♪♪) (♪♪) (♪♪) get exclusive offers on select new volvo models. contact your volvo retailer to learn more. the company kdid not reach thos conclusions or try to, quote, bury them. but what the companies knew at the time and spent millions of dollars to hide from us is really quite stunning. >> 1982, seven years before i was even born, exxon accurately predicted that by this year, 2019, the earth would hit a carbon dioxide concentration of 415 parts per million and a temperature increase of 1 degree cel celsius. dr. hoffford, is that correct? >> we were excellent scientists. >> and this is not just ancient history, "the wall street journal" just reported this year that in 2011, when the intergovernmental panel on climate change convened by the u.n. was warning of what would happen to the earth if carbon emissions caused the global temperature to rise more than 4 degrees celsius, above pre-industrial levels by 2,100, that same year, then exxon's ceo, rex tillerson's chief of staff, william colton, e-mailed colleagues about tillerson's feedback on a draft disclosure about emissions. tillerson wanted the words, quote, weather extremes and storms deleted. quote, his word was that even mentioning a possible connection between climate change and weather was possibly giving the notion more credibility than we would like, unquote. colton wrote. tillerson denies the company misled investors over the climate crisis, but we know that the oil and gas industry is as credible in their climate skepticism as the tobacco industry was about their skepticism of the risks of lung cancer and while exxon other companies are facing lawsuits around the world about their deceptions, include from maui's county, where more than 100 innocent people were killed by wildfires in august of this year, we should note that lawsuit was filed three years ago because of the climate-related risks, including wildfires that the hild now faces. so the big question, can the world get its act together and solve this problem the way it did with the ozone? yes, it can. will it? that depends on the degree to which politicians are brave enough to insist that the oil companies stop lying to the public and become part of the solution. in 1998, 52 solved an agreement to settle dozens of state lawsuits, and that settlement has generated more than $159 billion to combat the health risks of smoking. how much should the oil and gas companies should pay for what they have done to planet earth? is anyone in the u.s. government willing to take them on? thanks for spending your sunday morning with us. merry christmas. the news continues next. >> there is within the republican party still this element that, you know, post-pandemic is sort of anti-science and. >> yeah, you know, my concern is that this issue, like so many issues, has been now fitted into sort of the culture wars and that there is within the republican party still this element that, you know, post-pandemic is sort of anti-science, anti-experts, anti-bureaucrats telling people what to do. and react to climate -- the climate issue in that context. and you do see still a great gulf between republicans and democrats on the urgency of this -- >> but i did think that it was so interesting in that very first republican debate, they brought up climate change. there was a young person who asked a question -- >> and ron desantis kind of slapped him down. >> vivek ramaswamy wound up saying, oh, this is a hoax, he got booed by the audience, and now he's trying to walk back saying, i'm not saying climate change is a hoax, but the agenda is a hoax. it is not as much of a denial fest as -- >> i've watched all of these debates and i have not heard one candidate sort of proactively say, this is an issue that really threatens us and we have to do something about it. >> so we're finding that there is a change in young republicans 18 to 39. this has become an issue for them. and i think the more we talk about climate change the way you talked about it, we don't have false choices, we can actually, if we can get our heads out of the sand and admit that we can do something about it and we are part of the problem, that's the way we get more people onboard. >> and the economy -- >> more republicans like to hear that, that, hey, these are -- the false choice is, it's either energy production or the environment. >> the economy may be one way to bring the parties together. you know, i often joke, if i say, let's bring manufacturing back to the united states, i'll get a republican on. if i say, it's going to be clean manufacturing, suddenly they'll hesitate. but we talk the reindustrialization. bringing steel back, bringing aluminum back. by the way, it's going to be clean. it's going to be less co2 footprint than china. so if we frame it as the economic opportunity for american leadership, you may be i believe to get -- >> there's no doubt that if it's not a zero sum-gain kind of debate, where we're going to do climate action, and that's going to cost you your job, that will go over better. there's also the reality that lobbyists for the oil and gas industry just overwhelm the opposition in congress and it's like by 27-1. and that's been a rereality for longng time.e. the climate e in congress isn'ts good a as it shoululd be f for on this issusue. > all rightht. thanksks, one e and all for bei here. really appppreciate itit. we'll l be right b back. or never enough. across huge-u youth swaths of the nation forcing farmers to reimagine how every drop is used or wasted. >> this is the first of what will be many barges that could bring about a half million gallonsch freshwater at a time. >> 2023 forced the which i to reckon with a mississippi river, to lee to move food like it used to and too weak to keep gulf salt water from creeping into drinking and irrigation supply. and when west maui was the lush venice of the pacific, no one images how generations of water theft and invasive grasses would turn the capital of the hawaiian kingdom to tinder or the hurricane winds that would blowtorch the precious town of lahaina into ash in the deadliest wildfire in modern times. >> one of the beloved cities is scorched like a bomb went off. >> but it is transformed, break throughs in clean energy also abound by the day. arks and you only feed a tiny little bit of fuel. >> that is right. >> scientists at national ignition facility has repeated their success in nuclear fusion, to a world powered by man made stars in boxes that use salt water for fuel and never melt down. >> there is still many, many technology jumps that we need to make. but that is what makes it so exciting. >> but even an infusion that takes jenner algss, the two cheapest forms of energy are already onshore wind and sun. and with a surge of investment in clean energy storage, start-ups like ant ora hope to power entire factories like this. >> 1600 degrees celsius. this is hotter than the melting point of steal and just a couple of feet inside of that shelf. >> i had a hard time explain what nuclear fusion is but this is a hot rocket of box. >> so 2023 also reminded us to expand our imaginations. and not just for the worst that could happen, but for the best. >> the transition is inevitable. it is going to happen. we have the tools with he need. we just need to deploy them. >> and joining me now is the chief scientist at the nature conservancy and author katherine hayhoe. you say you're shocked by the climb extremes we saw in 2023. what are you expecting to see in 2024? >> i would say that shock but not surprised. because this is exactly what we scientists have been predicting for years and even decades. but when you soo he it in real life with your own eyes it is different than seeing it in a row of tiny numbers on your computer. so what do we expect for next year? well, we expect decade by decade as the world warms, we're going to see more frequent extremes. but every year is like holing the dice. some years you see less or more but it is steadily ticking up. >> so on behalf of the viewers watching right now. what could we do to change this, to help? >> well, it is easier to feel helpless. you make well i recycle and change my light bulbs, what else am i supposed to do. but the way to impact the future is by using something that we all have, whether we're 8 years old or 88 years old and that is our voice. when we call for change, that is how change begins to happen. and i'm convinced that it can. we just can't do it alone. we have to do it together. >> do you believe that hit this 1.5 degrees threshold of warming at which it will become that much more difficult to struggle to adapt and if so, what is that going to look like? >> well, 1.5 degrees is not a magic threshold and neither is 2 degrees. the science is very clear and in the national climate assessment it talks about how every tenth of a degree matters. it is kind of like smoking. there is no magic number of cigarettes that you could spoke but you know that even knew smoke carries with it additional risk. and so, what i know is that we've already altered our trajectory. we are heading for a world that is four to five degrees warmer celsius, and now between 2.5 to 3 degrees warmer. is that enough? how low do we need to go? as low as possible and that is why we're aiming for that 1.5 degrees goal. >> a lot of the coverage could be discouraging and i don't have to tell you how existentially a lot of younger people feel this crisis. do you see cause for hope, though? >> well, when you ask young people, how do you feel about climate change, the words that you are get are sad, angry, frustrated, paralyzed, depressed. and what i say is, first of all, if you feel that way, you're not alone. over two-thirds of americans are worried about climb change. i live in texas where a recent poll shows that even 42% of registered republicans voters in texas agree that climate change poses a threat. and the second thing, i tell them that is a rational response to what is happening. if you understand what is happening, you should be worried because this is the only home that we have. but what i do know is that our future is not yet written. our future is in our hands and i know also in the words of the science that every tenth of a degree matters and so what that means is that every bit of warming matters every choice matters and every action matters, we could shape our future and that is the definition of hope. >> thank you so much, for being with us. really appreciate your persrspective. coming up,p, he's beenen wararn ababout climatate change foror yearars after soso much time, d formerer vice presesident t al ststill have c cause f for h ho. thatat is next and then i'llll a multi-bibillionaire e about whag corporatioions should d be doin address ththe climate e threat. stay with h us. i'm a little anxious, i'm a little excited. i'm gonna be emotional, she's gonna be emotional, but it's gonna be so worth it. i love that i can give back to one of our customers. i hope you enjoy these amazing gifts. oh my goodness. oh, you guys. i know you like wrestling, so we got you some vip tickets. you have made an impact. so have you. for you guys to be out here doing something like this, it restores a lot of faith in humanity.

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