tv CBS This Morning CBS September 9, 2016 7:00am-9:00am MST
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, september 9, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." breaking overnight, the world condemns north test, sending a war head on a ballistic missile. >> dangerous foreign policy views. trump's campaign manager, kellyanne conway and clinton's running mate, senator tim kaine, both here. >> sully returns to the hudson river, how the miracle landing changed his world. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's
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north korea said it could be ducted its fifth nuclear test and capable of putting them on ballistic missiles. >> president obama saying provocative actions will be met with serious consequences. >> isis leaders essentially said they hope that allah delivers america to trump. >> she tried to make up for her horrible performance last gh she went on the tarmac and told more lies. >> scandal and huge fine for one of the biggest banks. thousands of wells fargos workers red. >> workers fired over accounts for customers who had not requested them and kept in the dark about them. >> faa warning not to turn on the samsung smartphone because the phones have been catching fire. >> a nasa spacecraft has taken
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astroid. >> cable cars in the french als have been rescued. >> quite an experience. >> plowed into a convenience store in connecticut and sending the clerk and everything else flying. >> that i said goodbye to my family this morning, and i will see them again on february 6th, i guess. >> the kick is no good. broncos win the ball game. >> all that matters. >> the forum was hosted by matt angry with his performance. >> some people are saying what did you expect, man, it was matt lauer. >> the guy who dressed up as lucy from peanuts. >> on "cbs this morning." >> it took place in new york on the aircraft carrier, intrepid. they wanted to cut the line and drift to sea.
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presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin with worldwide condemnation and concern, after north korea tested its most powerful nuclear weapon yet. they claim the ballistic missile can carry nuclear warheads. it triggered a 5.2 tremor near the main nuclear base. >> south it reckless and unacceptable and president obama returning from a trip to asia c consequences. adriana is in beijing this morning. >> good morning. this is north korea's second nuclear test alone, and its largest yet. this comes after the u.s. and south korea held joint military exercises last month and amid planning for a u.s. missile
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peninsula, angering the north and complicating a tense situation. north korea said overnight the test was performed on a newly developed nuclear war head at a remote site used for previous nuclear tests. south korean officials scrambled together an emergency meeting, and president obama had phone calls with south korea's president and the japanese prime minister. it violates five security reti regional stability. john kerry addressed it. >> tried still to monitor to find out precisely what took place. >> earlier this week, pyongyang caused more concerns, while china was hosted world leaders at the g 20 summit. >> we are constantly examining
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take. pyongyang's nuclear program is a source of national pride. when we visited in may, the nation showcased a parade float celebrating the january 6th nuclear test. that month, in a three hour speech, leader kim jong-un pledged to use nuclear weapons only in self-defense. >> every time we condemn them, they come back at us with another test. >> josh pollack is an expert. >> if you read their statements in the last few days, it has become increasingly clear that they have more planned for us, even before the end of this year. >> reporter: china, north korea's only ally, had harsh words for pyongyang, condemning the nuclear test. china also said it would lodge a
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>> adriana, thank you. it is a big presidential campaign this morning. new polling shows this race is getting tighter. in some of the critical battleground states, they're virtually tied in florida and ohio. the poll finds clinton with a four pound lead in north carolina and five points in pennsylvania. nancy cordes is here in new york, where clinton will meet with foreign policy leaders later today. nancy, good >> reporter: good morning. that meeting here at the historical society is designed to show two things. first, unlike her opponent, she is focused on the finer points of foreign policy, and second, that lots of serious republicans, including some who will be here today, are backing her for president. >> in the last 24 hours, more retired generals and admirals have signed up to support my campaign. >> reporter: trump's foreign
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who are national security experts to refuse to back him. two of them will be at the meeting with clinton today. former homeland security secretary, michael cherthoff. >> the number of things he is suggesting are not only illegal and morally offensive, but actually counter-productive. >> also at the meeting will be matt olson, the former head of the counterterrorism cen w isis is rooting for trump. clinton made that a new line of attack. >> they hope allah delivers america to trump. >> house speaker paul ryan hit back on the radio, calling that fear mongering. >> that's demagogue fear tactics. i don't know how you can make the claim to begin be. >> but trump said something similar about clinton last month.
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foreign policy, the candidate's website, her military pro proce proposals are laid out in a point by point detail. >> i'm going to make our military so powerful and strong, that nobody, absolutely nobody is going to mess with us. >> reporter: at a baptist conference in kansas city last night, clinton argued trump is too busy facing shadows to farm late serious positions. >> traffics in theories like the lie that president obama is not a true american. >> reporter: from an interview last night, former new york city mayor, rudy giuliani, argued trump accepted several years ago that president obama was born here in the united states. if that's true, charlie, trump has kept those feelings to himself. despite repeated questions over the years about whether his
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donald trump is defending controversial foreign policy comments he made in the forum. he stood by his view that russian president vladimir putin is a stronger leader than president obama. other republicans have strongly objected to that. trump also defended this comment about the iraq war. >> to hear hillary clinton say that i was not against the war in eye wrack. was totally against the war in iraq. >> you can listen to what trumpa stern before the war began. >> are you for invading iraq. >> yeah, i guess so. >> kellyanne conway, trump's campaign manager is here in the studio. welcome. >> good morning. >> is donald trump for or against the war. >> he was a private citizen against the iraq war. you heard him say yeah, i guess
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against it. >> how do we know that? >> the same thing barack obama said in 2008 and everybody took him at his word. >> he constantly says i was always against the war. here, he says i guess i would support it. that's a contradiction. >> not really, charlie. here is why. he is giving -- he is on a radio show. hillary clinton went into the well of the united states senate representing this state of new york and cast a vote in favor of the iraq war. >> this is about donald trump and what he said. she has acknowledged that vote and acknowledged it was a mistake. he has not. he wanted to have it brooth way >> he has not acknowledged that at one point, he said he was for the war. why can't he simply say that? at one point, it was, and then i changed my mind? >> because there are other public statements that he made con tem rain y contemporaneously with that, including the esquire magazine. he is clear now, it was a
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it cost thousands of americans lives, trillions of dollars for this country, and most americans agree with him. this is a contrast choice election. i think the choice on who was there voting for the war and causing the men and women to go over there and agreeing with the bush view of going to war was hillary clinton. she was in the united states senate. >> kellyanne, let me ask you. why does donald trump and mike pence keep praising vladimir everyone who wants to help in the -- >> a stronger leader than barack obama seems to be praising vladimir putin. >> he has seen him stronger in his country. if you pull the whole quote, he doesn't agree with that form of grof government. gayle, as president, he would like to not do a russia reset. that was a disasterous, hillary clinton walking over with a reset gadget.
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what do you mean he has been a stronger leader? what does that mean, vladimir putin is a stronger leader than barack obama. >> what mr. trump said is vladimir putin was a stronger leader, if you look at the full quote, he is saying the man -- i'm sorry. >> yeah i mean, as you know, speaker of the house, paul ryan, said putin is an aggressor that does not share our interests. lindsey graham said trump is making a mistake of the ages by thinking like an with vladimir putin. >> they're misreading the quote, then. >> then why would donald trump do an interview with russian tv that is sponsored by the kremlin? >> he actually did an interview with larry king, a personal friend of his, i'm sure everyone around the table, and he said he was doing it for his podcast and didn't know its would on russian tv what happened there was -- >> how didn't he know his words would be played on kremlin state tv?
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interview, however, i will tell you, he was doing it as a favor to his friend, larry king and it was larry king has a podcast. >> but the point is the same. the point is the same. it's that one of the two candidates running for president as we speak, was the secretary of state, united states senator, he has been a private citizen expressing his views. it is her record that people are scrutinizing now. she made terrible decisions. she went against the military brash and saidon went against the brash when people wanted to recognize boca haram, innocent children -- >> we will talk about her record when her running mate is here later in the program. one last question. north korea, what will donald trump do if they have ballistic missiles that can carry to the continental united states. >> he wouldn't do what is being done now, the president in asia talking about donald trump
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>> you always refer to what the democrats will do. he wants to be president. what would he do if north korea had the capacity to deliver a nuclear weapon to the united states. >> donald trump would be first of all, his entire america first campaign doctrine is that he would always look out for the interest of this country. north korea and the rest of the world would know that president trump and vice-president pence aren't messing around with anybody who is trying to threaten our lives. i mean, the generals that i hear and theio experts i hear talk about nuclear capability being nothing short of -- >> if they had the capacity -- >> he would make sure they would never use it. >> how? >> he is not going reveal all of his plans. he has made that very clear. maybe somebody can ask him in a debate. the fact is, the entire world would be put on notice that there is a strong leader in the white house. there would be no failures in syria, in libya, in benghazi, no russian reset.
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president called the -- >> he doesn't want to reveal his plans. how can voters make a decision if they don't -- he said he'll take care of isis, but i don't want the enemy know what i'm going to do. how can voters make an informed decision if they don't know what he'll do? >> president obama called jbt isis and right on the eve exactly executing another awful tack on innocent people in europe. so the happened in the last three years alone. 33,000 people killed since 2003 between isis and predecessor groups. 80% happened in the last three years. people will say who was there when that happened and can we do something different with stronger leadership? >> thank you for coming back. >> thank you. in our next hour, democratic vice-presidential candidate tim kaine will join us, ahead only on "cbs this morning." new problems for the tech
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ship phone. the faa is warning not to use the note 7 on planes or checked in baggage after a global issue after the battery could burst in flames. >> reporter: good morning, the faa is warning the public not to operate or charge the popular phone inside passenger cabins, also urging passengers not to st following the massive worldwide recall and another alarming fire, attributed to the device. >> it was very surprising to me how fast the dash caught on fire. >> this is what is left after a labor day fire tore through the interior. >> a brand new device, something as simple as a phone is going to burn down my car or my house. >> he left his samsung galaxy
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console, while briefing going inside his house. >> the fire was going up through the dash here. >> local fire authorities and samsung are still investigating the exact cause of the explosion. but it follows at least 35 similar phone related fires around the world that samsung blames on faulty batteries. last friday, the company recalled all 2.5 million units it shipped since the phones launched. >> it was a very popular phone. it got great universally, popular when it launched august 19th. but it's got a really bad battery that seems to have a tendency to ignite when you charge it. >> the faa's action does not outright ban the devices from airplanes. instead, the agency strongly advises passengers not to turn on or charge them. but a complete ban is in place in australia, where earlier this week, three national airlines
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begins. >> samsung will ultimately recover, but i think it is obviously bad press. they'll take a big hit with this, just because it doesn't look good. >> samsung tells cbs this morning that it is working with nathan to investigate his case. as for the other owners around the globe, the company is urging them to return the devices for new ones. they did not directly address the charlie. >> investigators in california and washington say wells fargo employees were signing customers up for credit cards and other items that they had not asked for. they say it fired roughly 5,300 employees in connection with the violations. the consumer protection bureau says the behavior by those employees was fueled by aggressive sales goals.
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! a group of chip pan zees held captive if a lab, and getting their first taste of freedom. >> i'm mark strassmann in georgia with a very unusual retirement, the first of 220 will he search chimps have arrived here, calling it a
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good morning- it's 7:26, i'm preston phillips. a major decision is just a few hours away. more than a week after the election, the republican race for congressional district five is still too close to call.today, a judge will decide whether some votes that were tossed out should be counted. we're talking about the race between christine jones and andy biggs.a maricopa count 300 ballots that were tossed-out.former go daddy exec christine jones hopes those once-contested ballots will give her the nine votes she needs to surpass her opponent. regardless of the court ruling, there will be a mandatory recount on tuesday. today, the owners of a gilbert kennel where 21 dogs died of heat exhaustion are scheduled to be sentenced following their guilty pleas in the case. jesse and malesia hughes were charged with animal cruelty, but prosecutors eventually dismissed the case against
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? the nfl opened its regar the nfl gainst the star-spangled banner. denver's brandon marshall got on one knee during the anthem last night. he said it was a message against social injustice. kaepernick who started to protest the anthem last month. the team says it respected marshall's decision on the field. the super bowl champs were down 14 points at halftime but they came back with two second half touchdowns by c.j. anderson. the panthers missed a field goal in the final second. that always hurts! the broncos beat the panthers. >> football is back. >> tv was on in my house.
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>> i'm ready. what a way to start with the super bowl champs. >> i like that. like it. here we go. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, new victims of the 9/11 attacks 15 years later. a growing number of first responders suffer from deadly cancers. we will look at the human toll doctors say remarkable. >> a safe new home for a group of research animals. mark strassmann the refuge for chimpanzees. how they are learning to survive again. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. two western hostages in afghanistan. they were thought to miss them by hour. kevin king, an american, an australia colleague were kidnapped by the taliban last month near american university in kabul. no americans were killed in the raid. >> "wall street journal" reports on the fbi addressing concerns that hackers could sabotage the
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58-voting system is to clunky that hackers could have a hard time affecting the outcome but sources tell cbs news that u.s. officials are sxanexpanding the investigations beyond illinois and saying hackers last month had accessed the state election databases. "usa today" published five photos of aleppo, syria, in response to a presidential candidate's bungled answer the civil war has caused a syria's largest. when a tv interviewer mike barnicle questioned libertarian candidate about it yesterday, what is aleppo, he says he understands the city's aleppo, but blanked about the city's train. the #aleppo >> they want to stop construction of a pipeline under
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the river is their water source. demonstrators from tribes across the country have joined the movement in north dakota. >> the "miami herald" reports that spraying to kill the mosquito started this morning. naled, the chemical is banned in europe but has been used in the u.s. for decades. miami-dade's mayor ordered the spraying when mosquito counts rose during the labor day weekend. sunday mar 1 the september 11th attacks. even today, the number of victims continues to more than 5,000 cases of cancer. jim axelrod shows us one of the heroes who is now fighting for his life. jim, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. as an emt with the new york fire department, sal tortirich yif spent months after the attack
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the recovery effort. every september 11th he pauses to remember others and keeping them in his prayers. prayers, he is the one who needs them. >> reporter: the diagnosis came last october. the sudden pain in sal tortritchie's stomach, cancer, the doctor said, attacking several organs at once. >> he said the cancer was here for approximately seven years. and i can't believe it. >> reporter: seven years? >> seven years it's been in him. not a pain. >> yeah. i didn't have anything. >> any kind of symptom, i didn't have it. >> reporter: after multiple surgeries doctors are now telling this father of three there is little they can do. >> i want to be there for them. i want to walk my daughter down the aisle. i want to see my boys graduate >> reporter: the federal government's world trade center
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tortritchie's condition to the toxins he faced at ground zero. he joins a growing list of responders who have fallen ill long after the attacks. as you began to see people get sick, were you worried about yourself? >> no. >> reporter: why not? >> i just didn't have any idea i would -- i didn't even think about it. didn't even think about it. >> reporter: dr. michael crane has given it plenty of thought. he runs the 9/11 health program clinic new york. sal's story, you anticipate being told more and more and more in the upcoming years? >> i want to say no, but the answer is yes. >> reporter: among the nearly 75,000 responders and survivors, health official are monitoring, they have certified more than 5,400 patients with 9/11-related cancers and dr. crane says the
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15 new cancer patients in our population every week. >> reporter: 10 to 15 case of first responder? >> per week. >> reporter: each week? >> each week. i've been in medicine for 40 odd years. it's remarkable. >> reporter: responders who died from illnesses after the attacks are not among those listed at the national september 11th memorial but a cotruction worker is keeping track of his own memorial 45 miles away. >> we are 15 years removed from 9/11. we are out of sight, out of mind. >> reporter: john adds new names every year to this wall on long island. >> sal, like the others, was a warrior and still is. and he is fighting a good fight. listen, we are hoping for a miracle but realities dictates that sal goes on this wall. >> reporter: reality is sinking in here on staten island where
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make memories for their children. >> don't forget about us. don't forget about the families that are out there. >> remember. you got to remember. >> reporter: remember what, sal? >> well, that this is what happened. this ithe history. this is our legacy. they died and we're dying and hopefully that, you know, that you think about us and remember us and keep >> reporter: early studies have found 9/11 responders may have have a 10%o 30% higher risk of cancer than the general population, but doctors say there is still a lot of research that needs to be done to understand exactly why this is happening. late last year, lawmakers passed a measure to spend more than $8 billion to extend health and compensation benefits to 9/11 survivors and responders.
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>> it is. can you imagine if you're a first responder sitting and listening and watching that piece and that 15 years later, we are all still feeling the effects, as you see, worse than others. >> living with it and not knowing it for seven years. >> with no symptoms. >> it is important to remember the first responders, you know, our veterans. the care for them extends long beyond just the conflict or the day that they are involved in that because of the very hard and difficult work that they do. >> very painful piece. thank you, jim axelrod. the flag 9/11 photograph is back home and display in new york city. three firefighters raised it over the rubble of the world trade center after it collapsed and then disappeared until an anonymous man brought it to the fire station two years ago. it is now on display of the museum. the whereabouts of that flag those years remains a mystery still. a group of animals are
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nine chimpanzees once used as research animals this morning have a new lisa on life. the group was moved to a new refuge in northern georgia and it is hundreds of miles from their former home and a lab. animal rights activists say they were subjected to cruel and inhumane experiments. >> reporter: i'm standing in the main cage of the chimp sanctuary and wearing this because the chimps are still in quarantine. last year they were considered endanger endangered species. one cage at a time. workers with a nonprofit group project chimp unloaded all nine animals. for the last decade or so, each of them was prodded and poked
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the sanctuary is their new home. and jessica hartel is their director. >> this is a chance to be who they really are. >> reporter: 16 hours are nine chimps sounds like a road trip from hell. how was it? >> well, considering we didn't sleep! it wasn't super easy but we were all excited for them. our adrenaline is on high. they are living their life for the first time really. >> reporter: chimps are considered the smartest primate. the closest relatives to humans why is why this research center in louisiana has used 220 of them for medical testing. but in 2009 undercover video shot by the humane society showed terrified animals yanked from cages and strapped down for experiments. no more! on wednesday night, the first truckload of chimps left louisiana, bound for georgia, and the sprawling-walled 236
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free. >> these cages are used for the chimps. >> reporter: sarah bechler davis leads project chimp. >> this marks the end of privatelily research funded on chimpanzees in the u.s. this is the end of an era for these guys. >> reporter: are you worried about ptsd? >> there are studies that show the science of ptsd so we will look for those signs. >> reporter: the nine new arrivals will than quarantined and before project chimp sets them loose. hartel calls their release long overdue. >> there are personalities there and individual and used as a tool wen we should be ashamed of ourselves of letting this happen to real beingings. >> all chimps are between 10 and 13 and never touched grass or swung from a tree. chimps can live to be 50, so once they are set loose into the sanctuary, these girls can look forward to a habitat that feels
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>> all right. mark, i love that he called them girls. i love evangeljessica's line. they can be who they want to be. >> and looking good, mark. looking good with that protective head gear. >> he stays ready! a nice look for you, mark! >> i think a headband would be good for your future broadcast. >> you could do dental work with that on too! >> nice job, mark strassmann. dozens of people after spending the night dangling high above the french
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in cable cars in the french alps. they are dangling between the cable car and the chopper. one in the car describe how they ran into trouble. >> the fog moved in, so we had to just wait and then they decided they could rescue us safely to the ground. >> scary but they are okay now. >> everyone knows that we landed and that everyone survived and we celebrated that. >> a heroic moment. >> they don't know what happened after that. >> they returned to the had you had river. that's ahead here on "cbs this morning." i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine.
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"cbs this morning" at the new good morning- it's 7:56, i'm preston phillips. breaking news: a small plane has crashed in wickenburg near the u-s 60.we're working to confirm that the plane crashed into a car on the freeway and that there are at least four people hurt. d-p-s is on scene assisting wickenburg fire and p-d. we have a crew on the way to the scene and l you new information as soon as we get it. a woman who faked cancer to get the state to pay for her late-term abortion will spend 28 years in prison.chalice zeitner was convicted of falsifing records to support her claim she had cancer.she was also sentenced for stealing more than 7-thousand dollars from two military charities. 3
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday september 9th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead including democratic vice presidential nominee tim kaine. he was virginia's governor when apologize for slavery. he's in studio 57 ahead of our monday broadcast from the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture. but first, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. this is north korea's second nuclear test this year. china, north korea's only major ally had harsh words for pyongya pyongyang. >> meeting designed to show unlike her opponents she's
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donald trump do? >> he wouldn't do a thing. >> he wants to be president. >> he would make sure his enemy would never use it. >> how? >> he's not going to reveal all his plans. >> move follows last friday's worldwide recall and another alarming fire attributed to the device. >> football is back. >> tv was on in my house. >> are you ready, charlie? >> i'm ready. what a way to start with the super bowl champs. >> i know. >> these girls can look forward to a habitat much more like head gear, looking good, mark. looking good. >> mideaark strassmann, stage r. >> gary johnson was on msnbc and he had a little trouble answering a basic question. >> what would you do if you were elected about aleppo? >> about aleppo? >> and what is aleppo? >> and that is embarrassing. i haven't seen someone go blank like that since i was asked who
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i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. a new poll shows donald trump is closing the gap in key battleground states. trump nearly leads clinton by one point in ohio. clinton led by four points last month. >> clinton is five points ahead in pennsylvania, but she led by ten points back in august. her support there from women and democrats fell by five points last month. the same poll finds hillary clinton upy four points in north carolina. but another poll shows donal >> we're looking forward to a special day on monday. "cbs this morning" will come to you from the new smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture in washington. we'll talk with many special guests about the museum's own history and the important events that it commemorates. >> and only on "cbs this morning" here to discuss his experience is a former mayor of richmond, virginia, once the capital of the con ffederacy is
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apology for richmond's role in the slave trade. he was virginia's governor in 2007 when it became the first state to apologize for slavery. he was a civil rights lawyer who joined richmond city council in 1994 and earned a reputation as a bridge builder at a time when the city's racial divisions were still quite stark. senator tim kaine, we welcome you to the table at "cbs this morning." >> thank you. so nice to be here with you this morning. >> good to have you here. >> so apology twice, why did you think that was necessary? very unusual for many people. >> richmond is i've been there 32 years. but we've got history and we've got scar tissue. one of the bits of scar tissue we have is that we were one of the centers of th slave trade in the united states first slaves came into the english colonies in jamestown in 1619. richmond became one of the centers of the slave trade. and it wasn't just that the city was a bystander. the official in the city defended and promoted the institution of slavery. and i thought it was important for the mayor to offer an apology, not to end the
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discussion. and i felt the same way when i became governor. >> should the president? >> look, i think it's a good thing to do. i think it's a good thing because it opens up a discussion. the thing that's exciting about the museum, anything's about the museum's opening, again, it will be a generator of discussion about stories that haven't been ld. and, you know, wounds that still last to today. >> and in many ways you have to acknowledge the past and embrace the past before you can move to the >> faulkner said something great. if it's just about the past, well, maybe you don't spend that much time on it, but i do think we can use the past in the right way. it was a virginian, jefferson, who said our north star of the nation is going to be equality, even though he wasn't living that way. even though no one was living that way, they were still smart enough to say that will be our north star and we've been a nation orienting towards that and sometimes away from it, but more often than not thank goodness orienting towards it ever since.
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the next. a sailor never gets to the north star and we'll never be perfect. >> should there be a legislator remedy? in other words, should there be reparations for descendants of slaves? >> i definitely think, look, the weight of discrimination in the country, if you look at 400 years since africans came to slaves into jamestown, for five of the eight half centuries africans were here as slaves, for two of the eight half separate but legalized discrimination even though slavery had been outlawed and only the last half century have african-americans been entitled legally to equality. the weight is very, very sequential. i've tepid nd to focus on thing like education, strategies and investments. and that's what hillary clinton believes too. >> so not separation. >> i think you acknowledge the consequences but then you try to solve them through investments
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left behind. in virginia sadly we had a school system prince edward county that closed their entire school system for years rather than integrate. governor warner and i worked together with legislators to create a scholarship so that even 50 and 60-year-olds who hadn't been able to get the education if they wanted to, if they wanted to go and get an education now the state would help pay for that. and i think educational investments to raise human capital is part of what we do to deal with the consequences that still exist today. >> there are many w slavery and its legacy and say it's a direct line to that and the conflict between communities especially the black community and law enforcement. >> there are connections there. there definitely are connections, but i'll tell you, in a lot of communities the police and community relationship gets it right. when i was elected to city council in richmond, we had the second highest homicide rate in the united states, and the homicides were largely in our minority communities.
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build ties. and many communities do that, but some don't. >> but that's the question then. how do you deal with those who don't? >> well, look, we have to push communities to embrace what i call a community policing model, where they try to deal with crime by building stronger ties. the other thing we have to do, charlie, this is really important, we've made police and sheriffs in many instances sadly the front line for mental health problems in the country because we don't treat mental health. so many of the instan to the bottom of it, there's a mental health issue, sometimes diagnosed but untreated mental health, and i have sheriffs who talk to me all the time, i don't want to have a jail where two-thirds of the people here really aren't criminals, they're mentally ill. but because we don't treat mental illness, they end up doing something wrong and in jail. solving this problem you have to build better relations. >> your running mate has a very different idea about mass incarceration than her husband did when he was president. >> a long time ago, sure. i think we've learned from
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nation we are so far out of whack with the rest of the world in the way we use incarceration. we have to dramatically change that. and so hillary and i both strongly support criminal justice reform, which isn't just about sentencing. it's also about -- >> recognizing mistakes that happened in the '90s. >> yeah, she's acknowledged the crime bill in '94 had consequences that went farther than we counted. >> before we move onto news of the day in the campaign, i'd love to know yourho this museum opening up. i know you've seen it. we can't wait to go live and actually be inside it and what it represents and what it means. >> it's a people's museum. you know, in 2019 we will commemorate 400 years of the arrival of african-americans into the english colonies at jamestown 1619. and as i said, if you look at that history, it's only been in the last fifty years that african-americans of the entire 400 have been entitled to legal equali equality. there's a lot of pain in that
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overcoming adversity. the cool thing about the museum, i know the director -- >> for ten years. >> so the smithsonian has had a great collection that will be used, but they've also gone out to families and said give us memorabilia. it's going to be a people's museum. and i think it will be a great generator of conversations that we need to have as a nation. >> can we get this to the news of the day. your contemporary -- your opponent you're runs against mike pence said yesterday he putin has been a stronger leader in this country than barack obama has been in this country. >> norah, my heart sunk when i heard this. because what about invading other countries is leadership? what about running your economy is leadership? what about persecuting lgbt russians is leadership? what about setting up journalists and imprisoning them and even killing them is leadership? there's a difference between dictatorship and leadership.
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a fifth grade civics exam if you don't understand the difference between dictatorship and leadership. it also demonstrates just an irrational hostility toward president obama that i don't get. how anybody could look at a vladimir putin -- because of state-run doping scandal, they just banned all russian athletes, even think it toward the president that is unpatriotic. >> you think that the russians are trying to hack into not only the dnc. >> absolutely. >> in order to influence the election? >> sure. >> they want to see donald trump elected because they think they'll get a better deal with him. >> well, first, charlie, it's very clear that the russians were behind the dnc attack. >> and their motive? >> at a minimum it's to delegitimize the election. at a minimum it's that.
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candidate encouraged crooks to commit espionage against the dnc in a presidential year to gain an edge, we impeached and richard nixon resigned. when donald trump went on the air publicly and said to the russians, go ahead and hack away and if you find something that helps me out, let me have it. we impeached a president for that, what he has encouraged russia to do. >> you got your first intelligence briefing yesterday. the news today, north korea has launched a possible fifth nuclear do to prevent north korea from sending a ballistic warhead to the united states? >> well, a couple of things. first, i'm on the foreign relations committee and we worked on the sanctions package that the congress adopted and then the u.n. adopted giving the president very vigorous sanctions tools. i know hillary clinton is going to use that sanctions power to the utmost to really squeeze those who are supplying north korea. that's number one. second, we have to get other nations engaged. china has put out a statement
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their border. and i think this is a wakeup call for them. and we have to demand they use their influence. and third, the last thing we should do, the last thing we should do is be cavalier about nations getting nuclear weapons. hillary has been very involved in trying to control nuclear weapons as secretary of state, donald trump has said well maybe more nations, saudi japan, maybe more nations get nuclear weapons, that would be a disaster for the world. we're going to control >> yesterday mike pence said he has a stand-in ready for you getting ready for debatds. who is your stand-in? >> the stand-in is the most closely guarded secret. i've done a lot of debates. this is a different one because it's not really pence v.kaine. >> we have to go. >> elaine is moderating -- >> i know, we got to go. >> thank you, guys, great to be with you. >> thank you. be sure to tune in this monday ceme september 12th when "cbs this
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point for pliskova. >> a big upset at the u. karolina pliskova defeated serena williams last night. jamie wax shows us how the game's pros share the court with the u.s. army and other impressive u.s. athletes. >> reporter: once a year there's a two-week display of elite athleticism on the court of flushing meadows. quick reflexes and explosive footwork, no, not the players, the u.s. open ball persons. this summer thanks to an
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association foundation, three friends and wounded military veterans are joining the ranks, including retired u.s. air force captain and purple heart recipient mitchell keefer. what is the most difficult thing about being a ball person? >> it's a very mentally and physically demanding job. tennis balls flying at you over 100 miles an hour. but also at, you know, what the score is, if there's an advantage, if they're going to be switching sides and at the same time my spine is putting off quite a bit of nerve pain >> reporter: pain from a broken back and traumatic brain injury after his unit was hit by an ied and ambushed in iraq. >> it's remarkable that you manage to do all the physical things that are necessary to be a ball person. how do you push yourself through that pain? >> so that's one of the things that empowers me. i know that i'm the one causing, you know, my muscles to burn. i'm the one that's making my muscles sore. so that gives me a lot of power for my own psyche understanding that i have control over this. >> reporter: former air force
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two tours in iraq and afghanistan surviving ied explosions and a suicide bombing attack. >> i still have nightmares. i have chronic pain. i will have pain every day for the rest of my life. >> reporter: otero says it was athletic activity that brought him back from suicidal thoughts. >> sport has absolutely saved my life. sport itself. >> reporter: and the new mental and physical challenges the men face at the open are part of their recovery. >> in the military it was, move, shoot, communicate. communicate, throw. really. and to learn -- i'm being mentored by 16 and 17-year-olds out here. those are my mentors on the court. >> reporter: also serving up support, rio olympic gold medalist bethany maddux sands. >> i'm glad they can be a part of it. i'm sure they're showing up some of the other ball kids. upping the standard here. >> once you go through a traumatic experience, you
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do everything exactly the way you used to be able to do it. i figured, hey, why not try. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," jamie wax, queens, new york. >> like that attitude. >> love that story. >> why not try? >> great story. ahead, lady antebellum on the journey to nashville. way t. many sleep-aids have pain medicine but zzzquil is different because why would you take a pain medicine when all you want is good sleep? zzzquil: a non-habit forming sleep-aid that's not for pain,
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"cbs this morning" at the good morning- it's 8:25, i'm preston phillips. breaking news: a small plane has crashed in wickenburg near the u-s 60.live pictures here...d-p-s is on scene assisting wickenburg fire and p-d. we've seen at least two people transported by helicopter. we're working to that four people were
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and in the middle ofofofofofofof and i wouldn't lose any voters, okay? it's like incredible. when mexico sends its people, they're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists. you know, you could see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever... you gotta see this guy - ahh, i don't know what i said, ahh. "i don't remember." he's going like, "i don't remember!? ...at the choices we are about to make. the goals we will strive for. the principles we will live by. and we need to make sure that they can be proud of us.
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? the odds of the odds of making it in hollywood are a million to one. introducing captain "sully" sullenberger. >> i'm tom hanks, and i'm going to be a big movie star. >> through his epic struggles. >> oh, a movie star. you can do this. >> and heart-wrenching performances. >> i'm stuck on an island and my only friend is a ball! why! >> "captain
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[ applause ] >> oh, no. a-plus-plus to jimmy kimmel. and how about a side of sully like that to show? he's got jokes. >> yeah, he's got jokes. that's right. >> very nicely done. >> and writers. >> yeah, but he had good delivery. but good joke writers, you're right. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, captain "sully" sullenberger as himself. what he says about tom hanks playing him on the big screen, and the safety recommendations that were not put in place after flight 1549 splashed down. lady antebellum hosting the country music honors. together for ten years and going strong. >> i love lady antebellum so much. >> me too, norah. >> right now time to show you some of this morning's headlines. airbnb addressing new rules. rental hosts will need to agree
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they can't list a unit on the same day if they've previously turned another customer down. airbnb will hire more minorities and make pictures less prominent. and giraffes are not one species but four. for the first time genetic tests found large enough differences to classify them as four distinct species. so they are southern giraffe, the reticklated giraffe and northern giraffe. so to most people they look very similar but there are some differences such as the spots d they're so gentile. >> what's the difference? >> it's their spots and their horns. >> and the length of their neck. >> and the length of their neck, norah. >> that's what it is. >> oh, my god. >> see what you learn. >> have you been to that place? >> i don't know the difference. >> oh, oh. >> return now from giraffe to heroism. in 2009 u.s. airways captain sully sullenberger landed a passenger jet on the hudson
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sully became a national hero. he is now a cbs news aviation and safety contributor. tom hanks is playing him in a movie directed by clint eastwood. we boarded a coast guard ship this week with sully. we sail back to where his miracle on the hudson story unfolded. okay. i want you to tell me this handedly and honestly as you can. ten pilots, ten pilots face the same decision, dec the hudson, how many would have done it? >> there's no way to know, but i'm convinced a lot of my professional colleagues would find a way to do something similar. and would find a way to save the lives of their passengers and crew. >> reporter: it's been more than seven years since that miracle on the hudson. returning to the river with sully, it is evident the moment remains fresh on his mind. what could have gone wrong on the hudson?
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wing too low, if we hadn't had the wings exactly level, it would have spun us around, the aircraft might have broken apart. if we landed with too great descent, the plane might have broken apart and wouldn't have floated long enough for the rescue to take place. if we had misjudged the height at which to begin the landing, even by a fraction of a second. >> we're going to end up in the hudson. >> sorry, say again, cactus? >> so there's thisie there, and you're played by tom hanks. if you can't get jimmy stewart, tom hanks is pretty good. >> tom came to our home and spent almost half a day there. and one of the first things we talked about was the responsibility he felt about playing a real person still living. but then after the film has run its course, i'll have to go back to living my life and he wanted to be sure he didn't screw it up
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>> and sully, tom hanks is at the controls with his co-pilot jeff skiels. together they take the audience through the harrowing 208 seconds of u.s. airways flight 1549. >> brace for impact. >> so eastwood and hank got it, as far as you see the moment and the personality they captured. >> and the emotion. what i really wanted this to have was a real undercurrent of the importance of our common humanity. and i think it's there. >> how so? >> this is about a group of people at a time in the world's history when it seemed as if everything was going wrong during the '08-'09 financial meltdown, seemed like no one could do anything right. and this group of people who didn't know each other came together in this place , in thi
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in life to see every life was saved. oempb knows that we landed, everyone survived and we celebrated that. >> that's a heroic moment. >> they don't know what happened after that. >> let's get into calculated all those parameters. >> there was no time for calcula calculating. >> the 15-month investigation by the national transportation safety board is the film's central focus. >> you're saying you didn't do -- >> i eyeballed it. >> one of the biggest frustrations for me and the ntsb board members that spoken about is that the ntsb made about three dozen important safety recommendations to improve safety going forward, but the ntsb cannot mandate they be adopted by the industry. that's up to the faa, our regulatory body to do. and sadly only two or three of the 35 recommendations have been adopted by industry and mandated by the faa. >> why not? >> there are a lot of reasons, but the bottom line ultimately is that the airlines in a very
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safety measures that they view as a burden or an additional cost. >> isn't that an avoidance of public responsibility? >> yes. >> i've delivered a million passengers over 40 years in the air, but in the end i'm going to be judged on 208 seconds. >> did you make any mistakes? >> of course. it wasn't perfect. but it worked. and i was confident i could find something that would work. >> and it changed your life forever. >> completely forever. >> oh, that was so good. so good. >> so good. >> you took us right back there to that day. and looking at the visuals. and he is still so calm and controlled. what struck you about him, charlie? >> calm and controlled. very matter of fact. >> love the movie. i think he's right, i think we need this movie at this time, too. >> and what it says about coming together for common purpose. >> yeah. >> good job, charlie rose. you are good at what you do. >> you're looking handsome out
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need to go on a boat with mr. charlie rose, gayle. >> i'm game. >> me too. >> i'm game. >> me too. >> this is why i'm theie luckie man in the world. sully in theaters today. lady antebellum talks about lady antebellum talks about staying close thers an be serious, even fatal to infants. it's whooping cough, and people can spread it without knowing it. understand the danger your new grandchild faces. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about
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? >> that is c ? that of course is country superstar blake shelton performing at the academy o country music honors which by the way airs tonight on cbs. nobody pays tribute to their own like the country music industry. that is very true. it is, the nicest group of people. michelle miller went to nashville to meet tonight's host lady >> reporter: lady antebellum is right at home on the stage. >> patty griffin, i was sitting right around here. >> reporter: they're just as happy to be audience members in the rieman auditorium. how big of a deal is this? for folks to understand the rieman. >> it's the mother church of country music. >> reporter: that church is a five-minute drive but a long way
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nashville bar where the band got its start. i can't believe it's been ten years. >> it is. i mean, it feels like a few lifetimes and it also feels like a blink. >> that's a good qualm. we should write that. >> yeah. ? well, i heard the news that you were back in town ? >> reporter: it was 2006 when childhood friends charles kelly and dave haywood teamed with nashville native hillary scott to form the antebellum. they found almost instant success. their first album won them the acm award for top vocal group, and a grammy for the single "i run to you." ? baby you're the only one i run to ? >> reporter: but it was their song "need you now" off their second album that vaulted to number one and made the trio a crossover sensation.
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>> reporter: do you ever worry that, oh, that one song that put us over the top, that introduced us to the world, you can duplicate that success? >> it gets brought up so much. you know, it's like how are you going to top need you now? to me we may write a song better than need you now but may not have the same success. it was right song at the rit time. >> reporter: in all the band has released six albums and won seven grammys. ? i still hear -- >> reporter: which gives them the country street cred they need to host this year's academy of country music honors. where a who's who of modern country pays tribute to industry giants like glen campbell
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>> reporter: and crystal gale. >> and to be able to show our appreciation for them is really -- it's neat. that's just what country music is, it's brotherhood and a sisterhood. it's a friendship. it's really special. >> reporter: it's a description that fits the band too. the three remain close though their lives have changed over the decade they've been together. including marriages and children. let's show all the rings now first of all. wedding bands. yep, yep. but when you think about it, though, i mean that's a lot of personalities to sort of juggle, and male/female relationships. >> yeah. >> reporter: how did you manage to get it right so it didn't impact this? >> i think we've always had our moments. you'll have moments where somebody's just over it at that time and they're snappy or whatever it may be. >> reporter: who's snappy? >> diva. >> we all have our moments.
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? >> oh, such a -- i love them. love them. >> gayle, you know the lyrics to "need you now". >> don't you remember i was drunk at 1:00 and told you -- you remember. charlie remembers. i'm all alone and i need you now. you can watch the acms on cbs tonight at 9:00, 8:00 central. >> it was sexier then. first look at the new smithsonian national museum of african-american history and limited interruptions monday. "cbs this morning" at the new smithsonian of african-american history. culture with limited
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clinton and president obama the military has gone to a rubble. >> we are not putting ground troops in iraq. >> she is focused on the finer points. >> there has been from the philippines president. >> he is colorful. >> i say it's harmless is proving difficult. >> i will not get >> danny heinrich confessed to killing the young boy. jacob said what did i do wrong after he was kidnapped. >> the jury acquitted. that means they found him innocent. >> what would you do if you were
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>> what is aleppo? >> you're kidding? >> no. >> second after takeoff we encountered a flock of geese. >> did you ever think in a million years you would be doing a water landing? >> no. or being on this show. off having -- >> one thing at a time. >> what do you think of james corden? >> this is about you, not me! ? sweet home alabama ? ? i believe in starting over i can see your heart is true i believe in good things ? ? lift me higher so glad you got me through i believe in you ? >> you realistically expect you can win the presidency? >> i think we have a chance to run the table. >> run the table? >> run the table. >> he mocked a reporter with a disability. >> if she really can't remember,
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she can't remember anything. >> did your mother say you get a second chance to make an impression? both of these candidates need a second chance. >> you did not have a stunt double for that scene? >> i didn't, no. but i need to be clear, that was a green screen. >> you're not really hanging? >> i am hanging but it's about this high off the ground. >> brace for impact. it worked. >> it changed your life forever? >> completely forever. >> have you seen >> i watch what gayle is going to ask. thank goodness i'm too dark to blush so i'm not answering that. >> you're turning blue. >> i like new york city. it's an opportunity to do stuff like you can't do anywhere else. >> like what? >> stay out all night and having cocktails with your friends! >> she bumped into him. >> no! >> you have the best job in morning television, no question, charlie! >> thank you, sir.
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? i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. donald trump: i could stand in the middle of 5th avenue and shoot somebody and i wouldn't lose any voters, okay? and you can tell them to go f--- themselves! you know, you could see there was ng out of her wherever... you gotta see this guy. ahh, i don't know what i said, ahh. "i don't remember."
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( "the price is right" theme playing ) >> george: here it comes, from the bob barker studio at cbs in hollywood, it's "the price is right!" irvin chase, come on down. ( cheers and applause ) cole donelson, come on down. ( cheers and applause ) yolanda parker, come on down. ( cheers and applause ) and meghan campbell, come on down.
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