tv CBS This Morning CBS July 12, 2018 7:00am-8:59am PDT
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up with us and spending time. a live look at sfo. foggy conditions out there. good morning. good morning to our viewers in the west. it's thursday, july 12th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning." president trump leaves the nato summit, saying u.s. allies have agreed to spend more money faster to support the military alliance. this morning, he's in britain, where massive protests are expected. >> cbs news has new information on the 12 boys and the coach trapped under ground in thailand and thousand how they survivalee than a week before they were found. anna werner talks to a family member of one of the boys. >> the founder and chairman of papa john's resigns from the pizza company for using the n-word during a conference call.
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>> and going online to tell fans not to believe getaway offer i theime andn "cbs a flying car could soon become a reality thanks to eight extremely powerful electric motors. but we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, nayour world in 90 seconds. >> i was extremely unhappy and they have substantially upped their commitment. a very, very stron nato. much stronger than it was two days ago. >> the president wraps a contentious nato summit. >> republicans better quit kidding themselves they have some tether on this guy. he is going to fly in to brussels like a seagull, dedicate all over everything, squawk and fly away. >> the founder of papa pizza has resigned aftern' joh admitted to using a racial slur during a conference call. >> 11 people survived a plane crash in alaska. >> the u.s. coast guard released video of them rescuing
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survivors. >> in phoenix, a grocery store caught fire during strong storms. no reported injuries. >> the adult film star stormy daniels has been arrested while performing at a strip club cord >> all that. >> in iowa, crow lashes on to the windshield wipers. the bird did not want to give up. >> what is going on right now? >> and all that matters. >> kylie jenner is on her way to being the youngest ever self-made billionaire. she has an estimated worth of $900 million. >> kim is only worth $350 million. she's poor. she's really, like -- >> on "cbs this morning." >> croatia shocking england, setting up a wild celebration in croatia's capital city. >> and croatia for the first time ever will play in a world cup final. >> this morning's eye opener is
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presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." congratulations to croatia. i love that reverse tackle of the coach. >> yes, we do that after a particularly good show. just in celebration. >> that's what you do when you don't have the gatorade tub to dump. >> it was a great match. congratulations to both teams we should say. gayle king is off so alex wagner is with us. president trump says nato companies yielded to his barrage of demands at their summit in brussels, belgium. but france's president says there's no change to existing plans to increase military spending. >> the president told reporters this morning that nato allies agreed to speed up those increases after he told them he was, quote, extremely unhappy with their commitment to the military alliance. he did not give any specifics before leaving for london. major garrett is in brussels. major, good morning. >> good morning.
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it's been a very hectic couple of hours here at nato headquarters. the nato spokesman says there was a special meetingncy meet the topic, the future of nato dens around it veiled threats from the president of the united states that the united states might withdraw from nato, though that was never specifically mentioned. though clearly president trump was prevailed upon by his staff and those here to talk about the enduring strength of the nato alliance and he took credit, rushing to the microphones to say his advocacy for accelera accelerating defense spending turned the tide. >> they really stepped up their commitment and stepped it up like they never have before. nato now is really a fine tuned machine. people are paying money that they never paid before. they're happy to do it. and the united states is being treated much more fairly. the united states commitment to nato is very strong. remains very strong. but primarily because everyone,
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the spirit they have, the amount of money they're willing to spend, the additional money that they will be putting up has been really -- really amazing. >> the president said $33 billion in additional defense spending was committed to last year. he said more is coming. the president also said that until he became president, nato spending was going down. that's not true. starting in 2014, non-u.s. nato defense spending has been increasing each and every year. that's something negotiated by president obama. nevertheless, president trump's lobbying has accelerated that trend. something the president took credit for here in brussels. norah. >> clearly a great deal of relief as the president reaffirmed nato's importance. what does the president say about this upcoming summit and meeting with russian president vladimir putin? >> well, he glossed over something i've detected here in brussels, norah, which is a bit of anxiety among european
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leaders about what may or may not happen when president trump sits down with vladimir putin in helsinki on monday. the president said no one here is anxious about his meeting. said they thanked him for sitting down with vladimir putin. president again asked is russia a friend or foe or enemy of the united states. president said russia is a competitor, hopes to get along, but you said it's an open ended loose meeting with no firm agenda. but the president quite clearly trying to minimize expectations heading to helsinki, norah. >> all right, major, thank you. the 12 boys rescued from a cave in thailand are reported to be feeling better this morning. they've been hospitalized since their 18-day ordeal ended earlier this week. anna werner is outside that hospital in chiang rai, thailand with more information. >> reporter: the british divers who found those boys, they had a helper inside the cave, a student who was able to take a leadership role by translating
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for them. today, staff at his school told me that is not a surprise to them. they say this is a young boy who has already faced significant challenges in his life and overcome them. this teacher says 14-year-old adoon has always been a leader, despite the fact he doesn't have his parents with him or even an official home. since adoon's parents slipped him out of myanmar eight years ago to escape the ethnic conflicts there, he's become one of many students at this school considered stateless, not a citizen of thailand or any other country. yet here adoon is a top student and a standout athlete. how did you feel when you found out that he was trapped in the cave? >> translator: i was so worried, kru told us. but adoon's proficiency in languages -- he speaks four -- proved key inside the cave. as he acted as translator for the british divers during the complicated rescue. new images show responders carrying the boys through the
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cave. they were give be anti-anxiety medication to keep them calm. in some portions of the journey, the boys were put into harnesses lying down. rescuers used a rope system and high lines to pull them through the cavern. >> how many of you? 13? brilliant. >> reporter: before they were found, a family member tells cbs news the boys worked together to survive for nine days in the cave. when the boys entered the cave, they each had a flashlight. they had one watch and one mobile phone with lights. until the batteries died. they were able to check the watch for the time for the first three days. they slept close together for warmth. and took turns digging in the cave to try to redirect the water that had trapped them. now the boys are in the hospital, where a new video shows them sitting up in their beds. their relieved parents watching them through a window. it's the result adoon's teacher has been waiting for. "he's a miracle boy," she told us, "i'm so happy that he is safe."
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so thai airways has now announced it will be providing round trip tickets, plus a week-long all expenses paid trip back to thailand for all of the international volunteers who helped out on this rescue. meanwhile, thai officials say that they want to establish an interactive museum at the cave site featuring items like clothing worn by the rescuers. but for now, norah, the cave is closed. >> yes, the cave is closed. understandably so. >> yes, still a lot of interest. anna werner, thank you. the founder and chairman of papa john's pizza is stepping down following allegations he used a racial slur. forbes reported yesterday that he used the n-word during a conference call in may. after the forbes report, he acknowledged using inappropriate and hurtful language. he resigned as chairman. vladimir duthiers of our streaming network cbsn is here with the controversy. >> good morning.
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he was the face of his company for years but recent backlash to his behavior appeared to force the highly visible pizza maker to take a step back. it was reportedly his attempts to fix his public image that caused this latest uproar. >> better ingredients, better pizza. >> reporter: papa john first waded into controversy in november of last year. >> pizza maker. playmaker. >> reporter: when he blame his his company's declining pizza sales on its long running sponsorship with the nfl. including the league's handling of the national anthem protest. on an earnings call, he said, the protest should have been nipped in the bud a year and a half ago. those comments led to him stepping down as ceo and the company reportedly connected him withheting fir to prevent future controversies. during a conference call with the firm in may, he reportedly tried to downplay his nfl statements, saying colonel sanders called blacks "n" words
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and complained that sanders never faced backlash. the article said he also described his early life in indiana where he said people used to drag african-americans from trucks until they died. he was reportedly trying to convey his antipathy to racism but allegedly offended multiple people on that call. after those comments, the marketing firm involved with the media training terminated its contract with papa johns. in a statement, he admitted making those comments, adding, regardless of the context, i apologize. he also resigned from his positi position in the board of trustees at the university of louisville. the federal government has reopened the investigation into the killing of emmett till, one of the most notorious racially motivated murders in our country's history. his 1955 killing in mississippi helped inspire the civil rights movement. the justice department says it has new information. it's not clear what that
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information might be. though a key witness admitted she lied about till in a recent book. two white men were charged with till's murder but acquitted. >> stormy daniels, the adult film actress who was paid to keep quiet about a 2006 alleged affair with the president, was arrested at a strip club in columbus, ohio, overnight. daniels was taken to jail, accused of letting people touch her on stage. it's illegal in ohio for nonfamily members to touch a nude or seminude dancer. her lawyer michael avenatti called her arrest a sting operation, tweeting, this was a setup and politically motivated. an fbi agent who once led the investigations of russian election meddling and hillary clinton's private e-mail server plans to vigorously defend himself at a coccal hearing that is just getting under way. peter strzok will tell lawmakers his work has never been affected by politics. republican house members will question strzok about his anti-trump text messages to fbi
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lawyer lisa page. she skip aped a scheduled interview yesterday saying she needed more time to prepare. the trump administration says 57 young immigrant children who were separated at the border are back with their parents this morning. in a statement it said 46 other children under 5 have been deemed ineligible for reunification because of the circumstances of their parents. nearly 3,000 children between the ages of 5 and 17 remain separated from their parents. mireya villarael is in texas following the complicated reunification process. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the judge will also be getting that latest update from the federal government on the progress they've made reunifying these families that end up in shelters like this one here in el paso. we were there for an emotional reunification that happened late last night in baltimore. he and his daughter arrived in baltimore to familiar faces after a long and risky journey.
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he says he and fernando were separated for 27 days. he claims they came to the u.s. seeking asylum after fleeing violence in their native hondur honduras. we rode along with them earlier in the day on the way to the airport. the officials were telling them at the border, at the bridge, like here, you mean nothing, you don't have any rights here, we're going to take your daughter away. did you know that it was possible? he didn't know that it was possible they could separate. they were reunited at an i.c.e. detention facility, then brought to the shelter in el paso. he was one of three fathers reunited with children there. fernando is one of at least 57 children under 5 who reconnected with families in recent days after a judge's 14-day deadline expired. she remembers the frightening
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experience. said that they treated her bad and scolded her. how do you feel when you hear that? powerless, he says. but he remains positive. there are a lot of people that are going to want to deport you, he said, joined back to your country, keep reminding yourself why you're here and this is about the children and keeping them safe. the family plans to stay in maryland while they continue to work on their asylum case. right now, we know that all three of the fathers that were reunited here in el paso did not do any dna testing and they were not given ankle bracelets. our sources are saying right now the government is looking to scale back a little bit on those restrictions to help make those reunifications go a little faster. >> mireya, on this story for us, thank you. new video shows the dramatic rescue of survivors from a plane crash in alaska. the coast guard released this footage overnight. it shows a rescue helicopters hovering 100 feet above the rocky crash site. the 11 survivors were hoisted
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off the mountain on prince wales island where it went down on the way to coacketican. >> reporter: the people on the plane were very lucky. the pilot told the ntsb by the time he realized he was in trouble, he was out of time. the camera on the coast guard helicopter's hoist shows the dirting rescue operation under deteriorating conditions hovering just 100 feet above the crashed plane on alaska's mt. jumbo. to get everyone out, the chopper was filled to capacity. survivors congratulated each other inside after cheating death. >> it was one of the hardest cases i've ever been on. >> reporter: this pilot and rescue swimmer say their crew braved bad weather and dwindling fuel to find the wreckage, flying as close as 50 feet from the side of the mountain through
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near blinding fog. they talked to cbs news via face time from a remote alaska air strip. >> holy smokes, we found these guys. we have a small time line to get people out of there. i think it was by the grace of god that the injuries weren't incredibly severe and there weren't fatalities. >> reporter: the pilot told investigators his flight plane went through mountainous terrain. after taking off, he ran into clouds. with visibility decreasing, as the weather got worse, he became disoriented. when he saw the mountains rising around the plane, he tried to climb but it was too late. passengers thanked the coast guard crew on facebook. those brave men put the lives on the line for us. i know we would have never lasted the night up there. >> i came up with the last person and it was literally like we had five minutes to get out of there. we were low on fuel.
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>> that's remarkable. you guys weren't worried? >> we were sweating the whole time. >> reporter: two hospital are still hospit two people are still hospitalized. they're expected to survive. >> what a dramatic story, thanks. one of the smallest countries at the world cup will have a chance to win the tournament on sunday. >> outdueled. scores. >> the team from croatia representing just 4 million people beat england 2-1 in yesterday's semifinal. this is the first time croatia will play in a world cup championship game. it will take on france, which made the final for the third time in 20 years. a lot of people sad it's not england/france but wow, croatia. >> congratulations to them. messages from some of your favorite celebrities on social media may not be what they appear. why figures like tyler perry and trace adkins are warning fans about online impersona
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your local news is next. a toddler is hospitalized... after a shooting in oakland. police say it happened about eleven last ni holly street. good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. a toddler is hospitalized after a shooting in oakland. police say it happened about 11:00 last night near 80th and holly. the 3-year-old is in stable condition. the gunman is still on the loose. starting in february, bart service in the transbay tube will start an hour later at 5 a.m. it's to allow construction work on the rail system's under water tunnel. and today is the grand opening of the oakland zoo's california trail. mayor schaaf will kick off the celebration with a speech and ribbon cutting at 10:30 a.m. stay with us; a look at traffic and weather in just a moment.
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slow through san jose. here's a live look at 101 near north first street. doesn't look like a good ride. it's over an hour commute just to go from hellyer to san antonio. this is all due to an earlier accident. we are still tracking northbound 101 right near matilda with two lanes blocked. southbound we have a crash car versus a pole at trimble so expect delays to continue along 101. delays at sfo as well about 50 minutes because of course right there the clouds out there. we have early-morning fog from the coast and temperatures are fairly cool, normal for this hour 50s and 60s.
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♪ at a breakfast with nato secretary-general jens stoltenberg notice how trump is the only one who already chugged his juice. >> pay attention to the body language from his chief of staff john kelly. >> i don't think it's fair to the united states. we can't put up with it. and it's inappropriate. >> sarah huckabee sanders felt the need to explain so she released a statement. this is real. we did not make this up. she made this up. she said john kelly looked like that because he was displeased because he was expecting a full breakfast. there were only pastries and cheese.
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what in the world -- is this nato or the hometown buffet? what's going on? >> welcome back to "cbs this morning. >> question nato leaders were going to have an upset stomach after the president spoke. >> i know the feeling of wanting a large breakfast and -- >> and sitting there and -- >> and talking and talking. >> a danish is not fried eggs and bacon. >> i think they were being tongue and cheek to answer all the questions about whether kelly was showing some response to the president's remarks. >> a little sarcastic. the body language will continue to be read after today. here are three things you should know this morning. many twitter users might notice a decrease in followers today. the platform is purging tens of millions of accounts that were locked due to suspicious activity. this will reduce the number of followers by about 6% across the service. it will affect users who paid for fake followers or are followed by suspicious accounts. the company says most people wi
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fewer while more popular accounts could see a larger drop. a new study says in the past three months about half of parents surveyed phones while driving with young children. more than 33% of parents admitted to reading text messages while more than 26% said they sent messages. researchers found a link between cell phone use with kids in the car and other risky driving behaviors. these include not wearing a seat belt and driving under the influence of alcohol. all no-nos. and the u.s. navy is rededicating a japan base destroyer to senator senator john mccain. was originally named after his father and dfathe senator mccain reacted on twitter saying, quote, i hope the sailors who will serve aboard the "uss mccain" will find the same fulfillment as my family in serving a cause greater than one's self.
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>> it really is one of the best books "faith of my fathers," one of the best books where he talks about his father and their service to our country. celebrity turnsing to social media to warn their fans not to fall for impersonators online. >> i am not giving away anything on facebook. i am not giving away any money. >> tyler perry is the latest star to post a video telling his fans he is not give away cars, not asking for money, nothing. federal trade commission says in 2017, americans lost more than $3 million to imposter scams and they filed nearly 350,000 complaints. tony decopolo is here with how these scams work. >> you think they could be real. >> it's easy to smile and laugh but it also affects a lot of people. a lot of money. getting a message from someone saying they are your favorite singer, favorite actor, favorite athlete may seem to be too good to be true. guess what. a slew celebrities are going online to say it is.
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>> i am not giving away anything. this is tyler perry. i'm not giving away anything. >> reporter: perry urged fans to share this morning. >> post this everywhere so people will know that is not true. >> reporter: his message was meant for fans like manny ramos who nearly became a victim. scammers posing as tyler perry told manny he won $2 million. first they asked him to wire them $200. that's when manny caught on. >> he taught me a lesson. don't believe everything you see. >> reporter: perry says his team has to getak counhut down but the star is just one of a growing number of celebrities -- >> never give out any of your private information. >> reporter: -- who have been publicly warning about music st has also been a target. >> there are a lot of imposter accounts throughout. >> reporter: he took to facebook earlier this year to warn. >> please do not engage with these people or send them money. >> reporter: atkins says in the
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last year it's gotten worse. >> these people are starting to show up at concerts saying that i invited them to be there. >> reporter: even women who think he proposed. >> there are women that show up and say, oh, we're engaged. i don't know what anybody is going to do about it, but, you know, you report them and they shut them down, but then they start another. it's whack-a-mole. you can't stop them. >> reporter: advocacy groups like the national consumer league say celebrities with huge fan bases are ideal weapons for scammers. vice president john braille. >> a scammer can easily try and contact all 5 million and chances are he's going to get a certain percentage who will respond. and unare not nfortunately it's consumers out their hard earned cash. >> reporter: t taken down 583 million fake accounts in 2018. they've made several recent improvements to combat impersonation, including face recognition technology,
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automation to detect scamsnd imilities. ter t dow 9.9 accounts in may 2018 alone and are bringing in new technology and staff to fight spam and abuse. as for the scammers adkins had a message for them. >> i wish i could find these people. i'm kind of old school. i'd just go give them a beating. >> the consumer watchdog guy says consumers should check and see if they are verified. look for that blue checkmark. he also says going on a limb here, celebrities are not going to be asking their fans for money. they're not going to be sending private messages. consumers shouldn't click on a foreign link or personal information like credit card numbers, e-mail, social security numbers. anyone who does think they've been scammed should contact the ftc. >> should we make it general. if someone asks you to wire money, even if they're in your
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familydo >> look for two factor verifications. >> if john dickerson ever contacts you for anything, don't give him anything under any circumstance. >> no, not even for girl scout cookies. >> tony, thank you. a new aircraft that could soon be coming to a garage near you. >> i'm john blackstone. the dream of a car that flies has been around for as long as most of us can remember. now a silicon valley company says that dream is about to become a reality. we'll show you people flying around in this coming up on "cbs this morning." >> i don't know if i'm ready for it. if you're on the go subskrip to our cbs this morning podcast. hear the day's top stories and what's happening in your world in less than 20 minutes. how is that for a deal? you're watching "cbs this morning." l. you're watching "cbs this morning." they appear out of nowhere.
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others imagined flying vehicles that didn't look anything like a car. but now the dream may be closer than ever to reality. developers have worked on it quietly for nine years in a secret silicon valley location only on "cbs this morning," john blackstone got a first look at the airborne project. >> reporter: marcus ling calls his invention a personal aviation vehicle. an electric aircraft so easy to fly he says you need little training and no pilot's license. whenge >> when you press the thumb stick to climb with this, you have absolute full control. >> reporter: ling gave cbs this morning this exclusive tour of the secret silicon valley facility with a craft he calls black fly is being built. his breakthrough invention -- >> what we're going to do -- >> reporter: -- is a small but extremely powerful electric motor. >> this can produce 130 --
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>> reporter: he claims the eight-motor single seat aircraft has flown thousands of miles in test flights controlled from the ground before they ever put people in the cockpit. >> we first flew 10,000 miles. 1,000-plus flights. >> all autonomous? >> all autonomous and pay load of 2000 pounds. we have some magic buttons like return to home button for people that fly for the first time. >> reporter: for decades, flying cars were part of a future that's never quite arrived. >> this was a commuter, the helicopter in everybody's garage. >> reporter: this museum in silicon valley displays several flying cars that just didn't get off the ground. >> the technology wasn't there because they didn't have the computers. now the computers can actually manipulate the controls. >> reporter: now companies around the world are developing flying cars. google co-founder larry page is
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supporting two flying car projects. uber is working on flying taxis. marcus lang be on sale next year so anyone can buy it. >> the price of a luxury mercedes? >> price of an suv? >> price of an suv. >> how long will it take to learn to fly one of these? >> in a simulator, in five minutes. >> reporter: alan hustus, vice president of knowledge at google is on flack fly's board of directors and knows about flight. he was carried by balloon into the stratosphere, then parachuted nearly 136,000 feet breaking a world altitude record in 2014. he's almost as excited about black fly. >> and i've noticed in my career that things go from impossible to inevitable in a very short period of time. >> it's no longer technology standing in the way, he says, but rather regulations governing flight. >> there's regulatory issues to
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deal with, but, you know, in theory right now you could take this strvehicle, fly to san francisco and be there in eight minutes. >> under current federal regulations, flack fly is an ultra light aircraft meaning it can't fly at night or over urban areas. it can travel just 25 miles on its electric batteries. but the joy of flight -- seems unlimited. >> just incredibly fun to fly. instant gratification. >> wow! >> cbs this morning, john blackstone, palo alto, california. >> i'm excited about that possibility. >> it's a sexy little vehicle, but i think the ground is underrated. asphalt is nice. it's really smooth. >> you're in touch with your gravity, are you? >> exactly. very in touch with gravity. >> things like less traffic, though in the air. >> you're right. we'll keep you posted on that reality. schools are getting new
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recommendations to help prevent school shootings. ahead, the head of the secret service national threat assessment center will show us how schools can identify potential shooters. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by >> announcer: this portion of cbs this morning sponsored by walgreens. trusted since 1901. from millions of things. so we're here to help you protect your skin.
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panera. food as it should be. panera. if you have moderate to thsevere rheumatoid arthritis, month after month, the clock is ticking on irreversible joint damage. ongoing pain and stiffness are signs of joint erosion. humira can help stop the clock. prescribed for 15 years, humira targets and blocks a source of inflammation that contributes to joint pain and irreversible damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas
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where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. help stop the clock on further irreversible joint damage. talk to your rheumatologist. right here. right now. humira. welcome back to "cbs this morning." here's look at this morning's headlines. a federal judge ordered paul manafort to be moved from a virginia jail where prosecutors say he has vip treatment. they say he's being treated like a very important person. he has his own private area including a private shower, bathroom, phone, and computer.
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the judge wants him moved so he can be closer to lawyer. he's standing trial facing charges later this month. security video from july 3rd shows a handgun falling from a jacket being carried by circuit court judge joseph clapp. he was charged with a misdemeanor weapons offense and on different duties. by the age of 21, kylie jenner is set to be the youngest female billionaire in history. with another year of growth, the 20-year-old is likely to be mark zuckerberg who became a billionaire at age 23. that's mostly from her company kylie cause meters as well as endorsement deals.
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"forbes" says she's been able to popularize her fame on social media that includes 120 instagram followers. ahead, how soy farmers are making less and how they worry they might even get worse. 4 oh, milk. another breakfast, another dilemma. am i willing to pay the price for loving you? you'll make my morning, but ruin my day. complicated relationship with milk? pour on the lactaid. it's delicious 100% real milk, just without that annoying lactose. mmm, that's good.
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for this weekend at antioch's contra costa event park... has been canceled. e festival ♪[ music ] good morning, it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. a music festival planned for this weekend in antioch's contra costa event park has been canceled. venue officials say that the festival organizers submitted insurance paperwork that was invalid. earlier this week, performers started dropping out. investigators say that an electric livestock fence that was improperly installed sparked the county fire that's burned more than 90,000 acres in yolo and napa counties. cal fire has cited the owner. crews hope to have the wildfire contained this afternoon. and state officials say that california's greenhouse gas emissions are under 1990 levels two years ahead of schedule. we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. time now 7:57 and we're going to it back to the south bay where we have slowdowns on northbound 101. this is a look near north 1st street. you can see that the commute is just crawling along that stretch. it's over -- it's about 2 hours to make your way northbound from hellyer to san antonio. this is all due to an earlier crash still with one lane blocked right near matilda. give yourself some extra time. use 280 as an alternate. a little slow going at the airport, as well. that's where clouds are low at sfo. morning fog to start and then afternoon high clouds chance of thunderstorms later on this afternoon, as well.
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welcome back to cbs. welcome back to cbs this morning. right now it's time to show you some of the morning's headlines. the navy is allowing service women to wear ponytails and online course about happiness has about 100,000 students. but first, before we get happy, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. the united states might withdraw from nato, though that
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was never explicitly mentioned. it was reportedly his attempts to fix his public image that caused this latest uproar. we'll also be getting that latest update on the government reuniy reunifying these families. it's clear, the people on that plane are very lucky. the pilot told the ntsb that by the time he realized he was in trouble, he was out of time. the team from croatia, with playing before 2 million people. >> every one of the croatian players ends in itch. there were so many itches, i had to open a bottle of callamine lotion. i'm john dickerson with
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norah o'donnell. president trump is in the london area this morning after eclaring victory for ims ahimst the nato summit in brussels. everesident trump said that ttedybody's happy, they agreed no increased defense spending and said that he believes in the nato alliance. very're very happy, we have a onger tery strong nato. much stronger than it was two tars. n> major, what a turn of events one might say. >>. crincreased nato de stepped
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spending. at one point, president trump said there's now a new agreement for nato agreements to spend more than 2% on gross domestic products. after the news conference, the french president, emanuel macron said that's not true. all that's been agreed upon is llr the 29 nations in nato to use that pledged threshold by s it. the president has already left for the meeting with president may. lhile they're there there will be a first couples team with bethn elizabeth. the preside street protests in london are expe expected. even so, the president said here people in the uk like him and actually agree with him on most of his policies. agree the bbc has a different take on the lhe president's visit, saying it will be the most controversial
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ever by an american president to amer britain. underscoring that, an unprecedented warning from the american president in london. the trump administration's escalating trade wars with china is puttirican faers on unstable ground. last slapped a 25% tariff on latelan soybeans yesterday. boy bean farmers are caught in ehe middle of trade disputes. dean reynolds is at a soybean far arm in edmonton, illinois. g. reporter: good morning, china has been a leading importer of international goods for years. inthe trade wars has the owner beijing spread in illinois
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worried about how it may change the landscape of his business. >> it artificially raises our prices. >> reporter: farmer paul taylor isn't happy with the tariffs. but hopes the president knows s what he's doing. the righnk it's okay to shake >> i hopp. ivereporter: last friday, the ter: chinaimposed a tariff on tarife goods worth $34 billion and china immediately responded with tariffs on its own goods, including soybeans. >> could it also be an incentive for the chinese to buy more soyeans from, say, brazil? > of course it is. >> reporter: while still >> i >> reporic, the fourth generation farmer still has concerns. >> in this case it's done to modify behavior of our trading ehrtners. will that work? i don't know. t ey don't have a very good record for that. record oope to god it doesn't lead to any kind of
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international rekregcession. recession.ar we lost $400 billion in trade to china. >> reporter: president trump talks about how china takes advantage of the u.s. for aeted, i am fighting for a level playing field for our farmers and will win. ere on taylor's farm, patience could be in much shorter supply come fall, when the soybeans are ready to sell. is price per bushel is down 20%ut 20% since march. >> i'm over 90% priced on my 018 soybeans. >> so you're set for 2018? >> yeah, kind of. >> but 2019? >> bets are off. >> reporter: and if there is one rd that could describe feelings down on the farm this year, it is uncertainty. y surehen you grow crops for a sohn? >> dean, it looks beautiful
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♪ for more than 60 minutes yesterday, england fans thought their team was headed to the world cup final. but then croatia took it away, tying the score midway through the second half and winning it in overtime. and still feeling the excitement of that moment. this is the first time croatia has made it to the world cup finals. mark phillips is in london where fans were left disappointed again. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, well, they don't call it the world cup for nothing, and after all it's the biggest sporting event there is. more eager than bragging rights, so it seems is the psychological well-being of entire populations. in england they gathered in their multitudes in parks across the realm.
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in croatia they filled the main square. england in white, the young team nobody thought would make it to a world cup semifinal. croat croatia, a company of just over 4 million people, independent for less than 30 years. whoever said it's just a game might have changed their mind when they saw the reaction to england's first goal. the celebratory mass outdoor beer shower has become an english tradition of this world cup. what makes it all the sweeter is it wasn't supposed to happen. england has peaked at mediocre for decades. could it be this easy? cro croatia may be small, but it has some of the most successful clubs in europe.
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so inevitably this happened. and this happened. tied after regulation time. they play an extra half hour. croatia needed 19 minutes. >> he shoots, he scores! >> reporter: somebody's got to lose, somebody's got to win. that's why they play the games. >> croatia, the second smallest stage in history to make it to the world cup final. >> reporter: and speaking of bigger and smaller, croatia will now meet the giant france in the final on sunday. france has 2-1 favorites, but it might need a little flavor when they take on croatia. >> they've gone far,
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congratulations. we know that beer will be involved in england, and in croatia. >> they can still play for third place, they'll play on saturday against belgium. >> it's an amazing game. and now we got one more to watch. >> two more. >> i'm focused on the main prize. all right, a california police officer went above and beyond the call of duty when a struggling teenager needed someone to talk to. >> daniel in his mind selected me and i had no choice in it. it's step up and be that person in his life or turn and walk away and i can't turn my back on him. >> ahead in our series a more perfect union, how the two formed an unlikely bond that changed both of their lives forever. you're watching cbs this morning. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this morning's "a
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could light up the room? aveeno® positively radiant sheer daily moisturizer. lightweight hydration for positively radiant skin that lasts. aveeno®. naturally beautiful results®. your mornings were made for better things than psoriatic arthritis. as you and your rheumatologist consider treatments, ask if xeljanz xr is right for you. xeljanz xr is a once-daily pill for psoriatic arthritis. taken with methotrexate or similar medicines, it can reduce joint pain, swelling, and significantly improve physical function. xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma, and other cancers have happened.
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don't start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts, and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common, and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz xr can reduce the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't let another morning go by without talking to your rheumatologist about xeljanz xr.
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this morning the u.s. secret service is releasing a new guide to prevent u.s. school attacks. there have already been 17 shootings this year. the secret service national threat assessment center has researched school attacks for nearly to years. the center is authorize by congress to ensure safety in public places including schools. only on "cbs this morning," we're getting a first look at the new guide on how to intervene before school shootings happen. lina alathari led the team. good mortgage. thains for joining us. >> good morping. >> what have you found?
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>> one of the best things we've found is having an effective threat assessment guide in place. this guide takes you through step-by-step instructions how to do that, how to set up a threat assessment program in school, which constitutes installing a threat assessment team, identifying prohibiting behaviors, having a mechanism for reporting behavior and doing a it. >> you recommend every school do an assessment? >> actually we provide this for the communities. we train law enforcement, school professionals, mental health professionals and counselors. we're seeing schools are already doing this. they've been doing this since following columbine since secret service released the earlier stoichlt they understand intervention is important. >> what do you mean by threat
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assessment. what is it if people don't understand the jargon? >> i'm glad you asked. some people think it's a risk assessment. threat assessment process is simply being able to have standards in place where you can identify a student who might be exhibiting concerning behavior or experiencing some sort of distress, how to gather information from multiple sources on the student's behavior, their circumstances, how they cope with challenges and setbacks so that you can assess whether they have a risk of engaging in harm to themselves and others and then identifying what intervention strategies can we implement. >> can may thank illegal firearms part of a risk. >> that's one small part. whether another peer reports a student, they're concerned about them making statements about engaging in violence or whether a teacher reports it, one component is to zpamen if you're
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concerned about the student, do they have access to weapons in the home. >> you say it's a small part, so it's really not that important, is that what you're saying? >> i'm not saying it's not that important. i'm saying it's one component. we take a wholistic approach. so if you're doing an assessment on a student, you want to look at everything going on in their life. you're looking at everything that would increase or decrease the risk of violence. >> we talk about assessing students. a year before parkland the student posted on social media he wanted to be a professional school shooter. how do you make sure the warning signs don't get ignores? >> i'm glad you said that. i know that in broward county they did have some assessment protocol. i'm not familiar with all of them. but just in talking to schools across the kun cantry, they have different practices.
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this will promote where you can have best practices. >> all right. lina alathari, thank you for being with us. >> thank you. ahead, we'll show you some of newest products in studio 57 with us and look at the questions over their accuracy and security. you're watching "cbs this morning." this is customizable streaming tv for your family,
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the 911. when a california teenager need swund to talk to, he found will get a tour of the west county detention facility in his city. it comes amid allegations of mistreatment, of detainees at lity. good morning, it's 8:25. i'm kenny choi. today richmond mayor tom butt will get a tour of the west county detention facility in his city. it comes amid allegations of mistreatment of detainees at that facility. investigators hope that new video evidence to help crack a hit-and-run case in oakland. it happened last year at bancroft and 78th avenue. a pregnant woman was severely injured and her unborn baby died later. plus a former bay area resident will be in san francisco, one of three world war ii veterans to be honored at a ceremony today. julian is a 91-year-old veteran who joined the navy at the age of 17. he later became a firefighter and was the first paid black
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firefighter in the south. we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment. ♪ strummed guitar you can't experience the canadian rockies through a screen. you have to be here, with us. ♪ upbeat music travel through this natural wonder and get a glimpse of amazing, with a glass of wine in one hand, and a camera in the other, aboard rocky mountaineer. canada's rocky mountains await. call your travel agent or rocky mountaineer r specof
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good morning. 8:27. and we are tracking the slowdowns if you are heading along 880 in both directions. there's a live look. this is your ride just south of 238. so heading through san lorenzo, we have about 25 minutes down towards highway 84 over towards the dumbarton bridge. a crash northbound just past whipple is blocking at least one lane, a backup developing speeds about 35 miles per
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hour. san mateo bridge, sluggish westbound. 26 minutes over to 101. and an earlier crash 101 at matilda, all lanes open, residual delays, very slow, about 80 minutes to go from hellyer to san antonio. good morning, everybody. so, yes, we're waking up to some early-morning fog out there, some low cloud coverage coming in from the coast, a sign we still have the west wind going on this morning. it's not too strong which is actually not helping because it's not pushing any of it out of our way. afternoon high clouds are in your forecast from the south. so right now, san jose you have nice clear skies. just a few little wispy clouds out there. beautiful conditions. temperatures in the 50s and 60s in the area. monsoonal moisture to the south of us now is going to bring in some higher cloud coverage and the possibility of dry lightning later on this evening through early tomorrow morning. year, i am sorry about that.
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♪ ♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's time to show you some of this morning's haeneeadlines. navy women can wear ponytails. many black women have reportedly asked for changes to the female grooming standards. free hanging braids, lock hair consist styl hairstyles and wider buns are allowed and it makes the navy more conclusive they say. a new paint job for air force once. the president wants to ditch robin egg blue part after
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redesign by president kennedy. trump wants a color scheme that looks, quote, more american and isn't, quote, a jackie kennedy color. president trump's preferred designed is believe to have include red, white and blue. we asked the white house for comments but did not immediately hear back. "the wall street journal" reports that kids today are more patient than kids 50 years ago. can it be true? a study in a journal developmental psychology reenacted the famous marshmallow experiment and when researchers put a marshmallow or a treat from front of a child and said they could have a second one if they wait a short period of time without eating the first marshmallow and leave the room. preschoolers were able to wait a minute longer than preschoolers in the 1980s and two minutes longer than children in the 1960s and one possible reason parents are more focused on cultivating a child's ability to
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make decisions for himself or herself. >> or the benefit of a marshmallow has gone down! it ain't what it used to be! >> exactly. >> there used to be a strong correlation for you to have the willpower to restrain and taking a marshmallow and later in life is why they cared about this. >> did we like marshmallows? we hate them. >> i have some in my pocket right now! >> you're stuffed with marshmallows. >> treats ahead. the best burger in the country is said to be found in chapel hill, north carolina. people "flipped out" over al's shack in chapel hill. they say it's the best in the nation. >> certainly the best name. >> second place to brooks gourmet burgers and dogs in naples, florida. and then here is number three in lincoln, nebraska.
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more than 50% of adult americans have at least one chronic health condition. silicon valley is now trying to take the lead in helping people monitor themselves. companies are introducing products that promise to help users keep a constant eye on their health including blood pressure, glucose levels and heart problems. the called wearable hospital is a more than $6 billion industry and it is growing. a market research group says the business is expected to more than double to $14 billion worldwide by 2022. while the products offer hope, many people have security and privacy concerns. brian coolie, editor at large with our partners at cnet is here. good morning. >> good morning. >> you have on your wrist a fancy looking watch. what is it and how does it work? >> this is the first time a blood pressure machine, actual blood pressure machine has been put into a watch form! a marvel miniature and a company that call at the time health view product. press bun button here or
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automatically program to take tests when needed and it goes into a countdown and you can't see it but i can feel the cuff, which is the band, tightening around my veins. it presses those down and releases again just like the big machine at the clinic. so it's fda cleared. it's not some piece of junk that is fly by night. it's doing the same thing. miniaturized and relays the data to an app and keeps a history that you can see on the app that shows you what your context is. so it doesn't just give you information. it will give you answers. here is how you're trending and what consumers need. >> it cuff laes? -- releases? >> yes. it never stays locked. >> how about the glucose monitors? >> tiny thing here that abbott. you stick this on your arm on the back of your upper arm and stays there ten days and take this reader here and swipe it right next to the thing and it
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will read your glucose. in the future, pending new approval use your smartphone and like pay at the register and swipe and there is your glucose information like finger sticks. >> you keep it on? do you shower with it? >> absolutely. it stays stuck on there ten days at a time. medica medicare has picked this up for coverage. >> blood pressure and glucose are two separate things. >> this is an apple watch band that does ekg and arterial fibrillati fibrillation. combine the two together and get fda cleared initial prediction you're trending to or maybe away from a likelihood of a future stroke. the idea is get in front of things and stop doing heroic amazing interventions later and
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be decades ahead of it. like we are driving a car today with a dashboard and only works one hour a year during checkup and the rest evident year driving around no idea if your car has a lot of oil. >> what about this one? >> it's an ekg in a wristband in an apple watch or the back of a phone. your fingers are there. why not take an ekg? >> this is a lot of personal information we are beaming around. >> also. >> there has to be some privacy or security concerns about all of this data. >> of course. of the areas of intervention wearables d i have the least concern. i have concern for the tleleast about this. you have health care payers and providers and fda all over seeing it and i wish smart home had that much regulation and connected cars have that much but that is not bad either.
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an area i'm less concerned is here but this is a and have to get consumers warmed up nefi a vast and we all need to be wearing there whether we have a condition or not. get in front of it. >> thank you. >> yes. what unites us as americans is far greater than than what divides us. today highlighting the unlikely bond between a police officer and young man whose father was in and out of prison. john blackstone went to orange county, california, to meet the pair. >> growing up, my father was incarcerat incarcerated. he wasn't there. actually, incarcerated a couple of months before i was born and in for a little over ten years. >> reporter: for daniel rodriguez, it could have all turned out differently. at than early age, lessons in law and order turned into motivation. there was no resentment about law enforcement? >> honestly, no. never once did i feel resentment. i knew they were doing their job and when he was arrested they
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came and talked to us. >> reporter: as a teen he joined a program for aspiring officers in garden grove, california, south of anaheim. some kids run into trouble and you run away from trouble. >> i was trying to. i think i needed somebody to mint to about things and, you know, just make me feel that much better going home and knowing i could talk to somebody about that. >> reporter: that someone was veteran officer and explorer mentor jason perkins who turned out to be a good listener. >> daniel and his mind selected me and i had no choice in it. it's step up and be that person in his life or turn and walk away. i can't turn my back on him. >> reporter: he guided rodriguez through high school. >> there is things that beginning years of high school i'm not too proud of and having jason around and being able to talk to him and going through high school when you have girlfriends. you don't want to talk to mom about that. and having jason there saying
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you got this, don't worry about it and believe in yourself. >> reporter: perkins was there along his mother and mother to pin on his badge at graduation. >> he hasn't just been a mental for him. he is also been a great dear friend. that male figure he was lacking at home i will forever be grateful for that. >> reporter: somewhere along the line, you guys came up with nicknames? >> yeah. he would always tell me i'm not here to replace your father but i think he was able to fill that void of that male figure i didn't have growing up and i don't know where or when it started but i started calling him pops. >> reporter: he calls you pops? you call him? >> me ho. spanish for son. he's the son i never had in every sense of the word. >> reporter: today rodriguez patrols the streets of a city and now leading his own police explorer program. >> came full circle for me.
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working with the kids and trying to do my best at mentoring them and using, you know, the skills that i've kind of got from jason and try to do what he has done for me for all of the other kids. >> so many lives out there that he'll have an impact on winding his is just getting started. so that's why i say he'll do a hundred times what i ever did in my career he'll do in his. >> reporter: a big task. >> sounds like he has a lot more confidence in me than i do. >> you'll be fine. you'll be fine. >> for "cbs this morning," john bla blackstone, garden grove, california. the beatles sang "money can't buy me love." ian one says it won't buy you happiness either. >> you think more money is going to make us happy and we think money to have grow is going to be super awesome but we saw that just doesn't work. >> the professor santos is in
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making it the most popular course in the school's more than 300-year history. now her teachings are spreading well beyond campus. more than 138,000 people around the world have registered for the online version of the class. professor santos joins us for a crash course on happiness. good morning. >> we've been so excited to talk to you all morning. so excited to get happy. >> be happy. go. so what -- what's the first step? >> yeah. so the first step is really to realize that some of our intuitions about what we need to do to be happy are just wrong. in the class i talk to students about how our minds lie to us. we say, to be happy i need to change my circumstances, no salary, new job, or move. really you just have to change your mindset. your circumstances are fine. you need to change how you react to them. >> you call them requiremewires.
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how do you do it? >> rewire the way you behavior. one simple one is just to make more social connections with other people. what the research suggests is that very happy people spend lots of time with people. they talk to the barista. that's a simple rewirement. how much time are you spending with other people. >> when you say social connections, you mean physical connections, right, not social media connections. >> yes. that's an important point. we're scrolling through our instagram feed and we feel like that's social. it's not. we need one on one hive conversation with a human. >> it seems like you're suggesting nothing is but theying makes it so. the other is change your actions. make these connections with people and develop community in an actual way, not in the superficial social media way.
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>> that's right. this combination of changing how you think and how you act is part of so many of the different tips. another tip we talk to student about is take time for gratitude, which is partly a thinking thing. don't focus on the hassles but the blessings of the life. this is hard for me. when i go out for a glass of wine with my girlfriend, i don't want to talk about the wonderful things. i want to complain. it's our mind tricking us. >> another trick, before you go to sleep, the three things you're grateful. hasn't that schon beneficial data. >> yeah, that's the amazing thing. these simple practices can change things. another is gratitude letter where you sit down for 15 minutes and write a letter to somebody you're thankful to have had in your lie. that act can boost up well being ratings a month later. it's a simple thing you can do.
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>> i saw something flash on the screen, random acts of kindness. >> this is where our minds lie to us. if i'm having a bad day, i'm going to treat myself. i'm going out for manicure, me, me, me. it turns out helping others bumps up our happiness more than we think. the simple act of spend 20g on someone or $5 can boost up your happiness for a whole day and make your happier than spending it on yours. >> what kind of homework did you assi assign? >> i gave students the home work of doing the exact practices. it's in the syllabus and they have do it. experience gratitude. talk to someone. another is healthy habits like sleep and exercise. >> professor, we're very a great. you have been here. >> we're happier having had this
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conversation. >> it's already working. >> thanks so much. to find out more about professor santos's class, visit our website on cbsnews.com. you can take the test she gives students to determine how happy you are. >> and you can hear more of our podcast which is available on our podcast app or wherever you like to watch. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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after a shooting in oakland. police say it happened about eleven last night, near 80th avenue and holly street. the 3-year-old is in stable it's 8:55. i'm kenny choi. a toddler is hospitalized after a shooting in oakland. police say it happened about 11 p.m. last night near 80th and holly street. the 3-year-old is in stable condition this morning. and the shooter is still at large. in february, bart service in the transbay tube will start an hour later, at 5 a.m., to allow construction workers on the rail system's under water tunnel today is the grand opening of the oakland zoo's california trail. mayor schaaf will kick off the celebration with a speech and then ribbon cutting at 10:30 this morning. we'll have weather and traffic and weather in just a moment. a
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good morning. time now 8:57. a motorcycle accident still out -- this is right along westbound 80 right at fremont. so just as you are coming off the bay bridge, this is on the skyway portion of it. you can see emergency crews are on scene. and quite a bit of activity with the tow truck and other emergency personnel. do expect delays getting into san francisco. your ride definitely starting to jam up along the upper deck as you are making your way towards the tunnel and we still have the metering lights on. the backup continues to stretch onto the eastshore freeway so 31 minutes heading
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into san francisco from the maze. eastshore freeway dealing with a few problems of their own right near gilman so our travel times still in the yellow 26 minutes. here's neda with the forecast. >> it's very foggy, our "salesforce tower" view showing part of the bay bridge but clouds over it but below "salesforce tower" which is about 1,000 feet up, so definitely dealing with low clouds and fog across the golden gate bridge, as well. but for places like san jose, you're nice and sunny this morning. temperatures up there are -- down there i should say, in the south bay 66 degrees. 57 in san francisco. livermore 67. overall satellite/radar showing we have coastal clouds, that's how the morning has been. but then to the south look at the cloud coverage. there's monsoonal moisture.
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