tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 14, 2018 3:12am-3:59am PST
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to cast doubt on the anonymously sourced reports about a staff shake-up. >> it could be that it's not completely verified and true. >> reporter: first lady melania trump made her own personnel recommendation today saying she was unhappy with the deputy national security adviser mira ricardel, who travelled with her to africa last month. mrs. trump cedric del, seen this afternoon standing behind the president, was involved in disagreements over seating on the plane and other logistics. in a rare public rebuke, the first lady's office in a statement tonight said quote ricardel no longer deserves the honor of serving in thi white huuse, even though, ricardel still has
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her job here at the white house. >> pretty amazing to see that statement, chip. thank you. the state of maryland today sued to block the appointment of matthew whitaker as the new acting attorney general. the state argues the constitution requires that whitaker be confirmed by the senate. the administration is expected to issue its own opinion defending the appointment. whitaker now supervises the investigation into the interference in the 2016 election. michelle obama says she is standing by her motto, when they go low we go high. in an interview for cbs this morning, obama spoke with gayle king about the current administration. >> it seems that whatever the obama administration has done, it seems the current administration wants to undo. how do you handle that when you look at the work that you all have done? >> you know, the truth is that the presidency isn't ours to own, you know. it's the people's jobs. and it's not how me and barack feel. we did our jobs. we did the best that we could
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do. the question is how does the country feel about what -- so i don't take it personally. >> you don't? >> our democracy is clear. it's just sometimes people think my vote doesn't count, and that's just so wrong. voting matters. you know? we saw in this midterms people wanted the country to move in a different direction, and they kim out in record numbers, and they voted. there are two big winners in amazon's nationwide contest for a second headquarters after seattle. the retailing giant's split decision today followed a frenzied competition and billions of dollars in promised tax subsidies. here is nick thompson. >> reporter: amazon's choice of new york and the d.c. suburb of arlington, virginia, had been a poorly kept secret, but with today's official announcement, the retail giant detailed what the two cities get, $5 billion in investments and 50,000 jobs, each earning an average of $150,000 a year. jay carney is amazon's senior
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vice president. >> we need a lot of tech employees, software developers, computer scientists, engineers, and both cities have available talent locally. >> reporter: the news ended a grand 14-month marketing campaign that inspired 238 cities to go to enormous lengths to win the prize. some of it bordering on the absurd. the mayor of kansas city, missouri wrote a thousand amazon product reviews and posted a video of himself doing it. but amazon may be the biggest winner, getting more than $2 billion in tax giveaways as well as a massive amount of marketing data that the 20 finalists handed over, all of which gives the online retail giant a leg up on its marketing, shipping, and logistics decisions. the cities clearerly believe amazon will help them, but if the experience of its home headquarters of seattle is any indicator, the relationship could be rocky. amazon has been blamed for
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seattle's stagnant wages and lack of affordable housing, and that has residents like new york's jonathan westin concerned. >> we don't need to recruit businesses to come here. there is lots of businesses that are coming here without any subsidies, without any tax breaks, without anything. >> again, a minor indication that amazon has some leverage here. you've been following this process for 14 months. are you surprised by the picks? >> no, i'm not surprised, but i still had been hopeful that it would go to a red state. there is too much tech concentrated in too few cities on coast, and that's not god for the country. >> bay area now and new york and d.c. and did amazon get the better end of these deals? >> amazon, they're relentless, they're ruthless, they're so smart. they always get the better end of a deal, and yes, they won again today. >> all right. we'll wait to see what happens next, nick. thanks. >> thank you. coming up next, why the dominant maker of e cigarettes is taking some of its products out of stores.
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and when i really want to take it up a notch we use k-y yours & mine. tingling for me, warming for him. wow! this holiday season get what you want i was on the fence about changing from a manual to an electric toothbrush. but my hygienist said going electric could lead to way cleaner teeth. she said, get the one inspired by dentists, with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. oral-b's gentle rounded brush head removes more plaque along the gum line. for cleaner teeth and healthier gums. and unlike sonicare, oral-b is the first electric toothbrush brand accepted by the ada for its effectiveness and safety. what an amazing clean! i'll only use an oral-b! oral-b. brush like a pro.
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it is the dominant maker of e cigarettes, and it's pulling some of its most popular products from stores. we're talking here about juul, and anna werner reports this could be a preemptive strike. >> reporter: e-cigarettes from juul labs introduced in 2017 command 70% of the market, and they've become hugely popular with teens. today's announcement comes as the fda is pressuring the company to reverse that trend. juul announced it is temporarily
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suspending all retail store sales of four e-cigarette flavors that expert say aract kids, mango, cucumber, kreme and fruit. the numbers tell us underage use of e-cigarette products is a problem. we must solve it. vape store owners we talked to aren't pleased. >> mango is the top selling flavor for juul. it's probably going to bring down sales a bit. >> reporter: the fda calls teen vaping an epidemic. preliminary government data shows in 2017, more than three million middle and high school students reported using e-cigarettes. commissioner scott gottlieb is expected to announce a ban on sales of most flavored e-cigarettes at convenience stores and gas stations in the coming days. but meredith berkman with an anti-vaping group wants a ban on flavors everywhere. e just want them to ban the flavors because the evidence shows that flavors hook kids.
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>> reporter: well, juul plans to resume retail sales of those flavors in the future, but only for stores that use age verification protocols. it's also shutting down its social media accounts. but jeff, the campaign for tobacco-free kids say it's too little too late and it's not a substitute for comprehensive government regulation. >> okay, anna, thank you very much. coming up here tonight, how evolution may save africa's elephants from ruthless poachers.
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we use k-y yours & mine. tingling for me, warming for him. wow! this holiday season get what you want the fbi said today for third straight year there has been a spike in hate crimes. more than 7,000 reported in the u.s. last year. that is a 17% increase. anti-jewish hate crimes were up 37%. two years after the execution-style murders of eight family members in rural ohio, authorities today announced a breakthrough. four people, a husband, wife, and their two adult sons were charged in the killings. ohio's attorney general says it may have involved a custody dispute. evolution may be the best defense for african elephants who are increasingly slaughtered for her ivory tusks according to national geographic, tusks are shrinking making them less
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you know, those grueling swim/bike run events that cover 140.6 miles. what with you, are you a competitive guy? >> oh, yeah. >> reporter: kyle has cerebral palsy, no use of his arms or legs. >> from the earliest age, i wanted kyle to be included in whatever we did. so let's just figure this out. >> reporter: he always look out for you? >> he was always there for me. maybe a little bit too much at times because i'm very independent. >> reporter: good big brother? >> great big brother. >> reporter: kyle got the idea watching brent race in his first ironman in 2010. they found the right equipment, started training and made it happen for kyle, just as when they were kids. >> kyle uses my legs and i use his spirit. so i pull kyle on a boat and push the pedals on a bike and push him on a run. but that whole time kyle has allegiancia. so his body is fighting itself. >> reporter: their first ironman, madison, wisconsin in
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2013. it took them 15 hours to finish. >> the most competitive athlete in our house is kyle, because he's been competing to be just like everybody else his whole life. >> reporter: last month in kona, hawaii, the pease brothers competed in their fourth ironman, the world championship. they finished after almost 14.5 hours, more than six hours behind the men's winner, but as always, brothers first. >> i knew in my heart that i wanted to become an athlete. and to become an athlete with my brother is so much sweeter. >> reporter: mark strassmann, cbs news, atlanta. >> that is the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others check back a bit later for the morning news and "cbs news this morning." from the broadcast center in new york, i'm jeff glor.
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this is the "cbs overnight ." >>me to the "overnight news." i'm michelle miller. president trump signaled an overhaul of the white house staff after the big democratic victories in the midterm elections. the first to go was attorney general jeff sessions. now a top national security aide is on the way out and another head on the chopping block appears to belong to homeland security secretary kirstjen nielsen. the president blames her for the problems with his immigration policies. chip reid has the latest. >> reporter: at a ceremony celebrating the hindu festival of lights today, president trump had no comment on reports that he plans to remove kirstjen nielsen as secretary of homeland security. >> we'll be talking about it. >> reporter: knowledgeable sources tell cbs news nielsen
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will be leaving but say the timing is uncertain. just last month president trump doink -- he you gotteno aneep ep a bn vocal adte migration., including >> apprehension without detention and removal is not border security. >> reporter: but sources say she could fall victim to the president's frustration that his immigration agenda has stalled. >> i mean, there is no great secret. a lot of administrations make changes after midterms. >> reporter: if she is forced out, that could lead to yet another clash between the president and chief of staff john kelly, who is nielsen's strongest supporter in the white house. source says her firing could result in kelly's departure. the former four-star marine corps general has been frustrated that he couldn't bring more order to the chaotic west wing. if kelly were to leave, sources say the president has been advised to bring in someone with
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more political experience in preparation for the 2020 reelectionhi adviser kellyanne conway today attempted to cast doubt on the anonymously sourced reports abst remaining anonymouses? could it be that it's not completely verified and true? >> reporter: first lady melania trump made her own personnel recommendation today saying she was unhappy with the deputy national security adviser mira ricardel, who travelled with her to africa last month. mrs. trump said ricardel, seen this afternoon standing behind the president, was involved in disagreements over seating on the plane and other logistics. in a rare public rebuke, the first lady's office in a statement tonight said ricardel tonight, quote, no longer deserves the honor of serving in this white house, and mrs. trump shared those views directly with her husband.
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even though, ricardel still has her job here at the white house. residents, family members and recovery teams are combing the ashes inha 200 people still missing after a firestorm incinerated the town. mireya villarreal is there. >> reporter: five days after a deadly wildfire incinerated entire towns in the sierra foothills, forensic teams are still searching through the ashes for victims. it has been an agonizing wait for the relatives and friends of the missing, including 30-year-old chardonnay telly who has not heard from her father richard brown since before the blaze. she posted this frantic message, "no, i am not okay, but i am alive. i need to find my dad." >> oh my god. >> reporter: we with telly today when she finally reached her father's charred land. >> dad! nothing. his tractor. it looks like a car.
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>> reporter: where is his vehicle? >> it's right there. >> reporter: what's running through your head right now? >> my dad's a survivor, and he has been through war and so many things. and there is a possibility he could have made it through this. >> reporter: telly, a registered nurse, had her own brush with death when she fled paradise, saving three of her patients. you called your husband? what did you say to him on the phone? >> i said we're not going make it out of this, and i feel like my patients are going to die, and there are things blowing up everywhere. and to tell the kids that i loved them and to check on my dad.
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>> where is he? >> reporter: investigators believe the ignition point for this blaze is about ten miles from where i'm standing, in the small secluded town of concow. it is surrounded by bone-dry forest, which was perfect fuel for the camp fire. once those high winds hit those raging flames, there was nothing stopping the fire's deadly path to paradise. jeff? >> in just a matter of minutes, a spot fire mushroomed into this towering inferno. it was an eerie reminder to residents down below that the devastating woolsey fire isn't over yet. >> we start seeing planes come down there, we're out of here. >> a mandatory evacuation had people scrambling just outside of los angeles. neighbors overhe weekend. >> we see thuge, you is likere g break. >> reporter: fire crews quickly swooped in. this firefight is now primarily from the air.
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each one of those helicopters can drop up to 3,000 g >> erratic winds, steep terrain, and so nobody is safe when we have winds like this. overseas, what started out as an israeli special forces operation inside gaza has turned into an all-out war. tel aviv says its soldiers were just gathering intelligence when they killed a hamas commander and six of his soldiers. now the palestinians are firing missiles and the israelis launching airstrikes. charlie d'agata reports. >> reporter: israeli air strikes lit up the sky over gaza in an escalation not seen here since 2014. retaliation, the military says, for more than 460 rockets and mortars fired from gaza into >> the palestinian islamic jihad made a deliberate decision to
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try to maximize damage inside israel and to try to kill israeli civilians. >> reporter: gaza has been under the control of palestinian islamists hamas since 2007 and stepped up attacks after an alleged botched israeli commando mission inside gaza left one israeli officer and seven palestinian fighters dead. the southern israeli city of ashkelon is just eight miles from gaza, making it an easy target. this is what it looks like when one of those random hamas rockets hits an israeli house in an ordinary neighborhood. it blew a hole in the living room wall where a woman was watching television when she heard the siren. she begged her son to come with her to a reinforced safe room. that used to be your bed? >> yeah, that used to be my bed, as you see. >> reporter: it may have saved both their lives. just two minutes before the >> yeah, that's the -- i don't know. that's my luck. >> reporter: it's a pretty close call. >> yeah, that's a close call. exactly. >> reporter: and this is what
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palestinians in gaza were facing today. widespread destruction after the israeli military targeted 160 ok i'll admit. i didn't keep my place as clean as i would like 'cuz i'm way too busy. who's got the time to chase around down dirt, dust and hair? so now, i use heavy duty swiffer sweeper and dusters. for hard-to-reach places,o cl it captures dust in one swipe. ha! gotcha! and (new) sweeper heavy duty cloths lock away a twice as much dirt and dust. it gets stuff deep in the grooves other tools can miss.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." where and the turn ng on you? it into big bucks. kris van c >> reporter: drivers are opting into this. it isn't time to wrap your car in tin foil or anything like that, but vehicles like this are increasingly coming connected. this has a wifi modem on board. your car may a whole lot about you, like where you've been, what music you like to listen and what your favorite cup of coffee is.
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privacy advocates warn that could end up in the hands. >> john ellis found four computers. it generates data and it collects data. >> reporter: and inside the car dyhr -- >> we're going to connect this undern us data streaming in realtime. with enough data i can discern patterns that seem almost nonexist don't the human eye. >> reporter: from the brakes to the windshield wiper, with as many point as 100 point thost that generate data, they pack as many as personal computers and can process up to 25 gigs of data every hour, some of it beamed back to carmakers. and now they're rushing to turn your car's data into a revenue stream, reselling blocks of revenue information in one day, info could be bought by mapping companies or apps that monitor traffic conditions. something nearly 72% of car owners said they had no idea was happening. >> we know how tired you are, because we have cameras inside the car looking at the driver to
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look for eyelid movement. some of the cars have the ability to detect alcohol. are you weaving? are you moving? are you harsh braking? >> reporter: and how hard you brake could get you a brake on car insurance. good drivers who agree to share data can get a better deal. and the drive for data is big business. soon a car's data may be worth more than the vehicle itself, according to one data company. and up to 3/4 of a billion dollars industry-wide. >> you're driving the behavior of the person in the car. we do have that data. >> reporter: gm uses that data with drivers' consent to put popular brands at their fingertips. >> you've created this connection with merchants and brands. they know that data. we're bringing it on to the dashboard of the car. >> reporter: gm calls it marketplace, an attempt to cash in on the 46 minutes a day the average american spends in a car. low on gas, it will point you to the closest gas station and let you pay from the dash, where yo reservations on the go. >> our newest.
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>> reporter: all based on what's close to the car's current location. >> click reserve. and now you and i have a reservation at 1:15 at samba kitchen, and it's sent to my e-mail. >> reporter: but gm says drivers are asked to opt in. what does the opt-in process look like? >> when you get into the car, the very first time you tap the dash, you accept other terms and conditions and we let you know we may be using the location of the car to serve you. >> it's important that carmakers work to make us as transparent and easily explainable as possible. >> reporter: and privacy advocates point out it's on us to start thinking about cars for what they've become. >> they're data generating devices. the truth is yes, our cars are learning more about us, but what they learn may save our lives. >> reporter: a lot of those sensors that collect data are for the new safety features in vehicles like collision avoidance, but aaa is finding that comes with a hidden cost. it can raise your repair bills by up to $3,000.
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$150,000 vehicle had a here's a simple true-or-false quiz for you. if you're between age 50 and 85, it's important for you to know the truth, so please listen closely. i'm alex trebek, and all of the answers are false. so what is true? you can get coverage, regardless of your health, with the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. whether you're in the best of health or you have high blood pressure or other health problems, you can get coverage, with no health questions and no medical exam. you can't be turned down for any medical reason. you don't pay a higher rate because of your age. and coverage options start at just $9.95 a month,
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tide and downy together. for decaded, internet giants like google, facebook and amazon have been collecting user information and selling it to advertisers and even political campaigns. there are no laws against it, at least not in the united states. but in europe, it's another story. online privacy laws there have
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silicon valley scrambling. repter: sevenes for data breaches, fake news, political meddling on the internet, and the endless amounts of personal information being gathered on americans. >> i don't want to have to vote to regulate facebook, but by god, i will. >> the eras coming to an end. >> the question is no longer whether we need a federal law to protect consumers' privacy. the question is what shape will that law take. >> reporter: in europe, they already have a law in place. after leveeing multibillion fines against google for anti-competitive behavior, the european union enacted the world's most ambitious internet privacy law. >> good morning. >> reporter: even winning support from the ceo of the biggest tech company in america, apple's tim cook.
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>> this is surveillance. and these stockpiles of personal data serve only to enrich the companies that collect them. >> reporter: speaking in brussels, cook did not say which companies he was talking about, but apple wasn't one of them. its business model is make and selling phones and computers, not marketing personal information for advertising like google and facebook. >> our own information, from the everyday to the deeply personal is being weaponized against us with military efficiency. it is time for the rest of the world, including my home country, to follow your lead. >> reporter: most people would agree that the point man in europe has been a spiky-haired 31-year-old viennese lawyer issupr atton t mms, who has bee
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brought big tech lawyers into court. in the information age he says data is the most important commodity. the question is who does it belong to. who owns your data? >> the legislation here says it's you that your data belongs so to. >> reporter: you should have control over that? >> you should have control. however, in an environment where there is no such law, basically, whoever has the power over it which is usually the big tech company owns it in that sense. >> reporter: max schramms was a big force in drafting the gdpr. it became law in may after a long battle with big tech and every company that does business me europe incluhe most comply. it was designed specifically to ensure that consumers not tech companies have control over the collection and use of their own personal information. what kind of new rights does
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this law give european citizens that people in the united states might not have? >> the default on the european system is you're not allowed to use someone else's data unless you have a justification. and the result of that is you have rights like you walk up to a company and say delete everything you have about me. you have a right to access so you can say i want to have a copy of everything you have about me. and all of these elements in the law overall are meant to give you that power over your data that in an information society we should probably have. >> reporter: and right now in the united states, you have none of those legal rights. >> americans have no control today about the information that's collected about them. every second of their lives. >> reporter: jeff chester is the executive director of the center for digital democracy. he's been a guaranteed privacy on the internet are children under 13. he says there are some limitations on some specific medical and financial information, but the internet has rendered them obsolete. >> there are no rules.
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there is not a government agency really protecting them. the companies can do whatever they want in terms of gathering your information and using it in any way they see fit. >> how did the big tech companies come to collect all this information? >> no one ever told them they couldn't collect it all. there had been no limits ever at all established. >> reporter: and that's what's going along with gdpr, someone is saying you can't. >> that's exactly correct. you can't collect it without permission. >> reporter: the big tech companies have always argued that consumers have given them permission to take their personal data in exchange for using the project. it's buried in the fine print on those long impenetrable onnepriv to click on. max schramm says it's not free choice but constitutes collusion under the european law. on the day it was enacted, his nonprofit group nonof your business took action against facebook and google for
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allegedly violating european laws. >> you know when you open an app, it says agree or don't use the app, and your choice is eitheroffline or you have to agree. >> reporter: he cited the example of google's android operating system. the software which runs up to 80% of the world's smartphones. but to use one, you must first activate it and give google consent to collect your personal data on all of its products. >> you paid a thousand dollars right now and you're not allowed to use your $1,000 buck phone unless you agree your data goes to somebody else. and that is forced consent. >> reporter: the take companies say look, you, the user, you gave us permission to take this information, to use it the way we wanted to. you agreed to it. you signed on. you made the deal. >> the individual doesn't have the power to or the legal expertise to understand any of that. and then you're sitting at home at your desk aavheioys. th fair
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deal. >> reporter: schramms has been waging this deal since 2011 when he spent a semester in california at santa clara's school of law. a lawyer from facebook told his class that big tech didn't a pay any attention to european privacy laws because they were rarely enforced and that the fines were very small. >> it was obviously the case that ignoring european privacy laws was the much cheaper option. the maximum penalty, for example, in austria was 20,000 euros. so just a lawyer telling you how to comply with a law was more expensive than breaking it. >> reporter: at the time most people had no idea how much personal information was being checked on them. so when the 23 schrimms returned to austria, he decided to ask facebook if he could see what they collected on him. by mistake or miracle, someone at facebook sent him this stack of information, lifting the veil on the extent of the company's interest in him. >> after a while i got a pdf
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file with 1,223 pages, and i'm not a heavy user. >> reporter: facebook had created a dossier of max's life that lewded his location history, event he attended, all of his contact information, and his private facebook messages. even the ones he thought he had deleted. so these were personal conversations you had that you thought were between yourself and the other person. and they're all here? >> they're all here. and they're basically undeletable. >> reporter: it created a huge stir at the time, but it's nothing compared to what's being gathered now. today facebook collects information on people who don't even have an account. google's android software knows whether the user is walking, running, or riding in a car. and amazon has patented algorithms that could be use on its echo smart speaker to listen in on continuous conversations and even read the mood of people in the room. >> and you can see
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when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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astronomers are still trying to wrap their brains around a mysterious object that recently went screaming through our solar system. they called it oumuamua, which in hawaiian meansand asteroid? how about an alien probe. tony dokoupil has the story from new york's hayden planetarium. >> reporter: quick astronomy lesson. what you're looking at here is a meteorite that came from our solar system, basically, our own intergalactic backyard. oumuamua, by contrast, is the first observed object to come from outside of our solar system. and get this, once it got here it behaved in ways that scientists can't quite explain, which is why this team of harvard scientists is floating a theory that even they admit is a little out there. when oumuamua was discovered last october, it was tumbling past the sun at 196,000 miles
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per hour. to some, the reddish object looked like a cigar. others thought it was shaped like a pancake. >> it looks very different from objects we have found in the solar system. >> reporter: avi lowe chair of the astrology department said it did it'sot clear what this pushs from. >> reporter: in an upcoming paper, he and a colleague offer what they call a more exotic scenario. oumuamua may be a fully operational probe sent intentionally to earth vicinity by an alien civilization. according to their calculations, oumuamua is less than a millimeter thin, but very wide like a sail, harnessing solar radiation to appropriate pell itself, similar to the spacecraft used in the "star wars" films. >> i just want everybody to take that with a gigantic grain of salt. >> reporter: jackie feherty is an astrophysicist at the american museum of natural history. she says oumuamua did not give off any signals it was a spacecraft. if you say that the top ten list
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of explanations does not include alien probe, what is on that list? >> it's a comet. >> reporter: or an asteroid. >> or a rock. >> reporter: so where is alien civilization on the list of explanations? >> i don't know, real low, real low. >> reporter: feherty doubts oumuamua's appearance means we're on the verge of an alien encounter like the one in the movie "arrival." >> muam, as it stands, is a phenomenal discovery and a really important object for astronomers to study and for the public to get excited about. it's okay that it's not alien. >> reporter: now oumuamua is out of our solar system, and we can no longer see it with our satellites. now feherty does have a theory for why we keep coming up with these exotic explanations. as hard as it is to fathom the existence of aliens, io fathom we are
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it's wednesday, november 14th, 2018.thbs n relentless flames overnight, a new wildfire has popped up in southern california. the firefighters continue to battle blazes across the state. staff shake-up. key figures in the trump administration could be out soon. motive behind the possible move. and a suspect is under arrest accused of trying to build a dangerous bomb in his house ith chemicals used by house ith chemicals used by terrorists.
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