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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 4, 2020 3:03am-3:59am PDT

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don't be stupid. >> reporter: in dallas, texas, malls reopened as the state of 29 million hit its fourth straight day of more than 1,000 new coronavirus cases. governor abbott defending his decision, and telling residents over 65 to stay inside. >> if you fall into that vulnerable category, we suggest that, if at all possible, you stay at home. >> reporter: meanwhile new york governor cuomo pushing back against premature demands to get back to business, even as the daily death rate drops for a fifth day. >> let's stick to the facts. let's stick to the data. >> reporter: that data now driving mississippi to walk back plans to reopen. and nationwide, health care workers continue to remind people that the pandemic isn't over. >> it's a little shocking to see so many people just disregarding human life. >> reporter: and this spring weather has lead to defiance on the roads, in parks and beaches across the country. here in los angeles, surfers and sun seekers have ignored state
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orders to stay off the sand. monique? >> all right, thank you, th. with 30 million jobs lost, people are low on money and on food. and to help the federal government plans to spend $300 million per month to buy surplus from farmers. food they've been forced to dump and ship to food banks instead. now jangette shamlian reports. >> reporter: gridlock in every direction, for miles. >> almost there! >> reporter: that is what happened at the food bank, more than 7,000 families showed up for food. >> you're welcome. >> reporter: desperation the nation's fourth largest city has never seen. >> for now, the food line getting some different part, it is not enough. >> reporter: houston has the nation's largest food bank, serving 18 counties from a 135,000 square foot warehouse. how much have you seen demand increase in recent weeks?
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>> we're now averaging close to a million pounds a day of actual distribution here. and we're still not meeting the need. >> reporter: c.e.o. brian greene says demand is up 150% from two months ago, keeping this facility going nonstop. an issue for this food bank and others is, demand has never been greater, and houston has this massive warehouse. but because of social distancing guidelines, they can only have inside a fraction of their usual volunteers. plenty want to help. amy allen brought her two children to volunteer. but because of social distancing guidelines, they can have only 150 people in the building. it was built to accommodate a thousand. >> all of the packing work, its being able to keep up with the labor, is what our biggest problem is. >> reporter: there is plenty of food including meat, despite projected shortages. and the produce room is overflowing, as farms donate vegetables that would have been sold to restaurants.
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what is missing, says brian greene, is the human connection people need, but that social distancing won't allow. >> we're just putting the stuff in their trunk and we're not talking to somebody who right now it is not just that they need food, they need comfort right now. >> reporter: but large giveaways like this are filling pantries for millions across the country -- >> thank you. >> reporter: -- who never thought they would ask for help. janet shamlian, cbs news, houston. >> overseas britain could have the worst toll in europe. countries hit hard by the virus are oe so is asia. here's cbs's elizabeth palmer. >> reporter: here's proof that china believes it has covid-19 under control. tourists are back, sightseeing on the great wall. in fact, thanks to radical lockdowns and extensive testing that started back in january, the pandemic is in decline across much of asia.
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the statistics show that after the united states, it's northern europe that has been hit hardest by covid. between them, britain, france, germany, spain and italy now account for almost a million cases. ♪ ♪ church services were held for the first time in more than six weeks today in germany, a brand new plastic screen shielding priests from parishioners. strict isolation rules are easing up, but in bits and starts, as the rate of infection declines. in austria, most businesses were back up and running, and spaniards gratefully took to the streets for the first time in 48 days, but just for exercise. people are wary. and so are governments, concerned that too much too fast could lead to a second wave of infection. and the relief of life opening up again as summer comes will soon be eclipsed by the kind of economic devastation europe has
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not seen since the second world war.
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♪ ♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> well, trump administration officials today again blamed cellini for the global pandemic. at the same time mixed messages on how and how fast to get the economy going again. nikole killion is at the white house.eportesi t
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after a working weekend at camp david. with more states poised to reopen this week, the coordinator of the white house coronavirus response urged caution. and, chastised anti-lockdown protestors for not social distancing, like these in michigan. >> it's devastatingly worrisome to me personally, because if they go home and infect their grandmother or grandfather who has a comorbid condition and they have a serious or an unfortunate outcome, they will feel guilty for the rest of our lives. >> reporter: as the senate heads back to work monday, the white house now indicates it may hold off on a fourth stimulus until it sees the results of previous relief efforts. >> there may well be additional legislation. there is kind of a pause period right now. >> reporter: governors, who have asked for around $500 billion in aid, are worried. >> the president and vice president and secretary mnuchin have already committed to it multiple times, and now the message seems to be changing. >> this is about firefighters, police, e.m.s., teachers at the
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point of attack. >> reporter: but treatment for some of the most seriously ill coronavirus patients is expected soon, after the f.d.a.'s emergency approval of the experimental drug remdesivir. >> we intend to get that to patients in the early part of this next week. >> reporter: as u.s. intelligence officials probe the source of the virus, secretary of state mike pompeo pointed the finger at a china lab. >> there is enor evidence that that's where this began. >> reporter: the secretary said he supports an intelligence report that the virus was ñot man-made. last week, the president said he's also seen evidence that the virus originated in that wuhan lab, but did not elaborate and late today he defended his travel ban on china. >> welike, former president george w. bush rele a vid calling for the end to partisanship in america's fight against the coronavirus. it did not mention the current president. but, it didn't sit very well with him either.
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>> reporter: well, president trump suggested that the former president did not put partisanship aside during his impeachment trial earlier this year. in a tweet, he cited a cable news host and said bush was nowhere to be found in speaking up against what he called the "greatest hoax in american history." monique? >> nikole, thank you. now, with all the focus on the pandemic, you might not realize the presidential election is six months from today. this week, former vice president joe biden denied allegations that he sexually assaulted a woman on his staff in 1993, when he was a senator. cbs news political correspondent ed o'keefe joins us. ed, what can you tell us about these allegations, and also biden's response? >> reporter: well, monique, the staffer, tara reade, worked for then-senator biden for nine months. last year, she was among several women who recalled what they said was inappropriate touching by biden. this past march she became the first and only woman to accuse him of sexual assault.
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describing the 1993 incident like this. >> i remember his hands underneath my bust underneath my skirt, and his fingers penetrating me as he was trying to kiss me. >> reporter: biden responded to the allegations for the first time on friday. >> i'm saying unequivocally, it never, never happened. women have a right to be heard. and the press should rigorously investigate claims they make. i will always uphold that principle. but in the end, in every case, the truth is what matters. and in this case, the truth is, the claims are false. >> reporter: cbs news requested an on-camera interview with reade, and we have spoken with her acquaintances, former colleagues and brother say they recall her mentioning the episode, but several benteever heard of those allegations when they worked for him. lawyers who vetted biden in 2008 to be president barack obama's running mate told cbs they found no sexual misconduct allegations. reade said she did not recall the exact language she used in
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the complaint she filed against biden in the senate personnel office, but said it didn't specifically mention the assault. biden asked the senate to track down anything related to a complaint. >> so ed, this all comes amid new polling that shows us how the race between president trump and biden is shaping up. and so what do those poll numbers show at this point? >> reporter: sure, the new poll gives biden a single digit lead over the president. the poll also shows that the economy is a top concern of voters. only a third tell us it is coronavirus. if either of these issues dominate the campaign, it could spell trouble for the president. he wanted the campaign to be about the economy, but not under these conditions. monique? >> ed o'keefe, thank you very much. well, straight ahead, hear from some parents who says home schooling has them in a daze. plus life lessons on copingn ve d at th closedorthern thede ldn outbreak of and the struggle is real.
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their frustration is growing as schools stay closed and distance learning goes on. and on and on. many are feeling the strain of working from home while also being teachers and care givers. as cbs's meg oliver reports, others have simply given up. >> pretty sure i'm flunking the third grade! >> reporter: jane krakowski's timely joke on "the talk" resonated with exasperated parents across the country. >> i have such appreciation for our teachers. >> can we do something else? >> reporter: but as remote learning stretches on, teachers are also being tested. >> i basically leave my computer on all day. >> reporter: allisonn is a 7th grade math teacher in queens, new york, and is struggling to teach her 6 and 8-year-old sons at the same time. >> i do a list every day, so much on there. just thinking about everything i
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have to do. and it's just, it starts getting very overwhelming. >> reporter: i can hear it in your voice. >> yeah, i'm starting to get upset -- i'm trying not to. work never stops. work never stops. >> reporter: anisha warner can relate. she is an 8th grade teacher and single mom to her six-year-old son. >> i am his only person right now. i am everything. i am his support system, i am his lunch lady, i am his teacher, i am his best friend right now. >> reporter: currently, schools in 36 states and the district of columbia have been ordered to remain closed the rest of the academic year. that's around 33 million public school students. some school districts are now sending out surveys, like this one my children's school sent, trying to get a pulse on how parents are coping. my favorite question on here, "what are we grateful for?" something psychologists say we have to keep asking ourselves. monique? >> a good reminder. thanks, meg. well, still ahead, from outer space to antarctica. lessons on surviving isolation
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americans are still stuck at home and struggling. but some people have spent long periods living, and actually thriving, in isolation. cbs's roxana saberi reports, there's a lot to learn. >> three, two, one. >> reporter: when nasa space shuttle "columbia" lifted off in 1998, astronaut jay buckey didn't realize he would learn lessons for living under lockdown today. >> there is a lot of similarities there. you could look at it that your family members, your roommate or whatever there, they are like your crew mates. >> reporter: you may have noticed, confinement with your crew mates can raise tensions at times. how can you keep the peace? >> do what you can do, to keep the communication focused on the issue at hand, not saying things that you know will aggravate the other person just because you want to get back at them. >> reporter: buckey and his team at new hampshire's dartmouth college have trained astronauts, and antarctic explorers, to cope with confinement. >> it is important to maintain
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your schedule, maintain good sleep patterns, you know, eat right. >> reporter: as the team leader and chef at norway's remote troll station in antarctica, karin jansdotter also has tips for the rest of us. >> being active, exercise and eat good food. go outside and get some sun. >> reporter: she also suggests, look within. >> take this time now to reflect and maybe appreciate the people that you have around you. >> reporter: isolation, she says, can be tough anywhere in the world, but it can also help us grow together, long after lockdowns are lifted. roxana saberi, cbs news, london. >> lots of time for reflection. now coming up, separated at the border, a love story. we'll have both sides next.
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we end tonight among what is said to be the world's longest undefended border. but in these times, at least for some, it might as well be the berlin wall. here's cbs's john blackstone. >> reporter: north of seattle, the peace arch, on the border with canada, is a symbol of deep international friendship. in normal times, some 30,000 people a day cross here. but in these abnormal times, the border is closed to all but essential traffic. and, visiting your spouse is not considered essential. >> like what did you do today? >> which explains why they, married six months ago, are meeting this way, careful to keep a few inches and an international border between
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them. >> it is great to be able to see my wife. basically, you are not supposed to even really touch, so when i was there just this afternoon, it is so hard to not want to hug her. you know, it makes it very difficult. >> we are apart, even just a few centimeters apart, it's worlds. >> reporter: just a few miles from the grandeur of the peace arch, the border between the u.s. and canada becomes little more than a ditch, a rusted guard rail and a few markers. but it's become a popular meeting place for family members and friends stuck on opposite sides of the border. some even bring folding chairs for international social distancing. one video posted on tiktok shows the dilemma for an ecouple. >> i'm in canada but my fiance lives in america. we're supposed to get married in two weeks but we can't because borderline, where u.s. and canada meet. >> these couples are having to find these little remote, almost like dirt pathee boers. rr:rati
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attorney len saunders has been helping ian and birgit with her green card application. they live just five miles apart, but her in canada, him in washington. >> the drive to his house takes me ten minutes, but might as well be continents away, because we cannot get together. >> we didn't expect to be isolated in our countries. that was a bit of a shock. >> reporter: while the international boundary is not fortified here, both the u.s. border patrol and the royal canadian mounted police are watching, to guard against the illegal crossings. but if a couple is careful, and quick, they might just manage to steal a forbidden cross-border kiss. john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. >> that is the overnight news for this monday, reporting from kiro 7 in seattle, i'm monique lavin.
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♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> and good evening. i'm monique ming laven, reporting from kiro 7 in seattle. tonight, the race to reopen the ailing economy is picking up speed even as the coronavirus outbreak is, according to health experts, far from over. so far, 38 states have eased restrictions. six more will follow suit tomorrow and tuesday, all emphasizing social distancing. now, texas is getting a first taste of its new normal. restaurants are open. so are malls. infections are still adding up, at least 1.1 million in this country. more than 67,000 people have died. jonathan vigliotti begins our coverage. >> reporter: monique, california governor gavin newsom not the
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only leader facing mounting pressure to reopen the economy. governors across the country are weighing options to get back to business, with mixed results. thchorus to reopen state economies. [ honking ] and get people back to work is growing louder, even as the nation's death toll from covid-19 rises. >> we need to get back to work. >> reporter: in california, there's a divide between rural communities largely spared by the virus and harder hit cities. come monday, small northern counties are open for business, ignoring the governor's own orders. >> if businesses are going to start opening with or without our blessing, we need to ensure the health and safety of our community. >> reporter: but not all guide lines are being followed like in illinois where stay at home orders have been loosened. chicago's mayor lashing out after seeing videos of house parties on social media. >> we're not playing games. we mean business. the time for educating people into compliance is over.
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don't be stupid. >> reporter: in dallas, texas, malls reopened as the state of 29 million hit its fourth straight day of more than 1,000 new coronavirus cases. governor abbott defending his decision, and telling residents over 65 to stay inside. >> if you fall into that vulnerable category, we suggest that, if at all possible, you stay at home. >> reporter: meanwhile new york governor cuomo pushing back against premature demands to get back to business, even as the daily death rate dropped for a fifth day. >> let's stick to the facts. let's stick to the data. >> reporter: that data now driving mississippi to walk back plans to reopen. and nationwide, health care workers continue to remind people that the pandemic isn't over. >> it's a little shocking to see so many people just disregarding human life. >> reporter: and this spring weather has lead to defiance on the roads, in parks and beaches across the country. here in los angeles, surfers and
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sun seekers have ignored state orders to stay off the sand. monique? >> all right, thank you, jonathan. well, trump administration officials today again blamed china for the global pandemic. at the same time, mixed messages on how, and how fast, to get the economy going again. nikole killion is at the white house. >> reporter: president trump returned to the white house after a working weekend at camp david. with more states poised to reopen this week, the coordinator of the white house coronavirus response urged caution. and, chastised anti-lockdown protestors for not social distancing, like these in michigan. >> it's devastatingly worrisome to me personally, because if they go home and infect their grandmother or their grandfather who has a comorbid condition or an unfortunate outcome, they
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will feel guilty for the rest of our lives. >> reporter: as the senate heads back to work monday, the white house now indicates it may hold off on a fourth stimulus until it sees the results of previous relief efforts. >> there may well be additional legislation. it is kind of a pause period right now. >> reporter: governors, who have asked for around $500 billion in aid, are worried. >> the president and vice president and secretary mnuchin have already committed to it multiple times, and now the message seems to be changing. >> this is about firefighters, police, e.m.s., teachers at the point of attack. >> reporter: but treatment for some of the most seriously ill coronavirus patients is expected soon, after the f.d.a.'s emergency approval of the experimental drug remdesivir. >> we intend to get that to patients in the early part of this next week. >> reporter: as u.s. intelligence officials probe the source of the virus, secretary of state mike pompeo pointed the finger at a china lab. >> there is enormous evidence t. >> reporter: she suppos an intei
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report that the virus was ñot man-made. last week, the president said he's also seen evidence that the virus originated in that wuhan lab, but did not elaborate and late today he defended his travel ban on china. monique. >> well, nikole, former president george w. bush released a video this weekend calling for the end to partisanship in america's fight against the coronavirus. it did not mention the current president. but, it didn't sit very well with him either. >> reporter: well, president trump suggested that the former president did not put partisanship aside during his impeachment trial earlier this year. in a tweet, he cited a cable news host and said bush was nowhere to be found in speaking up against what he called the "greatest hoax in american history." monique? >> nikole, thank you. now, with all the focus on the pandemic, you might not realize the presidential election is six months from today. this week, former vice president joe biden denied allegations that he sexually assaulted a woman on his staff in 1993, when he was a senator.
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cbs news political correspondent ed o'keefe joins us. ed, what can you tell us about these allegations, and also biden's response? >> reporter: well, monique, the staffer, tara reade, worked for then-senator biden for nine months. last year, she was among several women who recalled what they said was inappropriate touching by biden. this past march she became the first and only woman to accuse him of a sexual assault. describing the 1993 incident like this. >> i remember his hands underneath my bust, underneath my skirt, and his fingers penetrating me as he tried to kiss me. >> reporter: biden responded to the allegations for the first time on friday. >> i'm saying unequivocally, it never, never happened. women have a right to be heard. and the press should rigorously investigate claims they make. i will always uphold that principle. but in the end, in every case, the truth is what matters. and in this case, the truth is, the claims are false. >> reporter: cbs news requested an on-camera interview with reade, and we have spoken with
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her acquaintances, former colleagues and brother say they recall her mentioning the episode, but several biden senate aides said they never heard of those allegations when they worked for him. lawyers who vetted biden in 2008 to be president barack obama's running mate, said they found no sexual misconduct allegations. reade said she did not recall the exact language she used in the complaint she filed against biden with the senate personnel office, but said it didn't specifically mention the assault. biden asked the senate to track down anything related to a complaint. >> so ed, this all comes amid new polling that shows us how the race between president trump and biden is shaping up. and so what do those poll numbers show at this point? >> reporter: sure, the new poll gives biden a single digit lead over the president. the poll also shows that the economy is a top concern of voters. nearly a third tell us it is the coronavirus. if either of these issues dominate the campaign, it could spell trouble for the president. he wanted the campaign to be
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♪ ♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> i'm monique ming laven reporting from kiro 7 news in seattle. brazil has more coronavirus deaths than china, but the president continues to downplay the threat. that has them worried it could spark a second wave of infection here in the u.s. manuel bojorquez has the story. >> reporter: there is no denying the coronavirus is ravaging brazil. topping 90,000 confirmed cases and with more than 6000 deaths, president jair bolsonaro said this about the rising toll.
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so what. i'm sorry. what do you want me to do? instead, local officials were left to implement lock downs. brazil's crowded poor neighborhoods are fort worthal breeding grounds. here, disinfecting is often do it yourself. meanwhile bolsonaro last weekend joined lock down protesters, no mask or social distancing here. despite the grim situation througho tion. ecuador is suffering one of the worst outbreaks. in its largest city, some bodies went uncollected for days. the president's cabinet secretary juan sebastian told us this week that both new cases and deaths have decreased dramatically in recent weeks. but did confirm the country's official death toll in the hundreds is a vast under count. we assume there could be more than 6700 deaths due to
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coronavirus, but we can't prove it because the testing wasn't done. he told mel dicireworked but is workers are part of the informar [ speaking foreign language ] with know in ecuador it is fundamental to get back to work, he said, adding some restrictions would slowly be lifted in certain cases. but with casing rising in neighboring countries, peru, latin america's fight against the virus is far from over. manuel bojorquez, miami. >> there is fear that the coronavirus pandemic could lead to food shortages here in the u.s. as debora patta reports, that's already a major problem in other parts of the world. >> reporter: this is what hunger looks like when it spills over into the streets. a food stampede in kenya's largest slum, leaving scores injured and two dead. white flags waved by defeated families in peru, signalling to
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authorities they've run out of supplies. a mile-long line for food in india where workers wait in the hot sun. protests in lebanon as food prices surge uncontrollably. even in the richest countries, the virus has left people hungry, but for the world's poor it means starvation. like south africa, where a national lock down has led to a sudden loss of work and hunger for millions, food distribution is weighed down by cumbersome bureaucracy. if you're not on the day's list, there is no food. these people are desperate. they are hungry and they are angry. their biggest fear, if the virus doesn't get them, hunger will. she has been waiting in line every day for two weeks now. his name is never called. >> if you're hungry, it's easy to get sick because of stress and everything here. >> reporter: he was working as a delivery man before the national
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lock down dried up his income. his four young children used to receive two meals a day at their local school, which is now closed. >> i don't get anything for them. it's all. >> reporter: it's a cry echoed across the globe, prompting a dire warning from the united nations. the world is facing a familiar inof biblical proportions. debora patta, cbs news, johannesburg, south africa. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. 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.
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discover what's good - pantene nutrient blends later today, more states will continue the process of reopening stores and other businesses. that includes a lot of malls and department stores. but the question is, will shoppers come? here's jill schlesinger. >> reporter: for weeks they've been fields of desk lags. but slowly, mall parking lots are starting to come back to life. malls started reopening in texas and some southern states. others are offering curb-side pick up like at stone bryer center in dallas, texas. >> thank you very much.
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>> it's uncharted territory for us. >> reporter: stephanie is a senior vice president at brook field properties which manages 170 miles across the country, including stone bryer. >> our research actually indicates that 70% of people are looking forward to shopping in person again. >> reporter: but as it struggles to reopen amid the deepest rescission since the great depression, the retail industry is facing a new reality. >> biologically, a virus is meant to or usually goes through and culls the herd. >> reporter: scott galloway is professor of marketing at new york university. >> we're having the same thing economically, a culling of the herd. strong retailers are probably going to emerge from this stronger. there will be a fewer number of elephants. >> reporter: the biggest names in retail areeaping t st ho who spend their $1200 government checks to everyone buying everything possible online right now. >> if you think about the
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stimulus, you can argue it's the amazon and walmart shareholder act. not only did we put a lot of stimulus in the hands of consumers who spend a disproportionate amount of dollars at amazon and walmart and need those basic essentials, but they also had an opportunity to see 98% of their competitors closed. >> reporter: as they have deserted the streets and sheltered at home, americans have changed their everyday shopping habits. perhaps permanently. online grocery sales are way up. is this a growth area for the stop & shops and the kroger of the world? >> 100%. you can see just in the last 90 days we are going to take somewhere between 70 and $100 billion in u.s. grocery commerce and move it from the store to online. >> reporter: no part of the retail industry has suffered more than department stores. when they first appeared more than 150 years ago -- >> one of the largest most spacious stores in america. >> reporter: -- they were feared
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as much as loved. >> consumers really liked it, but who did not like it was the little stores that were being gobbled up. the key thing to realize is that these department stores in the 19th century, especially toward the end of it when there were many more of them, they were the disrupters of their day. every bit as much as amazon. >> reporter: jan whitaker has written about the history of department stores. she said the disrupters are about to become the disrupted. >> the department store has been in decline for a very long time. >> reporter: neiman marcus and jcpenney are on the verge of bankruptcy. others have furloughed hundreds of thousands of workers and seen their credit downgraded. >> covid-19 is really more of an accelerant than it is a change agent. and that is, the future is happening, playing out the same way. it's being pulled forward faster. department stores are likely the walking dead. they were in the 7th inning of their life, now they are
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officially in the bottom of the 9th, if you will. especially retail apparel. >> reporter: at brook field properties, they are still t may beedgingir bets a stores, keo a mall or anchor store, one big department store that's on either side or two different sides, is that still the case today? and if not, what replaces it? >> our department stores are still valuable partners for us. and it varies according to market. we have properties where we are replacing department stores with grocer, sporting good stores, health care facilities. but then we also opened a new property in connecticut last year with two department stores. >> reporter: by tomorrow, at least 50 malls and 68 macy's are expected to reopen across the country. the question for retailers is, if they open, will we come? >> that was jill schlesinger reporting. the pandemic has touched off
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a new age of innovation. charlie d'agata reports on some of the latest inventions that may stay with us after the virus is gone. >> people touch their faces all the timeac 2im per ho it is an unconscious behavior that just happens. >> reporter: stopping it from just happening is what seattle based designer justin if had in mind with his vibrating bracelet, reducing the risk of the coronavirus entering the body through vulnerable points. >> so, you basically calibrate -- this is when i touch my eye, this is when i touch my nose, this is when i touch my mouth. so when you do it in the future it will vibrate. >> reporter: the global pandemic and the challenges of a post-lock down world have already inspired a slew of ideas. like dividing screens in restaurants. plex i glass cubicles for the beach. and mobile barriers on car assembly lines. how about a chinese designed antivirus thealma smart
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helmet recently deployed in dubai straight out of robo cop on the hunt for people running health hazard, especially door handles. one british inventor came up with this. he's called it the hygiene hook. pretty simple concept really. works like this. and like this. and the idea was to make the lives of health workers easier. >> i change my gloves every time i get a cup of coffee. that's a hell of a lot of gloves just to maneuver around the house. >> reporter: inventor steve brooks has already donated hundreds to hospital workers. are we seeing new age of innovation now? >> yes. definitely. >> reporter: an age not seen since the last truly global period of upheaval. >> to win this fight, we have undertaken the greatest national mobilization since world war ii. >> reporter: world war ii saw an explosion of inventions and
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innovations. >> hit lettler's last terror weapon -- >> reporter: it helped launch the era of space exploration. >> we have liftoff at 2:13. >> reporter: the jet engine which revolutionized travel. and radar which came of age in the 1940s. but that period also introduced the modern ballpoint pen, and super glue. everyday objects you'd find in your home today. and home is exactly where justin if's idea started. >> i created it for personal reasons. my father is in his late 60s and he has an autoimmune disease which makes him compromised. we wanted to jump into action to protect my dad and other families in the world that are in that situation. >> reporter: sometimes complicated situations call for simple solutions.
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the stay-at-homes have a lot of us going stir crazy and that includes the kids. steve hartman found a bunch of them even laying down their own laws. >> she seems harmless enough, but 9-year-old daffney is part of a resistance. lately she's ticketing her parents for not trying to work it out. not listening to me. and adding corn to the chili. >> i didn't want corn in my chili and she added it. >> reporter: it seems like maybe you have a shorter fuse. >> i know that. i'm trying to work on it, but -- >> reporter: how is your quarantioi >> not >> rep right? no. did king george think it was cute when his little brat spilled tea in the harbor? that's why this concerns me. across the country kids are picking up their pitch forks for the tiniest grievances. there was peace in the land. what happened? this is farhad manju.
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>> we won't for a walk. it was too far of a walk apparent. >> reporter: that triggered more control and later bed times. it says here if you do not sign, we will declare war on the parents. and there's no signature. i assume war is happening. >> war broke out that day. my kids took my wife prisoner which meant she got to nap in my son's room but they left the lights on. >> reporter: left the lights on? alert the hag. and 10-year-old joshua banned his parents. >> because of the coronavirus and the revolution. >> reporter: jackson considers himself a separate state which he adopted from the country of tajikistan. he plays it as a constant loop fr his torture dictator parents. >> they don't understand what a democrat government is. >> reporter: can i talk to the enemy? yeah.
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you're going to regret it. >> reporter: this is king mike. how did it get this far? >> unfortunately his unit on the american revolution came right before. >> reporter: and mike says he's been drafting manifestos ever since. >> it says here they forced me to make unfair agreements that i don't have any say in. isn't that just being a kid? >> yeah, but it doesn't feel like being a kid. it feels like life. >> reporter: it is life. >> well, then ri rtefor a rough ride. parents in america have never been mor more inept. children in america never more fed up. so after you sew your mask, you may want to save some fabric for your white flag. steve hartman, cbs news, on the front lines. >> that's the overnight news for this monday. reporting from
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captioning sponsored by cb >> ming laven: tonight, more states move to reopen, with fingers crossed. new signs of life across the country. >> people are staying away from each other. >> ming laven: but in california, new defiance at beaches and beyond. and in other still-restricted states, anger. even after the virus spreads. also tonight, the white house points fingers again. >> china has a history of infecting the world. >> ming laven: and signals a pause on new stimulus funding. >> it is a huge, huge package. let's see how it is doing. >> ming laven: plus, desperation at food banks as the economic crisis peaks. home schooling, parents are at wits' ends. lessons in isolation, an astronaut's guide. >> we have noticed cme

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