tv PBS News Hour PBS September 2, 2022 3:00pm-4:01pm PDT
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>> the data shows job growth is strong as hiring slows and employers struggle to fill positions. president biden calls out former president trump and extremist supporters of his for undermining the nation's democratic values. >> history tells us that blind loyalty to a single leader, willingness to engage in political violence, is fatal to democracy. >> it is friday. david brooks ways and on the message and the rest of the week's news. all of that and more tonight. ♪
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>> major funding has been provided by -- >> pediatric surgeon, volunteer, topiary artist. raymondjames financial advisor. helping you live your life. life well planned. >> and with the ongoing support of these individuals and institutions. and friends of the newshour including kathy and paul anderson. >> the james l knight foundation. fostering engaged communities. ♪
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>> and friends of the newshour. ♪ >> this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions to your pbs stations from viewers like you. thank you. >> the u.s. job market showed steady growth again in august, but hiring slowed from a torrid pace. employers added 315,000 new jobs last month. the 20th straight month of job growth. there are now 5.8 million more jobs than there were a year ago. the unemployment rate ticked up to 3.7% as more people try to get back into the workforce. even so, many employers say they still need more workers. economics reporter has our
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report. reporter: for concrete pros in northern ohio, this work goes on rain or shine. getting business is no problem. they have been backed up for months. >> the work is there. we just need the workers. reporter: come the employees could you had at this point if there were people willing to do the job? >> we could get five or six more employees. . more than double the number of people you have now. >> correct. . a restaurant industry survey showed they were short on workers. >> every to dine in them but that he wants to work in them. reporter: she had to cut service at two of her three establishments. >> i was told today that my hosts are making about $38 an hour on average. reporter: and you are having trouble filling those jobs? >> absolutely. reporter: today's solid job
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report sgests more people are looking for work and the unemployment rate ticked up as a result. this economist -- >> the labor market remains strong. we saw strong payroll gains. they were not as strong as july, but it is clearhat demand for workers is still growing. reporter: employers are still struggling to fill those jobs. more than 11 million job openings remain. the big question is, why can't employers find enough workers? among the reasons you have presumably heard before -- >> i don't see a work ethic out there as i did before. reporter: she agrees. >> i think hussle is very frowned upon with this younger generation. reporter: that mike bianco five by the recent government benefits.
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. >> i think it takes theressure off a lot of college students and people who would otherwise be working on the weekend. reporter: there is also still covid. andy lopez in high stress jobs. he cleans planes or american airlines. >> you are not really willing to deal with something like this. reporter: we have heard a bunch of reasons, covid, lack of work ethic, fewer immigrants to take the jobs, low pay, government benefits. is that the full list? >> in addition, there is the reality of some workers retiring. earlier in the pandemic we saw workers stepping out of the labor force.
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there is also the additional reason of care challenges. workers stepping out of the labor force so they can deal with child care challenges. reporter: exacerbated by covid, which stressed the entire workforce. >> we get new hires and then they will come in for a week or two, see how things go, realize how stressful it is, and they quit. reporter: as they drop out, that puts more stress on you to clean up your people? >> yes. reporter: it is like a vicious circle. >> as vicious as a hurricane, really. reporter: vicious as a hurricane on the tarmac, at the table. >> the restaurant industry has historically been a challenging ace to work. it has become 10 times more challenging. >> when you do not have the
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right resources, everybody gets burned, everybody gets hurt, people leave crying, people with on shift. it is really kind of traumatic. reporter: as i'm listening to you i am thinking this is like a labor supply chain crisis. and this was the aha moment fo me. after a demand freeze with ships tried not to sprouted camera shot, a demand surge. workers out of the workforce for various reasons, making jobs more stressful and less attractive. ♪ >> in other news, president biden charged again that former president trump at his most extreme followers are
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threatening democracy. it followed his speech last night on the same team. today the president said he is not talking about all trump supporters, but those who advocate violence and reject election results. the justice department now says that fbi agent found in deep older smart classified at the trump estate in florida. a detailed inventory of the material was released today. it said more than 100 documents were classified, but more than 40 folders labeled classified were empty. eight others contained 10,000 government records with no classification. the one time trump white house counsel pat cipollone testified today before a federal grand jury investigating generally six. he arrived this morning and spent several hours with the panel before leaving later without comment. his deputy counsel also.
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. both men spoke with the congressional generally six committee. u.n. nuclear experts spent a full day at the russian controlled plant after repeated shelling attacks. they reported signs of damage to the nuclear plant but did not pinpoint blame. instead, the director said he expects to make a full report next week. >> it is obvious that the plant has been violated, several times. whatever you think about this war, this is something that cannot happen. judy: russia extended the shutdown of the pipeline giving natural gas to europe. they said it needs additional maintenance. a bombing at a crowded cost in western afghanistan killed 18 people today. the blast erupted during noon
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prayers attended by scores of worshipers. in the aftermath, ambulances took the wounded to a nearby hospital rate officials said at least 23 people were hurt. the death toll in pakistan floods rose above 1200 today amid warnings of more trouble. a new flood tide is moving down the indus river for the southern provinces. many in the region are already in relief camps where disease is spreading. many say they are frustrated with a lack of aid. >> i am seven months pregnant. i have a lot of pain in my back and a cough. i'm here because my house collapsed in the rain. nobody takes care of the poor people. officials come here only for photographs and doctors came and gave medication for one day and went away. judy: the best maturity in pakistan estimates that 90% of the affected population has yet to receive any aid.
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the federal government will provide abortion services for military veterans in cases of rape, insist, or danger to the mother's life. the veterans affairs department announced the move today. it comes as a number of states have imposed new abortion bans. the years first atlantic hurricane formed today after what had been a quiet season. the storm poses no immediate threat to land. this year marks the first time since 1941 that the atlantic had gone from july to august without a named storm. on wall street the jobs report was not enough to lift stocks. the dow jones industrial average lost 338 points. the nasdaq fell 154 points. the s&p 500 slipped 42. the dow and s&p were down 3%, nasdaq fell 4%. author and activist barbara
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ehrenreich has died in alexandria, virginia, after a recent stroke. she called herself a myth buster and challenged ideas about class, religion, and the american dream. barbara ehrenreich was 81 years old. still to come, dr. anthony fauci he discusses new booster shots that target covid subvariants. extreme heat in china threatens a major water source. how nasa's latest mission is setting the stage to send astronauts back to the moon. and much more. >> this is the pbs newshour from our studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university. judy: americans 12 and older should be able to start getting updated booster shots for covid
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within days. approval this week came for new boosters from pfizer and moderna. they will hopefully provide more protection against the latest variant this coming winter. the latest questions around this , i am joined by dr. anthony fauci. he is the president's chief medical advisor. welcome back. with the news that these new boosters will be available, there is understanding and confusion about who should get them and when. is there a simple rule of thumb that people should follow? >> if you look at the eligible, who is essentially approved, it is just what he said.
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the need for it varies considerably depending on risk. there will be a greater benefit if you are a young person. there will be a degree of that if it everyone. that does not mean there is not some degree of advantage for everyone within the framework that the fda approved and that the cdc recommended. judy: whaabout the guideline in terms of how long to wait after a recent shot or abused or someone has had covid? >> as the fda had mentioned,
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when you're talking about when your last shot was, you need to wait at least eight weeks or two months. when you're dealing with a prior infection, you should wait about three months from the tim that you had a prior infection. i am in that category. that is exactly what i'm going to follow. i was vaccinated andoubly boosted but i got infected toward the middle and end of june. i am looking forward to getting the updated subvariant vaccine. i will wait three months so that will put me somewhere around the late part of september. judy: we noticed that one of the members of the cdc panel that moved -- voted to approve these new vaccines said he voted against it because it has not been studied in humans.
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should i give anyone pause? >> i do not think so. for the following reason, vaccines that were in the same general category as that one, there is pretty good information we got. when you think about the experience of this platform, these vaccines, we have the liens of doses that have been given to people. it is treated very much like influenza. we feel pretty comfortable that
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when you look at the totality of the data, it is not something i'm concerned about. judy: i think it is fair to say that the success of these boosters will depend a lot on how widely they are accepted. how many people get them. at the same time, we are in a time when the country's vaccine delivery system has been scaled back. their questions about why that is. the administration says they did not have congressional funding. should the administration have done more to move funds around so as long as this covid is the threat that it is that there is an easier ability for americans to get the vaccine? how do you see that? >> i see that we need to do the best we can. that is why you have heard
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several of us as part of this team saying we need to have the continuation of the resources and funding necessary for that response. there is only so much you can move around from other programs without negatively impacting those programs. the federal government is purchasing millions of doses that we will make available re-to people. certainly we want to make sure that we make it an equitable manner. so anyone has equal opportunity to get the vaccine. judy: your point is that the ministries has done everything a cam to move money around? to the vaccine available? >> yes. you can always look and see if you can take it from here or
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there. there is always the danger of negatively impacting the programs from which you take that money. that is why you need to have continued support. congress has been very generous up to this point with us. there is no complaint about that. but looking ahead to the challenges we have, we need continued support with more resources. judy: dr. anthony fauci, we thank you very much. >> thank you. good to be with you. ♪ judy: china's record-breaking heatwave has finally begun to ease. the power shortages that came with the searing temperatures have raised russians about the region's reliance on hydropower and china's ambitions to in its
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use of fossil fuels. our special correspondent reports. reporter: a cool breeze returns here. and so have fishermen. this native is one of the many who have come to soak up the cooler conditions. >> now that it has rained the temperature has come down, i decided to come outside. it has been suffocatg at home. reporter: many people here to comfort indoors. this region was hard-hit by a recent heatwave. the searing temperatures killed crops. and caused wildfires that ripped through the mountains. it also dried up stretches of this river. cracked earth was all that was
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left in some parts. it is a water source for 600 million people. it fuels much of china's extensive hydropower infrastructure, including the world's largest dam. but he calls a 50% reduction in daily hydropower generation. he is a climate and energy activist based in beijing. >> i think what it has revealed his problems on a couple of months area one is around the different ways electricity is generated. in the other is usage. reporter: southwestern china is particularly reliant on hydropower. this province gives 80% of its energy from it. scorching temperatures piled pressure on electricity system. there were parts that were rationed.
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plants had to suspend operations. authorities also restricted more operating hours. only allowing them to open for five hours a day. >> it was pretty inconvenient if you went and got groceries and had to carry large bags. it was quite hot. if you're going up stairs you could take the escalator. but if you wanted to go down, you have to walk rate a lot of elderly people were worried about falling. reporter: many people and businesses are pitching in to try to help conserve. she has come to study here at a fast food restaurant to avoid using the ac at home. they have lights switched off when they are less busy. this unpredictable weather is keeping people on alert. >> right now should be the wet season, but the water levels are still pretty low. so i am the worried area there
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are lots of efforts going into trying to save energy and address ts power crisis. lights are being dimmed. every other life is switched off. these really are just stopgap measures. they will help alleviate the problems in the short-term. in the long term, southwestern china may need to rethink its reliance on hydropower. extreme weather events have become a threat to this clean energy source. >> the power cuts reveal the problems around using different sources of power and the need for more long-term systematic planning and improvements in energy grid. this is more important than looking at anyone energy source alone. reporter: many environmentalists fear policymakers may resort to fossil fuels to meet energy demands and to reduce the risk of energy crunches brought on by
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extreme nditions. thermal plants in southwest china fired on all cylinders to generate as much energy as possible. >> there are indeed discussions needed around how to balance short and long-term problems rid i think energy regulators need to look at how to adjust overall consumption of power. you have a much clearer direction. reporter: still, unpredictable weather related events blamed on climate change heard the energies infrastructure. planet has pledged to go carbon neutral by 2060. but they said emissions will not be until 2030. any shift in the balance could make it even harder to achieve.
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♪ judy: the 2020 election season is in full swing. president biden says existential dangers are living large area in a speech last night, he raised the alarm about extremists forces in the republican. an escalating threat they posed to democracy. we have more. >> as i stand here tonight, democracy is under assault. on the same day president trump floated old pardons for insurrectionist, joe biden said america's imperial. >> too much happening in our country today is not normal. reporter: during a primetime
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address in philadelphia, he sounded alarm about the gop being controlled by extremists. >> they represent in extremism that threatens the very foundations of our republic. either they win or they were cheated. reporter: it is a new and aggressive shift from the president. this speech is part of a larger effort by democrats to confront a movement they warm has abandoned typical partisan politics. >> history tells us that blind loyalty to a single leader and a willingness to engage in political violence is fatal to democracy. maga forces are determined to take this country backwards. they and the flames of political violence that are a threat to
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us. to the pursuit of justice. to the rule of law. reporter: he likened that philosophy to fascism. he diagnosed that wing as having fascist and authoritarian underpinnings. this comes after he spoke to historians about ongoing threats to democracy. >> he said does this moment in america remind you of anything in american history? this reminded me of 1860 when we were on the precipice of civil war. 19 orally when americans were choosing whether or not to stand up to hitler's. i think this is a year that might have a lot to do with whether america's democracy. we could be a major turning point. reporter: he said the new
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language has a specific historical lineage among past presidents rated >> joe biden is trying to educate people that much of what they are seeing politically is not just a feature of this year but something that goes back in history, especially to the 1930's. some said that american can do without elections. there should be little separation between church and state. the official religion should be christianity. he is willing to draw a line between democracy and what he sees as the opponents of democracy. reporter: this shift come 65 days out from the midterm elections. it is welcomed by many scholars who have identified republicans as embracing autocrats. they appeared universally silent
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in the hours after trump called for pardons for those who stormed the capital. >> he came across as a sad, angry, bitter old man rid and like darth vader. reporter: some continued lies. trump repeatedly posted on the social media demanding he be declared the winner. trump has stoped anger and distrust of the fbi. a number of republicans rallied to his side. >> if there is a prosecution of donald trump, there will be riots in the streets. reporter: today he again tried to reach those he described as mainstream republicans.
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>> i don't consider every trump supporter a threat to the country. i think anyone that calls for the use of violence and refuses to acknowledge that an election was won, that is a threat to democracy. reporter: threats of violence and election the nihilism on the right are reasons why some democrats diagnosis. >> it took him a long time to get to the speech he gave last night. i think it is because of his long-term reticence to characterize the republican party in these terms. some people dispute the use of the word fascist. some people think authoritarian is more accurate. there may be a new word to describe this kind of right wing
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antidemocratic tendencies. there is an international authoritarian movement with which trump is aligned. you may disagree with us about tax policy or social policy, but the most important foundational belief when it comes to casting our ballot is the person you are voting for is in favor of american-style democracy. reporter: the white house is hopinghis bold approach convinces voters to cast a ballot or democrats and democracy come november. ♪ judy: as we just herded in the report, the president is calling maga republicans a direct threat to democracy. court filings show more details
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about the investigation into president trump handling of top-secret documents. in an upset in alaska shakes up the midterm forecast. this is all fodder for the analysis of our gas. it is good to have you both back together again in person in the studio. welcome. back together. welcome to both of you. let's pick up where we left off with that report. the speech last night. he says this is an inflection point. he went hard on what he calls maga republicans. >> i do agree with that characterization. the theme of his speech and what he was saying is something he has been saying since he launched his campaign for president in 2019. that campaign video where he spoke to the nation about
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charlottesville and president trump's reaction to it. and how the soul of the nation was at stake. that is why he was running for president. we have seen in other speeches. in atlanta when he gave a voting rights speech. talking about the need to protect the right to vote. what may last nights speech different was the toughness and the directness of his language. he made it clear there is a contrast between what he is doing as president and the maga wing of the republican party. joe biden is never more animated, clear, and focus than when he is talking about the fight for the soul of the nation. judy: what did you make of it? there is a lot of criticism. >> i think he is right that this
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is a special time in american history. all of the threats to democracy are real. the president should be speaking about the real threats to the country. i have no problem with him giving the speech. he should've called out his own party. 30% of trump voters have shown some openness to not voting for donald trump again. those are the key people in this election. they need to deal away. we talked about the soul of the country, i thought it was a beautiful phrase. it cap should not just what is happening in our politics, each
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-- it captured the despair, the declining life expectancy in this country, the spiritual crisis at the heart of a lot of our problems. maga comes out of that crisis. deep down in our relationships. >> i take your point. he should've talked about a lot of the legislation was passed was passed with republicans. some of them are bipartisan deals. we are at a point in this country and the president talked about this.
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those rights have either been taken away or are under threat. there are people who are republicans who are women who might have to seek reproductive health care and cannot. i quibble with you a little bit i think he touched on some of those issues. >> i don't fault him for having a democratic campaign rally. but this was a primetime occasion to not have a campaign rally.
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this is something we can all rally around. i would've preferred a tone that is less partisan. >> that is a little harsh. but that gives me an opportunity to talk about the speech that happened 90 minutes before that. house minority kevin mccarthy gave his own speech in pennsylvania. i immediately dubbed it american carnage 2.0. it was dark and dystopian. if you don't put republicans in charge, all hell is going to break loose. it was an exercise in projection. a lot of the things he was saying in that speech was going against what the president was going to say.
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we have to pay attention to what the republicans are saying on the other side. kevin mccarthy fully expects to be the next speaker of the house. if you have not watched that speech, do so and then get back to me. [laughter] >> it is not a race. judy: you don't want to talk about that. the justice department out these filings. as much as they can show of what they found at mar-a-lago. it was clearly some classified materials. what do you take away from this? >> the empty folders are new.
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as each memo or indictment comes out, it gets worse and worse for donald trump. we learn new things. do we really believe you took out empty folders that said classified documents? that seems hard to believe. where are those documents? how much has this had an effect on our sources around the world? there is escalating peril for donald trump. the more we learn. taking classified documents that were mixed in boxes of newspaper clippings. it just seems like not just sloppiness. judy: is this likely -- how damaging is it for a former president? we have seen a lot. and this in. how damaging is it? >> it should be damaging.
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it should be very damaging. but we are talking about donald trump. he takes every damaging piece of information and uses it in the court of public opinion. we know he is all about the short-term term. not about the long-term. one of the pieces of information among many in that filing that leapt out at me was the fact that you have federal investigators who are part of this investigation who had to get additional security clearanc in order to look at some of the papers to review some of them. what did he have? how damaging is it not only to
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the country but to our national security? judy: he said he had already personally declassified them. >> there is actually a process for that. judy: midterm elections getting a little more interesting. in alaska, a state that has been represented by republican congress for 50 years, choosing a democrat red she beat out sarah palin. this and some other reassessments, what you think? >> that race was conducted by ranked choice voting, which i'm a fan of. that makes the parties less powerful. that is exactly what happened.
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that is why she got that victory. it is a victory for ranked choice voting. it has been pretty clear for a month or two now, we have had a couple of special elections that democrats have one. -- won. that is a pretty big sweep. abortion is a real issue. democrats e moving on. judy: she addressed with me that alaska voters do not like partisanship.
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they are looking for politicians who talk about the issues. >> clearly that is the case. i think we will find out in november whether that is the case across the country. there are a couple of hurdles in the way of democrats repeating nationwide. gerrymandering is going to make it super tough. it will take a lot for the miracle in alaska to make it possible for democrats to hold onto that house. if you are talk to a democratic operative today, they like their prospects much better now. judy: they think that house is a real reach. >> those who know what they are talking about.
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they have moved it from less than a 30,000 seat gain two more like 10. you don't want to be that party. judy: you know what you're talking about. that is why we have you here. thank you both. ♪ if all goes as planned, nasa will launch a rocket tomorrow afternoon that is the start of a longer mission to get back to the moon. the first phase of the artemis moon mission will send an unmanned capsule to the moon. they want humans to land again on the moon in a few years.
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there are far grander designs for destinations after that. our science correspondent tells us it has been a long time to get this mission off the ground. reporter: it was a countdown to yet another delay. years late and billions over budget, the mot powerful rocket ever is still on the pad in florida after bad weather and a host of technical issues scuttled a launch attempt. the system will be carrying an orion spacecraft on a unmanned test flight to orbit the moon. it is the artemis one mission, the first foray to an encore campaign to send humans back to the lunar surface. this time the agency is promising more than flags and footprints. why is nasa going back to the moon? >> because we do not have the capability of going to mars. reporter: that is a former
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shuttle specialist and former florida senator and current nasa administrator. >> what we're going to learn living and working on the moon is going to help us. reporter: i met him at the kennedy space center a month before launch. still inside the cavernous assembly vehicle building was a rocket enveloped in a cocoon of scaffolding. the technicians could work through their checklists. >> the enormity and the amount of energy that is containein their. >> mission sequenced start. reporter: it has 15% more thrust than a saturn five rocket, which launched 12 men to the surface of the moon between 1969 and 1972. it returns nasa to the apollo design philosophy. a capsule on top of a rocket. >> the final liftoff of
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atlantis. reporter: unlike the space shuttle in harm's way of falling debris. >> this is where the crew would enter orion. reporter: the manager took me to the top of the 32 story rocket. the rocket is designed to whisk the crew away if something is terribly wrong. that is a significant safety improvement. but there is still a lot of space shuttle dna in the design. the four main engines are modified shuttle leftovers. so too are the twin solid rocket stirs. and the fuel tank design also has a strong shuttle lineage.
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>> it does not push technology that was never part of the failsafe. it was the oppose. because we are reusing shuttle parts, we are going to be able to do this sooner and for less money. reporter: she was the deputy administrator of nasa. in her newly released book, she says boeing executives promised to deliver a new rocket in five years for $6 billion. that was in 2010. >> i do not believe these people thought this would be true. but they knew they could sell that congress. reporter: who was buying what boeing was selling? bill nelson, chairman of the senate committee that oversees nasa. when we heard pieces of the show would be kind of put together, this was not true at all. >> it was a seducing argument.
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because there were certain technologies that we were comfortable with. reporter: b some of the obama administration were not comfortable with the old way of building rockets. contracts that guarantee companies healthy profits even if they were late and over budget. instead, they wanted to double down on fixed pricing. the old space industrial complex exuded its political influence. senator nelson led the charge to make it the law of the land. a lot of people over the years have called this the sate launch system or mr. nelson's rocket. it really does have your imprint on it. >> you are very kind to want to give me all of this credit. the fact is we were at a
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crossroads. the program before was not going to make it. to go back to the moon. >> testing concepts for the future reporter: of new rocket design. the bush administration proposed that program in 2004. using that milestone, it has taken nasa 18 years to finally be poised to launch an unmanned rocket and capsule toward th moon. why has it taken so long? >> it was not a repeat of the space transportation system. the shuttle. the orion capsule had to have all kinds of new sophistication. not the old apollo stuff. so this is a brand-new rocket. when you design a brand-new rocket and build it, it is going
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to take time. and it did. reporter: meanwhile, brand-new, much cheaper rockets keep emerging and launching from spacex at a much faster rate. the company has its own moon and mars ambitions with its lead -- heavy lift rocket. it will have a test flight in september. it will be fully reusable. except for the orion capsule, nasa's new rocket is newly expendable single use system. the inspector general says the artemis campaign will cost $93 billion between 2012 and 2025. $4.1 million for a single launch. elon musk claims the price tag for a starship launch will be less than $10 million. >> this is not nasa's best foot forward. we are better than this. reporter: what does it prove if
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anything? >> i think it will prove that we should not be doing things in this way anymore. reporter: it is already happening. nasa has contracted with spacex to build the landing craft to take astronauts from lunar orbit to the surface of the moon on the third artemis mission. you have to wonder if this is the beginning of an era at some level or the end of an era of a way of building rocket ships to space? >> it is the beginning of a new era of both commercial and the government joining up in a partnership. it will evolve. reporter: evolution implies a natural selection. nasa's big, goldplated rocket may be aiming for the moon, but it also may be headed the way of the dinosaur. judy: fingers crossed all things
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go well. we will have more in the latest gal issues surrounding former president trump. please tune in this weekend to see an interview with michael boop light and hear a sample of the voice that made him an international sensation. >> listening to this latest album, i was playing -- paying close attention to your technique. the contemporary stuff sounds completely different than when you sing the old classics. how do you do it? >> it is very similar to elvis presley. they almost sound the same. ♪ elvis would do this quick by grotto -- vibrato. if dean did it, he would have a
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quick turn. it sounds kind of effortless. sinatra sings on the bowels. -- vowels. ♪ there are all of these little changes. all the nuances. judy: you have to watch that coming up sunday. that is it for tonight. thank you. please stay safe. we will see you soon. ♪ >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by -- ♪
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>> moving our economy for 160b years. bnsf, the engine that connects us. ♪ >> and with the ongoing support of these individuals and institutns. and friends of the newshour, including kathy and paul anderson and camilla and george smith. the walton family foundation, working for solutions to protect water during climate change so people and nature can thrive together. the hewlett foundation. advancing ideas and supporting institutions to support a better world. ♪
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♪ hello and welcome to "amanpour & company." here's what's coming up. >> a long awaited refport from the u.n. drops. what it says about beijing's treatment of the uighurs. lingling wei joins me. plus, a year on since the u.s. withdrawal from afghanistan. i ask senator jeanne shaheen about her continued fight for afghan women and girls. then -- >> i can't watch it now. i will save it to the cloud and leave it for my grandchildren and children. they should know about this crime and all these women. >> ukrainian officials say it's a war crime caught an camera. a gruesome recording may help bring some justice in ukraine. and -- >> the problem isn't just donald trump. it is this much bigger change
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