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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 14, 2016 7:00am-9:01am EST

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captioning funded by cbs >> ♪ good morning. it is monday, november 14th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." president-elect trump sells "60 minutes" his opponent should not be afraid of him and what you did not hear last night about the business empire. "60 minutes" lesley stahl is here. >> how will reins priebus and steve bannon share power in a trump administration. >> we will have kevin mccarthy if congress will let trump build a border wall and bernie sanders is in studio 57 with his way forward for defeated democrats.
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we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> on election night, i heard you went completely silent. >> i realized that this is a whole different life for me now. >> president-elect trump speaks to a divided nation. >> are you, in any way, intimidated, scared about the gravity of what you're taking on? >> i respect it. but i'm not scared by it. >> do you think the campaign has hurt the trump rant? >> i don't think it matters. this is so much more important and more serious. >> this is our country. i don't care about hotel occupancy. it's peanuts compared to whatter doing. >> anti-trump protesters gathered the fifth straight day in the country. >> we reject to president-elect trump. >> landslides blocked several roads in new zealand. >> it got worse and it didn't stop. >> dozens of wildfires are
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burning across the southeast and fire officials believe many have been deliberately set. >> the moon is the closest it's ever been to earth in six decades. >> well advertised. super moon. no i'm not going to howl for you >> all that. >> supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg has been moonlighting and made her opera debut. >> sherman gets away for the touchdown and seattle is going to win it. >> donald trump did it. he is our president. i feel bad saying it. i'm staying in a trump hotel right now. i don't know if he is going to make a good president, but he makes a swell hotel suite, i can tell you that. >> on "cbs this morning." >> i'm hoping hillary has time for herself. the day after the election she was spotted hiking near the woods near hur house and had already grown out a full david letterman retirement beard. announcer: this portion of "cbs
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this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning." the trump administration is taking shape starting with two important choices for top white house roles. republican party chairman reince priebus will be the new pre president's chief of staff and steve bannon will be trump's chief strategist priebus, trump said, the insiders and bannon, the outsider, will be equal partners in the white house. >> the president-elect and his family spoke with lesley stahl of "60 minutes" with their first tv interview since the election. we have happy to have lesley stahl in the studio with us. >> i am very surprised to hear that. >> reporter: you're telling muslims -- >> i hate to hear that. >> reporter: but you do hear it.
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>> i don't hear it. >> reporter: you're not seeing this? >> one or two instances. >> reporter: on social media? >> very small amount. >> reporter: do you want to say anything to those people? >> i would say don't do it. that's terrible. because i'm going to bring this country together. >> reporter: they are harassing latinos, muslims? >> i am so saddened to hear that and i say stop it. if it helps, i will say this, and i'll say it right to the camera, stop it. >> reporter: when they demonstrate against you and there are signs out there i mean, don't you say to yourself? i guess you don't. do i have to worry about this? do i have to go out and aassaug entell them -- and tell them don't be afraid? >> i'm saying don't be afraid. we are going to bring our country back but certainly don't be afraid. >> reporter: you looked pretty sober sitting there in the oval
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office. did something wash over you? >> i think i'm a sober person. i think the press tries to make you into something a little bit different. in my case, a little bit of a wild man. i'm not. i'm actually not. i'm a very sober person but it was respect for the office, it was respect for the president. again, i had never mitt before, but we had -- we had a very good chemistry going. we never discussed what we said about each other. i said terrible things about him and he said terrible things about me. we never, ever discussed what we said about each other. >> reporter: there was no awkwardness? >> i'll. ho be honest. from my standpoint, zero. i'm surprised to tell you that. >> reporter: you say lobbyists own politicians because they give them money. you admitted you used to do it yourself. >> lobbyists and special interests. >> reporter: you want to get rid of all of that. >> i don't like it.
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>> reporter: you don't like it. but your own transition team is filled with lobbyists. >> the only people you have down there. >> reporter: verizon, you have lobbyists from the oil and gas industry and food -- >> everybody is a lobbyist down there. >> reporter: no way. >> they are down there. >> reporter: on your own transition. >> trying to clean up washington. >> reporter: how do you clean it up? >> everything down there, there are no people. they are all people that work. that's the problem with the system. the system. right now, we are going to clean it up. we are having restrictions on foreign money coming in and we are going to put on term limits which a lot of people aren't happy about. we are doing a lot of things to clean up the system. >> reporter: are you appoint or looking to appoint a justice that will overturn roe v wade? >> i'm pro life. the judges will be pro life.
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>> reporter: what about over turn the law? >> they will be pro life and they will be in terms of the whole gun situation, we know the second amendment and everybody is talking about the second amendment and they are trying to dice it up and change it. they are going to be very pro second amendment. but having to do with abortion, what -- if it ever were overturned, it would go back to the states. >> reporter: but then -- >> and go back to the states. >> reporter: some women won't be able to get abortion? >> no, back to the states. >> reporter: by some -- >> perhaps have to go to another state. >> reporter: and that is okay? >> we will see what happens. got a long way to go. >> reporter: are you going to ask for a special prosecutor to investigate hillary clinton over her e-mails? and are you, as you had said to her face, try to put her in jail? >> well, i'll tell you what i'm going to do. i'm going to think about it. i feel that i want to focus on jobs. i want to focus all on health care. >> reporter: you called her crooked hillary. said you wanted to get her in
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jail. your people and your audiences kept saying lock her up. >> yeah. she did some bad things. >> reporter: i know but a special prosecutor? do you think you might -- >> i don't want to hurt them. i don't want to hurt them. they are good people. i don't want to hurt them. and i will give you a very, very good and definitive answer the next time we do "60 minutes" together. >> lesley stahl is with us. good morning. >> good morning. >> let me ask you this, first. you interviewed him as a candidate and now after he has won the presidency. did you get a sense that he has changed? >> i did. you could see it in his body language. you could hear it in the timber of his voice. he is taking and, obviously, very seriously. i think sitting there, it was sinking in. i think it's been sinking in since the few days of the election. he even talks about how huge this is. and it is. the enormity, the gravity of it
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is sort of weighing on him now and he wants to present himself as a serious person. he understands he has all of these issues. he wants the public to know, i think, that he is going to take it really, really seriously. >> here is a report in "wall street journal" today. mr. trump did not even realize that most of the west wing staff are political appointees that came up in his 90-minute conversation with president and president obama feels he has to spend additional time to advise trump as president. >> i got the feeling that president obama would love to advise him, because, apparently, they talked about obamacare and the president kind of made a pitch to keep -- >> lobbied it. >> lobbied it to keep parts of obamacare and now he said he would keep parts of it. i think the president thinks, i can persuade this guy. >> tell us how you felt about the relationship with obama and how he might use obama?
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the president-elect said i'm going to seek his counsel. >> he did say that. >> that surprised many people when he said those words outloud. >> i think that the president, in being so respectful to him, i think donald trump went in there not knowing what he was going to get, given the birther issue and some of the other nasty things he had said, that donald trump had said about the president, he didn't know what to expect and he got this graciousness, he got a man really offering to help in a very constructive way. and that their meeting went on so long. he said it could have gone on for four hours. we had to break it off as if he didn't want to. that there was a rapport. you know, all of the past presidents have a little club. >> yes. >> who else is going to understand the burdens? and i think obama talked to him,
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man-to-man, about the constant pressure. >> trump talked said they talked about the middle east, for example. >> apparently, trump wanted to talk about the middle east and north africa and north korea. and so they must have done sort of what you'd call a tour. they went around the issues that are most prominently on a new president's plate now, today. >> was he caught off by the protests in the streets? he seemed to think, i'm not aware of it or i'm not marrying abo -- hearing about this? >> he knew about the protests in the street because they are in front of trump tower. >> but he said, "i don't know much about that." >> i asked him about the racial threats that are going on and problems and schools and things like that. he said he didn't know too much about that. he certainly knows about the demonstrators. he feels that -- you know, he had tweeted out they were professional protests and then a second tweet saying everything,
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kind of taken aback but with me again he went back to the professional. he really has a deep animosity to the press and he feels that the press is part -- we are whipping it up, he feels. >> great job. >> really great job. bravo, lesley stahl. >> we will have more of parts of the interview including parts you did not see last night. we will look at his plan for the trump organization and plus the potential conflicts of interests he faces. president-elect trump has thousands more government positions to fill before inaugust race day. names include former new york city mayor rudy giuliani for attorney general and sjeff sessions for secretary of defense and laura
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on is the list. chip reid has more. >> reporter: president-elect trump laid out a series of policies, top republicans are trying to provide clarity and uniting behind mr. trump and asking the country to do the same. >> we are not planning on wrecking a deportation force and donald trump is not planning on that. >> subject to extreme vetting but not a ban. >> reporter: president-elect trump's team and members of congress out in full force on sunday trying to calm an anxious nation. >> donald trump has to be donald trump and the country will organization its around who he is. >> reporter: white house chief of staff will be rnc chairman reince priebus who convinced many establishment republicans to support mr. trump's unconventional candidacy but the choice of stephen bannon is anti--establishment move as breitbart news ceo, bannon has been criticized for using his site as a platform for the alt-right movement.
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bannon used his new service to bash house speaker paul ryan for withholding his endorsement. speaker ryan expressed confidence in the president-elect's staffing process. >> he is a successful person. he surrounds himself with successful people. so i'm confident he is going to do the same here. >> reporter: as for the protest spurred by trump's victory, campaign manager kellyanne conway said harry reid in a statement called the president-elect a sexual predator who lost the popular vote and fueled his campaign with bigotry and hate. >> you have him asking like a political pundit and it has to stop. >> reporter: steve bannon, a statement was put out that reads, in part, it is a sad day when a man who presided over a loose-knit group of white nationalists and racists is slated to be a senior staff
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member in the people's house. >> chip, thank you so much. on sunday, "60 minutes" lesley stahl also asked the president-elect about immigration and do deport millions of undocumented immigrants. >> we are going to get people who are criminals and gang members and could be 2 to 3 million people to get them out of our country and incarcerate but we are getting them out of our country that are here illegally. after the border is secured and everything is normalized we will make a determination on the people you're talking about, who are terrific people, been terrific people, but we are going to make a determination -- >> house mantle leader kevin mccarthy is with us from washington. good morning. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> paul ryan, the speaker of the house, has said we are not planning on erecting a deportation force. you just heard what the
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president-elect has said about maybe a large number of people who are criminals. give us a sense of is there a division between republican leadership and president-elect on exactly what to do about immigration, including the wall, including deportation? >> now remember, first, wernt a not a week away from being election and coming back into session right now. everybody will find right now is securing our border and bill that passed in senate put a great deal of money, billions of dollars into protecting the border. so i think that is the place we will find common ground. what president-elect donald trump is talking about is those who have broken felonies and that is not a new law, that is upholding current law on the deportation. >> how many people is that? 2 million to 3 million? >> there is a lot of different numbers out there. and i don't know the exact number. i mean, look. that is nothing new. somebody has broken a major felony, do you still want them
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inside the country when they broke the law to come in the first place? >> what do you make, so far, congressman, of the appointments the president-elect has made with reince priebus and steve bannon? >> i think it tells a lot. i spoke with both of those gentlemen last night and with president-elect donald trump. they forged a relationship. when you go through a campaign and even a campaign as high as president, you've gone through ups and downs but you create a relationship together and see how to work together. i think he was able to bond the different parts of that campaign and show that they can work together. i'm hopeful that we give donald trump an opportunity he can put out policies and move together to bring the country united once and for all. >> you know trump is facing criticism for bringing steve bannon into the white house. the anti-defamation league and the southern poverty law center have both suggested his website
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have ties to white nationalism and specifically accusing breitbart being a white propaganda bill. do you disagree? >> i think you're putting a lot of things on that site on it bannon probably he doesn't have control of. he is out running a campaign of donald trump. donald trump has the opportunity to find those that he thinks that he trusts. they work together with reince priebus. look at the job that reince has done from taking over in the rnc, the republican national committee. when we were in the minority. look at the number of governships and the ability to have a majority in the house and the senate and now the presidency. i don't think many people would look back and say that that could happen. that was pretty much a little impossibility. and he brought a lot of people together to make it happen. >> but has the alt-right become a credible part of the republican constituency and with a voice now to be heard in washington? >> look. when you come into my office, the portrait that sits behind my
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desk is abraham lincoln. i think that is the core of what republicans firmly believe and always will believe. >> all right. congressman kevin mccarthy, we thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> you're welcome. a rare and beautiful sight in the sky that is causing problems here on earth. ahead, how the historic super moon is making the water rise even higher in the coastal areas and that is hit by flooding. first, it's time t
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>> announcer: this national weather property sponsored by arreva. heal your cold sorry fast. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning."
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and good morning, i'm rahel solomon. philadelphia firefighters are controlled a large tire fire in kensington, the fire broke out at about 3:00 this morning, at joel's tire shop on frankford avenue, thick black smoke poured from the building, fortunately, there were no injuries, and so far, no word on a cause. well, out the door with the forecast. >> good morning, i would liely advise you walk out the door with a heavy coat this morning, it is chilly and no matter where you are you are going to feel the chip. typically colder spots up in the poconos, beautiful view for us here sun rising over lake harmony up in the mountains, and everywhere else you've got full sunshine at least initially, only going to rebounds to 61 degrees, technically smidge milder than average, eventually clouds rebuilds, as early as this
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evening, especially overnight tomorrow, first half of the day, pockets of steady rain, clear it out, have the chance to moderate up to 66 by week's end. >> all right, we have the beautiful sunshine katie but we also have the slow downs because of it, and an accident here, 995, northbound direction, past bridge street. you can see how slow moving it is. pulled out to the far left. and it is really causing to you put on your brakes, as we move to the right which will slow all of you down, accident in mayfair, cottman avenue roosevelt boulevard, really slowing you down, and traffic valley forge road skippack pike, lanes block, as well, rahel? >> thank you, next update is at 7:55, up next from cbs this morning, the supermoon is causing a flood of problems in florida. i'm rahel solomon. make it a good morning.
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at the end of the night, everyone went into the west wing of the white house and there was a huge party and everybody in there was black, except bradley cooper, for some reason. and i saw how happy everybody was. these people had been historically disenfranchised and it made me feel hopeful and it made me feel proud to be an american and it made me very happy about the prospects of our country. so in that spirit, i'm wishing donald trump luck and i'm going to give him a chance, and we, the historically disenfranchised, demand that he give us one too. thank you very much. >> that was such a brilliant
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"saturday night live." i was there and the minute he said that people were on their feet applauding. to see president obama and donald trump together sitting down and having a civilized conversation made a lot of people think, maybe there is something here. maybe we can finally move forward because the country is divided. we shall see. >> you were there? >> yeah, i was there. david chappelle so nice to see him back. and kate mckinnon's opening mondologue was pitch perfect. welcome back to "cbs this morning." donald trump said his children will raise his business empires but his plans raise ethical questions. part of the interview he didn't see last night. lesley stahl shows us how he will manage potential conflicts of interest. >> the super moon comes with a threat to coastal communities. ahead, how it is making regular flooding in south florida even worse. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" reports on the temporary closing of the u.s. embassy in kabul after a suicide bombing inside a key military
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base in afghanistan. four americans were killed in saturday's attacks at bagram air field. the italitaliban claim responsibility. two deaths and extensive damage in new zealand after a quake that struck the country's south island more than 24 hours ago. the shaking heavily damaged buildings and roads. helicopters and a navy ship will head to the coastal town where hundreds of tourists and residents are stranded. some workers at facebook reportedly are worried about the spread of racist means. facebook is accused of also spreading fake news stories. in response, ceo mark zuckerberg said they are making progress and, quote, our goal is to show people the content they will find most meaningful and people want accurate news. "wall street journal" reports on president-elect trump
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speaking last night with china's president. trump's office confirmed a phone conversation with xi jinping. two leaders established, quote, a clear sense of mutual respect. trump had called china currency man lipulator and threatened to pose trade tariffs. president-elect donald trump is ready for his children to run his business. his plans are feature inside a discussion with lesley stahl "60 minutes" overtime that did not air last night and here is part of that conversation and what his children believe is the future of the trump business empire. >> reporter: what are you going to do about your business? your kids run it or are you going to divest yourself? >> i built a great company and most of the greatest assets in the world. i don't care about it any more. this is so important what i'm doing and, you know, the people believe this. this is so important what i'm doing. i don't care about i own a building in manhattan and i have nice tenants. my kids will run it and they will run it well.
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>> reporter: and never talk to you about? >> they won't talk to me. now, the laws are very soft on this whole matter. i don't have to do anything. you know? i don't know if you know this. i don't have to do anything. >> reporter: roles during the administration. any of you want a job in your father's administration? >> so we have amazing company. one of the fortunate things for my marriage and our father he was able to step out of the company to run for commander in chief and i think he is going to rely on us more than ever. >> reporter: so you'll stay up here? >> so we will be in new york and we will take care of the business. i think we are going to have a lot of fun doing it and make him very proud. >> reporter: let me ask whether any of you think that the campaign has hurt the trump brand? >> i don't think it matters. this is so much more important. and more serious. and so that -- that is the focus. >> i think what ivanka is trying to say, who cares? who cares? this is big league stuff.
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this is -- this is our country. our country is going bad. we are going to save our country. i don't care about hotel occupancy. it's peanuts compared to what we are doing. health care, making people better. it's unfair what has happened to the people of our country and we are going to change it. as simple as that. >> donald trump's campaign says figuring out how to transfer the family's real estate business to his children is a top priority. in a statement to cbs news, the campaign said, quote, we are in the process of vetting various structures with the goal of the immediate transfer of management of the trump organization and its portfolio businesses to donald jr. and ivanka and eric trump as well as a team of highly skilled professionals. julianna goldman has more. >> reporter: the trump organization is a privately held company that has always answered to donald trump and not shareholders. now that his shareholders are the american people, trump's
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massive business portfolio presents unprecedented conflicts of interest. as a candidate last december, donald trump was asked about turkey's role in the fight against isis and began by saying this. >> i have a little conflict of interest because i have a major, major building in istanbul that it's a tremendously successful job and it's called trump tau towers. >> reporter: as president-elect that is the more striking given his 59 properties at home and around the world bearing his name. while there are rules to prevent conflicts of interest for government officials, they don't apply to the president and vice president, who have traditionally put investments in a blind trust. asked about this in january, trump said he would tap his children. >> put your assets in a blind trust? >> i would put it in a blind trust -- well, i don't know if it's a blind trust if ivanka and donald and eric run it. is that a blind trust? i don't know. but i would probably have my children run it with executives
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and i wouldn't ever be involved because i wouldn't care about anything but this country. >> reporter: watchdogs say the setup didn't wall off the trump administration. >> a real blind trust would be one where he picked a third-party, independent third-party to manage his investments. he would not know what is going on there. >> reporter: larry noble is a former general counsel of the federal election commission. >> what that is is just turning your business interest to your family which is very close to you and involved in your campaign who you say are your gig advisers. >> reporter: the arrangement doesn't solve conflicts like trump's relationship with deutsche bank, one of his main lenders. according to his financial disclosures he owes the bank more than $300 million in mortgages. the bank is currently in multibillion dollar negotiations with the justice department to settle a fine for trading toxic mortgages in the run-up to the financial crisis. the talks could last into the next administration.
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the tenants in his building pose a conflict like the state-run chinese bank on on the 20th floor of trump tower. >> i have tenants from china. i have the biggest bank in the world from china paying me rent. >> reporter: closer to home, there is the trump old post office hotel where the landlord is the federal government which trump will now head. >> with the notable exception of 1600 pennsylvania avenue, this is the no coveted piece of real estate in washington, d.c. >> reporter: the general of services administration oversees the land and trump's lease and put a plan in place but nothing has started yet. gayle, trump will be appointing the new head of the gsa and can renegotiate his lease under certain conditions. >> thank you very much, julianna. parts of florida have seen a sharp increase in flooding incidents. ahead, how the and historic super man it's called could swamp low lying communities with even more waters. we would like to invite you to
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subscribe to our on "cbs this morning" podcast. why? you'll get the news of the day, extended interviews, and podcast originals. good stuff there and find them at itunes and apple's podcast app. we will be right back. anknows how it feelsiabetes to see your numbers go up, despite your best efforts. but what if you could turn things around? what if you could... love your numbers? discover once-daily invokana®. it's the #1 prescribed sglt2 inhibitor that works to lower a1c. a pill taken just once in the morning, invokana® is used along with diet and exercise to significantly lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. in fact, it's been proven to be more effective at lowering a1c than januvia.
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♪ the extra bright super moon has been lighting up the sky all over the world. the full moon has not been this close to earth since 1948. it will reach the peak of its full phase at 8:52 a.m. eastern but the stronger gravitational pull is amplified the tide in places like south florida. david begnaud is in ft. lauderdale with the threat. >> reporter: good morning. 45 minutes as this was dry but we put on the rubber boots now.
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the high in is coming in a pretty steady clip. a crack here in the water in the street is coming up through the concrete and some of the nearby drains. look. people here in south florida are used to this. a way of life if you live in the area. however, with the super moon which is rare, it's creating a conversation about how things are changing and what cities are doing about it. the super moon over miami was stunning. unless you lived in a place like coconut grove on south bay shareholder lane, it came ashore sunday night. looks like we have about 60s inches of water here in the street that shouldn't be. >> that's right. by 2030 we expect up to another six inches of rise to occur so we might see another six inches on to which this. >> reporter: seasonal king tides are swaump is store fronts and submerging the streets. is the moon closer to the earth
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than normal? >> it is. it is. that additional gravitational pull has caused her high tides to be a little bit higher than they would have been without that super moon. >> reporter: we are at the point now that, you know, the waters are rising high enough that it's interfering with public safety. >> reporter: there in miami beach, flooding incidents have increased at least 400%. >> we had to close the water because the water was a foot taller than the ground. if we have to close this ground that affects our police, our fire, our ambulance service. >> reporter: if miami beach's sea level were to rise just two feet, the area would undergo a radical transformation. desperate times lead to desperate measures. the city is now spending at least $400 million trying to keep the tourist mecca higher and drier. 50 temporary pump stations have
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been installed and more permanent ones on the way similar to those in new orleans and they are rising city streets and evidenting the flood walls and one says this has gone beyond the debate over the debate. >> we have sea level rising in our neighborhoods and we need to do about it now. >> reporter: most people here in ft. lauderdale live about five feet above sea level but there is a report that says by 2030 sea level could rise another six inches and that is before we are talking about the next super moon. >> that is incredible. david, thank you so much. a pioneering astronaut marked some milestone. tailor made for social media. ahead, buzz aldrin's first of its kind picture from space, get this. on its 50th anniversary. how cool is that? >> he is ahead of his time with
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tweeted this remarkable mission 50 years ago. really the first selfie from space you could say. he is seen ownfloating in orbitd took the picture between the 1966 mission. aldrin is most famous for being the second person to walk on the moon. when you look at that picture, guys, it's so clear. nice job, mr. aldrin. >> gorgeous picture. democrats try to regroup after trump's big election win. bernie sanders has some ideas for a big comeback. he is here wandering around! there he is. he is here. the former presidential candidate shares lessons from his campaign ahead on "cbs this morning."
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>> this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, i'm jim donovan. starting today, even easier to ride septa, offering septa riders, on sale at septa's sales offices, and at septa headquarters on market street. now, here's kate way look at today's weather. >> the forecast, jim, definately quiet initially, it will be changing as we head toward night fall, next storm system moving up the coast, it is a coastal system, and i think those two words combined make people little nervous. but his is really just going to be shower producer for our area, already getting to see it move into the virginia's, eventually we ends one showers from it, waiting for the clouds to rebuild i would say until probably mid to late
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afternoon, maybe shower as early as this evening, starts to build up, and through the overnight, first half of tomorrow. very nice note rounding up the work week. >> thank you, looking outside, still looking very busy out here, vehicle 95 northbound academy, blogging the right lane, now just blocking the shoulder. heads up on, that also, we have an accident out here, still kind of lingering out there, police are directing traffic at valley forge road. at skippack pike, lanes blocked there, another accident at doylestown, blogging right lane, jim? >> thanks, meisha. next update at 8:25, coming up on cbs this morning, senator bernie sanders in studio 57. talking about working with president-elect donald trump. i'm jim donovan, good
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♪ it is monday, november 14th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including senator bernie sanders in studio 57. his view of president-elect trump and his plans for a movement to change the democratic party. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. did you get a sense he has changed? >> i did. you could see it in his body language. you could see -- hear it in the timber of his voice. he is taking it, obviously, very seriously. i think, sitting there, it was sinking in. >> top republicans are now trying to provide clarity and they are uniting behind mr. trump and asking the country to do the same. >> what do you make so far of the appointments that the
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president-elect has made? >> i think it tells a lot and one thing you'll find between those two gentlemen and i spoke with both of them last night, they forged a relationship. >> how many questions people have about donald trump is whether anyone can tell him no. can anyone tell donald trump no? >> maybe ivanka or melania? i don't know. this is a very strong-willed guy. >> trump in the oval office with president obama. i just looked at the president's face there. he cannot believe what is he looking at either! in fact, just listen to the actual audio in that room. ♪ i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. president-elect donald trump is putting a party insider and a political outsider at the heart of his administration.
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republican national committee reince priebus will be white house chief of staff and the insider could help the new president work with congress. >> campaign ceo stephen bannon chief strategist and senior counselor. his breitbart is a fierce critic of the white house. the role includes the following. in a statement, president-elect trump said, bannon and priebus would work as equal partners. >> stephen bannon's new role is causing criticism. bannon has described ba brightbright alt-right movement. it was tweeted bannon should go and the main banner between breitbart being a propaganda mill. president obama told
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democratic leaders in an e-mail it is time to get ready to fight. senator bernie sanders is laying out his agenda for the next four years. his presidential campaign won 22 states before losing the nomination to hillary clinton. more than 13 million people voted for him. he writes about the campaign and what comes next in his new book called "our revolution, a future to believe in." senator sanders, good to have you here. >> good to be here. >> we were talking to your lovely wife jane in the green room and said you two stayed up late to watch the returns. we heard it's a lock, it's a rout, it's her night. by the end of the night, we all know it turned south very, very quickly, we could say. >> let's not forget, in the midst of that dismal night, she did win more votes than mr. trump. >> she did win the popular vote. what do you think went wrong? today she is blaming james comey in the letters. >> this is what i think went
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wrong. what trump did very effectively is tap the anger and angst and pain that many working class people are feeling. and what he said is i, donald trump, i'm going to be a champion of the working class. that is the word he used. i know you work longer hours for lower wages and you can't afford child care and can't afford to send your kids to college. i, alone, donald trump, will solve these problems. what we are going to do, gayle, we will hold mr. trump accountable. we have all of the things he has said and we are going to say to mr. trump, if you have the courage to actually stand up to the big money and trust of the billionaire class, if you have the courage, in fact, to develop policies to improve lives for working people count us in. you want for increase the infrastructure and way equity for women, we are on your side. >> are you surprised that a billionaire could connect so well when the democrats could not to the working class? >> a fair question. on the other hand, what you're
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looking at is a guy who utilized the media very well. he is an entertainer and a professional at that. i will tell you i think there needs to be a profound change in the way the democratic party does business. it is not good enough to have a liberal elite. i come from the white working class and i am deeply humiliated that the democratic party cannot talk to the people from where i came from. >> if you believe you were the candidate, you would have won? >> hindsight is great, charlie. i don't know the answer to that. maybe, maybe not. ths is what i do know. i know that the democratic party has got to stand with the working people of this country. feel their pain and take on the billionaire class, take on wall street, take on the drug companies. yo know, it is very easy and this is what i feel. very easy for a president to take on little girls who wear head scarves or muslim, take on latinos and minorities.
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little bit harder to take on wall street and the drug companies and the insurance companies. >> secretary clinton doesn't say that. she said they had momentum going into the last week and in fact, what happened with james comey. >> a minor look. >> that is their analysis. >> not a question of what happens in the last week. the question is that she should have won this election by ten percentage points. the question is why it is that millions of white working class people who voted for obama turned their backs on the democratic party and i think a lot of people do not think that democratic party is standing with them. that has got to change. that is among other reasons why i'm supporting keith ellison who will shake up the democratic party. >> this is the memo from hillary clinton's team which they do blame james comey. we saw voters in the last week broke for donald trump. again, back to this original question of trust. whether they trust hillary clinton, whether they trust her as a change agent. how long was the primary between
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the two of you? >> a long time. >> a long time. do you bear some responsibility in raising some of those concerns? do you feel any guilt about her loss? >> i guess if we believe somebody who the establishment brings forward has a trite to be anointed and nobody should run against, i guess yes. if we believe in democracy we have a vigorous debate on the aisle ideals. by talking about the fact that college answers universities tuition free and only country on earth not to make health care free. >> she adopted your proposal on colleges. millennials supported you in droves in your campaign. they were part of the obama coalition. they didn't turn out for hillary clinton. why is that? >> well, i think -- first of all, i haven't studied it.
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in my book, "our revolution, i make this point. i ended the campaign more optimistic than i began and i saw so many beautiful young people who are the least prejudice generation in the history of this country who want -- let me tell you something else. when we talk about mr. trump. what this guy is talking about in terms of climate change should frighten not only the people in this country but around the world, because if the president of the united states does not believe that climate change is real, if he is not going to be aggressive in transforming our energy is that is a message that goes to the entire world. i worry very much about the future of this planet and what life going to be like for your kids and your grandchildren. we have to rally the young people who will lead this effort to tell mr. trump, sorry, we want the planet that our kids and grandchildren will be living in -- >> are you encouraged he is becoming more open minded? >> in a thousand ways his campaign was unusual and dominated by himself.
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he developed it. i would hope this is nobody fooled. this is a smart guy. i would hope he will go to the scientific community and say tell pea what is going on with cl climate change. >>th should the electoral college be abolished? >> i hope everybody in this country would think about not only the fact that hillary clinton ended up with more votes than mr. trump, but second of all the campaign -- i ran around the country for hillary clinton. 15 states, state of vermont is a democratic state. nobody paid any attention to us. wyoming is a republican state and nobody paid attention to wyoming. i thought we were 50 states and i think a campaign should be campaigning in 50 states. i think this is something we should be thinking about. >> think about changing the electoral college? >> i think we should -- the answer is i think a campaign for president should not be in 15 states in this country. >> have you spoken to hillary clinton. >> i have not. >> you have not spoken to her?
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>> what will you do in the united states senate if they move forward on trying these mass deportations that donald trump said he supports on "60 minutes"? >> all right. this country faces very serious problems. middle class is shrinking. too many people living in poverty. kids can't afford to go to college and clim chanate change there. we can't pick on one group because they are latinos or african-americans or that is nothing this country is about and i will do everything in my power to make sure we come together and not let mr. trump or anybody else divide us up. >> are you running again? >> a little bit early to talk about that. >> that's not a no. >> thank you, senator sanders. >> thank you. president obama leaves today for his final trip abroad in office. donald trump's surprise victory will follow the president to greece and germany and peru. obama said world leaders were rattled by the prospect of a
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trump white house but since the election obama has promised to work with president-elect trump and urges americans to root for mr. trump's success. he will hold a news conference this afternoon at 3:15 eastern and cbs news will bring that to you in a special report. tens of millions of americans are arthritis may have a new way to manage their pain. our dr. tara narula is in the toyota green room with new research that could lead to a change in treatment on that. first, it's time to check
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trevor noah joked about his humble roots the first time he hosted "the daily show." ahead on "cbs this morning," the comedian in studio 57. he opens up a new book about his childhood and improbable rise to fame. >> growing up in a dusty streets of south africa, i never dreamed i would, one day, well, have two things, really. an indoor toilet. and a job as host of "the daily show." ♪
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♪ some of the more than 50 million americans with arthritis may benefit from new research on pain treatments. data published in the new england journal of medicine
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shows the popular arthritis painkiller celebrex is not as risky as your heart suspected. the study found it is as safe as that proxin and ibuprofen. dr. tara narula is here with more. what have we learned here? >> to understand this you have to take a look back. in the 1970s we had ibuprofen and thnaproxen. they had gastrointestinal side effects. step into the arena in the late 1990s the vioxx, sell vertebra bres and we started to see increased cardiovascular being pulled off the market and sell verteb a plan by the fda to study the drug over the next ten years and
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that is where we are at now. >> what are they saying now? >> a large study, 24,000 patients over ten years. patients with arthritis who took the three drugs. what they found in moderate doses celebrex called noninferior meaning all of these patients had a ruffle 2% chance of some are cardiovascular event. >> can you back up a few minutes? how do you know if you have arthritis and you are getting older and your bones a little tight? >> you would need to see a doctor. >> it has to be diagnosed? >> yes. lots of conditions can cause pain. what we are talking about is not the types of dose that you would take from an over-the-count aleve or motrin or ibuprofen or advil. dozes taken for years daily and
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chronically. >> the fda did update its regulatory warnings on all of these. as an entire class the agents increase the risk of cardiovascular. you do need to be caution and take the lowest doze for the shortest amount of time possible but this is nice because it offers a potential another option for patients who may have been afraid of this class of drugs. there was some limitations to the study, i think it's important to note, a quarter of the patients were 27% lost to follow-up and don't know what happened to them and 63% stopped taking the drug which is a normal amount for pain studies but still the influences how we interpret the data and also a lot of patients were on aspirin, we don't know has what that did because it affects ibuprofen and naproxen as well. >> thank you.
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president-elect trump is tweeting. what melania trump told "60 minutes" about her husband's social media use. we will be right back. but till you came along ♪ we counted on our fingers and toes ♪ now you're here to stay ♪ ♪ and nobody really knows... ♪ zero really can be a hero. get zero down, zero deposit, zero due at signing, and zero first month's payment... ...on select volkswagen models. right now at the volkswagen sign then drive event. listerine® total care strengthens teeth,, helps prevent cavities and restores tooth enamel. it's an easy way to give listerine® total care to the total family. listerine® total care. one bottle, six benefits. power to your mouth™. tresemmé botanique a blend of coconut milk and aloe vera in a professional-quality formula, inspired by nature.
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and what helps them, helps you. (alex)tor) if you have medicare or will be covered soon, here are some important things you should know. first, if you think medicare covers everything, you may be in for an expensive surprise. second, you could be responsible for thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs. which brings us to number three. a medicare supplement insurance policy from colonial penn life insurance company can help you save money by helping to pay the bills medicare doesn't. so you have affordable coverage with the freedom to choose a plan that best meets your needs and budget. and no one chooses your doctors
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on "60 minutes," lesley stahl asked her about her role. >> what do you think of first lady she will be? >> she will be terrific. she is very strong and very confident but she is very warm and i think she will have a platform where she will be able to do a lot of good and that is what she wants to do. >> reporter: you know, first ladies usually have a cause and you've already said you're interested in speaking out against bullying on social media. >> i think it's very important, because a lot of children and teenagers are getting hurt and we need to teach them how to talk to each other, how to treat each other, and to be able to connect with each other the right way. >> reporter: what about your husband's tweeting? >> well, sometimes it got him in trouble, but it helped a lot as well. he had unbelievable following. >> reporter: so you never say to him, come on? >> i did. >> she does. >> of course, i did many times.
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>> interesting to see them good morning, crews trying to flight flames in the basement of a twin house, the 600 block every east 22nd street, fire destroyed both sides of the twin, no other injuries in the fire, but six people were displaced. now checking the forecast with katie fehlinger. >> good morning, rahel. looking ahead to overall a very nice day, nice, bright, sunny start for you, hopefully had a chance to enjoy the supermoon before it set 6:30 this morning, pretty significant high tides, far off to the south, but here, at least, at this area beach, all calm and very, very quiet. very serene view, but it is cold. there are only couple of spots
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that have eaked out 40 or above at this point, in the two's lancaster, right around the freezing mark, reading, allentown, so still need to bundle up walking out the door here. eventually rebounds to 61 degrees, how much, with clouds starting to rebuild, there is a coastal system riding up the eastern seaboard, that bridges in showers, as early as this evening, but specially overnight, into tomorrow. first half of it, more specifically, and then we clear it out. and we're back into nice little warming trends rounding out the work week. >> thank you, good morning to you, all of you at home, still looking busy out, there we have couple every accidents. first one eastbound county line road at doylestown road, still out there blocking far right lane, shoulder, as well, but certainly the right lane, tap your brakes little bit passing by. a pedestrian struck here in malvern, heads up on that area, avoid the our altogether, you certainly want to do so. plus another accident here hatfield township, cow had the path at orvilla road. another place to avoid. looking at the wide, 17 on the schuylkill, 32 on 95, the vine looking good at around
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06 miles per hour and ten very slow on the blue route moving in the northbound direction, rahel. >> meisha, thank you. next update is at 8:55, ahead on cbs this morning, the best of the best to beat out the top prize. i'm rahel solomon, make it
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, the daily show host trevor noah, you know him. he's in our toyota green room. hello, trevor! good to see you in the morning! he has got a new book on his improbable journey from south africa to the big apple where he hosts his own late night show. the world chess championships are back in the u.s. for the first time in 21 years. the defending champ from norway has tough competition from his russian opponent. ahead, the champion reveals why he thinks he has an advantage. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "rolling stone" looks back at the musical career of leon russell who died sunday in nashville. he collaborated with bob dylan
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and dozens of other stars and composed songs that became classics like "this mass ka r d and "this song is for you." genes can double the risk of heart disease but a good lifestyle can cut that risk in half. a good lifestyle includes not smoking, eating well, and moderate exercise. "the washington post" reports on a surprising effect of sleeping more. get this. you could make more money! researchers found that moving to a location where the sun sets an hour earlier may increase wages more than 1,0500 a year. it can increase productivity at work but it also other factors can produce productivity. trevor noah was the host of "the daily show" last fall as
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the political campaign heated up. a week after the results, the comedian is not shy about how he is trying to cope with the outcome. >> if, this morning, you finally woke up from a coma, well, you might want to go back. this entire result is sort of like trump's hair. i know it's real, but my mind can't accept it! >> mr. president, a great honor being with us and i look forward to being with you many, many more times. thank you. >> that is one hell of a performance, especially by president obama, which means at least one black person should got nominated for an oscar this year. >> the story of the election. noah is opening up about his own past. new book "born a crime." he describes growing up during the twilight of apartheid and the difficult years that followed. great to have you here. i read your book and i got choked up a couple times because
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i knew nothing about your background he is south africa and i've been there and i think it's a beautiful country but you were illegal because your dad is white and your mother is black and they were not supposed to get together so you spent a lot of your childhood hidden? >> i did. i spent a lot of time hidden from the authorities. my grandmother and my mother hid me. we had to hide our family in essence. i think one of the greatest gifts my family gave me they didn't let me know where we were being hidden so as a child was the only world i knew. i knew we were indoors a lot and i knew my dad would walk on the other side of the road when we would go outside and my mom would sometimes dress up like a maid which i thought was her style of dress at the time. i didn't know that we were being hidden from the authorities in the country that we were growing up in. i didn't know at the time that my very existence was against the law. >> and then you didn't fit with the black community, you had. you didn't fit with the white community either? >> i think i was -- i didn't
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feet in terms of what the government wanted me to fit and where they wanted me to be but i was really lucky in that growing up in an african community i was welcomed and grew up as a young black man and african man so i felt completely at home. my country was one we were divided into race so even my mother and i were considered two completely different racisms and were given different liberties according to the law. >> so how did it shape you? >> i think it shaped me because it made me an outsider and kept me as an outsider and one of the greatest gifts. i only came to appreciate later on in life and that is when you're an outsider, you're always working to see different people's points of view because the world is never yours. you know? you don't exist in a space where you ever see yourself as the be all and end all. that is one of the greatest gifts i got which i didn't appreciate most of my life and now i see as a strength. >> when you look back and think about it? >> yes, definitely. definitely.
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>> one of the nicest thing about the booth and it's described as a love letter to your mother. >> it really is. >> yeah. >> which i didn't intend. i thought he was the hero of my story. i think we all do. you know? when i wrote the book, i'm a hero and this is my life and what i've done and i wrote all of these stories from my childhood. once i coalesced through all of them i re it and said, wow. my mother is an incredible woman. south africa is a nation because of the laws and because of the police have taken away so many black men, we are a nation raised by women. >> you described your mom as a tom and jerry relationship. a cop and a criminal relationship. you said she taught me how to be a man but she didn't teach me how to be a boy. >> yeah. my mom was always after me. >> no joke? >> i'm not going lie. i was a terror child and please don't take that -- >> she called you a problem child and stubborn. >> i was one of the naughtiest
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children i know of. the house burned down because of me. i did not burn the house down but i may have been involved in an instant where a house was burned down. >> look how cute you are! >> you've had an interesting perch in america to sit and watch a political campaign. >> yes. >> we have now seen an election and looking at a new president. how do you see it? and what is your own sense of how we should react to donald trump? >> well, the biggest thing i've seen is america is not as immune to the ills of the world as i thought it was. you know, i think a lot of the world is disappointed in america because america is that -- is that beacon, that light house, you snow a baston of democracy. i think it's sad we are living in a place we are normalizing and moving on so quickly from two glaring truths that were part of what happened in the election. i acknowledge a white working class that is something we can
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talk about, but we cannot deny that many of donald trump's supporters were earning large amounts of money and doing great for themselves but there are people who put two things above everything else and that is whiteness and that is also sex. and misogyny, people talk about the glass ceiling but what you don't realize you can't see it because it's see-through and misogyny has quickly gone out of the conversation and even as a man i have tough grips to come there is a monster that keeps you down. >> in terms of racism is implicit bias? >> you see that. hillary faced it throughout her life. i keep trying to think of that and, unfortunately, i have to use the metric in my head where i say is if she were a man and the fact i have to say that means there is a problem. i have to say if she were a man how would i see her? would her shortcoming not pale in comparison to the achievements? the truth we do live in this world and until we work on
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acknowledging it more we will never -- >> you make the point also, as you point that out, that we have got to understand what our values are and be true to our values. >> definitely. >> but, at the same time, you say we ought to give donald trump a chance. >> well, you have to give him a chance. because the president. i'm not saying i would like to give him a chance. you have to. when the person is the president, the person is the president. >> and the people have spoken. >> yeah. . 19% of the people have spoken which is strange that most america doesn't feel the need to vote. >> when you were a little kid you dreamed of having a driveway. i'm thinking you have bigger dreams now? >> i still dream of having a driveway because in new york you don't have any space! >> that is true. >> trevor noah, continued success. thank you. >> thank you very much. >> "born a crime" is on sale tomorrow. we are looking past our differences to find stories of people coming together. on "cbs this morning" we are beginning a new series tomorrow called "a more perfect union oimplt t." . the first installment will women
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pushing to get into the college of their choice and now helping less privileged students do the same. >> i say, all the time, i don't know who gets more out of the program the student or me. i'm not necessarily changing someone's life but i'm impacting their life and, to me, it doesn't get much better than that. >> get this. this group calls itself the pushy moms. we will introduce you to them tomorrow in the debut of our new series on "cbs this morning" called "a more perfect union." >> so looking forward to that. a high stakes battle between kings and queens and knights are creating a rare spectacle for chess fans. >> it's norway versus russia in the chess championships. since bobby fisher won. we will meet the grand masters of the game who are battling it
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. actor woody harrelson made the ceremonial first move to kick off the first world chess championship in the united states. in 21 years. over the next few weeks, defending champion magnus carlsen of norway will face
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sergey karjakin of russia. vladimir duthiers is in new york where the competition will begin. >> reporter: game three of the world chess championships will take place today. after matches on friday and saturday. and in a draw. this is the room where the action is taking place. it's glass enclosed which allows crowds on the outside see what is happening in here without disturbing the players. this board is electronic. little transmitters inside the chez pieces which allows people online to watch all of the action without disturbing the players and anybody who knows chess knows that magnus carlsen is the player to watch in quite sometime. we are headed in a direction of washington square park where a lot of amateur chess players. before magnus carlsen made his first move in the world chess championships, we asked him to take on a few of the local chess
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sharks in new york. $5 a game, they are offered a lesson in defeat every day. not every day, but today. because to get a sense of how good the world's top ranked chess player is, you only need to see him dispense each of these three opponents in under three minutes! there are people who have said that you haven't even hit your peak yet, that you're still progressing and you're still growing as a player. do you feel like that? >> well, the thing is i feel that i'm still learning. i'm learning all the time. i feel that i know just incomparably much more about chess now than i did, say, six years ago but my level of play is not that different. >> reporter: you could say carlsen level of play has been pretty high since he was barely a teenager. here he is at 13 playing gary
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casperoff and considered by most to be the greatest chess championship of all time. the young and seemingly wrestless kid from norway played the chess master to a draw? 2004. >> it's always about finding the key squares in the center. >> reporter: now 25 years old and two-time world champion himself, carlsen retains the love of the game as much as he fears the history. taj table, for instance. >> this is the table where bobby fischer played a tournament in havana in 1966. at that time, naturally, i wasn't allowed to go to havana because of the sanctions that the u.s. had against the cubans so he played from this table in marshall chess clubbed and they transmit his moves which i think is very fascinating. >> reporter: when was the last time you lost? >> michael jordan says he has missed the most shots in the history of basketball. i've lost tens of thousands of chess games and most recently
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was, you know, a few days ago on a game i played on the internet. so -- >> reporter: you played the game on the internet anonymously? >> yeah. i played anonymously and i lost to a random person. >> reporter: what country was that person in? >> i won't say. >> reporter: mag gus is beatable? >> yes, magnus is beatable. >> reporter: sergey has played carlsen 48 times and won eight and lost 18 and 21 have ended in a draw. what was the last time you played him? >> it was in 2005. i was 15 and he was 14. >> reporter: back then, karjakin had the edge and the youngest to be named a grand master at 12 and carlsen earned the title at 13. >> i always looked up to him. i remember when i was, like, 11 years old, i thought w i'm never going to be simpoos this karjakin guy.
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>> this is the first time the two have met in a world championship, a match that will span up to 12 rounds the next two weeks and games can last up to six hours. though, he may have lost a few anonymous games online, magnus carlsen is at his best in close proximity. >> the recent games that have been played, i feel like i've had the psychological edge. i certainly have won more games against him than he has won against me. so i feel i have confidence that i can beat him. also, i have the advantage, i think, of being a better chess player. >> reporter: the prize is 1 million euros and split 60/40 between the two players. the matches are tied now but a winner will be at the end of the month. >> so glad we did this piece. >> drama. >> do you guys play? >> the kids play chess, absolutely. >> you too, charlie?
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>> i'm very good at checkers. >> checkers? >> that too! i play that. >> bill plante has reported for cbs news for more than 22 years. we
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we tonight congratulate cbs news legend bill plante on his retirement. he began his career at cbs news in 1964 as a young reporter. he interviewed martin luther king on the historic march from selma to montgomery, alabama and covered the vietnam war and every president since ronald reagan and spent in the anchor chair every sunday. i had the pleasure to serve with him at the white house. thank you, bill, four decades of outstanding journalism. >> and for your knowledge of food and wine and cosmopolitan sense anticipate and your lovely wife. >> just being a good man always counts. >> thank you, bill.
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tune into the "cbs evening ne
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this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, everyone, i'm jim donovan, investigators look being for the cause of a tire fire in kensington, the fire broke out this morning, at about 3:00 a.m., at joel's tire shop, near frankford and leally avenues. thick black smoke poured from the building, took firefighters less than an hour to contain the fire, no injuries reported. now, here's kate way look at today's wetter. >> overall, jim, really is very pleasant day. starting our work week off with plenty of sunshine, cloud cover does builds in, generally into the afternoon, because of this. our latest coastal system start g to move in other words wart, actually into the southern delmar have, see the clouds build sooner further south, but as the day progresses eventually wet weather going to move in, as well. so here's what we expect.
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generally not until at the absolute earliest, shower southern counties, over night, into tomorrow morning, first half of the day, just generally speaking that the rain will be falling. that will lead to slow, morning commute obviously, might want to give yourself the benefit of five extra minutes, set the alarm maybe ahead tomorrow, wet roads, ponding, don't expect deluge, though we could use it, but something that obviously will slow you down, umbrellas required first half of tomorrow, clearing it out for wednesday through friday, saturday, too, and also nice little warming trends to company that. meisha? >> great heads up, we will need to know that. thank you so much, good morning, everyone, looking outside at the vine, looking okay. i see slowing down just little bit. moving in the westbound direction, as you jump on to the schuylkill, other than that though the vine starting to calm down just little bit. do have accident ridley township involving two vehicles and entrapment here at bristol pike, give yourself extra time if you have to go out, avoid the area, also, another accident, cow path at orvilla road still out there for those of you wondering about that, the ben franklin
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bridge actually looking nice and quiet for those of you westbound jersey in center city looking almost quiet. sixteen on the schuylkill, 42 on 95, southbound direction, 18 on the blue route. jim? >> thanks, meisha. that's "eyewitness news" for now. join us for "eyewitness news" at noon. i'm jim donovan. make it a great day.
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