tv CBS This Morning CBS August 16, 2016 7:00am-9:00am CDT
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ideological screening test. the time is overdue to develop a new screening test. >> donald trump calls the cold war style immigration test. >> no major party nominee in the history of the united states of america has been less prepared to deal with our national security than donald trump. >> donald trump is temperame temperamentally unfit and totally unqualified to be president of the united states. >> hillary clinton lack the mental and phyl eratutempermentally up prepared. >> hillary clinton lacks the mental stamina to take on isis. police arrest a man who started a fire. people are dead after deadly flooding in louisiana. >> a tornado touched down on the ground. >> we're watching it. >> a protest in milwaukee following two nights of
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>> reduced to rubble, good-bye. here it goes. >> in ohio, a monkey started wandering in a walmart parking lot. >> just monkeying around i guess. >> all that -- >> and to the line, shaunae miller wins for the bahamas. >> and "all that mattered" -- >> lar about bankrupt cancellation. >> our show going off the air has to mean only one thing, race is solved. we did. we did it. >> on "cbs this morning" -- >> watching bolt, i don't think there's anything like him. >> fastest man on earth. >> i think this gives the jamaicans hope in the winter games, because instead of having the bobsled teams, they should
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bolt. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." norah o'donnell is off. margaret brennan is with us. a california man aunder arrest accused of setting a devastating wildfire thatrupted the lives of thousands of people. the clayton fire in northern california has destroyed more than 175 buildings. thousands are waiting to learn what happened to their home. >> 40-year-old damin pashik of starting the fire on purpose. he may be linked to other wildfires oft the past year. the clayton fire is one burning across the state is, mireya villarreal is just about 80 miles north of san ancisco. mireya, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, there are clearly mixed emotions in the count of lower lake. there is some relief that someone is found and in custody
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homes in sections have been burned and 4,000 acres as well. into. >> it's my pleasure to announce the arrest of damin anthony pashik, age 40, on 17 counts of arson. >> reporter: people in the lower lake community welcomed the institution of the arrest after wildfires destroyed more than 170 structures and displaced hundreds of families. >> i'm excited that he jail, so now it's not going to happen anymore. >> there are 17 counts of arson related r numerous fires in lake county over the past year. >> reporter: law enforcement would not say which fires the counts referred to but just last year, the same region were burned by other fires. rocky fire, the jerusalem fire and the fatal valley fire which investigators said was caused by
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meanwhile, the clayton fire continues to burn. this fire and the fires last year are really the new norm. >> reporter: the rural community of lower lake dates back to the 1850s. now, much of the downtown area has been destroyed. mark gaverson filled the back of his pickup with valuable musical instruments but couldn't get his truck out in time. >> this is full of guitars. and my of the music stuff in here. >> fire was burning out of control, both sides over here and here. >> reporter: when darin redding returned home monday, nothing was left except the gold fish in his pond. as for damin pashik, he's set to be arraigned tomorrow. we should learn which fes in addition to the clayton fire he's accused of setting. flooding in louisiana has
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response in the u.s. since sandy. the advocate in baton rouge said rising waters have broken every record. flooding since friday is responsible for at least seven deaths. more than 11,000 people are homeless. and much of the southern portion of the state is uer sunday and we passed through that and all we could see is the roof. before it gets better. worse >> we're not going to give up. we're going to stay until the bloody end. if it knocks us down, we'll get back up. >> reporter: overnight, voluntary tear evacuations were
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floodwaters from the amete river poured into the community. and they pulled more people from flooding in louisiana. we went along as they took us into a search and rescue mission into the flood zone. we're now flying over seven springs, louisiana. you can see this area is covered in water right now. roughly 90% of the homes in denham springs have flood damage. the company's main highway is washed out. boyfriend brooks wilson, returned to heir flooded home for the first time on monday. >> oh, my god, you're all right. >> like t end of your life, end of your world when you start over like that >> reporter: me than 11,000 people have been forced into shelters. >> i never thought i'd see this day. >> reporter: 20,000 have been rescued since friday in large
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volunteers. >> and i'm very proud of the efforts we're making. more than anything else, i'm proud of the way louisianians are taking care of their own. >> reporter: this man's home is. governor john bell edwards will a tornado tore through central indiana. the funnel cloud swept across multiple counties last night traveling at a speed of 25 miles an hour. the twister ripped up roots and uprooted trees northwest of indianapolis. no one was reported hurt. donald trump says tighter immigration controls will be part of his war against isis. on a major speech on terrorism the republican nominee said united states faces challenges
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called for extreme vetting of immigrants. trump also launched an attack on president obama and hillary clinton. major garrett is in youngstown, ohio, where he covered donald trump speech. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, donald trump came here to say in the fight against terrorism immigration makes america vaul nernl. he proposed a ban on immigration a-n a region of the world and called for ideological security surveillance overseen by a federal commission. and when it comes to rooting out islamic radicals trump in his words promised to act viciously if necessary. >> the rise of isis is the direct result of policy decisions made by president obama and secretary of state clinton. >> reporter: donald trump said president obama gave rise to isis by supporting the removal
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and removing troops from iraq. >> my administration will not telegraph exactly military plans and what they are. >> reporter: instead, trump focused on the politically potent issue of immigration. >> i call it extreme, extreme vetting. >> reporter: proposing a temporary ban on immigration from regions afflicted with terrorism. trump promised more details after his he also suggested a federal commission on radical islam that would teach the public and police how to identify and expose terror networks for new immigrants trump cal tactics.vival of communist era >> w shoe only admit into this country those who share our values and respect our people. in the cold war, we had an idgical screening test.
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new screening test for the threats we face today. >> repter: attempting to disqualify his opponent, trump went after hillary clinton's fitness for office. >> she also lacks the mental and physical stamina to take on isis. and all of the many adversaries we face. >> reporter: trump also called for a strategic alliance with russia to do battle with isis, peddling between the u.s. and the russian government pled by vladimir putin. this has raised eyebrows in light of revelations that trump's campaign manager paul manafort whose name appeared on an apparently secret ledger by ukraine that indicated that was pro-russian. the newest poll out this morning shows donald trump is still far behind hillary
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clinton with a nine-point lead, 50% to 41%. she blasted trump's qualifications yesterday in scranton, pennsylvania, where her father was born. clinton had some help from another high profile native. nancy cordes is in philadelphia where clinton holds a get out to vote rally in just a few hours. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, conveniently for clinton on the same day that trump unveiling the security proposals, she was complaampaig with someone who actually does have the code for security. vice president joe biden took clinton to his childhood home in scranton monday. and told a hometown audience that clinton has forgotten more about foreign policy than trump will ever know.
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the code. >> reporter: biden said trump is too erratic to be trusted with the lives of u.s. service members like biden's late son beau. >> had donald trump been president i would have thrown my body in front of him. i mean it. >> reporter: biden wasn't just there to bash trump. >> i want to make sure you understand what i know about her. >> reporter: he was also there to show as character witness for the n it worked for this man from allentown with his daughter. >> he does bring that honesty of just mean what you say. and i truly believe hillary and joe and congress sent a letter to the
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was evidence she per youred herself. and telling cbs news it could happen any day. still clinton is plowing ahead. a few minutes ago, she announced the members of the team that will work on her transition to the white house, if she becomes president. salazar the former secretary of the interior and four co-chairs including michigan governor jennifer granholm. one of america's largest insurance companies is scaling back its involvement in obamacare. that decision is a big setback for the president's health care law.
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2,017 in four states. saying it cannot afford obamacare. good morning. >> the 2010 law requires that most people get health coverage and its exchanges are its centerpiece, coverage more than 11 million americans. more than 900,000 of those people rely on aetna's coverage through its plans. and aetna now says it's going to withdraw from 11 of 15 states effectively pulling outea 70% of the counties where it operates the exchanges. aetna said it did the math and it was too much of a financial hit. the company reports more than $430 million in losses with individual policy units since the exchange has opened in january of 2014. and aetna, it is just the latest of the major national health insured to announce that. humana and united also announced consults.
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majority of payers have experienced continued financial stress. and adds the company may expand our footprint in the future should there be meaningful exchange-related policy improvements. for consumers, the big change is choice. for those who rely on health care coverage in some areas will only have one or two insured to pick from. gayle. milwaukee is calming down after two days of violent protests sparked by police shootings. people held vigils last night to honor sylville sm who was shot dead after running from a traffic stop. li say he did have a gun at
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charlie, good morning. multiple olyic winner allyson felix joins exclusive company on monday but she didn't do it quite the way she wanted to. >> it it will be a dive. >> american track star allyson felix was nearly certain the gold was hers. >> but she was elged out by a 22-year-old jamaican sprinter with unconventional finish. she laid across the rain-soaked line to snatch the gold away from felix in the 400 meter sprint.
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30-year-old felix grabbed a pretty good consolation prize. with seven medals, she's now the most decorated female track athlete in american history, eclipsing her mentor jace joyner-kersee. >> all she needs to do, same she's been doing all week long and the medal is hers. >> pint-sized simone biles proved she's human after all. this minor stumble on the beam medal and her shot at five golds in rio. she settled for bronze. biles' teammate laurie hernandez got silver with a near perfect routine and the ceras watched the parents perfect response. >> reporter: speaking of cameras
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during high winds a camera that suspended over olympic park to get overhead shots fell off the wire and crashed to the ground in the middle of a crowd of fans. some minor injuries but i think those people got a bit of a scare, gayle. >> i'd say, ben. everybody is okay. thank you. i know it's legal to dive at the finish line but that just doesn't seem like the way to win. when you're ahead and this close and somebody dives and catches it. >> it doesn't feel right. >> that's not how you're supposed to win. congrats. for children with severe allergies epi pen can be a severe life saver. >> why do they tell you it's so important to have it. >> you never know what anyone has eaten, you never know if they have washed their hands.
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3 coming up on "cbs this morning"--- should the identity of a sexual assault victim be ?reveal??a cb legalan-alystkes ?inside the latest legal battle? stemming from a sexual assaultat a new hampshire prep school. monday morning.let's get you ready for the new work week ?weather wise.?here's meteoroligist michael schlesinger with your forecast. forecast.today: warm and humid. high: 83tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high: 90forecast... today: warm and humid. high: 83 tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83 thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high: 90forecast...today: warm and humid. high: 83tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83thursday: ostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly
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? a final of an icon came crashing down overnight. crews imploded the last standing riviera hotel and casino. this was the first the las vegas strip and became known pour vegas mobsters. liberace and dean martin were frequent guests. it will be used as a convention center. i always marvel they can do
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but the company that makes it ratcheted up the cost by hundreds of dollars. we'll look at why that's happening and hear from a family stuck with the bill. >> time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. es stuck with the bil. "the new york times" reports that the obama administration largest one-time transport of guantanamo bay prisoners. 15 detainees have been sent to united emirates. president obama wants to get out all 61. russia attacked isis targets in syria used troops based in iran. previously, russia has not used
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syrian president bashar al assad against militants. and the dallas morning news, a person testing positive for the zika virus. a person recently visited the miami area where the local transmission of zika has occurred. in florida there are now 30 cases of locally acquired zika. the daily news reports on the arrest of the arrest t death of an imam. officers say oscar morel gunned down maulama akonjee on monday. city accusers have learned as far as the suspect theres tension between the hispanic and muslim communities in the area. about ten minutes after the shooting, morel was allegedly involved in this hit and run, about a mile from the crime scene. that's when police began tracking his car.
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victims yesterday. and "the washington post" reports on a controversial police confrontation. twitter video shows an officer holding a woman against a cruiser as her feet dangle above the ground. the footage was posted yesterday. the officers did not search the woman in the video and later drove off. it's not known why the police stopped her. metro police say the investigation is underway. >> a student sexually and released at a new hampshire school. the victim's family filed a civil suit in june against st. paul's school. and they claim quote, a trion o statutory rape. and they claim that should not about allowed to hide behind a
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but it also says they have no desire to reveal the identity of the young woman they will ensure the case is fairly considered in court proceedings and not through media attacks. rikki klieman joins us. what are is the family alleging that the school was doing, and do they have a case? >> yes, they have a case. and what the family is saying is that the school not only condoned a culture woman could be sexually assaulted by older men. because it was believed it was a senior boy who would go after a freshman girl in order to score, whatever that meant. and that it was institutionalized. and as a result, the plaintiff says, look, they breached a duty of care. they're negligent. they inflicted emotional distress. they had premises that were unsafe, all of these are recognized ways to go to court
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>> so should the victim be identified? >> well, that, of course, is the ultimate question. we have to look, charlie, at what this motion really says as opposed to how it may have been reported in the news. the motion is looking for three things. the motion is looking for a gag order, and that's really what the defense lawyers are really mad about. what they say is they were sabotaged. now, what happened is the plaintiff's lawyer filed a complaint. they had not even gotte of it. the plaintiff's lawyers went on a media barrage. and what they want is to get the plaintiff's lawyer to stop talking. well, if they had just filed that motion it probably would have been successful. unfortunately, for the defense, they combined it with this idea of saying, look, we'll let you
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okay. in exchange, quid pro quo, you've got to stop talking. and that's really not how this should be done. they want it to do it in two ways. number one, discovery. how do we get medical recordings of a girl whos psychological distressed if we have to see a subpna that says j.d., instead of her name. that's reasonable, that doesn't become public. but when they go to, trial which could be years from now, she's still a minor for a couple months. >> b the time it goes to trial, she won't be a minor, does that matter? >> i think it does matter. we always protect minors across the country. you never give out names in litigation in juvenile courts or criminal proceedings. what we do have here, we find by the time she's an adult at trial, there have been cases
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got to go. >> this precedent-setting? >> it could be precedent-setting. the reason from could be precedent-setting here and cause a terrible chilling effect on women who are likely to come forward who are under age or who have been sexual assault victims is that this case is so infamous. the entire press corps that went there was not only national, it was international. so, we don't want women to feel, young or old, that they could because their names will be made public. however, they could have dealt with the thought of making her name public at trial a year or two yearsrom now. the fact that they've done it now when they're school. and school is supposed to be a place that nurtures their students, that's that's really why they have eured so much bad publicity here. >>o you think it's back firing more onhe school? >> i think the backfiring now.
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choice, but this calculation may have been in ror. thank you. people in louisiana help each other survive the devastating floods? >> how many people have you rescued? babies, kids, elderly. dirty dogs. >> how volunteers are getting creative to save as many victims as they can. and next why are some families paying nearly 500% more than they used to for life saving allergy treatments. we'll be right back. i work 'round the clock. i want my blood sugar to stay in control. so i asked about tresiba?. ? tresiba? ready ? tresiba? is a once-daily, long-acting insulin that lasts even longer than 24 hours. i want to trim my a1c. ? tresiba? ready ?
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s like your body's insulin. when my schedule changes... i want something that delivers. ? tresiba? ready ? i can take tresiba? any time of day. so if i miss or delay a dose, i take it when i remember, as long as there's at least 8 hours between doses. once in use, it lasts 8 weeks without refrigeration... twice as long as lantus?, which lasts 4 weeks. tresiba? is used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba? to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, are needles or insulin pens. don't reuse needles. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which may cause dizziness, sweating, confusion, and headache. check your blood sugar. low ood sugar can be serious and may be life-threatening. injection te reactions may occur. tell your doctor about all medicines you take and all your medical conditions. taking tzds with insulins, like tresiba?, may cause serious side effects like heart failure. your insulin dose shouldn't be changed without asking your doctor. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing...
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surging, putting the pinch on many families. it's cost has risen by more than 488% by 2009. vinita nair introduces you to a family that has felt every bit of that increase. vinita, good morning. >> this is a training practice that parents use in case of an american. they remove the safety cap and push the epipen into the thigh. the real thing is epinephrine. the real cost of epinephrine is only a couple of bucks but the manufacturer is charging hundreds of dollars for a trusted name. >> reporter: an epipen is never far away in the household where dinnertime -- >> mexican -- >> reporter: -- is a cautious time. family's six children, two have severe food allergies. 3-year-old cora and 7-year-old ellie. ellie has a laundry list of foods to avoid.
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tuna. seeds. >> reporter: it's why both girls never leave their indiana home without their fanny pack. you can get sick if you don't have that with you? >> uh-huh. >> reporter: as a baby, ellie's allergic reactions were so severe hives covered her entire body. her family has twice used the epipen to save her life. >> her lips turn blue, she starts swelling. replace the epipens every year when they expire. they remember paid $80 a few years ago. before they switched to a high deductible plan. >> we really noticed in the last year and a half when we had to refill it, it was 600. >> reporter: did you believe it was wrong? >> i did. i had her look it up again. but she didn't have to because she answered that question many times for people who asked that
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that the epipen price has risen. >> reporter: more than $200 for a two-pack, today the price has skyrocketed to more than $600. >> if they don't have it, it can be life or death. >> reporter: for some families to sake risks. wee had thre patients who had, issues with the price of the epipen. actually, they did not receive it, they just refused to take it. >> reporter: bloomburgenior editor robert langgrief said the main competitor last fall. >> it's like kleenex. >> reporter: he said the company has remarketed the decades-old device without making a
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>> i couldn't breathe -- >> but i had it with me. >> i used it immediately. >> reporter: it spent tens of millions of dollars on tv ads and donated the device to schools across the u.s., ensuring it's a familiar product. family with competition, that gives them freedom to raise the price every year. >> reporter: in a statement mylan told cbs t changed over time to better reflect important product features and the value the product prides, saying we've made a signicant investment to support the device over years. >> do you think the price will go up? >> absolutely, there's no competition. >> the company offers coupons that allows many patientto pay nothing out of pocket. theoupons are worth $100. so families with high
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primate, but it fought back. then the monkey's apparent owner intervened and led it away by the hand as one does. the monkey reportedly -- >> the answer to the question why does the monkey have a diaper on? >> well, he's not potty trained there. obviously, they're working on behavorial changes there because he may or may not have bitten the employee. donald trump unveils a new strategy with comments on war tactics. coming up. strict quality and purity standards. nature made. the number one pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand. migraines aren't just bad headaches. they steal moments from my life. that's why i use excedrin. it starts to relieve migraine pain in just 30 minutes. and it works on sensitivity to light, sound, even nausea, all of it.
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning everyone. i'm jessica tighe with this cbs 58 news update.it's 7:56. a ?much calmer? start to the day this morning.... after ?two nights of unrest? in milwaukee.for the most part--- things stayed ?peaceful? overnight.there were some reports of ?large gatherings? presence? in some areas late last night--- but ?nothing? like the previous two nights. nights. violent protests broke out on the north side... after an officer-involved shooting on saturday.23-year-old smith was killed. killed.the rage and violence seen in the city over the weekend captured the nation's attention. this is video of the ?b-p gas station? fully engulfed--- just one of the businesses hit during the unrest.multiple buildings were burned... damaged... or destroyed near the sherman park neighborhood.
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jamie wax returns to his home state of ?louisiana?... to speak with victims of the flooding in baton rouge. monday morning.let's get you ready for the new work week ?weather wise.?here's meteoroligist michael schlesinger with your forecast. forecast.today: warm and humid. high: 83tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high: 90forecast... today: warm and humid. high: 83 tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83 thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: pay humid. high: 83tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly
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feingold: i'm russ feingold and i approve this message. son: i've always said i'll be e calmest y onecti my el night. i win either way. sonaator: if he los,d i'll be e calmest y senar johnson fas back on the ten million dollar bonus he paid himself ceo. a big corporate ut forim. hnson: i've alysaid... i n either way. narror: if he wins, he gets another six years to support tax loopholes and bad trade deals that ship jobs overseas. all to benefit corporations
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? it's tuesday, august 16th, 2016. well co welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including neighbors helping neighbors escape the flooding in we ride with the cajun navy that's rescued hundreds of people. first here's today's eye opener at 8:00. >> there is some relief someone was found and in custody, but 175 homes and structuresave been burned. >> thousands of homes are damaged and with water still on the move, it's only going to get worse before it gets better. donald trump called for ideological purity tests of new imfwrants and rooting out islamic radicals he promised to
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proposals she was campaigning with someone who has access to the nuclear codes. >> pretty exclusive company here on rio but allison didn't do it the way she wanted it to. >> it could cause a terrible chilling effect on women who would like to come forward is that this case is so infamous. >> the cost of the epi pen is surging putting the pinch on were the "wall street journal" called donald trump to get serious or turn the nomination over to mike pence. >> some rumors that sound pretty serious, put it pence in his place. >> i'll do it, okay? today i'm out of work, so [ bleep ], i'll do it. i'll do it. i'm down. i got the suit already. with y'all want a wall? i'll build a wall, and canada, two walls, let's do it. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle
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nor brennan. the tracking poll out this morning shows clinton ahead 50-41%. >> yesterday donald trump focused on how to destroy isis and called for cold war style strategies an ideological test for immigrants and joint coalition with russia and other countries against isis and also said that his administration would "be a friend to all moderate muslim reformers in the middle east." >> trump did not mention proposal to temporarily ban muslims from entering the u.s. but he did say his administration would temporarily block immigrants from dangerous and volatile regions. no specifics there. but trump said he will name those places after he's elected. >> in the cold war, we had an ideological screening test. the time is overdue to develop a new screening test for the
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i call it extreme vetting. in trump's speech did not how u.s. trosould be involv. >> bob woodward is associate editor of "the washington post," he's with us now from washington. bob, good morning. >> good morning. >> so assess trump's speech on foreign policy and isis for us. >> well, it's a hodgepodge. to trump's credit,e's trying to serious lay cess and come up with some policies and ideas, but if you step back after 9/11, terrorism has defined so much of the world's history, america's history. trump is trying to frame it somewhat as a border security problem, which it's not. it is an intelligence and military problem, which the obama administration really is
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effective but not perfect way. >> yet bloomberg politics poll says that trump polls higher than she does on the question of who is best prepared to combat terrorism. >> well, he sounds tough, and there is a tough component in all of this, but as the fact checker glenn through "the post" of the speech he said a lot of things are just not true and you can't take the isis problem, the islamic state problem, and dump it all on obama and hillary clinton. it's got a long history going back to the bush admistration. >> go ahead, margaret. >> we keep hearing about this idea of ideological tests, going back to cold war-era type screening. what does that mean? is the idea here that terrorists would tell the truth if you ask
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america? >> well, it's a good question, this notion of extreme vetting. i don't think it's practical at all. as you say, what would you do, stand there at the airports and have somebody say, do u believe in theconstitution? do you believe in american values? it just wouldn't work, and again, it's a misfocus of the >> it's been reported, bob, that congress is soon going to receive the notes from hillary clinton's emails. what should we be looking for there? >> god knows. i mean, there are thousands of emails the fbi said that they uncovered that were not turned over. take anyone's emails, thousands of them, there could be something there, maybe not.
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i guess it depends on what they found. do you see this as a serious issue? >> very serious issue. so many unanswered questions. you know, let's face it. hillary clinton just has not come totally clean on this, and she would serve herself well if she would do that. >> bob, why do you think she hasn't? >> habit of seecy, the whole idea of the private server was so no very bad habit, and you really, i mean i think people say, if she became president, are we going to have some kind of transparency? of straight talk, rather than a culture of concealment? >> she has not had many press conferences either. should the press be commanding more access?
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press conferences. it should be, she should certainly have them but she should do serious interviews with serious people, who really want to look at all of this. you can't do it on the fly, and she's trying to do it on the fly, and it is a giant mistake. look, the people, the average voter is asking not just somebody might do as president, but who they are and who she is, is her past, and she needs to kind of just sit down and say look, i'm the email thing, i made a serious mistake and kind of let it roll out, and -- >> but she said she made a mistake. >> on the other hand, you have donald trump who has had many dealings with the press who is now blaming the press for some of his stumblings.
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don't go their way. do you think this strategy is effective for him? >> i want to hear more answers from him about what he might do as president. i mean, somebody was saying to hillary clinton said she made a mistake. she did but it's the kind of like, i slipped when i was coming off the stage. this is a serious issue. these thousands of emails that we don't know about, what do they have? you ow want to see and if you get closer to the october surprise era, something could come out that could get, be significant or get overblown. >> it's like his tax returns. thank you, bob. >> good deep dive on iraq by the way and her record there in "washington post" and bob's paper. meanwhile, historic flooding in louisiana claimed at least seven lives. more than 11,000 people are staying in shelter this is morning and more than 20,000
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water. but people have pulled together throughout the devastated region to give each other support. jamie wax is in baton rouge where people are helping their neighbors survive. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. for the past several days one of the only ways to get around in certain parts of labon rouge has been with a boat or something like this. chevy truck converted into a high-riding hunting vehicle. for this week, this truck hasn't been used for hunting. it's been used for people that have been stranded by the floods. when the water started to rise -- robert singleman and tieg bonneville rolled into action. how many people have you rescued with the truck? >> 250 plus. babies, kids, elderly. to dogs. >> reporter: this video was taken as they plucked stranded neighbors from their mes. they're part of a loose colltion of volunteers known locally as the cajun navy.
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when you do it. you just do it. >> reporter: with 911 operators overwhelmed, scott and jessica g gaspar turned to facebook for help. eventually boats arrived to take them and their 11 children to safety. >> what we truly saw were friends, neighbors, complete strangers rescuing people left and right. the officials had no idea this was going to happen, so it's truly the guy next door. >> you should have seen the line of people. >> reporter: pat heads up celtic studios. the massive sound stages usually the site pour movies, have been converted into shelters for those left homeless. >> there was about 4,000 people here yesterday, a small town no doubt about it. >> reporter: as definite sta staiding as the floodwaters have been, a tense summer of racial tensions. >> floodwaters don't
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color, creed, religion, gender. you name it. >> latrinda sanford and her children have been living as this as their home. >> i never thought i'd experience what katrina had experienced. >> reporter: lisa willmeyer survived hurricane katrina and moved to baton rouge after losing her home in that storm nearly 11 herself flooded out again. >> i learned it's not about the material things, it's about the soul of louisiana and that's what they've got, a real big healthy heart. >> reporter: lisa wellmyer explained how the city helped her and others after katrina and now it's time for her to repay the favor by helping those who came to her rescue nearly 11 years ago. gayle? >> talk about paying it forward.
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one group has saved more than 100 wrongly o prisoners from execution. ahead, why it n a national memorial to honor the first,000 african-american victims of lynchings. we talk to the group's founder. you're watching "cbs this morning." unlike cascade gel, finish has active cleaning enzymes. its unique powerball takes on anything.
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is yes. >> jennings -- bye-bye -- >> reporter: you don't normally play beach volleyball in the middle of the night. but kerri walsh jennings and april ross are just fine with how their midnight matchup in rio are playing out. >> the americans score again! >> i don't mind if you wake me up in 4:00 in the morning, i'm going to be ready. >> everybody is riled up by midnight. it's fun to play in front of th play side by side. kerri walsh jennings and misty treanor were unste.oppabl they won 21 olympic medals taking home gold in athens, beijing and russia. >> they've done it again! >> reporter: in 2012, mty
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retirement. walsh jennings walked up to her then opponent april ross and whispered in her ear. what happened at the end of the match, what did you say to her. >> like this. i said let's go win gold in rio. reporter: you said let's go win gold in rio? >> yes, i said it with all my heart. we both loved our partners. it took time to builds. greatness takes time. >> april ross, she hammers it home! >> reporter: they've served up five wins in rio. if they win tonight, they advance to the finals. it would be a sweet birthday gift for walsh jennings who turned 38 on monday and was serenaded by the crowd including members of the men's basketball
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ross is 34, and hoping for her first olympic gold. >> we've overcome adversity, challenges, and we feel like it's made us stronger. and we've always had our mind set on getting here and doing the best that we ca as for kerri walsh jennings, she said she's not ruled out playing in the olympics again if 2020 in tokyo. >> love that, ben, love those shades on you, man. go! >> reporter: well we're at the beach, you've got to put on your sunglasses, right? >> you got to do it. >> charlie's got on sunglasses, too. i'm trying to think is the sun bright or are you guys trying to look cuter than usual? very nice.
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>> be cooler than i am. >> go team usa. leaving the late night??h lineup, larry wilmore talks on the cancellation of his comedy central show. we could brag about what's in new light & fit yogurt. but we'd rather talk about what's not in it. like no artificial colors or preservative ingredients. ind of bragging? new light & fit. for lower back pain sufferers, thsearch for relief often leads to this. introducing drug-free aleve direct therapy. a high intensity tens device that uses technology once only in doctors' offices. for deep penetrating relief at the source. new aleve direct therapy. oh, look... ...ather anti-wrinkle cream in no hurry to make anything happen.
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning i'm kate chappell... c-b-s 58 news time 3 donald trump will be in wiscsin today... just days after the latest mauette law poll shows him trailing hillary clinton by as many as 15 points. he'll at the pabst theater in milwaukee at six tonightrumpll also stop at the ziegler building at the washington county fair park andfere cone center in west bend at 7:30. 7:30.we've put a link to get tickets to today's event on our website-- cbs 58 dot com. 3 wisconsin senator tammy
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later this morning. she'll be joined by local leaders and members of the u.s. army corps of engineers. baldwin has been vocal about combating lake bluff erosion. last week- she ote o the army corps in support of the emergency streambank and shoreline prti coming up next and only on cbs this morning the tebest neresta can't wait o hear those!but forecast.re's meteorologist michael schlesinger. today: warm and humid. high: 83 tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83 thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high: 90forecast...today: warm and humidgh: 83tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scatted showers, thunder. high: 83thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high: 90forecast... today: warm and humid. high: tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesy: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83 thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high:
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feingold: i'm russ feingold and i approve this message. johnson: i've always said i'll be the calmest guy on my election night. i win either way. narrator: if he loses, senator johnson falls back on the ten million dollar bonus he paid himself as ceo. a big corporate payout for him. he wins, he gets another six years to support tax loopholes and bad trade deals that ship jobs overseas. all to benefit corporations and multi-millionaires like him. johnson: i win either way.
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? our show is going off the air s to mean only one thing, racism is solved. we did it. we did it. >> larry wilmore is still cracki jokes in his final week of the nightly sho central announced yesterday it cancelled the show due to low ratings. wilmore has been a staple there since 2006. he as a the daily show. i was so bumm. >> me, too. >> there's nobody doing what he's doing on tv, too. nobody does what he does. >> smart comedy.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour -- confronting one of amera's st shameful chapters. bryanstevenson is the equal justice initiave. bryan back in studio 57. his plans for an unprecedented memorial fund. the racial economic divide exposed by america's biggest cities. >> lookingorwards to that. and first on "cbs this morning" bon apt. restaurants pushing flavors to the extreme. ahead, the hot ten. including one eatery so popular it doesn't even have a sign outside. time to show you this morning's headlines. "the washington st" has a ld you about lastfall.d train we the crew started digging for the train this morning in poland. its existence haser neveen
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searchers could know by thuray whether there really is tray train. soundsike a movie. olympians aren't the only ones going for gold. the irf would tax the medals. 25,000, 15,00$15,000, and $10,0. the top on a gld would be $9900. silver, nothing certain.0. and the new yorker reports on a new museum in montgomery, alabama for america. it is scheduled to open 2017 and this could b the biggest memorial for the thousands of peho wop we lynched. it's the biggest from the
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wrongly condemned death row prisoners is back at the table to discuss this new memoir. bryan, good to see you. >> good to see you, too. >> this is a subject that certainly nobody wants to discuss. and then to say let's put it in memorial. what is ur ting here? >> well, i don't think we've done a very good job of recognizing this. if you go to south africa, you are confronted with the legacy of apartheid. sure you understand what genocide is. if you go to germany, you can't go without seeing the markers on the stones placed at the houses of the jewish families. they actually want you to go to auschwitz to convert that legacy. >> why is that so difficult? >> because it's important when you do that, you change your entity, you change your history to these environments
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history created by that in the closet continues to compromise our help. in this case we haven done that about slavery, about segregation. there's no pla inhis country that you can gond have an honest depiction of heiistory >> why? >> because we created an america of denial. talking about mistakes w make. we dolympics greats, we do mistakes great very well in this country. we don't do error very well. i think it's because we've become a punitive society. we think if something bad is going to hapn, we get punished. m not doing this to be punished. i want us to be liberated from the change that this system has beencreated. it would be different if we didn't want to talk about the past. that's not dynamics here.
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of confederacy. we love talking about 19. >> caller: -- 19th century histy.confederate memoriay is a state holiday. we don't even have martin luther king jr. day. it's robert e. lee day. and we won't talk about slavery. this project is aimed at trying change that. we've got system, we've got to talk about the cllenge created, we've got to talk about the challenges created by lynching. people don't understand that was terrorism. it was menaced and traumatized millions of african-americans. 90% of the black population lived in the deep south and they fled by the millions. and the black people in milwaukee and cleveland and chicago and detroit and los angeles didn't come to those communities for economic
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as refugees and exiles from terror. we don't talk about that history, we're not going to understand the challenges theye created. so, we want to give name to this history. we want to name the lynchings. we want to talk about people like elizabeth morin who was lynched. and we want to talk about people who were lynched >> when was the last lynching? >> we documented linkings from 1877 and 1950. there's continued violence every day. hanging, we call racial tension the act of violence that is done with unity where there's no risk of prosecution. our study focuses on those from 1877 and 1950s.
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place goes to bad in washington, d.c. and number one staplehouse. andrew is here. good morning. i'm excited going through washington, d.c. being the standout city. first of all that surprises a lot of people. secondly, i live there. >> i grew up there. >> how did that happen? >> this is not the case like 20 years ago, we had like ruth chris steakhouse and that was about it. >> what's the new renaissance?
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cities, it's something that's palpable. there's an excitement going in d.c. that i didn't see in other neighborhoods. there's neighborhoods where bad saint is, number two on the list. so there's just this energy, we saw in san francisco a few years ago and we have in new york. but d.c., unexpected, i know. >> it's lax and cool. >> yes, it's cool now. >> s >> you're not going to go there and understand filipino food. three friends' interpretation of the filipino food that they grew up, making it new for a whole new audience. it's an introduction. i think it's exciting to discover new cuisines that challenge you. that's the point of eating out. >> i was just at a barbecue place in north carolina made the police. barbecue has never made the list before. >> barbecue has never made the
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on page 148, i want to lick the picture. >> everyone loves barbecue. for some reason it's not considered a real restaurant. it's not a restaurant but why is this one? >> well, the chef there ellie months is only doing whole howh. smoked overnight. they work the graveyard shift. all of the restaurants have community stroinvolved. there's a lot of bad news out there right now, all of these restaurants i think for us were kind of escapism, going into whole new worlds for an hour and a half where you felt a part of the scene. >> is fried chicken back? >> the fried chicken sandwich --
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category, not the best burger. the fried chicken is the new burger. >> there's something about a rice bowl that has 19 ingredients. when andrew talks about it, his eyes light up. i'm thinking what in the world is that? >> it's a restaurant called barue in a strip mall in l.a. it's a korean chef. it's him and another guy. everyone's had a rice bowl before but there's >> it's crazy stuff going on. >> for each of these places is it food plus atmosphere, ambien ambience, feeling? >> that's why you go out to dinner. you want to feel welcomed. the hospitality. you want the vibe. you want the lighting. that's what going out to dinner is about.
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>> and we're not checking any boxes when we go into these restaurants. you guys know. you get this gut when you walk into places. it's like, i like this place. a good vibe and people who care here. >> i love number ten, the most romantic french restaurant in the world and 4,570 miles -- >> did we fraction in the numbers? >> we did. >> this is the bywater section they bought this house devastated during katrina. they opened up this amazing oasis with a cintron car out front. you go down the hole and next thing you know, you've been there five hours. >> which is what happens in new orleans. >> number one, staplehouse. >> it's an amazing story. it was a tragedy where the chef who founded it in his house as a pop-up died at the age of 36.
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get this restaurant off the ground. and staplehouse opened about a year after he passed away. and that story is an amazing story. and it has a happy ending because the food there is amazing. it's progressive southern food in a way it's not just fried chicken and grits. i tear up. the way you eat the food it comforts you and satisfies you. >> andrew, after around the country, how come you don't weigh 200 pounds? >> i do train for it. i wouldn't say i fast but i juice and i ride my bicycle anhere. thank god for bike share programs in most major cities. i can bike. >> nicely done. >> thank you.
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning i'm kate chappell... . c-b-s 58 news time is 8:56. you'll notice a ?change on wisconsin school buses? starting today.every school bus built after 2004... must now have "amber" warning lights.when the amber lights flash.. it means the bus is ?about? to stop.when you see t you can ?slowly pass? if it's safe to do so.but once the ?red? lights go on-- you ?have? to stop at least 20 feet away from the bus.if you don't-- you could get a 326 dollar ticket... and four points on your driving record. 3 today is national bratwurst day! miller park is celebrating the occassion.. along with the klement's sausage company.. with free lunch with a donation.proceeds go to feeding america of eastern wisconsin. wisconsin.the brat drive-thru at miller park is open from 11 to 2. you'll get a klement's
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soda.. while supplies last. the first 100 people who show up will get two tickets to a brewer's game.. and a coupon for a free pack of klement's sausage.so get there early! 3 enjoy the nice warm weather while it lasts!the farmer's almanac says... the upcoming winter season... will be a ?very cold one.?they're predicting an ice cold winter in the eastern two-thirds of the country.the editor says... there will be ?plenty of snow? this winter--- but ?nothing? like the winter... two years ago. which i guess is good news. but nobody wants a frigid winter!let's hold onto summer while we can, right michael? forecast...today: warm and humid. high: 83tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high: 90forecast... today: warm and humid. high: 83 tonight: chance of storms. low: 70wednesday: scattered showers, thunder. high: 83 thursday: mostly sunny. high: 86friday: partly cloudy. high: 90forecast...today: warm and
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wayne: ah! you've got the big deal of the day! jonathan: yeah, girl! it's a trip to bermuda! - bigger isn't always better. wayne: you won a car! - zonks are no fun. - big deal, baby! jonathan: it's time for ?let's make a deal?. w here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america. welcome to ?let's make a deal.? i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in. three people, let's go. the baby. come on, baby. come on,aby, baby! the blue loofa. come on. baby, right there. loofa next to her. and lastly, the king of hearts. everybody else have a seat.
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