tv Sunday Morning CBS November 6, 2016 9:00am-10:30am EST
9:00 am
captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations >> pauley: good morning. i am jane pauley and this is sunday morning. the battle for the whit white he is going down to the wire. and if you are thinking it has been a particularly long campaign, you're right. november 8th is the latest date an election can be held. zoo where are we with just two
9:01 am
martha teichner has the big picture in our sunday morning cover story. >> reporter: just think, on wednesday, the election will be over, i will keep you in suspense. >> or will it? >> at each other's throat and i don't see this getting healed very quickly. >> reporter: it has been ugly. >> it has been divisive. >> nasty women vote. >> but that is nothing new. >> you can't vote >> trump v clinton, a little context ahead this sunday morning. there's a question on tuesday's abouballot that is all the buzzn several states, including our most populous, barry petersen will tell us all about it. prop 64 -- >> recreational marijuana is on the ballot in five states this tuesday. and that has some people worried. >> why in the world would we
9:02 am
drugs. >> but all eyes are on california where it may pass. >> i think ten or 20 years from now we will look back and say i am so glad we ended prohibition. >> can the rest of america be far behind? >> that story later on sunday morning. >> of the 43 men that served as president so far, which one stands out it is a worst ever? mo rocca tells us there is a ad >> in a recent poll of historians, james buchanan topped the list it is a worst president ever, but not everyone agrees. >> i really think he is in the basement but he is not at the rock bottom. >> like maybe second to worst? >> yeah, i mean, he could be the second to worst, yes. >> he could billions the worst? >> could be. >> the portrait of james buchanan --
9:03 am
later on sunday morning. >> from the worst of presidents to a legend among singer songwriters, paul simon, at an age where some people are slowing down, he is tuning up, as lee cowan will show us. >> if only we could all be as cool as paul simon as 75. >> as you get older we say, wow, so my whole life, really, spent writing songs? i mean, it turns out like that's what i did. >> and you are okay with that? >> yeah, i am okay with that. the i am okay with that, you know,. >> and so are millions of his fans. paul simon's next chapter, ahead on sunday morning. and erin moriarty introduces us to an artist who is colorful yet conservative. seth doane in rome tells us why
9:04 am
election. steve hartman meets a family divided. and more. first, the headlines for this sunday morning, the 6th of november, 2016. a disturbance at a donald trump rally in reno, nevada last night. trump was rushed off stage by secret service agents and a protester was tackled. turns out someone had shouted gun. trump later returned to the stage to finish his speech. the protesters was identifie a a republican unhappy with his party's nominee. in washington a man armed with a firearm was confronted by a uniformed secret service agent near the white house. he was arrested after a brief struggle. president obama was not there. in south carolina, a body found on property where a woman was discovered chained in a metal container for weeks has been identified as that of charles
9:05 am
9:06 am
tv-commercial
tv-commercial
9:07 am
trust us we know from experience. mom put her career on hold for us. to raise our family. she is a role model for everyone in our community. i'm proud of you mom, we both are. dana young for the florida senate. hillary clinton: i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. vo: in times of crisis america depends on steady leadership. donald trump: "knock the crap out of them, would you? seriously..."vo: clear thinking... donald trump: "i know and calm judgment. donald trump: "and you can tell them to go fu_k themselves." vo: because all it takes is one wrong move. donald trump audio only: "i would bomb the sh_t out of
9:08 am
>> the time has come this campaign season to take a look at the big picture. how did we get to where we are? and where does the country go once the dust has settled, if ever? our cover story is reported by martha teichner. >> looking have told us what we were in for. >> we need a leader that wrote the art of the deal. >> no one has ever entered a presidential race quite the way donald trump did in june, 2015. you couldn't look away. >> they are bringing drugs, they are bringing crime, they are rapists. and some, i assume, are good people. trmp billionaire turned reality tv show celebrity. >> you are fired.
9:09 am
person hillary clinton expected to be going to the wire against. >> i mean really. can we just stop for a minute and reflect on the absurdity of donald trump finding fault with miss universe? >> and in what has become a campaign so ugly. >> i will tell you at the time. i will keep you in suspense. >> you can't polish this turd. >> americans just want it to be over. >> i will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential maybe -- >> if i win. >> what better time too step back and consider what exactly it is we have been witnessing. >> lock her up. lock her up! >> for the last year and a half -- >> i will be the youngest woman president in the history of the united states. >> this country is in turmoil. it's a battle between outsiders and insiders, between elites and the people in the heartland.
9:10 am
presidential lis stone. >> there is a kind of pitchfork mob anger going on out there. >> like the battle of the titans. >> i will fight harder for you. >> donald trump. >> than anyone has before. >> i will do everything -- >> and hillary clinton. >> i will do everything to get incomes rising for hardworking people. >> have gone at each other across an ideological chasm. >> i want to build a wall. >> i don't want to rip families apar. >> we have there and we are going to get them out. >> i don't want to see the deportation force that donald has talked about in action. >> muslims have to report the problems when they see them. >> it is also very shortsighted and even dangerous to be engaging in the kind of democrat goj genetic rhetoric that donald has about muslims. >> when you look at issues versus personalities, ultimately what is this election about. >> 2016 is about which is the
9:11 am
the lack of enthusiasm for hillary clinton and donald trump is profound. >> polls show that trump and clinton are the most unpopular presidential candidates in polling history. >> in a campaign about negatives, clinton versus trump comes down to trust versus temperament. >> i will release my tax returns against my lawyers' wishes when she releases her 33,000 e-mails that haven these e-mails add up to in the end, except that whenever it's raise hillary clinton gets deeply defensive, and it gave a taint on her that she is a candidate that is running with the fbi in pursuit of her. people hate donald trump because he's prejudiced. he says bigoted remarks. he often speaks from a bully pulpit of ignorance. he degrades women. >> nobody has more respect for women than i do.
9:12 am
he called hermes housekeeping because they is a beautiful latina. >> >> reporter: how many times have you heard there has never been a campaign like this one? well -- >> when you have an unprecedented situation where you have one candidate claiming that other candidate should be in jail, that is actually one part of this election we haven't seen before. joseph cummins has written a history of dirty tricks and cheap shots in u.s. elections. >> a dirty election runs in our american. i like to say about this election that it's really a 19th century election that is occurring in the 21st century. >> reporter: consider the election of aifght teen hundred, when thomas jefferson ran against john adams. >> thomas jefferson a hired a scurrilous scottish writer names james callender to accuse john adams of being a hideous memory afro indict which has neither
9:13 am
nor the da gentleness and sensitivity of a woman. john adams and his people for their part were already spreading rumors that thomas jefferson was sleeping with slaves at monticello, which in fact he was. they also used one of my favorite all-time slurs in american campaigns by simply saying, well you can't vote for thomas jefferson because he is dead. and how can you vote for a dead man. >> i am afraid the election is going to be rigged. i have to be honest. that is something we haven't seen before in american >> there was even a time when he didn't get an emmy for his tv program three years naah row and he started tweeted that a the emmys were rigged. >> i should have gotten it. >> i would say the only truly rigged election in american history was 1876 which is the dirtiest election of all-time. where you had rutherford b hayes the republican running against samuel tilden the democrat. >> tilden was ahead, this was the post civil war reconstruction period. the republicans controlled the
9:14 am
>> they basically telegraphed the people who counted the electorial votes in florida, in louisiana, and south carolina and they said change those votes. make those republican votes and not democratic votes. >> reporter: so one. >> literally, yes. >> necessaried with the vote. >> they messed with the vote. this was the one election in american history that was, that can be proven was stolen. >> so republican rutherford b hayes became our 19 president. >> well as a matter of fact, they do like dirty elections and they pay attention to dirty elections. >> proof? the first clinton-trump debate was the most watched in tv history with 84 million viewers. >> donald supported the invasion of iraq. >> wrong. >> that is absolutely proved over and over again. >> wrong. >> >> reporter: but donald trump never miss as chance to launch a full throated attack on the
9:15 am
katie. >> nbc correspondence katie tur has been a frequent punching bag, even requiring secret service protection. >> has trump actually been treated unfairly? >> the media is simply an extension of hillary clinton's campaign. >> the most distinctive thing about trump's coverage is how much there is of it. >> george mason university professor, robert lichter. his studies of media bias are often cited by >> trump is outrageous. he is unpredictable. >> stay on point, donald. stay on point. >> all the definitions of what makes someone newsworthy. >> no sidetracks, donald. nice and easy. nice and easy. >> analysis of nearly 20,000 articles on the websites of major media outlets show stories about trump vastly out numbering the stories about clinton. >> a harvard university survey pound that both candidates are
9:16 am
trump's is more negative. which trump actually turns to his advantage. >> donald trump isn't just complaining about media bias because he believes it is happening. he is complaining about it because it revs up his troops. >> has donald trump dope a better job of using the media than hillary clinton in this campaign? >> donald trump has clearly managed to use the media better than hillary clinton. >> reporter: except. >> hey, when you are a star they let you do it. you can do anything. >> the video didn't roll right off donald trump. neither did this. >> such a nasty woman. >> for outraged voters, these were defining moments in his race against hillary clinton. >> and nasty women vote. >> among clinton supporters, it seems sexism is the elephant in the room. >> i have been called a lot of things. >> the constant in the decades of attacks against someone who, in two days, could be elected the first woman president of the
9:17 am
>> we are going to drain the swamp -- >> or the next president could be donald trump, the unlikely populist, speaking for voters losing their trip on the american dream. whoever wins, especially if it's close, a lot of people will go away mad. >> i don't see this getting healed very quickly. the battle wounds of 2016 are going to be deep. and it's going to take a while for people to nightmare of 2016 behind us. >> pauley: coming up. >> what does buchanan get right? >> not much, to tell you the truth. >> worst ever?
9:18 am
my dad gave me those shares, you know. he ran that company. i get it. but you know i think you own too much. gotta manage your risk. an honest opinion is how edward jones makes sense of investing. ? before it became a medicine, it was an idea. a wild "what-if." so scientists went to work. they examined 87 different protein structures. had 12 years of setbacks and breakthroughs, 4,423 sleepless nights, and countless trips back to the drawing board. at first they were told no, well... maybe, and finally: yes.
9:19 am
and the hope of millions. and so after it became a medicine, someone who couldn't be cured, could be. me. ? >> pauley: who among our presidents deserves the dubious distinction of being called worst ever? mo roccael the possibilities, there is one who stands out. >> james buchanan was in this house when he was notified he won the election to the presidency. >> bet any nauman has been giving tours of wheat land, the lancaster, pennsylvania estate of president james buchanan, foreclose to 30 years. >> the portrait of james buchanan was done early in his campaign. >> it's a gorgeous home. with one very special amenity.
9:20 am
probably a seat for a teenager down there. >> that wheat land's director patrick clarke showed us. >> an outhouse for five? you can have a whole cabinet meeting in there. >> the family that goes together. >> but it is in the proverbial toilet where historians rank our 15th president. >> she definitely the boston. >> the worst ever. >> the worst president ever. >> robert strauss wrote a book about buchanan. >> ah, here is buchanan. >> filled with presidential action figures. >> here is jackson. remember when they talked to each other? >> but jackson hated buchanan. >> hated. >> of course, not everyone hated buchanan. after all, he was elected president in 1856. but this northern democrats' sympathies with the slave holding south exacerbated long simmering tensions, setting the stage for the civil war.
9:21 am
>> where would you put james buchanan in the ranking of the 43 men who have occupied the oval office? >> probably 42nd. >> he had opportunity to write a book. don't they all write a book. >> if buchanan is remembered at all, it's for being the bachelor president. the only one never to marry. >> let's just get this out of the way right now. >> okay. >> what was the deal with james buchanan? >> he did have a bad relationship early on. suicide. >> because he was gay? >> well, maybe so. >> there is no evidence to say he was gay. but there is no evidence to prove that he was a heterosexual either. >> but there is plenty of evidence he knew how to throw a great party. >> he threw the best party of the middle part of the 19th century, the inaugural ball. 6,000 people show up.
9:22 am
>> buchanan had quite a resume. >> the greatest of anybody who has ever run for president. he served in both houses of the pennsylvania state legislature. served in both houses of the u.s. congress. he was ambassador to russia, ambassador to great britain. he was also secretary of state. >> there were high hopes at the beginning of his administration? >> i think so. but they were dashed pretty quickly. >> only two days after his inauguration, the supreme court handed down the infamous dred scott decision, allowing t escaped slaves be forcibly returned to their owners. .. buchanan backed that decision. slavery would be the country's and his undoing. >> he feared that if you handled the issue of slavery too robustly that it would create what he believed would be the end of the union, secession. >> and that is exactly what
9:23 am
before his inauguration, seven states seceded while a politically paralyzed buchanan presided. >> when all of these states start seceding, when the country is falling apart, what is his reaction? >> his biggest reaction is his friends are leaving him. because many of his cabinet are southerners and many of his friends are southerners. >> so his biggest reaction is personal one like, guys i thought we were all friends. >> yeah, i thought we were all friends. >> the ensuing civil war would become known as buchanan's w >> what does buchanan get right? >> well, what he gets right is not much, to tell you the truth. >> upon his, upon leaving washington, it is said that buchanan told incoming president abraham lincoln, sir if you are as happy in entering the white house as i shall feel on returning to wheat land, you are a happy man indeed. >> he said to friend and family alike, i could well be the last
9:24 am
states. >> still, at 91, betty nauman doesn't plan on abandoning buchanan or his home any time soon. >> i think this house keeps me young. >> i am glad the candidate did something right. >> i am glad buchanan did something right. >> >> pauley: color him red, next. >> no two whale flukes are the same. because your needs are unique, pacific life has been delivering flexible retirement and life insurance solutions for more than 145 years. ask a financial advisor how you can tailor solutions from pacific life to help
9:25 am
9:26 am
a reminder that america returned to standard time during the night. clocks should be turned back one hour. which of course gives the candidates one more hour to campaign. because strong is beautiful. fact. ying awake with aches and pains with advil pm than with tylenol pm. advil pm combines the number one pain reliever with the number one sleep aid. gentle, non-habit forming advil pm.
9:27 am
behold the stamp of liberty by steve penley, an artist proud to wave the red, white and blue, particularly the red. here is erin moriarty of "48 hours". >> >> it's probably fair to say that these days, there may not be a lot of people who share stephenly's enthusiasm for politicians. >> oh, i love these guys. >> these guys are, i mean, on both sides, a lot of the guys i get to be friends with are great guys. >> he doesn't just paint them, politicians are also among his
9:28 am
he estimates that his work hangs in as many as 20 congressionals offices, primarily on one side of the aisle. three-pieces hang in the office of house majority leader kevin mccarthy, a republican from california. >> how do you feel about being called the republican's party's favorite artist? >> it's flattering. i mean, it's really flattering. even in a magazine article they write about me where they are kind o bit, i have to admit, i was kind of flattered they took the trouble to bash me. >> she a 52-year-old georgia artist who makes a living painting iconic american images, both statesmen and symbols, his statue of liberty is his best seller, along with george washington, ronald reagan, and bottles of coca-cola. >> that's america. we built this nation on trade,
9:29 am
>> there is nothing overtly partisan about penley's work. >> either trump or clinton. >> when political pollster franks luntz interviews voters of all stripes for cbc news that is penley's work hanging the background, and yet it seeps the people that who consider themselves conservatives see something more. >> when i see that statue of liberty, i see freedom in that picture. >> republican c westmoreland of georgia says that this penley painting of george washington is speaking directly to his conservative constituency. the we believe in personal freedom. that's a big thing for us. we don't think the governments needs to be involved in our business. >> and you see that in his artwork? >> absolutely. i mean the statue of liberty? that just shouts freedom. >> steve is here this morning to talk about it. nice to see you. >> and it doesn't hurt that
9:30 am
expresses his own conservative viewpoint during appearances on fox news. >> i think people feel so, you know, nateed about their country a, alienated about their country and feel like they are alone in feeling patriotic. >> he has once hoped to make his mark in the new york art world but after two years at the school of visual arts, he left disappointed and disillusioned. >> i walked into a gallery one day and there is this giant pile of dirt, i said what is this? she said i a piece. you know, in that real snob by way that they talk to you. and that made me think there is no place for me in the art world, i am never going to make it. so i said, let's get out of here. >> he finally found a niche by combining art with his love of history. his harm paintings now sell for just under $20,000. >> this sounds really bad. it is true. i will paint the ones that sell. because i can't be waste ago lot
9:31 am
he is? >> and penley is content with his work, even if his recognition as an artist never goes beyond the hasselhoff capitol hill. >> do you hope some day that you will have a piece in moma or te whitney museum in new york? >> i would rather be rich. i am serious. i would rather have the money, but yes, i would like it, of course i would like it. but i t to give me that. >> pauley: still to come, on the lighter side. >> number 3. >> pauley: and later -- ?
tv-commercial
9:33 am
9:34 am
is jane pauley. >> saturday night live got in its final pokes in campaign 2016 last night. a campaign lee cowan reminds us that has given humorists and voters plenty of comic relief. >> it has been such a head scratcher of an election. >> the late show's stephen colbert thought he better protect himself. >> got to say i have to wear this until the election is over, so i don't claw my eyes >> bingo, how many of us feel the same way? >> trump sues so many people he's probably got platinum medallion status at the courthouse. >> instead of being the nation's night-lights, late night comedy shows have become more like release valves. >> hillary needs to own all the nasty things the hater says and run it is a notorious hrc. >> if we weren't laughing we might be crying.
9:35 am
is one of the extraordinary things, that gets totally swamped under the pile of, you know, orange shag carpeting that is donald trump. >> colbert doesn't see his humor as piling on donald trump. he sees it as truth telling. >> he sounds on the campaign trail as much like he's like a mobster and, you know? i am in shipping. it's a nice democracy you got here. i hate to see something happen to i okay. maybe i will concede 0 on election date maybe, i won't, okay? >> even jon stewart couldn't resist coming out of retirement to sit in for colbert one night. >> i thought donald trump was going to speak. ivanka said he was going to come out. she said he was really compassionate and generous and then this angry groundhog came out. >> reporter: stewart led the fake news movement that blended laugh out loud one liners with news analysis.
9:36 am
that word isn't presidential. >> samantha bee and john oliver, both daily show alums, continue that tradition although she is more righteously furious. >> donald trump screws the truth this way this lemur views the supreme court. vacancy, i don't care about that in any way. please (bleep) off. i have a banana. to diffuse it all, the candidates themselves have tried getting in on the jokes. >> what's the best way to get in e-mail? >> hillary clinton appeared with zach on funny or die between two ferns. >> what is going to happen if you become pregnant? there are some pamphlets i can send you that might help you understand. >> donald trump made fun of himself too on the tonight show with jim might have fallon. >> me interviewing me, that is what i call a great idea. >> of course it's a great idea. we nought of it.
9:37 am
poll, taken outside of the cracker barrel. >> but them came alec baldwin trump on saturday night live. >> i turn on the news and all of the newscasters are making me look so bad. and how are we doing that? >> by taking all of the things i said and all of the things i do and putting them on tv. >> that sent the donald straight to his twitter account. >> alec baldwin portrayal stinks, he wrote. media rigging >> he may actually have a bit of a point. there is a humor bias, it turns out. studies have proven it. >> among a survey of four late night shows, george mason university found donald trump was the subject of 79 percent of the jabs, compared to just 21 percent for hillary clinton. >> but that 21 percent can still stick. if only there was some way we could get into the private side of hillary clinton. i don't know.
9:38 am
something. >> >> it starts off on a napkin, on a cocktail napkin. >> just the idea. >> just the idea. >> but not everyone with a political funny bone is a hard-core liberal. >> i am a member of the smallest minority in america, a conservative journalist. we are outnumbered about 100 to one and i think i just have to be that much more obnoxious to make up for it. >> reporter: michael ramirez is winning cartoonist, when pruning the renewed e-mail investigation you would think this would be a dlielgt. >> as soon as anthony weiner approached on the landscape, believe me, 50 ideas that i cannot draw immediately came to mind. >> it is all so absurd, some humorists aren't quite sure what to make of it. >> it's a role reversal where the politicians is being the
9:39 am
this is unacceptable, sir. you cannot do this. >> andy borowitz writes "the new yorker"'s borowitz report, a parody of daily news that boasts headlines like these. >> people are so distraught and so upset about where our country is, that i have never seen this kind of visceral reaction where people will actually come up to me and say thank god for comedy right now because it's the only thing that is getting me through. >> it's okay to still be polls on tuesday, just don't be laughing too hard not to go at >>
9:40 am
trulicity is not insulin. it helps activate my body to do what it's supposed to do... release its own insulin. trulicity responds when my blood sugar rises. i take it once a week, and it works 24/7. it comes in an easy-to-use pen and i may even lose a little weight. trulicity is a once-weekly injectable prescription medicine to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. trulicity is not insulin. treat diabetes or for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not take trulicity if you or a family member has had medullary thyroid cancer, if you've had multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to trulicity. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms such as itching, rash, or trouble breathing; a lump or swelling in your neck; or severe pain in your stomach area. serious side effects may include pancreatitis,
9:41 am
increases your risk for low blood sugar. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, decreased appetite and indigestion. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may make existing kidney problems worse. with trulicity, i click to activate what's within me. if you want help improving your a1c and blood sugar numbers with a non-insulin option click to activate your within. ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. leso dad slayed the problem with puffs plus lotion, instead. with lotion to soothe and softness to please.
9:42 am
>> pauley: the world is watching our presidential election. and just like our own country, holding its breath. seth doane has been watching the watchers. >> it may be america's election, but the world is watching. >> dispot close in the polls. >> the presidential campaign is headline news in mexico where that wall and who would pay for sit a regular part of the discourse. >> russia has figured prominently with allegations of hacking and trying to influence the election. some lead versus started to publicly court candidates, israel's prime minister has kept his options open, meeting with both. while north korea's state media indicated that country would lean trump. >> are people here paying more attention to this election than in years past?
9:43 am
>> sarah varetto is vp of news at italy's sky tg 24. >> i think in this case, with donald trump, it's a huge story. >> >> she says that they are dedicating more and more airtime for the campaign. it's good tv. >> we can't imagine that two candidates that are so different, more opposed, and also because of this it's dominated by scandal. >> >> and it's not just the personalities but the political issues that are relevant. in particular, she says, the rise of populism, and not just in the united states. >> get out and vote. thank you. >> i think there is a part of society in the u.s., but also here in europe, that is not voting for something or somebody, for a political
9:44 am
voting against, against the establishment. >> take brexit, for example, the, uk's vote to leave the european union. or iceland's anti-establishment pirate party, which tripled its parliamentary seats in recent elections. and britain's sky news is promoting its coverage with a spoof. that pits the candidates against each other in a boxin >> >> appropriate, since in real life, this match has gotten ugly. >> secretary of state john kerry acknowledged it's made it tricky to push world leaders to promote democracy. >> there are moments when it is down right embarrassing. >> at the rally in iran president hasan rouhani asked
9:45 am
>> in china, where the ruling communist party often speaks through state media, a recent commentary noted the election revealed quote the defects of democracy, adding the selection of the u.s. leader has become a shouting match of insults. >> still cbs news found chinese watching the presidential debate the in a beijing coffee shop live at 9:00 a.m., the debates aired at 3:00 a.m. local time in italy. sarah varetto told us i ili tuned in any way. >> the debates air in the middle of the night a. >> and people are tuning into those debates. >> yes. >> people in each country of course are paying attention to issues that will affect them most n iran it may be the future of the nuclear deal. in mexico, issues of immigration and trade. here in been drawn between donald trump, and the scandal plagued billionaire businessman and
9:46 am
tv-commercial
tv-commercial
9:47 am
this is mike's office. if he doesn't show up, he doesn't get paid. too often marco rubio didn't show up i am patrick murphy. to get things done, you've got to show up. you've got to work together. whether it's protectinal curity and women's health care or growing the economy, we've got to start solving problems instead of pointing fingers. i am patrick murphy and i approve this message
9:48 am
9:49 am
>> cam bring a benson the store's brand director says business is brisk, still, she says it was hard to tell her grandma that she was selling drugs. >> and she goes, ah, do you think there is something that can help me sleep? >> it turns out that grandma is a pretty good care of america's changing attitudes about marijuana use. in 1969 a gallup poll showed 12 percent favored legalization. today it's 60 percent. mel available in 25 states, and four states and the district of columbia now allow sales of recreational pot. >> business soon may be booming in california -- >> the first state in the nation to approve medical marijuana was california in 1996. tuesday, california is one of five states voting to legalize it for recreation. >> why do you think attitudes are changing about marijuana? >> well, i think people have
9:50 am
for the last 20 years in california and have had good experiences. >> andrew deangelo is director of operations at harborside health center in oakland, one of the largest cannabis dispensaries in the nation. >> cannabis culture has shown that we can cultivate, transport and distribute cannabis in a responsible way. and that really changed the at dude of soccer moms and mainstream people who perhaps are not connected to cannabis. >> a poll released in california on friday shows favor of legalization, a contrast to six years ago when a similar measure was voted down. >> how do you educate an intoxicated mind? >> still, across town there is impassioned opposition from religious leaders of oakland's african-american community. >> to say, what, no. no. >> on 64. >> bishop ron allen serves churches across the state.
9:51 am
legalized drug dealers that are going to make a bunch of money off of this. >> and there is a lot of money in marijuana. growing marijuana legally and illegally is a multibillion-dollar business, by some estimates pot is one of california's top cash crops. >> but a majority of small growers actually opposes the legalization, afraid big business coming into the state will put them out of business. >> they e lobbyist, hezekiah allen. >> we are hardworking small business owners, we want the same things for our families and communities that every other resident of this state does. >> he was raised on his family's illegal pot farm. today he works the hasselhoff the state capitol. >> how does it feel to be out in the open? >> oh it feels great. it feels so good to be honest about who you are. some marijuana advocates compare their battle to the gay rights movement as proof of how fast
9:52 am
after same-sex marriage was legalized by one supreme court ruling. >> now, they believe, it's their time. >> when such a large diverse community that has such economic power decides that cannabis should be legal for adults over the age of 21, that sends a powerful message. not just to washington, but to the entire >> pauley: next, when politics -- >> and i am your mother. >> pauley: gets personal.
9:55 am
many a family feud. steve hartman has visited a house divided in the tar heel state. >> the serrated edge of our election divide runs right through a town house in raleigh, north carolina. >> right through the family of joyce wood house. >> this is. >> joyce two sons, brad and dallas grew up side by side. >> mom is on medicare. >> but they are on opposite sides of a split >> dallas is executive director of the north carolina republican party while brad runs a pro clinton super pac. >> perhaps you have seen them before, biting each other's heads off on cable news channels or taking phone calls on c-span. >> one from a very familiar voice. >> well you are right i am from down south. >> oh god mom. >> and i disagree that all families are like ours. >> you must have raised them differently. >> i rocked them in the same rocking chair.
9:56 am
right side and one on your left side. >> must have been. >> their relationship is such a circus someone once did a whole documentary about it. >> at least in the film you could tell much of the banter was good-natured. >> but this was all shot before trump versus clinton. >> you know,, it is a girl, right? >> yeah, whatever. >> i am used to them getting angry and debating, but this has been the most difficult election. it was the first time that i just got very sad about it. >> reporter: this past summer, as the election boiled, joyce says her sons stopped talking to each other altogether. >> i cried a lot. >> and for too many americans -- >> i did. >> -- this is what our election has come to.
9:57 am
today, we may think we hate the other side, but the fact is, more often than not, we actually love a lot of those people. in some cases, with all our hearts. but here is the good news. the brothers are talking again. >> i am i think that all families can come together and love each other and realize that family is the most important. >> i think we can all vote for that. i am just sort of dragging along this bag of sounds i have been collecting. >> paul simon is just ahead. and then we are on the trail. >> a lot of people have no idea
9:59 am
the fiery tissue left her nose sore and red. so dad slayed the problem with puffs plus lotion, instead. puffs have pillowy softness for dakota's tender nose. with lotion to comfort and soothe when she blows. don't get burned by ordinary tissues. a nose in need deserves puffs, indeed. now get puffs plus lotion in the squeezable softpack. ? ? simon and garfunkel singing america in new york central park
10:00 am
fast forward to this past summer, when paul simon released a new album to wide acclaim. he is a music legend, but hardly a complacent one. here again is lee cowan. >> to watch paul simon is to watch a big band leader in action. >> he has some of the best musicians in the world at his fingertips. . >> and when it is time to play -- they create a sound that is uniquely his. >> in my music is containing more and more elements from i am just sort of dragging along this big bag of sounds that i have
10:01 am
>> reporter: sounds and not just the silent ones have always spoken to paul simon. >> these are it have naahize. they go -- >> he has shelves full of exotic instruments at his studio, at his home in the connection country side. >> i use it like this. like a schisch sound. >> each one of them, an auditory muse. >> i always called it a twanger but it turns out it's f i think, india and it is called a gopichand. >> you will hear it very clearly on the first song off simon's 13th solo studio album. >> he calls it the werewolf. >> and when i heard it, it sounded like the werewolf is coming. the werewolf.
10:02 am
from. >> milwaukee, man, lead a fairly decent life, made a fairly decent living, had a fairly decent wife. she killed him, sushi knife. now they are shopping for a fairly decent afterlife. >> at 75 his voice is as strong as ever, and with it comes lyrics only rhyming simon could deliver. >> the winners, the with money colored eyes, they eat all the nuggets and they order extra fries. >> the world is coming. >> at a time when you could be playing your greatest hits, you could be not worried about sort of exploring new things, and yet you are still kind of trying to push the envelope. >> i am not trying to push an envelope. i have no agenda other than to
10:03 am
interesting. >> a lot of trial and error. >> it's a very much trial and error, and i have learned to have a lot of patience with the errors. and a lotta errors. >> ? ? hello darkness, my old friend. i have come to tal talk with you again. >> even in this, you have been at this song writing business a long time, since he was 13, teaming up friend, art garfunkel. >> because a vision ever strengthens in my brain. still remains. the sound of silence. as a team they wrote anthems for a generation, with lyrics that seemed wise beyond their years. >> for a while there, i had my
10:04 am
finger and everything i touched became a hit. >> i am just a poor boy, though my story easel dom told, i have squandered my resistance for a pocket full of mumbles such are promises. >> sometimes you get into that flow where you feel like you're plugged in and stuff is just coming through you. >> does one ever arrive in a flash for you? >> occasionally. occasionally. >.>> like with what? >> the fastest song that i can remember ever writing that had any legs to it was slip sliding away. >> ? ? slid sliding, slip sliding away. slip sliding away. >> you know the myriad destinations, just slip, sliding away. >> which i wrote in about 20 minutes or half an hour.
10:05 am
bridge over troubled water. i wrote it in a night. >> ? ? like a bridge over troubled water." >> and when i finished it, i thought, where did that come from? that is better than i usually write. >> bridge over troubled water was simon and garfunkel's last album together. >> their often rocky collaboration ended thinking about simon and garfunkel. but given the span of years of my career, it's only a relatively small proportion so -- >> does it feel like ancient history, sort of? >> you know, nothing feels like ancient history. it's one of the cliches of getting older, it's like you remember everything as if it just happened. >> at the end of this field way back there is another path and
10:06 am
that was also completely filled. >> how could he forget their massive reunion in central park back in 1981. >> ladies and gentlemen, simon and garfunkel! half a million people crammed on to the lawn that night to see the duo to -- the duo together again. ? and here's to you, mrs. robinson, jesus loves you more than you will know, whoa, whoa, whoa. >> it was a totally peaceful scene and it sort of spread through the city like that. there was something quite extraordinary about it. >> art garfunkel, however, wasn't so sure. >> when we came off stage and i said to artie, well, how do you think we did? and he said disaster. >> really? >> yeah.
10:07 am
>> they were a hit. and so were simon's solo songs. he had plenty after the breakup, enough to bring an even bigger crowd back to central park in 1991. >> so momma don't take my kodachrome away. >> but nothing was quite as popular or quite as different as his south african influenced graceland. >> c betty when you call me, you can call me al. call me al. >> i never really heard boundaries between music. to me, it really didn't matter where the stuff came from. it all sounded to me like something that i liked and therefore was popular music. >> people say she's crazy. she got diamonds on the soles of her shoes. >> it was the biggest learning experience of my musical life.
10:08 am
other learning experience. he has four children, and he married a musician. edie brickell who has a successful career of her own. >> he continues his musical exploration pushing himself and his band to play each song, old or new, as if for the first time. >> if you are bored, you are probably not playing it well. you could be playing it perfect, but t playing it well. >> his latest album stranger to stranger debuted at number 1 on the billboard charts this summer, that is historic even for him. >> i stepped outside my backstage door to breathe some nicotine. >> it's proof perhaps that any talk of his retirement is just that, talk. >> that's not to say, though, he is not thinking about the future, and for paul simon, those thoughts it probably won't
10:09 am
what i am thinking of is, how to end things well, not just a career but the whole thing, the whole life. you know? and if i could do it gracefully or beautifully, well, i would be very grateful. >> but it doesn't sound like you are dwelling on it. >> it's not my favorite go to subject, you know, when i want to tear myself but on the other hand, you know, it is probably worth it to be at least somewhat prepared for how to end well, how to end the song well, how to end a career well, how to end everything well. >> there is the goody. >> pauley: ahead, as american
tv-commercial
10:10 am
>> at amope we know, heels can be every woman's fashion secret. but what's no secret is how much they hurt. the foot care experts at amope now turn your heels into sneakers. new gelactiv insoles. almost invisible, and made of ultra-thin concentrated gel. so the only thing you feel is improved comfort. share the secret of looking great, and feeling good. new gelactiv for all kinds of women's shoes. from amope. love every step. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. i could stand in the middle of 5th avenue and shoot somebody and i wouldn't lose any voters, okay? and you can tell them to go f**? themselves.
10:11 am
this, i don't know, i don't remember. he's going like 'i don't remember.' does your child need help with digestive balance? try align junior probiotic. so she can have a fraction dominating... status updating... hello-yellow-belt kind of day. get 24/7 digestive support with align junior. the #1 doctor recommended probiotic brand, now for kids. the pursuit of healthier. born. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier
10:12 am
>> pauley: on the trail is sponsored by subaru. working together with the national parks to help them reach zero landfill. from domestic politics to a pacific outpost, colin knighton covers a lot of ground this morning. >> hello world, hello, america. >> of all of the the republican national convention, only one the introduced itself to the rest of america. >> american samoa, and yes that is the correct pronunciation is an often overlooked collection of islands in the south pacific that has been a united states territory since 1900 and yet -- >> a lot of people there have no idea where this place is. >> pua tuana is a ranger 0 at
10:13 am
from our nation a's capital. it is the only u.s. soil south of the equator, moment to drop, tropical fruit bats and colorful crabs. the pristine coral reeves here are some of the best in the world. >> the island a's remoteness has also helped preserve its way of life. >> the most important thing is our culture, we want to preserve our culture here. >> samoan culture combines ancient traditions like coming in an umu or earth more recent ones. >> the islands have been overwhelmingly christian since arrival of missionaries in the 1800s. >> in the capital city of pago pago you pay for the fresh coconuts in dollars. the american flag is everywhere, it is the preferred decoration on family run shuttle buses. in fact, the close to 55,000 people who live here may be the most patriotic in the entire
10:14 am
daughters proudly wear the uniform of the u.s. armed forces than any other state or territory! >> the military has a big presence here. but despite participating in the primary process, american samoa won't be choosing the next commander in chief. >> just like the people of puerto rico and guam, residents of american samoa don't get any electorial votes. >> all we do now is just to pray for a good leader to rise up and to make a >> peter talivaa was born in a the small village of anuu where in still lives today and like most ever else here, not only has he never voted for president, he is also not a u.s. citizen. the people of american is a no a are considered u.s. nationals. >> you are born owing allegiance to the united states, but you are not a citizen. america doesn't owe its allegiance back. >> while the other major territories have achieved citizen ship by birth through
10:15 am
last year, attorney charles voa alailima and his colleagues filed a lawsuit arguing that the fourteenth amendment which guarantees citizenship to those born on u s soil should apply to the territories. >> they have been raised in an american system, and they have served the american government. there is no reason why they should not be citizens because they are on sovereign u.s. >> just let us be united states citizens. >> the plaintiffs in the case, is a decorated vietnam veteran. >> i am being discriminated against. i cannot be a united states citizen. if nationals move off island, to say, california, they still can't vote or hold certain jobs unless they pay a fee and apply for citizenship. >> if you were a citizen by birth, you could go to any state and establish residency there
10:16 am
citizen for voting purposes in that state. you can't do that here in american samoa. >> for him, it is also a matter of personal pride. >> i feel i don't belong. >> really? >> in june, the supreme court declined to hear mamea's case. he is currently exploring other options but it's worth noting that not everyone here wants to be a u.s. citizen. >> i would say i am pretty much good the way i am. >> you are fine with being a national? >> i am fine being a national. >> the laid-back simplicity of the extremely complicated system of local and national laws that govern a place like this, a system that is on the brink of change. >> the federal government doesn't even own this park land. it is leased from the local villages. which means that when the lease runs out in 22 years, the future of this pocket of green in the distant pacific is as uncertain
tv-commercial
10:17 am
people. >> pical airline you only earn double miles when you buy stuff from that airline. wait...is this where you typically shop? you should be getting double miles on every purchase! switch...to the capital one venture card. with venture, you earn unlimited double miles on every purchase, everywhere, every day. not just ...(dismissively) airline purchases. seriously... double miles... everywhere.
10:18 am
i've been taking probiotics gx from nature's bounty to maintain healthy digestion and help with the occasional unwanted gas and bloating. so wherever i get stuck today, my "future self" will thank me. thank you. thank you. thank you. hang on, go go go back. thank you. do i get stuck in an air duct? it's a funny story really... (laughing) nearly 50 years of experience has taught us: no matter what the future holds, you're always better off healthy.
10:19 am
>> in this year's presidential campaign, the worst ever? the polling says yes. and our bob schieffer agrees. >> my mother always said go vote, it makes you feel big and strong, but when i cast my absentee ballot this year, i didn't feel big or strong. i felt anxious and worried. it's not enough to say this was the lifetime. this will be one of that's examples we will use to rate future campaigns, the way we judge disasters and scandals, as in the worst scandal since watergate or the worst hurricane since katrina. >> shocking, isn't it? >> our campaigns are more than just the process where we select candidates. they should also enlighten us, help us to understand problems and debate solutions.
10:20 am
that. you could put half of trump's supporters into what i dawdle basket of demorables. this campaign left an unsavory stain on everyone and everything it touched, including the process itself. >> folks, it's a rig system and it's a rigged election, believe me .. political discourse ranged from allegations of old-fashioned understandings and character -- >> we have learned that thousands of additional e-mails have been discovered o electronic device. >> to depths never been plumbed, vulgar and rude discussions of subjects seldom mentioned in public. >> he referred to my hands, if they are small, something else must be small. i guarantee you there is no problem. i guarantee it. >> the recurring question was could it get worse? and it always did. >> and when you are a star they let you do it. you can do anything. >> whatever you want. >> grab them by the (bleep).
10:21 am
multibillion-dollar industry and have made millionaires of the professional class that has grown up around them, yet the system coughed up two candidates this year that most americans neither like nor trust. >> which raises the question, has the whole process become so money driven, so odious that the most qualified people want no part of it? >> after what we have been through this time isn't that something we need to talk about before next time? >> shuts down your stomach's active acid pumps... to stop the burn of frequent heartburn... all day and night. have we seen them before? banish the burn with nexium 24hr. ordinary tissues left dakota's nose sore and red. so dad slayed the problem with puffs plus lotion, instead. with lotion to soothe and softness to please.
10:22 am
10:23 am
>> welcome to hooray for politics at the smithsonian national museum of american history in washington. where we learn that ballot comes from the word ballota, italian for little ball. colored balls being an earlier and simpler way of voting, as harry rubenstein, head of the museum a's division of political history >> and the way it works is you put the ball in the little hole. different people come and do it, open it up, and you get your count. >> now you know where the expression blackballed comes from. it's the ultimate no vote. >> on to the paper ballot. this maryland ballot for the electorial college is believed to be from our first election in
10:24 am
given more blatantly partisan ballots with candidate pictures, such as this one featuring ulysses s grant from 1868. >> come the 1900s states were using large ballots, including all the candidates, so big they were called blanket ballots. at the same time, in big cities, technology was taking over, though paper ballots can still be found in some places even today. and then there is the 2000 presidential election in florida, remember those hanging chads? >> so which artifact from this year's campaign will rate a spot in a future exhibit? like the election itself, stay tuned. >> pauley: and that brings up to john dickerson in washington for a look at what is ahead on "face the nation". how is it looking to you this morning, john?
10:25 am
year it is fast and furious, down to the wire in all a the battleground states we have been talking about and now late activity in the traditionally democratic state of michigan. so we will be watching to see whether hillary clinton can turn out the democratic coalition and if that silent majority that donald trump has been talking about will emerge on tuesday. >> >> pauley: all right that is ahead, face the nation. thank you, john. don't forget, cbs news election coverage tuesday night, and next week. here on sunday morning. >> never t >> after warren beatty looks back. >> we asked people to write down the things they love to do ? now give up half of 'em. do i have to? this is a tough financial choice we could face when we retire. but, if we start saving even just 1% more of our annual income...
10:26 am
10:27 am
10:28 am
tv-commercial
10:29 am
10:30 am
with amendment 1, you don't pay captioning sponsored by cbs dickerson: today on "face the nation" it's down to the wire as campaign 2016 finally comes to a close. >> on this last weekend before election day the end can't come soon enough. the tension stays with us until the end. >> by the we're at it -- >> dickerson: donald trump was rushed off the stage by the civil service in reno. >> nobody said it would be easy for us. but we will never be stopped. >> dickerson: and last minute dashes across the?i country to sewer up support in a flurry of final photo ops.
134 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WTSP (CBS) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on