tv CBS This Morning CBS July 9, 2015 7:00am-9:01am EDT
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good morning. it is thayursd july 9th 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." overnight history is made in south carolina. the legislature votes to bring down the confederate flag. >> new questions this morning about our nation's vital computer systems after sudden shutdowns hit the new york stock exchange and the united airlines. and they turn it into a discount bridal boutique. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 skojds. >> the people have demanded thatth sisymbol of hate come off of the statehouse grounds.
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>> south carolina's house approves the removal of the confederate flag. >> we canneot b happy that we no longer have a symbol on our st ate house grounds. >> computer glitches affecting one of the world's biggest airlines and the new york stock exchange. >> obviouslyt thagh caut my attention. in my business you don't love coincidences but it does appear there's not a cyber intrusion involved. >> china's market crashed this morning. >> baltimore's belief chief abrupted willly fired after a spike in crime. >> southwest forced to make an emergency landing as one of the plane's engines burst on television. >> you don't know what you're talking about. >> donald trump as brash and defiant as ever. >> she was theor wst sec of state in the history of the united states. >> a daujer and father caught in
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dangerous rip current. >> luckily they were both able to escape. >> the tornado struck several buildings. an 11-year-old girl overcoming with gratitude when taylor swift donated $50,000 to help her battle leukemia. >> i think i'm going to pass out. >> and we're so fragile. stephen colbert had fun with wall street's turmoil. >> worship me. >> on "cbs this morning." >> come cons. they're hear to latest on all things entertainment. >> come con is the only play where you can meet superman whose kryptonite is a nut allergy. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs new mexico
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we're going to begin this morning with a history-making vote in south carolina. the legislature passed a bill overnight to remove the confederate flag from a police of honor in the state capitol. >> governor nikki haley celebrated after the house voted 94-20 to lower the banner. the flag could come down later today. omar, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. after a long day of debating this confederate battle flag will be removed from state grounds where it's flown for more than 50 years. a movement sparked by the deadly church shooting that led to what many thought would never happen. overnight lawmakers and advocates emerged from the south carolina state house after a request to remove the confederate flag from the
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grounds was approved. the decision comes after weeks of protest and days of heated debate in the wave of last month's massacre at a emanuel a middle east e church. nine people were killed including state senator clementa pinckney. >> all of those people the martyrs who sat in that church and worshipped. >> reporter: for 14 tense and emotional hours lawmakers debated the bill. republicans opposed to the flag's removal led by michael pitts proposed over 60 amendments meant to slow down any decision. >> history's not always pleasant. history's not always roses. but it's our history. it's our collective history. >> reporter: but each amendment was beaten back bibi partisan support to take down the controversial symbol. >> i cannot believe that we do
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not have the heart in this body to do something meaningful such as take a symbol that is hate off these grounds. >> reporter: in a statement south carolina governor nikki haley applauded the vote. it is a new day in south carolina, she said day that truly brings us all together as we continue to heal. >> i think we have a true chance to really go forward in south carolina. >> reporter: south carolina's lieutenant governor still has to sign the bill before it goes to nikki haley's desk and once it's signed, the flag has to be remved within 24 hours. anthony? >> omar villafranca. thanks, omar. one alabama suburb may drop the rebel man, its high school mascot. we'll go there ahead on "cbs this morning." a tech failure affecting
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three major u.s. organizations on wednesday was not a coordinated cyber attack. that's what officials and security experts say this morning after a string of problems affected millions of people. technical glitches grounded dozens of airline flights, shut down the new york stock exchange and crashed "the wall street journal" website. jeff glor is at the new york stock exchange where they're hoping to bounce back from a 251-point loss. jeff good morning. >> vinita good morning. there was a debt crisis in greece and market mess in china. then this glitch happened and traded grounded to a halt. for nearly four hours the nearly raucous floor of the new york stock exchange was quiet. some 700,000 orders in the system had to be canceled as they work to fix a technical issue. >> they decided the best thing to do to protect people is to shut the market down. >> reporter: president obama was briefed by members of his
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national security team that at this point there's no indication that malicious actors are involved in these technical issues. >> reporter: the troubles surfaced just hours after united airlines experienced what they called a connectivity issue. at 8:00 a.m. the airline had grounded all of its flights. the outage lasting nearly two hours affected 4,900 aircraft and about 400,000 frustrated passengers. >> they send us over here and now this is telling us to go back to the computer check-in. so we're just running around inn "the wall street journal's" home page crashed. readers were redirected to a temporary page. >> we have three ho sew-called coincidences today. i don't believe in coincidences. i believe it's an event we don't have an explanation for. >> i think "the wall street
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journal" piece is people flooding their website. >> most took it in stride. few gave creedence to the theory that hackers were behind the mess. >> it's an embarrassment for the institution, which is a shame, but things break and they fix it and things will break again. >> another snafu grounded flights last month as well. well trading did continue on other exchanges, both companies say they're not the victim of another cyber attack and right now we're looking at a slightly higher opening. >> these computer problems highlight the downside. dan ackerman and our editor with c anytime is with us. good morning. >> where is the backup. where is the redundancy? i mean is this a wakeup call? >> this is a wakeup call that we spend a lot of time effort and
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protection and money. these are all very important things, but the less glamorous part of it is the regular everyday i.t. work that keeps the systems up and running. i saw yesterday three different cases where different bread and butter issues fell down and that's why we had three problems on the same day. >> you ask yourself if something like this happens, if you have internal problems does that make these systems more vulnerable to external attacks? >> i think we're so focused that maybe we don't pay enough attention to tin term systems and that's what happened here. if you can have a router and they didn't have another piece of hardware, you're down for hours and the airlines are so tight ly tightly packed and it has a ripple around the world. that's where you do software updates and they find problems and have to get the backups and reinstall that. >> a while back i read an article where security experts
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said every company said they can expect to be compromise. it's how they handle that. what do you think they're capable of? >> if any of these were malicious attacks they could have gone further. it's not something that happens right away like we saw yesterday like the sony hack and the government personnel files harks things that happened months ago. it slowly kind of drips out piece by piece. if it's something where a light switch goes off and all of a sudden they can't trade stocks that's no longer an issue. >> by 2020 we going to have 25 billion pieces connected to the internet. how vulnerable are we? >> we're vulnerable to deliberate actions and to the systems not working the way they should. they're so complicated. getting everyone on the same operating system is a huge challenge. >> dan ackerman, thanks so much for being with us this morning.
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stock futures as jeff glor pointed out are on despite the shutdown. they're cracking down on investors accused of describing down shares with quote, malicious short selling. seth doane is in beijing where they're treating the constant turmoil as a threat. good morning. >> good morning. the stocks have rebounded after the government feevsly tried to stem the losses. still half of all the companies listed here in china have suspended trading. that's about $2.8 million worth of stock frozen. despite the upswing, there were no signs of relief and smiles as investors gazed at savings lost or in limbo. this is what even is watching of course. the company's names are here in chinese. how they're doing is in this
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column. and in these patches of green zeros, those are companies that have suspended trading. >> a $19 billion stabilization fund was set up to buy stocks. i would call this a major stockmarket catastrophe we were told. we've never seen anything like this. we met jong a retired electrician, at this trading hall which resembles a dingy gambling parlor. here smalltime investors buy and sell stocks. more than 80% of the 90 million-plus chinese in the market are average citizens. many are covering their faces with newspaper and shawls. they don't want to talk. the reasons are clear. they've lost so much money. off camera some have lost 30% to 70% of their savings. one man told us his heart was
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broken. many were urged by the government to get into the market. >> just win one month the situation came to this. those are real money, real fortunes being lost in there. >> ping told us he believes the government tried to do all it could to stem losses but added it remained to be seen if it worked. that's a view shared by many economists. passengers on a southwest flight arrived in boston overnight after a scary start to their journey. the plane aboarded its takeoff at midway's airport after an apparent engine fire. the plane sped down a runway. the 143 passengers boarded another flied to boston. this morning jeb bush is speaking. the republican candidate faced intense criticism from democrats for telling a new hampshire
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newspaper that americans need to work longer hours. critics say he's auto of touch. >> in an interview on wednesday he said, quote, we have to be more productive. work participation has to work harder. people have to work longer hours, gain more income for their families. bush says critics are twisting his words. >> you can take it out of context all you want. they have to decide how to spend it rather than getting in line and depending on government. >> bush says nearly 70 million americans who work part-time should have the opportunity to work more hours. there's a new proposal this morning. it insurance 55 million american ms. about 80ch of deaths each year come from that group.
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major garrett is at the white house. good morning. >> good morning. this falls into the toxic political category of so-called death panels. pressures could lead bureaucrats to interfere. all conversations of this kind will be voluntary. they were, however, tucked somewhat unobtrusively into a larger stack of medicare regulations released yesterday. the goal according to the government, is to make these traumatic decisions easier to cope with and hope families plan ahead on decisions like using extraordinary means to keep someone alive, drug therapy and options. they praised the move. even though they're giving it a new name. medicare will not approve end of life discussions but advance
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care planning. baltimore has a new leader. the mayor fired him yesterday. the movie came hours after a report blasted the department after the riots after the death of freddie gray. >> when the time came he was nowhere in sight and reporters were directed to the mayor's big announcement. >> this was not an easy decision but it is one that is in the best interest of the people of baltimore. >> baltimore mayor stephly rawlings-blake parades him but questioned growing questions on his leadership to fight crime. >> too many are continuing to die. families are tired of feeling
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this pain and so am i. >> >>-batt's dismissal comes after the death of freddie gray. >> unprepared plitt it lick motivated and uncaring. >> reporter: in a 32-page review baltimore's police union claims the violence could have been avoided claiming the officers lack basic rioting, equipment. as protests spiraled out of control, officers reported being told not to intervene or wear protective gear. one officer said he felt like a sitting duck while he said quote, batts offered us to slaughter. hi apologized in a closed door meeting. >> i want to come here and tell you guys i think i let you down. say that with a humble heart.
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>> a significant percentage of the officers are considering retiring or leaving within the next two years. >> reporter: last night he said quote, i've been honored to serve the citizens and residents of baltimore. eastern been proud to be an officer of this city. pope francis will celebrate mass this morning in bliv yaolivia. thousands greeted him. his motorcade stopped where a policeman was found murdered in 1980. received gifts from the president including a cruise fiv carved in the shape of hammer and sickle. he urged them to fix their atmosphere of quality that he says led to corruption. ahead, what the presidential candidate is saying
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there are still unanswered questions surrounding the doctors who treated patients with unnecessary dancer drugs. >> i can't find any justifications to do such a thing from a human being to another human being. i will never find the answer. >> ahead, wi speak with the whistle blower who alerted the feds to the insurance scam. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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there's a road rage incident right there. >> hey. now's not the time. hey, get back in the car. sit down or you're going to get arrested. both of you grow up. come on boys. moitve . everybody's a winner. >> at least they listened to him. a toronto police officer was being interviewed when a road rage erupted on the road below. he quickly told the two men involved to grow udp an get back in their cars. did without throwing a single punch. it's still unclear what sparked the confrontation, but look how close those cars were. there must have been a fender bender there. welcome back to "cbs this
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morning." coming up this half hour a michigan doctor could sentenced for his health insurance scam. we speak to the whistle blower. >> plus should the rebel man retire? there's a rule to change the mascot at an blame school. we'll show you a new debate over slavery issues in the south. that's ahead. first, time to show you this morning's headlines. the"the oregonian" says -- they'll provide on demand birth control and patches. they'll be the first state to require insurers to cover 12-month supplies of birth control. typically only 30 days to 90 days are covered. busy insider says sales of apple watches are tanking. they're down as much as 90%. customers were buying about
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200,000 watches a day in april. now they're about 20,000 a day and sometimes far fewer. "the wall street journal" says microsoft struggled to break into the mobile phone business. ceo sa tia nadella sent an e-mail to microsoft staff. he said the company will write off $7.6 billion in connection with the nokia purchase business. they will also eliminate 7,800 jobs globally. "usa today" says e s p nspn's reporter says pierre-paul had his right finger amputated. he hurt his hand ina fireworks situation. adam schefter twittered his
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medical records and he says it was given to him. >> apparent will i the giants didn't even know about it. >> he's getting a lot ofk. >> for tweeting out his records since they're proovt. private. chef jose andre is pulling out. this comes as the billionaire mogul is getting blunting advice from the head of the republican national committee. julianna goldman is live in washington. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. cbs news has confirm thad reince priebus called donald trump on wednesday to discuss his lengthy rhetoric. he told trump to tone down his comments about mexican immigrants but trump is still doubling down.
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>> there's nothing apologize for. there's nothing to apologize for. >> reporter: in television interviews wednesday donald trump stood by his claims that the mexican government is shipping drug dealers and the rapist to the united states. >> you wouldn't be hearing about it if it wasn't for donald trump. i want the latino works. aisle pull them to work. >> you have to go back 35 years to tell me about something, i think that's pretty pathetic to be htones with you. you're not bringing up anything new. you're bringing up stuff, you're a naive reporter. get it out. >> i'll get it out. >> don't know if you're going to put this on television but try getting it out. >> reporter: he dismissed conversation about contracts. >> they're weak and they want to be politically correct. >> reporter: trump lost another big contract whence when they
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said in a statement the contracts make it impossible for him to move forward with him opening a restaurant in his international upcoming hotel in washington, d.c. i believe that every human being deserved respect regarding their immigration status andres spoke. trump's son wrote back he has no right to terminate his on gachlgts senator marco rubio said trump did not speak for the gop. >> i think voters are capable of distinguishing the rupp party from donald trump and he'll have to respond for his own comments. i strongly disagree. they're inaccurate and offensive. >> reporter: jeb bush said candidates should talk about bigger issues. >> we shouldn't focus on that. he's not swg i doubt who be
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president and is not kuhn struck turf force for our party. >> reporter: now yesterday trump dismissed the story but, anthony, he also said that he couldn't gary guarantee that there weren't undoks meanted payroll. this morning a detroit doctor will face more victims of his health care fraud. dr. fareed fatah gave medications to his patients. some of his 55 victims were never sick. dean reynolds is in detroit and spoke with the whistle blower who discovered the insurance scam. dean, good morning. >> good morning. fatah's defense attorneys will ask for no more than 25 years in prison. the prosecution is asking for 175. >> did you ask her who diagnosed her disease? >> i think in a very fantastic
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way, i know who did, yes. i was enraged so i asked the question. >> you were enraged. >> correct. >> reporter: he started working for dr. fatah at his private practice in 2012 and realized something bizarre was going on. >> i discovered a patient receiving treatment without actual diagnosis of cancer. >> but as you looked at her record you saw that there was no cancer. >> when i reviewed that, there was nothing to support thein patient had active cancer. >> reporter: after the discovery he alerted the manager who then contacted the feds. fatah was in handcuffs less than a week later. >> how did it feel when you learn head got arrested. >> i feel very satisfied that at least he th has stopped. i think he's guilty of the most
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cruel thing a human being can do to another human being. >> reporter: he was on court on wednesday in the same room with a number of his former patients. >> it's looking the people in the eye and telling them you're going need to have this treatment when it was completely unnecessary. >> inn some cases knowing people were untreat by ill and making their last days more painful. >> who's more trusted than a doctor, especially when you get a cancer diagnosis. >> you did not have cancer? >> no. >> who told you you did have >> dr. fatah. >> he went through several rounds of chemotherapy and now needs a lifetime of medicine. >> he knew he was lying. he gave the drugs to me anyway and i had no knowledge of it and now my life is turned upside down.
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i can't do anything about it. i don't know how long i'm going to live. >> reporter: now dr. fatah pleaded guilty to 23 counts of health care fraud, conspiracy and money laundering. the married father of three said he did it to collect up to $34 million from insurers. a sentence could be handed down today. vinita? >> that's an upsetting and unbelievable story. the confederate flag debate widens in the south. and some are rebelling against the high school mascot. hey f you're heading off to work, set your dvr so you can watch us any time. we'll be right back. ofessional golfer have in common? we talked to our doctors about treatment with xarelto®. xarelto® is proven to treat and help reduce the risk of dvt and pe blood clots. xarelto® has also been proven to reduce the risk of stroke in people with afib, not caused by a heart valve problem. for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto® and warfarin compare
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so lonesome oh my goodness. ♪i see you are feeling blue ♪come on over to my place ♪hey girl ♪we're having a party happy birthday, grandma! ♪we'll be swinging ♪dancing and singing ♪baby come on over tonight south carolina's legislature is not the only ones debating. other communities in the south are reconsidering symbols representing the civil war history. a high school mascot is now part of the debate. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning.
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the cry here as you hear behind me has always been go rebels. this is the rebel, the symbol of the rebel man that has always been the symbol for the high school here, the mascot for the high school here and now, of course, there's a great debate. the debate is before the school board whether go rebel must become the rebel image must go. >> let's find a symbol that embodies who we are today, not of who we were in the past. >> reporter: many of these people in this room have thought about themselves as a rebel family while some call it a rebel revolt. >> there's no question in my mind that it's symbols of racism. >> reporter: the rebel man logo is the character of an old south plantation owner. their mascot is a rebel man civil war soldier and fires up the crowd. karen fontenot is already fired
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up. >> i do not want my child exposed to a time when she was considered less than human. >> reporter: they moved here for the excellent schools but she wants the rebel man to move out. >> i don't think this is a black or white issue. it's a sensitivity issue. >> when you look at the mascot and school symbols, what do you see? >> i see confederacy, i seeic images of slavery, jim hill. >> reporter: it's affluently white. signs supporting the rebel man are everywhere and teen opponents admit most residents want to keep it. >> it did not in our hearts then or now represent the shameful times of slavery or the racial issues of the day. >> reporter: to supporters the rebel man represents heritage not hate pride not prejudice.
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>> there's nothing racist about it. >> reporter: michael o'neill played football here. he agrees the confederate flag should go but not the rebel man. >> the confederate flag with its direct lines to racism, taking that down is drawing a line but when you're starting to dik over a character, you're not drawing lines. you're splitting hairs. >> reporter: in 2010 they replaced the colonel with a black bear. now for vestavia hills, they're wanting change. >> what happens to the rebel man is now up to the local school board and they promise a decision by the end of the month. anthony? >> mark strassmann alabama. stephen colbert is ready for the apocalypse. we'll show you how the late-show host is embracing the panic over big
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for nearly four hours american bankers had no idea how rich they were? we're so fragile. worship me you minions of the worldwide waste line where i have amassed 60 bags of snackable chips. >> comedian stephen colbert says he's prepared for the potential end of days after yesterday's big computer glitches at the new york stock exchange and united airlines. the late-show host showed the apocalyptic prediction from a well stocked bunker. >> i think he needs to get on
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tv. all right. former virginia senator jim webb wants to be president. he's right here in studio 57. we'll ask him about hillary clinton and his democratic rivals. you're watching "cbs this morning." people with type 2 diabetes come from all walks of life. if you have high blood sugar ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms
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hey, good morning. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there's more real news ahead including chemicals that were supposed to make it. how they could make children sick. first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> after a long day of debating this confederate flag will be removed, something many people here thought without never happen. >> wednesday was already shaping up to be a rough day here, but then this glitch happened and trading ground to a halt. >> we'reo s focused on the external attacks that maybe we don't pay enough attention to the internal system that that's what happened here. >> this is what everybody is watching. the patches of green zeros, those are companies that suspended trading. >> commissioner batts was
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duschetoled hold a conference but when it was time he was nowhere in sight. >> donald trump has been asked to tone down his comments regarding mexican immigrants. >> stephen colbert says he's prepared for the end of days after yesterday's computer glitch. >> look. we'll be fine, and i will lead us. >> the new york stock exchange was shut down for four hours due to a technical glitch. yes, that's a true story. they would have picked it sooner but unfortunately all the people who know how are here at comic-con. i'm norah o'donnell along with anthony mace and vinita
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nair. charlie and gayle are off. >> it followed a debate lasting all day and most of the night. the effort to remove it began less than three weeks ago after nine people were murdered at a historic black church in chars ton. >> three major organizations hope this will be a quiet day after a series of computer glitches. officials say there was no cyber attack. united airlines grounded all of its flights for nearly two hours when its computer system fail and then they halted trading for 2 1/2 hours because of computer trouble. this morning 11 words have made a "washington post" intern nternet sensation. thad moore was one of the first to post the story yesterday about a computer glitch. it featured one sentence. the new york stock exchange halted trading on all stocks. many used the cheeky hash tag to
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hire thad to try getting him a position. jim webb wants a fresh approach to problem solving in washington. webb is a decorated vietnam war veteran. he was secretary of the navy under ronald reagan and recently served one term as a senator. he is here for an interview after announcing his candidacy. good morning. >> good morning. >> welcome to the race. >> thank you. >> off and running. i want to ask you about some of the headlines. south carolina is going to remove the confederate flag. do you think it's good it's gone. >> the confederate flag was a battle flag. it assumed a lot of racist overtones during the civil rights era. at the same time i have been trying to reinforce we need to
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remember two other parts of our history. one is the very complex history of the civil war itself where in only 5% owned slaves while at the same time there were four slave states that remained in the union during the civil war. missouri, kentucky maryland, and delaware. so if you were a young person being called to duty during that period, this was a very complicated decision to make and we should remember that. >> is that why you didn't call for its immediate removal after the massacre? >> i said it didn't belong in public places but my concern was this would go beyond the issues of harmony and unity that we want to keep on the table and into issues that again divide us. i think we've seen a great sense of growth of unity in the
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american south. it's always been a small veneer that's manipulated emotions white against black for all these other reasons and we need to look at jobs. we need to look at education, harmony, and bringing people together. that's what i hope we don't lose with this. >> senator dwroilkt have a pac and you don't want to seem to want to take pac money. how are you going to be a contender in the race given money and the importance of politics? >> what i said is i don't have a pac, a super pac. people can give us $2,700 or contribute to a pack of $5,000. but the super pac, you could write a $27 million check. my point has been if you ethically feel that bothers you, don't participate. others have directly participated in this action which i think goes against the
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grain in this democracy. >> what's your packet to victory? how do you run against a juggernaut like hillary clinton and what's your argument? >> i don't have an argument against anyone who's running. i think we should all put our issues on the table and let america decide. i don't think you need to. if you're going to get to a half businession, let them contribute in the right way. i've read citizens united. it talks about independence. if you're going to talk about, that it should be independent. we're not seeing that. ektd ethically if that bothers you, just say you don't want to participate. >> you say you're not against hillary clinton. you say the u.s. has not had a clear articulation of what american foreign policy is. does that include the time she was secretary of state? >> i believe that since the end of the cold war and particularly
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since 9/11 we have had a policy on situational ethics. i've been a strong proponent of how they can connect around the world. we are the garn tore of stability in east asia. i've been talking about this since i was first overthere and a marine. i've worked as a military planner in east asia. we led, i think, we led this pivot toward asia in our office. >> let's talk about specific issues. should we be going forward with a deal that secretary kerry is pursuing? >> i'm very concerning about any agreement that would ak kwee yes, sir to the idea of iran and nuclear weapons. we want better relations with iran. i've said this many times over the years, but since the iraq
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war. they've been much more accurate. we don't want to send a message that we're ak kwee yes, siring to the greater power that iran has. i don't see a hurry here with respect to the agreement with iran and i wouldn't want to support any agreement that was akcquiesceingeing over time. >> thank you. good luck to you. chemicals in products could be impacting your
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in our "morning rounds" new possible health risk from chemicals in plastics. studies look at replacements for potentially harmful compounds thought to be safer but the alternatives may be just as risky especially for kids. our dr. david agus is with us this morning. good morning. >> good morning. >> what did the studies find? >> so a typical compound was removed from the market used to make plastics. you could bend them but it could increase blood pressure and cause discrepancies. >> this is bpa. >> no. this was dpha. bpa came afterward. there were one of two replacements for that. what these do is the same. it's ma id to make plastic softer and now in a study, two separate studies in children it
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association. not causal necessarily, but there's an association. higher levels of these, higher blood pressure and more insulin resistance. so the potential is these may be affecting children. >> these are takeout counters. we all use this. you're saying that dimp and -- >> didp. >> how do they connect the chemicals with these with higher blood pressure and higher insulin resistance? >> they're coating these plastics and what happens is -- especially when you put it in a microwave, it heats it and it goes into some of the food and goes into your bloodstream. in this study they looked at theure rinne the urine of kids. take it and put it in glass container at home. i know it takes an extra 30 seconds but believe me it works.
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my kids love that macaroni and they put it in a bowl. you see on the bottom. i know you can't see it on camera. but there's a triangle there and inside is a number. those numbers correlate to what numbers are in it. you want to avoid the ones that have 3-6-7. >> this has number 6. >> there you go. >> they say that these chemicals have been studied, that i do not migrate out of products easily. how are they making those claims with these new medical findings and really what should we all be avoiding? i went through the purge. i switched to kblas. i don't heat anything, put it in the dishwasher if it's plastic. >> three different agencies that wreck late this. the notion in there is that they only react when there's a problem. so it's kind of innocent until prooerch guilty. that's an issue there. there's not a lot of study
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before they go into these containers. then they can affect all of us. we need to be aware of what we put our food in. use glad as much as possible. doubt put it in the microwave or dishwasher which can make the chemicals leech out. >> thank you. america's aging infrastructure becomes a source of inspiration. >> finding new life for transportation's past. comings up on "cbs this morning," i'm kris van cleave. we'll take you inside a long abandoned trolley station in washington, d.c. that's about to get a whole new use. >> announcer: cbs "morning rounds" sponsored by purina. your pet, our passion.
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bridges, train tracks tunnels are being reimagined. kris van cleave is underground this morning. kris hello. >> reporter: good morning. this is one of those spaces that few people in washington have been to let alone even know about. take a look down here. you can see these are old street car tracks and this space used to be full of commuters, but it's been empty, abandoned for decades. that's about to change as this station is poised for a comeback. cue point circle is one of the most vibrant well traveled parts in washington, d.c., and i it has a secret hiding below the
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surface and out of sight of all those passing by. >> we're walking back in time. >> we are. this space you see looks essentially as it did when it shut down in 1962. he's taking on a private effort to take a part of d.c.'s transportation past and make it a key piece to its future. it's nearly one mile of tunnels allow the street cars to turn around at the end of the line when the street cars stopped running, it went dark. >> what makes this such a unique art space? why use old infrastructure? >> partly because it's a good use for the space itself. this space was designed to hold large groups for temporary amount of time and given the raw concrete and aspect of it, we think it's a much better place to observe it. >> a spot where people once
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waited, it could become an art space. new york city's high lines turned an abandoned elevator to the heart of manhattan that's attracting millions of people becoming a model firefighter millions across the country. last month the first phase of chicago's 606 trail opened a park built upon the derelict elevated train line. when completed it will run three miles connecting a network of neighborhoods and parks. in philly there's a space stretching through the city. dr. constructruthers calls this adopted use. >> fe with can find new ways to
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reuse them in ways that enhance quality of life. >> reporter: julian hunt founded the group trying to reopen it using $57,000 raised through crowd funding. >> the character of the space lets you know where you are. that's the part i find most appealing. >> reporter: they'll open the east platform first and hope to raise $2 million more and do the west platform that briefly sought life and failed as a food court in the 1990s. >> one is to develop it into a city that's separate from the federal oilk of the city. this is a moment when the city could begin to emerge with an identity of its own. >> organizers hope to have this space open and operating in september. >> thanks. "glee"
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, he helped make high school glee clubs cool again. matthew morrison is in our toyota green room. he's enjoying success on broadway. he eat show how david letterman helped deliver his big break. plus one painter's unusual talent led to an unusual art exhibit. you might have to squint to see the result. see how artwork for ants led to more. that's ahead. they struck a deal with two theater movie chain when a movie is in fewer than 300 theaters. a two-week clock begins before it gets online. historically you'd have to wait
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at least twice as long before you can watch the movie at home at least 90 days. a photo got thrown into here. you can see ariana grande. she's apparently licking and spitting on the doughnuts. she's also heard saying she hates america. unfortunately for the shop health officials downgraded it one letter. that's because someone saw it. they had a special request so they went back to get the request. now they lost a letter. >> i don't know. weird story. >> everyone's talking about it. the video seems to be everywhere. >> she's a big star right now. vladimir putin is ready toed a yoga to his exercise routine.
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he's done pair glides riding horses huntinging and fishing. frequently photographed without a shird. >> tomorrow an online auction with a wide backstory comes to an end. you won't find it on places. a federal drug bust led to a seedure. jan crawford in washington shows us how one arrest could help many people head down the aisle. good morning. >> good morning. federal law enforcement broke up a drug ring in alaska three months ago. the owner went off to prison. now they have to get rid of the bridal merchandise so they're offering the dresses to the highest bidder. >> reporter: she's in a market for a wedding dress. when she heard about the auction she decided to come check it out. the starting bid for that dream dress, $46.
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>> the only difference coming here versus david bridal, you don't have the dress trying on experience but the price is greater. >> the government tracked an alaska store's bridal inventory nearly 4,000 miles to a federal building in downtown atlanta. >> how unusual is it you would be fielding contact toppers, wedding dresses? >> it's the most unusual i've seen in all my career work. >> reporter: when you think of properties seized in drug raids you think of fast cars speed boats, and designer merchandise. this auction named down the aisle a bridal skprav x trash began za is different. >> maybe they thought a bridal shop was easier to hide their
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money. >> curious shoppers can browse the lot online. the team is helping bring the production in under budget. these are federal employees moonlighting as weddle models but the atmosphere of a bridal shop has general service officer victoria knotts thinking about saying i do. >> i'll be married 25 years next year and i'm thinking about renewing my vows. >> you still have that atmosphere of oh this is an exciting moment in my life. it gives you that bridal gown experience. >> thank you so much. >> now, those items are worth nearly a half million. the money that they raise is going to the u.s. marshal service and given to kriek vim strijs and the agencies that help with those raids. norah? >> jane, thank you so much. matthew morrison melted the
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hearts the of "glee." ♪ now morrison is back on broodway in the newfoundland "finding neverland," the story of how "peter pan" came about. ♪ ♪ now i'm stronger ♪ matthew morrison is here at the table. good morning. >> good morning to you. >> congratulations. it's such a terrific show. >> thank you. that video gets me pumped up. that's my serious moment of the show. come on.
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get this note out. >> it really does display how great a singer you are. you were such a star on "glee" and now on broadway. how did you know it was time to return to broadway? >> i've about known for a lork time. i didn't have the opportunity. like you said in the clip this is home for me. came to new york as a young man. i went to nyu. and i got my first broadway show when i was 19 years old. i was on "foot loose," white boy break dancer and from there i moved up the ladder and kind of gained success and started getting roles and movies and stuff and then this great tv show came along. >> but this is your first broadway lead and it's a really physical part and you have to sing 12 songs? >> with a scottish accent. >> yeah. i've done a lot of great roles on broadway but being the leader of the show is so different.
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i often call my friend melissa white house the lead in "hairspray." it's tough. you're carrying a $50 million show on your shoulder. >> you say your body feels kind of beat up at the moment. >> yeah. i wanted to do everything i could. i started my career as kind of a dancer and stuff and i told the choreographer, let me do anything. but that was my 26-year-old self talking. and i'm 36 now. so it's a little harder. i'm taking ice baths after the show. it's an intense show but i wouldn't change anything. >> when you look at your own career, "glee" was doing so well, even in season six. do you look back and they, maybe i could have done another season there, or are you happy with the transition? >> i'm happy with the transition. i think the show did everything it could do. it's so great to look back on the show and see the change that it made in this world,
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especially with what just happened with gay marriage and the supreme court. i feel like "glee" had a big voice of bringing those issues into people's living rooms so they could have a open conversation about it with their family. >> let me ask you. one of your first appearances on tv was with david lit let letterman. can you explain what fresh not kitty litter. >> it's not kitty litter. it was a boy's band. wow, that takes me back. yeah. i was 19 years old. it was a bunch of broadway people. i wasn't on broadway yet. this is my step into the broadway community because these guys were all in "foot loose," and -- >> very magic mike. >> totally. >> look at that six-pack. >> was the only one not in "foot
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loose." the choreographer was like you're great, you should audition for the show and that was. >> it what do you owe david letterman? >> i owe him a lot. i've been on his show, i think, three times. as an actor, you know i think that was like the -- one of the highlights of my show was being on his talk show and so glad that i got it in before he left. >> so glad. >> thank you so much. >> very exciting. herpaintings. maki
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become a popular artist but it led to a big life change. >> reporter: art lovers gathered to take in tiny portraits. the exhibit best observed with a magnifying glass is called ants in nyc and it's many paintings by south african artists. >> when you see this stretched all around the gallery, what does i it's weird that you work with them so much you kind of stop seeing them and now just looking at it, it's a very overwhelming feeling. >> reporter: each piece like this portrait of a hot dog about is the size of a quarter or two south african rands. you must have a steady hand. >> i do. i wasted my life.
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i should have been a brain surgeon. >> reporter: lutz's career took a different path. the decision to paint something new every day started. >> it started that i didn't want to be an artist. i wanted to do a normal 9 to 5 pay the bills and spend the day finishing one artwork. >> why did you desigh to pate so small? >> it was exactly what i could finish in an hour. the amount i put into a square-inch stays the same no matter how big the painting. if i painted an-inch, it would be an hour of work. >> reporter: the one-hour limit didn't last long. when she began posting her size on instagram, followers flooded her with requests to buy it. her daily routine went into a second year. >> you have something like 190,000 instagram followers.
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>> yeah. no pressure. >> do you think of it as pressure? >> not really. i see it as fun. you can't be too serious about something like that. it is my job but if i see it as my job it becomes something different. >> when she started her paintings were selling for about $40. today they go for nearly a thousand. >> i knew that she had traveled to new york and she really loved it there so i wanted to do something new york-inspired. i did the statue of liberty. >> why did you think of doing a picture a day and marking it with a date? >> i'm a very sentimental person and keep a journal. i also love marketing every day and remembering what you were, remembering what you did and really grasping hold of it and putting it down. >> this date is especially significant. why? >> that's the day we got engaged. >> her wedding day is marked with a picture of the place where she and her husband hope
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to marry? >> do you step back and say, wow, look at what i've done? >> i'm a little embarrassed about the earlier stuff. i think that's the nice thing about this is you can actually see progression and you can see it's not just a pointless exercise. you grow as an artist and your ooh style changes and you learn things. i think that's wonderful about it. but, yes, i'm very proud. >> lorraine lutz sold all of the 730 paintings she painted in 2013 and 2014. the picture at this gallery are all prints with the exception of ten new york city originals to commemorate her first show outside of south africa. >> are you an artist now? >> yes. well, i call myself a painter. >> the difference? >> well, some people it's all
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about concept. for me it's about the skill and time and patience that it takes to put paint to paper. so that's a painter in my mind. >> right. >> her show will be in brooklyn. she said she started painting small because a jewelry designer had seen her artwork and asked for miniature drawings and that's somehow he learned to paint an inch wide and instead of an hour, she spends seven to eight hours. >> it's amazing what she can do. >> love that. great interview. see what happened what ena deejay got bored and sparked outrage in a crowd. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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a crowd at a music festival in australia. after work them into it with a beat he cut it with a ballet -- >> i think they don't appreciate it. >> they were probably born after. >> it is one of the '80s classic. >> that does it for us. be sure to tune in to the "cbs evening news with scott pelley." for more news any time watch cbsn on cbsnews.com. we'll see you tomorrow for more "cbs this morning."
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those seats would be hot. >> why she's so passionate about her charity. >> dedicated to helping families. >> my feet sweat. >> the shocking cosmetic procedure that can keep you from sweating. how a deadly diagnosis gave her a new life. >> welcome everybody to the doctors, we are excited for today's show and our first guest, emmy award-winning leeza gibbons, she's done it all, a wife, a mother, ceo, best-selling author. and she's not done, she joined
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