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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 14, 2016 7:00am-8:59am EDT

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black silk, from folgers. . >> rich: good morning. it is thursday, july 14th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." a "cbs news"-"new york times" pom shows donald trump surging in the national race after a rough week for hillary clinton. trump reveals when he will announce his vice presidential candidate. a serial killer is on the loose in one of the nation's biggest cities. police are searching for the gunman who shot nine people, some right outside their homes. and a fingerprint or eye scan could help travelers skip those long security lines for price? does this threaten his privacy? >> we will begin with today's eye opener, your world in 90
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seconds. >> and now we will move potentially for but in my own mind i am probably thinking about two. >> donald trump closes in on a running mate. >> my hunchs i hes i coming to california thinking about gingrich and hens nggirich. >> this man is the nominee of the party of lincoln. we are watching it become the party of trump. ♪ amazing grace >> a final farewell in dallas, the fallen officers remember the heroes. >> police in fresno, california, have released graphicta fooge ofosiss shooting an unarmed teenager. >> get down on the ground now! >> united kingdom has a new prime minister, teresa may. >> together, we will build a better britain. >> a man hunt for a serial killer was hit seven times over the past five months. >> they made sure someone was in the car and opened
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>> a massive brush fire outside los angeles. >> this fire is burning towards communities. >> it's a little b itscary. >> what's going on out there? >> a female car jacking suspect on the run. >>k loot a those sparks in there welcome to the espeys awards. >> we begin on a sober note. >> i'm not seeing th vealue of black and brown bodies has to stop. enough is enough. >> we all have to do better. >> all that matters -- >> i think i'm questioning her mental capacity. >> justice ginsberg has an insuo lt ttrump, which is a no-no. >> ginsberg said chop for life mo folks. >> on "cbs this morning." >> following her endorsement by bernie sanders, he began the task of wooing his 13 million primarily young supporters. i have to say, she's off to a real awkward start.
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>> welcome to "cbs this morning," just days before the political conventions, the presidential race is a statistical tie. >> that is the finding of this morning's "cbs news"-"new york times" pom. it shows both hillary clinton and donald trump with 40% support nationwide. the poll was conducted days after the fbi announced the findings of its investigation into hillary clinton's private e-mail servers. the same poll one month ago showed clinton leading 43-37%. >> and trump confirmed last night that he'll announce his vice presidential choice tomorrow morning. his "options action" are governor mike pence, governor chris christie and major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. in a brief conversation i had with newt gingrich after his final meeting with dd
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described the entire vice presidential vetting process as quote amazing. he said trump was relaxed and in good humor, gingrich considers himself a finalist along indiana governor mike pence and in a city home to the ncaa, he announced his final four. >> at three, potentially four, but in my own mind, i probably am thinking about two. >> reporter: donald trump's mind is the only one that matters as he summoned his family from new york to meet with mike pence at the indiana governor's mansion. their second face-to-face encounter in two days. trump then left for downtown, indianapolis, to run with other potential running mates. first former house speaker newt gingrich retired from congress in 1999 and ran for president, himself, four years ago. four-term alabama senator jeff sessions, the first senator to back trump also flew to indiana for a meeting. trump spoke by phone with new
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who has been the most outwardly loyal since ending his own presidential campaign. >> i want to pick somebody who is solid, who is smart. i'm not looking for an attack dog. >> reporter: a new cbs-"new york times" pom shows two-thirds of supporters say a vice presidential candidate matters in their vote for president. >> gingrich, pence? >> reporter: gingrich signaled he is one of trump's final two. >> this is a little self serving, one is me. i think trump has two very good people he is looking at in a serious way. >> how about governor pence? >> reporter: pence kept up appearances, at fort wayne appearances. a devout evangelical christian and fiscal conservative, pence served six terms in congress but must notify the state soon if he remains on the ballot. >> i'm governor of indiana. i'm seeking re-election. i'm honored to be considered. >> reporter: we have
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current list of speakers for next week's convention, ail moaning them, tim tebow, peter thiel, former new york city mayor rudy guiliani and eileen collins, the first woman to command a space shuttle mission. >> thank you, major. hillary clinton will focus on her potential running mate in washington today a. new poll shows 28% of voters see clinton as honest and trustworthy, that itself the smallest we seen in this election so far. 67% of bernie sanders supporters now say they will vote for hillary clinton. that's a gain of 4% from a month ago. fancy cordes is on capitol hill where she will be in a few hours. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. that's right. she will be meeting with all of the senate democrats here on capitol hill. a number of them aren't just her former colleagues, they are her potential running mates. not that they'd admit it. >> i kind of feel like i will stay in the
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rule for clinton's vp contenders, don't acknowledge you want the job or that you are even being vetted. >> i'm just referring questions about the best vice presidency to the woman that has to make this decision. >> i think the vice president rarely matters that much. >> reporter: ohio senator sharod brown, will attend that closed door meeting, including senator elizabeth warren and senator tim kaine. >> that's something we haven't talked about. >> reporter: checkpoint let's trump do all the talking out this morning. >> i could stand in the middle of fifth avenue and shoot somebody and i wouldn't lose voters. >> it features children doing the listening. >> oh, i don't know what i said. >> reporter: the message? trump is r-rated and a bad role model. >> when kids are scared by political candidates
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debates, it's a sign that something has gone badly wrong. >> reporter: but in a new "cbs news"-"new york times" poll, it's clinton's popularity that has taken a hit. 50% of voters say clinton's prepared for the job, down nine points from last month, though, it's still better than the 30% who say trump's prepared. clinton's campaign says she just had a bad week last week with that scolding from the fbi director and that her poll numbers will bounce back, but her opponent is about to name his running mate and about to hld his convention, two things, charlie that historically provide their own balances. >> thanks, nancy. bloomberg managing editor john heilemann is in cleveland. she also co-host on showtime, a division of cbs. good morning, john. >> reporter: how is it going? >> it's
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have to say about the vice presidential pick. do you have outside information? >> reporter: i think i have the information that eb else has. we have it down to three. trump said it could be two, it could be four. it looks like mike pence, newt gingrich and chris christie on the finalists on the apprentice. gingrich shows it's the two of them, him and pence, folks are saying to us, don't count christie out. it could be that guy. i beaver there is a 5% chance it could be a surprise. maybe gayle king will be on the tick. >> i can assure you, gayle king is not on the ticket at all. i'm very happy where i am. on the list of two-to-four candidates we heard so far, john, who do you think helps him the most? >> reporter: well, i think all three of those guy versus downsides, all three have upsides. i think it's a bad thing to say. mike pence is on the far
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trump has problems with those folks. they question whether he is one of them. peps would probably reassure them a bit. christie is the guy i think he likes the most and has known the longest and probably would like to hang out the most. probably the most likely to have upside in terms of performance on the convention stage and on the debate stage, gingrich is the guy with the most experience in terms of government. he has been on the national stage the longest. although he's the most unpredictable could maybe be the guest gompg partner, because he has been in washington so long and understands the legislative branch. it depends on how trump is thinking ab it. that's a little of a mystery. >> news out this morning from the "cbs news"-"new york times" poll that shows trump gaining grounds on issues in an 11-point lead on jobs in the economy. it's a dead heat on terrorism and national security issues. even while clinton continues to give these policy speeches. is that a warning sign for her? >> reporter: well, there are a
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i'd say his her ore trump's numbers are terrible, they got worse in the brutal drubbing from james cummings last week even as he decided not to recommend charges against her. trump has the businessman credibility, even though a lot of people criticize his business dealingles. it's the case that voters see business people being strong on the economy. you know, he's led on a bunch of these attributes for a while now t. interesting thing is if you look at these battle grounds state polls coming out in the last 48 hours the last week or so, for automatic damage trump did himself in the previous month-and-a-half, he sort of made up ground in the last week-and-a-half post-comey t. race is now basically a dead heat against. >> is it more a vote against her or something he is doing positively? >> reporter: look, i think, charlie, i think he managed to not make a lot of mistakes in the course of the last week-and-a-half. as you know he made a lot of mistakes, things that would have killed any other candidate in may and june.
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period difficult on her without inflicting further damage on himself. what he didn't do is capitalize on that moment. he might be in a better place had he driven a more kind of disciplined message against hillary clinton in the course of that rough patch before all of the tragedies that took place last week as you guys know in louisiana, minneapolis and dallas, which blotted out political news over the course of the weekend. >> john heilemann, good to see you in cleveland. we will be joining you in cleveland. thanks so much. >> reporter: all right. good to see you guys. and dramatic new video from body camera shows the deadly shooting of an unarmed california man last month. officers shot 19-year-old dylan noble in a few minutes. he ignored dozens of commands to show his hands. >> police department. show your hands, if you come forward, will you get shot. >> noble can be heard saying he quote hated his life as he walked towards officers.
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to the ground. the fresno police chief is awaiting an internal affairs investigation. >> this video is going to raise questions in the minds of people, just as those questions exist in my mind as well. primarily, with the last two rounds fired by the officers necessary. >> the names of the officers involved have not been released t. chief says they have been threatened. president obama warns there is no quick solution for the country's racial tension himself. he met with activists, officials and law enforcement officers yesterday at the white house for about four hours. the president expressed hope for change, but he warned, this will take some time. >> we have to as a country sit down and just grind it out, solve these problems. and i think they, if we have that kind of sustained commitment, i am confident we can do so. >> people who attended the preting said it was candid and
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was really just the beginning. >> the military record of the gunman is in the dallas police ambush is being reviewed by the army him officials want to determine how he received an honorable discharge despite a recommendation he'd be thrown out of the service. today is a week since the attack that killed five police officers. three of them lorne ahrens, brent thpson and michael smith. dallas police chief david brown saluted his fallen comrades. manuel is at police headquarters where the tributes continue. manuel, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. dallas has been grieving since last thursday's attack. yesterday, the city paused for several hours to begin burying three of its own. >> there is no comfort for us right now. we are well, we are wounded. r
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officer michael smith, his younger sister called the father of two and army veteran a guardian. >> my brother's murder will not be in vain. >> reporter: thousands gathered to pay tribute to the three fallen officers, including law enforcement, from across the country. the procession for officer lorn% ahrens ran for miles in a steady stream of blue. his colleagues described him as larger than life. >> lorne was passionate about police work. we want to make sure from everybody top down went home safely ♪ amazing grace. >> he showed me even though i would doubt myself from time to time i am strong and can do anything. thursday, july 7th, 2016, that was all ripped from me. >> reporter: dallas transit officer and marine veteran brent thompson married his wife
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shooting. she is also a transit officer. >> to the cowards that tried to break me and my brothers and sisters, you know your hate made us stronger. >> every child thinks their dad is a hero, but the six of us up here can hold our heads up high knowing my dad a hero. one thing i always said to my dad when he left out the door was, "good-bye, daddy, i love you, be safe." tonight we say our final, good-bye, daddy, we love you, be safe. >> reporter: funeral services for the other two officers kill in the attack, officers patrick 82 zamarripa and michael krol. krol will be flown to his native michigan, where he will be laid to rest. gayle. >> manuel, thank you. some of the biggest nba stars are speaking out against racism and gun violence. powerful woram
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year's espey awards, big names in sports, entertainment and politics voiced concerns about the issues pressing this country. jim axelrod shows us the most moving moments of the evening. good morning. >> reporter: good morning the espeys recognize achievements in the world of sports. last night, there was no getting away from the headlines that have been dominating the news in this country him some of the biggest names in the sports world use their high platform to call for action. >> laquan mcdonald, philandro kass still. >> reporter: nba stars chris paul lebron james and dwyane wade opened the show with a plea. >> the racial profiling has to stop. the shoot-to-kill mentality has to stop. not seeing the value of black and brown bodies has to stop. but also to the retaliation has to stop. it's time to look in the mirror and ask
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doing to create change? >> reporter: the calls to curb gun violence continue as she accepted the arthur ashe award for her son. he was shot and killed last year while protecting others from gunfire. >> i think tonight of why he died and what you can do tomorrow to pre vent the next innocent young man or woman from being lost as well. >> reporter: vice president joe biden presented the jimmy v award after a coach whose public battle with cancer became an inspiration. >> like jimmy v, my son, bo, never let cancer touch his heart or his soul. he lived his entire life by my father's code, which was, never explain, never complain, just get up. >> reporter: this year
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recipient side line reporter chris sager who spent the last year-and-a-half battling leukemia. >> i want you to know that your will to live and to fight cancer to make all the difference in the world. i will live my life full of love and full of fun. it's the only way i know how. >> the espeys also paid tribute to the iconic sports figures who died this year, including pat summit and muhammad ali. >> it was a moving program last night. chris sager, it's always good seeing him looking to great. >> thank you so much. police in phoenix say a string of random shootings, ahead, an app
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>> some liberals are siding with donald trump in a supreme showdown. >> ahead,
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ginsberg to back off. could her explosive comments come back to haunt the democrats? >> the news is right back here on "cbs this morning." beyond has a natural grain free pet food committed to truth on the label. when we say real meat is the first ingredient, it is number one. and we leave out corn, wheat and soy. for your pet, we go beyond. i am a lot of things. i am her best friend. i am her ally. so i asked about adding once-daily namenda xr to her current treatment for moderate to severe alzheimer's. it works differently. when added to another alzheimer's treatment, it may improve overall function and cognition.
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the days of long airport security lines could soon be over for a price. ahead the high-tech hardware that's drawing flyers and
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questions. tomorrow, stephen colbert returns to studio 57. guess what?
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>> engineers in sweden developed a few remote air traffic control system designed to reduce airport delays and increase efficiency. to be fair, anything would be an improvement over the current air traffic control guys. ♪ do do do do >> air traffic control guys don't think that's funny. >> i love tsa. i think they do a great job, also big fans of our show. >> they have a hard job to do. >> lots of time in the tsa line, they say, do i know you? wait a minute, yo you work with gayle and charlie. >> some say do you work at the bank? stop n shop? no, cbs. welcome back to "cbs this morning," got one of those faces. coming up this half hour, giving the private sec
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the security business. we'll look at technology that helps you skip the long lines. critics warn it can create a dividing line. >> plus, justice ruth bader ginsberg is known for her own sometime. some of her supporters say the notorious rbg may have gone too far, outrage over her comments of a donald trump presidency. >> time to show you the headlines around the globe the "wall street journal" says america's power grid is vulnerable to attacks that could cause blackouts. they documented dozens of break-ins at utility substations. an arizona facility was vandalized twice without anyone being caught. most are unmanned. many lack video under surveillance despite federal orders to secure these substations. the "new york times" reports on john kerry's assessment of the iran nuclear dome on its one-year anniversary. in france today the secretary of state said iran is living up to the bargain. since the deal was announced,ine
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sanction would be eased. kerry said other issues are being worked on. the u.s. and iran are still at odds over syria, iraq and p the britain times reports n the new prime minister spending her first day in office. it points to teresa may's clean break from the past, yesterday, she officially became prime minister. she has the courtesy already. she is britain's first prime minister since margaret thatcher. the chinese government is suspected of hacking into computers at the frol deposit corporation. they say the alleged incidents happened in 2010, 2011 and 2013. an ad advanced per system threat compromised 12 computer work stations and ten servers. a chinese embassy spokesman says china firmly opposes all forms of cyber crime. u.s. news and world reports says anger management is
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on america's roads. nearly 80% of drivers told aaa they experienced anything rer, agression or road rage. more than half confessed to purposely tailgating, many admitted yelling or honking at another driver. raids your hand if are you guilty at home. >> road rage? >> sometimes of yelling or honking your horn, yeah, sure. >> me too. are you not alone. >> or giving the finger? [ laughter ] >> wow, i have never done that. >> yes, i have. >> you have? >> i am not proud of it, yes, i have. i have. it's not nice, i know. not nice. >> i was there. there were certain incidents. no, just kidding. just kidding. . police are hunting for a serial killer terrorizing the phoenix area in the last four months, several people have been shot and killed. two other victims were wound. investigators believe all of the attacks are connected. carter evans is outside police phoenix headquarters with the race to pre vent more
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carter, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the entire city of phoenix is on edge as police try and track down this so-called serial shooter and authorities are really still trying to determine if it's one person or a group of people hein these crimes. >> but they went to the front of it and looked through the windshield. >> reporter: that's when they opened fire? >> that's within they opened fire. >> reporter: his daughter stephanie and 12-year-old granddaughter malia were shot and killed in his driveway in june along with their friends angela leonard. >> 14 bullets in my daughter. 12 bullets in my granddaughter, eight in the other girl, that's 34 bullets. >> reporter: since march, nine people have been shot in about a 50 square mile area of phoenix. several people died. police released this sketch of a suspect. not much else. >> it clearly meets the definition of a serial shooter. >> reporter: does there team e seem to be a pattern with the victims? >> there is not. right
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determined a motive in any one of these eight incidents. we haven't found a relationship between our victims. >> reporter: evidence points to shooter or shooters. victims have been shot at night. many outside of their homes, with a killer using a handgun, arriveing and depart income a sedan. >> this guy has to get off the street and pay for what he did. >> reporter: nancy pena lost her twin brother horaceio. >> reporter: you are still trying to deal with the loss of your brother, at the same time, you are afraid it can happen to you? >> they have not only taken my brother but they have taken my sense of security away. so they have me as a victim along with the ones that passed away. >> reporter: stephanie alice's mother hopes justice will help her family move forward. where do you go from here? >> who knows? i really don't know. >> reporter: now the last shooting that authorities were able to connect to this string of shootings w
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and they've stepped up patrols in the neighborhoods most affected. they've got dozens of investigators working this case and, norah, they are now offering a $1,000 reward for information that leads to an arrest. >> that story is really scary for people, carter, thank you so much. going pushback this morning over justice ruth bader ginsberg trashing donald trump. the "new york times" opinion page reads, donald trump is right. the "wall street journal" questioned if the 83-year-old justice is fit to serve. jan crawford the there with this extraordinary clash. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, you know justice ginsberg. she has always been one to speak her minds, her comments about donald trump are unprecedented in modern history. we never had a supreme court justice lash out at a leading candidate. even her liberal defenders say her comments went over the line. >> this is all the more reason why i hope i win. >> reporter: justice ginsberg
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new favorite target. >> i think i'm questioning perhaps her mental capacity, yeah, for her to do that was either a very dumb mistake and she has been criticized by people that would always be at her side. >> reporter: her comments sparked criticism from both sides. >> ruth bader ginsberg calling donald trump a faker, why he hasn't file his tax returns. >> she said, i can't imagine where we will be with donald trump as president. >> reporter: they say she needs to drop the political punditry and name calling. the washington post says it undermines public faith in the impartiality of the courts. >> one of the things we ask them to do as judges is to set their personal views aside. >> reporter: law professor says she may be overreacting and her comments may be inappropriate and could have consequences. >> heaven to bid we have a replay and there was an election
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clinton that made it to the supreme court, it would be appropriate if, if motions were filed for justice ginsberg to recuse herself. >> i, ruth bader begins berg -- >> reporter: nominated in 1983 by president clinton, she's the oldest justice and leading liberal voice. trump in a tweet earlier this week says ginsburg's comments show her mind is shot. >> i don't see she is too old for her job or this is a sign of more than she made remarks she shouldn't have in a few interviews. >> reporter: now, on wednesday, justice stephen breyer was asked for his response to justice ginsberg's comments, he said, if i had an opinion, i wouldn't express it. gayle. >> a lot of people are expressing that. >> programs it wentz over the line, "new york times" editorialize, the interesting thing, too, is she has always been outspoken. secondly, she has that great friendship with justice scalia. >> i
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taking her asigned and saying, stop talking? >> remember when she dozed off, she said, i had a couple. >> a couple glasses at dinner. she speaks her mind for sure. if the tsa program doesn't get you through the airport close yuf. kris van cleave shows us what may be an alternative. what atms did for banking.s do we'll show you about the price and your privacy. >> we want to go with you through the cbs all access app right there on your digital device. we will loehok bind pokemon go the biggest reported game in u.s. history. wow. we'll see you when we come back. and i said "come to class, let's start walking together" and i said "and i bet you money you'll be able to do that senior walk". that day i said "ok it's me and you girl, me and you!" i said "if you need to stop, there's a bench we'll just hang out in the shade."
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♪ . >> the summer travel season is well under way, for many airports, the busiest days are yet to come t. tsa helped long waits at checkpoints by hiring new screeners. it says most passengers get through in less than 30 minutes. th
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cleave at baltimore-walk airport shows us a concierge service showing some skipping the line all toke. i like the sounds of this, good morning. >> reporter: good morning they call it clear the idea is to get to you that security line as quickly as possible. the company sees a future where you can show up with no i.d., no credit card, no boarding pass. all you would need a fingerprint and your backs. >> please look into your eyes. >> reporter: this is the latestest way to beat the security lines. >> you put both thumbs on that pad. >> reporter: clear is a private company using biometric iris scan or finger print to identify a passenger's identity. lead that passenger along a long line of people waiting to have their i.d.s checked by the tsa and screening. >> the hassle that everybody
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upgrade. >> reporter: the ceo caryn seidman becker. >> they are like what atmed on easy pass has done. >> reporter: clear is different from pre check, which allows pre screened passengers to go through an expedited physical screening. nearly 600,000 customers use full services like business traveler erica heinemann. >> reporter: how much do you think it costs you on a busy day? >> 30-plus minutes. >> reporter: 30 minutes? the time savings come at a cost $179 a year for clear and dlf 85 for tsa pre check. >> i think it is creating one more break between the upper crust and the hoy ploy which is not happy. >> reporter: they sigh these concierge services add to overall travel frustration. >> i don't mind paying my $85 to the government to
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check. however, it's a little distasteful no me when private companies can sort of horn in on a government operation and find a way to make money from it. >> reporter: another concern, all that biometric data in the hands of a private company. i would think it would be an attractive target to try to hack? >> we are extraordinarily focused every day on the security of our data, on the privacy of our member's data is core to our business, is core to our mission. >> reporter: clear is not affiliated with the tsa. but administrator says he sees the potential for biometrics to improve airport security. right now clear is in 13 airports nationwide with the goal of being in 24 by the end of the year. norh. >> kris, thank you. it is interesting. everybody is looking at different ways to get through security quicker. >> i don't want to remember the hoy ploy. i want to get through the line faster. that's never fun standing in that line. >> you are pre check,
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>> it does. kayakers stumble upon an unforgivable site in san francisco bay. ahead, their dramatic encounter with a group of humpback whales. look at these beau
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rity were rated as cleared or minimal at 12 weeks. be the you who talks to your dermatologist about stelara®. >> oh! oh my god, that was so close! >> a group of kayakers will never forget how they interrupted a beating frenzy by humpback whales. she and her friendsic noted a flock of birds swarming overhead on san francisco bay. they got closer and stumbled on five humpbacks splashing around and feeding in the water. >> i love our headlines, alive
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>> kayak versus whale. i'm going for the whales. >> i like the song. >> you win that one. >> i loo tick song "i feels so close to you right now, it's a force field" here in the green room, that's what you are, bob, a force field. >> i love that. >> so we're going to talk a little politics after the break. getting ready for the convention? is anything going on? bob schieffer, bob johnson, we'll be right back. why suffer? stand up to chronic migraine... with botox®. botox® is the only treatment for chronic migraine shown to actually prevent headaches and migraines before they even start. botox® is for adults with chronic migraine, 15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more. it's injected by a doctor once every 12 weeks. and is covered by most insurance. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness
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. >> rich: i love it. it's thursday, july 14th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead, including the world going wild for pokemon go. businesses apparently love it, too. mellody hobson looks at who is likely making money off this free app. first, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. >> after his final meeting with donald trump the former house speaker described the entire vetting process a qsuote amazing. >> it looks likes mike pence, kristi's tee are the finalists. a number are her potential running mates. >> atlanta has been ginrievg nc
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begin burying three of its own. the espeys recognize achievements in the world of sports, but last fight, there was no way getting away from if hesline dominating the news in this country. >> it's time to look in the mirror and ask ourselves, what are we doing to create change? >> reporter: the company shows a future, where you show up at the airport, no i.d., no credit card, no boarding pass. all you need is a fingerprint and your backs. >> new research shows dinosaurs made closer to the coo of a pigeon on the mumble of an osstrich. it's really going to change jurassic park. >> aflac. aflac! >> i'd still watch it, i'd still watch it, though. . >> rich: i'm charlie rose with gayle king and for ra o'donnell, a "cbs news"-"new york times"
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race for president is neck and neck. hillary clinton and donald trump are tied at 40%. clinton led our poll a month ago by six points. >> both candidates are vetting potential vp choices. donald trump will announce his running mate tomorrow morning. trump and his family met yesterday with indiana governor mike pence. he faces a deadline tomorrow in running for re-election. trump met with future gingrich and senator jeff sessions. he spoke on the phone with governor chris christie. crump described what he is looking for in an interview last night. >> i want to pick somebody who is solid, smart, i'm not looking for an attack doc. frankly, i'm looking for somebody who understands what we are talking about. i'd rather have the whole thing be on policy. i've said that to you before. people thif of as an attacker. i'd rather talk about policy. if we can take our company against hillary clinton and only talk about
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things we are talking about, i'd be very happy. >> our new poll shows donald trump makes significant strides on big issues. clinton led on terrorism and national security in june and tied on the economy and jobs. now donald trump is tied on national security and 11 points ahead on the economy. clinton's 8-point lead on illegal immigrants is down to just 3 points. "cbs news" contributor bob schieffer is with us. he is our former "face the nation" moderator. bob. good morning. great to see you. so i know you were on capitol hill earlier this week. what are you hearing from the republicans aheaded of the convention? >> they don't know about this. it's like harry potter he whose name is mentioned, i was going around the senate, you hear senators who never bring up trumps name. they talk about -- >> what do they call him? >> i will support the nominee or i'm going to
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nobody, you know, really brings up his name. it was interesting. john borasso, a very conservative senator from wyoming. he was chairman of the platform committee. is. he presided over the platform committee for two days and somebody told me that in those two days they couldn't remember him ever mentions donald trump's name, said, you know, he mentioned ronald reagan a lot but said he never got around to saying trump aloud. now that to me kind of sums up sort of the establishment side of the republican party and the -- >> the question is will they try to do something in terms of the dell gapts and allowing them with the rules committee to be able to change their vote? >> you know the rules committee is going to start meeting today. i go es this afternoon and tomorrow and there will be this movement. this never trump movement. if they can get i think 28
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in what 100-something people on the committee, they can get a minority vote out. then they would have to vote on it on the floor of the convention. that would be to unbind the candidates that are placed. i am not sure that's going to go very far. but, you know, it's there. >> anything could happen in 2016? >> the people i was talking to, that's what they said, anything can happen. >> it's a long way to go until november. >> so what do you think will happen, what of the race, this new new york sometimes-cbs poll closing? >> yesterday, we had a poll showing he was ahead in some key swing states. >> yes. i think this poll is devastating i don't think there is any other way to put it. now he has opened up a big lead among independents, independents are the people who are going to decide this race. i mean, i keep hearing about democrats worried about, you know, how do we get to the bernie sanders people? how does hillary clinton get to
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i think it's in the middle where she's got to work on getting people and this poll really shows it. you know, now, i mean, think about this, we have managed to come up with two people here on the republican and the democratic side that a majority of americans don't like and even worse don't trust i mean, how does that happen? i mean, it seems to me that the main appeal of both candidates now is that they're not the other candidate. you hear people over and over saying, i can't vote for hillary, so i'm going to have to vote for trump. i don't like him, i'm going to vote for him. like hillary, i don't like trump, so i'm going to have to vote for hillary. it's nobody that's positive here. >> bob, are her numbers going down and his up? is that what you are say something. >> his numbers are holding steady as far as the trust and likability.
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33% of the people down trust him, but 28% of the people i mean do trust him, only 28% of the people trust her. i mean, in a uncan the of 340 million people? this is how we wind up this thing? i don't think we've ever had a choice quite like this. >> you have been to every convention since. >> 1968. democratic. this will be my what 25th if i live to get to the democratic convention, it will be my 25th. >> we will all be there together. today the "new york times" reports city officials in cleveland are working out plans to handle mass arrests should chaos break out on the streets. are you worried about what may happen in cleveland in terms of security? >> well, i am. i am. and you know i hope everything goes calmly. but i think this is going to be a very tense time. and i mean,
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know what's going to happen there. i hope it goes well. i hope we have a good convention. i hope they're all good conventions. but the country is really on edge. we saw that in dallas. we keep seeing it, you know, once again, cleveland is an open carrie city. you may see demonstrators there carrying weapons as you saw in the -- >> dallas chief brown said one of the problem that law enforcement had when they were trying to find that sniper was that there were a lot of people with guns and they didn't know -- >> and tell the good guys from the bad guys. it made it harder for law enforcement. >> bob, you spent a lot of time in the dallas-ft. worth area. reflect on this moment. >> well, people talking about running mates. i think i'd put that dallas police chief on the ticket. >> very well respected. >> i mean, this guy, really spoke well. you know, dallas went threw some hard
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the hard way. they were doing it right. barack obama was right when they said they were doing it right. to have that happen. you saw some very strong leadership. the mayor enjoys widespread support from african-americans and the business community and white people. both political parties. i think that you saw real leadership in the midst of a very awful time. you saw real leadership. i was really proud of dallas. i really was and ft. worth. >> i said dallas-ft. worth. >> the mayor and the chief getting rave reviews. thank you very much, bob schieffer. we will see new cleveland. >> i'll be there. >> historian ken burns has strong views on donald trump, why he is breaking with tradition when he joins us at the table. plus the nuance for
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. >> rich: just over a week after police, poke upmon go has becom one of the biggest apps of all time, people finds fix al characters in real life locations. it made headlines when two former marines helped find a murder suspect. the app surpassed twitter. people spend more times there than on facebook. nintendo owns part of the shares, they jumped on the craze. mellody hobson is here, joins us at the table. we have to say off the top your aerial investments which owns nintendo stock. we think are you going cha-ching, cha-ching. >> we have to share 2011, certainly the last week has been huge. >> it's been huge. >> up over 50%. >> so are you surprised that it's caught on so quickly? i'm thinking a week already to begin the same conversation as twitter? >> i think this is about viral
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game that everyone is talking about is that it straddles all of these various demographics. you have children play it. adults play it. as a result of that, it makes it something that can be berg. the fact that these characters are known and beloved to a certain generation. >> so it's free to download, how do all the companies involved, whether apple, google, nintendo, how do they make money? >> reportedly, they're making about $2 million a day, that itself what we're hearing. they're making the money based on the fact that individuals go in, they pay to upgrade. they pay to get through game faster or access to certain characters. that's where they are seeing the money they make right now. they split that with the app store, apple and google and the actual game manufacturer and this company they own towing. >> the news hasn't been all good. there has been safety concerns about the game, too? >> right. so the issue that people talked about is the security. because you are giving someone your location and access to your camera. >> so that's somhi
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say, is that a license for trouble? >> i'm not worried about the game company doing any untoward the players. the question is, would a hacker go if and use this against someone? are you not in your house, people know that that sort of thing, so there are questions out there but there's been nothing that has been reported as having been a breach in anyway t. other thing is some of the locations can be remote and so that, you know, if you are in a park or, you know, things like that. does that create a security risk for you? >> how do you explain this remarkable success? >> i think this is the new era. people have been waiting for this whole idea of ar to come into being that you'd have this virtual, this digital reality joined with real life and we are seeing this augmented reality together. this has been an odd thing coming. when we think about the games before wii, dancing if your living room, now they've cracked the code on
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think that was discounted. and it sets them up, all of these game companies for, you know, a big future in seeing this platform of augmented reality works. >> it is significant, balls ecat gets people to come and see the things they pay for? >> it will be a cash cow around consumer product. wait for this merchandise to come. >> a business, a pizzeria owner paid people to lure them into his business. >> we're seeing the petty cabs, which is smart. people going and taking the bicycle cats so they're not walking around in traffic. so there is all sorts of ways that the economy can benefit. >> it's just here in the united states, right? >> it's in some other countries, but it hasn't been ruled out globally. >> all right. we node to get on the pokemon go craze. mellody hobsoning thank you so much. >> it pays to know somebody. >> he's 14, white, hoping to start a different conversation on race in america.
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. >> rich: an atlanta teen is an internet star for his song about race in america. he has ten million views online. how his words are drawing intense reactions from all sides in this
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>> you are everyone who gets in the middle of upper class white boys. i am sorry. i started on the top of the ladder while you were born on the last rung. >> reporter: he crafted his race poem white boy's privilege. >> i think i will change faces with you in an instant. but if given the opportunity? would i? probably not. to be honest, being prich privileged is awesome. >> his poem was a plea for privilege for everyone. the kind he feels as a 14-year-old white kid going to a private school in atlanta. >> i wouldn't trade places with somebody and that i think a lot of people sometimes aren't so trul about that and sure that might get me some hate from different people. but i was just trying to be honest. >> i love it. because when i see a police officer, i see someone who is on my side. >> reporter: america was divided by crisis last week. moments of mayhem involving
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minnesota, baton rouge, dallas that's when the internet discovered his poem. many praised it. critics included bigots. >> i have been attacked by what i would call a white supremacist group. and they posted it and by giving it attention that it got to the people who do agree with me. >> i guess the change can be scary, equality shouldn't be. >> he originally wrote the poem for a school contest. he won and found a national audience. >> it's time to let go of that fear, it's time to turn that ladder into a bridge. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," mark strassmann, atlanta. >> the whole poem is four minutes, it's ironic it's coming from him, number one, it raises so many good points. >> the power of writing. >> yes. >> 'power of speaking. eggs lent. >> and turning a ladder into a
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>> welcome back to "cbs this morning." we will be anchoring live from the quicken loans at the site of the cleveland convention next week. are you guys ready? >> i am ready. i will be packing this weekend. i am looking forward to it, too. >> everybody will be watching. >> it will be interesting to see what happens in cleveland. we will all be there. coming up in this half hour the nation joins dallas in mourning after the deadly ambush of officers and the recent police shootings. tj jakes, how america can find a pathway from racial tension. >> the historian film maker and author ken burns. a vocal critic of d
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we'll say why he says the survival of the public is at stake. >> why it's time to show you this morning's headlines. the walk post explains why flying east may call severe jet lag than flying west. researchers found the average recovery time from a westbound trip over six time zones is about six days. but it takes eight days to bounce back from the same trip going east. the reason going west adds hours to your day. most people find that to be less stressful. >> ala hawaii. >> that's right. >> "time" reports on marijuana leading to a stunning drop in opioid prescriptions. med car part d enrollees from 2010 to 2013. in states where marijuana was legal, there were about 1,800 fewer doses of painkillers prescribed in any given year. the rums people use marijuana as recreational purposes. the website
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relation in the u.s. more than two dozen celebrities are describing acts by black people before they were killed by police in recent years. >> failing toal a lane change. >> riding in your girlfriend's car with a child in the back. >> running to the bathroom of your own apartment. >> i'd have to say outside of a corner store. >> riding a computer train. >> the video is called 23 ways you could be killed if you are black in america. alicia keys says at the end the time for change is now. >> after those police-involved shooting deaths of two black men and the ambush of five dallas police officers, some communities turn to religion for healing. td jakes held a meeting at his dallas megachurch on sunday, police, local leaders and family members of those killed by officers all took part t. aunt of alton sterling shot in baton rougsc
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video of his death. >> alton is my nephew. i call him my son. because i raised him. when i saw the first tape, it hurt me. it pained me. i was okay, because i saw my child/nephew didn't suffer, but when i saw the second tape, he suffered. he suffered. he suffered. >> bishop t. j. jakes leads the potter house church. we welcome you back to the table. >> thank you. >> really at this particular time, it was a week ago today, bishop jakes, this shooting took place. so many people are still mourning, still in pain. yet we must move forward. how in the world do we do that? >> it's going to be dpiflt for the families. it will be a pain that stays with them the rest of their lives in one form or another. for the countrys we have unresolved issues we have to deal with in order to go forward. i am happy to say dallas as a whole is not in the
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police brutality to the degree we see in other places. chief brown has done an amazing job. mayor rawls has as well. it's the irony of one lone ranger shooter who brought it to our lives. we are trying to heal and recover from it. >> the president says we must listen to each other. we must talk to each other. >> the talking is very uncomfortable. i this think we have a pro fencety to not say anything about it. maybe it will go away. we have seen this philosophy work in child abuse, po leftation, the catholic church. you can't shush things up, make them go away. you have to get the infection, there is any degree of infection in these communities. when you see the swelling and uprising, you have to respond with care and attention and allows people to victimize and not speak and not become professional at telling us what's wrong with us? >> i thought it was interesting to hear chief brown say at one point, it made
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know, we're asking cops to do too much, to solve all those societal and community problems, whether it's too many dogs in dallas, too many single mothers leading households, cops can't do all of those things. we have to ask ourselves what it's doing. >> it's way too much. then we have certain communities that are disproportionately dealing with issues like that, because of poverty and joblessness and police officers who go underpaid. one of the problems that came out in the democracy issue is they don't have a buck for tasers. so there is nothing in between the billy club and the gun for the police officer to go to. those types of things we have to listen at the police officers. we have to respond to them in such a way they do their job more effectively. >> i think we have to make a strong understanding there is on the one hand overt racism and implicit bias. the implicit bisass what we have not been dealing with. >> is that is true. i think when you call it race im, you are not burning crosses,
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we do have biases built into the fabric of the human experience. and we have to be intention am about compensating for those biases. one of the ways we can compensate is making sure the police department is a reflection demographic ally of the community that it serves. so that that sensitivity goes beyond the training that you had five years ago to a day-to-day experience that goes on in the patrol car. >> chief brown made that point. black live matter has been coming under fire, it's called anti-ratist, anti-cop, anti-white. what do you say and tying the shoot tore the black lives movement? >> when someone makes a statement, i would prefer they call it black lives matter, too, when a person makes a statement, you need to see what the intention is. they have been quite clear the intention is not so they white lives matters, white lives always mattered. it is to bring attention to the swelling and the problem in black communities, they feel black lives are fought treated as if
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that rather than argue about e semantics, the blood of our sons runs down the streets, we learn about terminologys. i think it's irrelevant. let's go on the issue behind the term and let's fix it. >> how do we start today? conversations in the churches and conversations in the communities? or do we need a sense of score card urgency? let's make sure these are not killings in vain. >> i think the conversations will bring attention it to. they will not fix it. until we admit to the fact that we have a criminal justice system. not just on the sidewalk, but the entire system is totally dysfunctional. most democrats are saying it is dysfunctional. we are not doing anything about it. we have to fix that thing. not only does it create injustice on the sidewalk. we also create communities of people once incarcerated who can't get a job. who can't get a place to say.
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survive if they don't have the very bakes and fundamental apples of life itself. >> that's something we know how to fix. >> we know how to fix it. we can fix it. we have been der lick. we are taking tax dollars from people. they're not getting representation, it's simply not fair. >> does this time feel different to you? this particular time what's happening with the shootings that happened in minnesota and baton rouge and now in dallas? do you feel that people are paying attention differently than they have before? >> i think they are. i think we reached a cusp that something has to happen. it's very troubling, many of the companies we have gone overseas to fix are riddled with the same problems we have in our country. we are not dealing with countries nation countries. we're not able to go to the united nations to fix it. we are dealing with gang wars all over the world. now we see gangs rise up in our cone e own countries. we have to be judicious to fix our own laundry before we fix our neighbors.
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shooting to dylan ruth. do you see the comparison? >> when the african-american did, they tied it baaing to the community and tied it to black lives miller. when dylan booth did what he did, they did not have to brunt one lone individual. we looked at him, his backgrounds, we looked at his past. we did not look at him as he represented the plight of an entire people. it is unfair, 40 million african-americans does not reflect all of those people. >> pastor, thank you for being here. ken burns, why he is teaming up with fellow
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>> you must do everything you can to the retrographic forces that have divide our house, no matter your political persuasion the dictatorial tendencies of the candidate with zero experience in the much maligned but subtle art of governance. >> film maker ken burns was passionate and political in his stanford commencement speech. the video became an online
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department cure. bumps has spent more than 35 years telling america's story in documentarys. they include the civil war, the national parks and recently jackie robinson, his first book more kids was published this week. it is called "grover cleveland, again!" a pressure treasury of american presidents. ken burns, welcome back. so what led to this, the book? >> yes. well, i'm a lucky man. i have four daughters age 33 to five. when my oldest. >> ken, ken, wait. 33 to five. >> not the same wife. >> 33 to five! i never thought of ken as a mac-daddy, okay. >> no i am very rich in daughters. my oldest daughter sar remarks i grilled her with the presence, i'd lie aaim, i'd say george, she'd say washington, aside adam, she'd get to grove cleveland again! then i said, we should do a
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book. then he daughter lily, taim same thing, after a long pause, i had olivia, after olivia i said i really have to do this, by the time willa my five-year-old got arounded to memorizing it this past year, we completed this book, which is a way to invite people into the political process. you know, we are talking all this morning about what's wrong with the political process. >> you were outspoken on that too. >> very outspoken. we want to talk about. time reading choices, in my bed- house it was "good night moon" "giving tree." you wanted to focus on the presidents. i think you show the humanity, their dogs, wife's, children. >> let's leave it to the later generation to say this person is bad, this person is good. we wanted to know their pets, siblings, their parents, where they came from, interesting things, andrew jackson was a practical joker, he liked to move people's outhouses to a new spot at
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>> the book is layers, too. >>. if are you a five-year-old, you could be like an abc book, can you people rise the list of the presidents, which is what you do. if you are a 6 or 7-year-old writing a half page report, or an 8 or 9-year-old or older, this book has enough layers in it that it ought to be able to compel you and send you to other places and to do so without the judgment we spend our adult likes making about these people. human beings. >> a great way to get people interested, too. john quincy adams had a petal gator. >> abraham lincoln is the tallest. madison the lightest. william howard taft the fattest. these are all human beings. >> did hughey get stuck in the bathtub? >> no, because he was so big, they had to order a special tub
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one step, one degree of separation to me, him stuck in the bathtub. >> you are right in terms of some of the presidents that have had some personal issues. >> yes. >> you write about that. you write it in such a way that it's not -- cellatious. that's the word. >> all of these president versus deep human flaws as we all do. then what we have to do as human beings is try our best not to make the other wrong, try our best to sort of balance these out. to understand that heroism isn't perfection but a kind of interesting negotiation between strength and weakness and that's what we try to do here. for children to understand that there is issues of race and slavery that are, you know, affecting almost all of the so far men here. there's a lot of things about finances and also of mistakes they've made. >> we return to politics and to speech. in this speech, which has gotten so much attention, you talked about american politics. >> y s
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passionate and political. i'd like to say i was passionate and american. as you know, charlie, i spent my entire professional life being down the middle. non-partisan, them american facts. i try in public television to reach all audiences that isn't the upper west side and russian hill. we have good ratings in alaska and oklahoma and arkansas and west virginia. i love it that way. there comes a time when we have to stop and say, you know, each one of the people here, even zachary taylor who had no previous experience was qualified for this office. >> that is not the case this year. and those of us who know a little about history are agast at the amount of oxygen this candidacy has gotten. >> why is donald trump not qualified? >> he is just temperamentally unsuited. we like to think of that in a psychological way. i can analyze him. he is riddled with lice and inconsistencies and will say whatever it takes. he didn't give us any
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but more important, if you are interested if having a healthy economy, if he does half the things he's promised, we will make the recession of 2008, 2009 look like child's play, if are you interested in world stability, what he said about nato, what that will produce with russia and china who will become more aggressive and adventurous, how he will react. we don't want that war. >> we have to go, it's been donald trump's attack, m-o to strike back. are you prepared for that? >> i'm an american. there is a wonderful part called the first amendment. i'm allowed to say something. i don't represent the views of pbs or anybody else. i represent myself as a citizen. i join two a lot of historians. >> ken burns, we got to go. can i pension
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morning. >> that does it for us, the news
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brian is bake in the great day kitchen. >> tavy boneu is here with a live performance. >> this is "great day washington." i'm chris leary. >> i'm markette sheppard. we are the hosts of "great day washington." what you don't see is chris has a fun
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ising. >> i am a news performer. >> do you remember the pocket song? i have been told not to sing any. >> whiz khalif take. nice guy. >> he will sing the new single which he collaborated with whiz on. maybe we can give him a crab cake. >> from who. >> in the "great day washington" kitchen. he will cook up crab cakes. >> we have superstars throughout the show. superstar chefs, rappers, moms that started a foundation for disabled children. >> i can't wait to talk to her. wonderful. >> we have a packed show. stay with us. you will enjoy
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espy awards aired last night and among the award winners were lebron james, of course king james took home awards, steph curry, aaron rogers and bryce harper from the nationals. now, the nats right fielder won for best major league baseball player of the year. but the show, it started out with an emotional plea to help change the state of race relations in america. carmelo anthony, chris paul, dwyane wade and lebron james took to the stage to urge all of us to make an effort toward racial unity here in america. and tomorrow the conversation will continue here on wusa 9 with a special program race, an honest conversations with bruce johnson. it will air commercial free tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. on wusa 9. a great, great

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