tv CBS Evening News CBS July 26, 2017 6:30pm-7:00pm EDT
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>> mason: good evening. i'm anthony mason. in his inaugural address, president trump said, "when you open your heart to patriotism, there's no room for prejudice." but today, the commander in chief decided there is no room for patriotic transgender americans willing to serve their country in the u.s. military. he is reimposing the ban lifted by president obama. major garrett begins our coverage of what's behind the decision and the fallout. >> reporter: the president's tweets sounded like new policy. "the united states government will not accept or allow transgender individuals to serve in any capacity in the u.s. military." but it caught the pentagon and congress completely off guard. the white house could not explain what it meant for the thousands of transgender individuals serving now. press secretary sarah huckabee sanders does dnot provide a time table for implementing the policy. >> obviously, it's a very
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it's not a simple one. but the president feels that it's the best one for the military. >> reporter: but you can't answer the question of what's going to happen to transgenders who are in the military now. shouldn't you have been able to answer that basic question, with a policy of this magnitude? >> look, i think sometimes you have to make decisions, and once he made a decision, he didn't feel it was necessary to hold that decision. >> we're ending the ban. >> reporter: the obama administration lifted the ban on transgender military service in june of 2016, then-defense secretary ash carter. >> transgender americans may serve openly. and they can no longer be discharged or otherwise separated from the military just for being transgender. >> reporter: estimates of transgender individuals in the military range from 1300 to 15,000. in his tweets this morning, the president said their continued service would burden the military with tremendous medical costs. but a 2016 study found transgender individuals who may
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opt for gender reassignment surgery or other procedures would add one-tension of 1% to overall military health care spending. ♪ the men who died >> reporter: during the campaign, candidate trump said he would fight for the transgender community. >> l.g.b.t. is starting to like donald trump very much lately, i will will tell you. >> reporter: today he ignore a question about the policy. >> reporter: john mccain, chairman of the senate armed services committee, rejected the policy implied by the president's tweets writing, "anyone who meets current medical and readiness standards should be allowed to continue serving." anthony. >> mason: major garrett at the white house. thank you, major. it was on this day in 1948 that president truman declared that all members of the armed services would have equal treatment and
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religion, or national origin. transgender service members say they deserve the same. here's jericka duncan. >> i've done 11 deployments, including five strategic patrols. >> reporter: lieutenant commander blake dremann served in oofg in 2011. two years later he started transitioning from female to male. today's tweets by president trump worry him. >> this does impact me, absolutely, personally. transgender people are already serving in various aspects of the military honorably, and they've shown no impact to readiness or the lethality of our mission. >> reporter: civil rights and veterans groups reacted withoutw outrage. the transgender american veterans association said, "we want to ensure that people know that right now, this is a tweet, not an official policy." but organizations like liberty council, who have been calling for a reversal of the obama-era folicy, applauded the president
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the military, according to founder and chairman matt staver, is a lethal weapon designed to protect america and our allies. it is not a social club, a social experimentation petri dish, or clubmed. allison jaslow is executive director for iraq and afghanistan veterans of america. is it disruptive to be transgender? is it disruptive, based on your own experience in the military, does it matter? >> you know, i think, honestly, what's disruptive is sort of shoot-from-the-hip policy making. >> reporter: do the comments that president trump taed maid set the transgender community back? >> i think that the comments that the president made today harm national security. we need soldiers in uniform. once you put that uniform on, you're the same as anybody who is next to you. >> reporter: as for dean reynolds, he said today's tweet shouldn't prevent any american from serving openly. >> i do want to say to the service members that are currently t
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military, continue to do what you're doing. >> reporter: the american medical association weighed in, saying there is no medically valid reinreign to exclude transgender personnel from military service. people should be honoring their service, not trying to end it. anthony. >> mason: one day after senate republicans brought their health care plan back from the dead, caring it to the senate floor on a stretcher, its chancing for survival are still in doubt. here's chief congressional correspondent nancy cordes. >> the motion is not agreed to. >> reporter: seven republicans bucked their leaders this afternoon voting along with every democrat against repealing obamacare without a replacement. ohio republican rob port man: >> i didn't think repeal only was appropriate because it doesn't provide that help for those people. they're stuck in the status quo. >> reporter: it came after nine republicans voted down their party's replacement plan last night,
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slashed medicaid, cut some taxes for the wealthy, and allow hoed healthy people to buy cheaper plans. >> the motion is not agreed to. >> reporter: in the absence of consensus, republicans are voting their way through a buffet of repeal plans. democrat mark warner: >> in effect, we have a series of option options that say do wt to pass legislation that would take 16 million americans off of health care? do we want to to pass legislation to take 22 million americans off health care? >> still a little bit of confusion about what is the path forward. >> reporter: alaska senator lisa murkowski was one of two republicans who voted against even starting debate without a clear plan. president trump tweeted this morning that she "let the republicans and our country down." do tweets like that from the president work? do they intimidate you, put pressure on you? >> if i were to focus on-- on every little morsel that comes out every day, i wn'
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time to do the job that i need to do. >> reporter: these votes will go on another couple of days, and it's looking increasingly likely the g.o.p. leaders will ultimately try to pass something known as skinny repeal, a bill that would only eliminate one or two elements of obamacare, but that would give them something, anthony, that they could take into a negotiation with the house. >> mason: putting the health care bill on a diet. nancy cordes, thank you very much. repealing and replacing obamacare was one of president trump's key campaign promises, so was bringing back jobs. today, he announced the electronics giant foxcon, will build a factory in wisconsin, expected to create 3,000 jobs. dean reynolds caught up with trump supporters in ohio. >> reporter: as his motorcade made its way to a big rally in youngstown last night, the president said he was struck by the closed factories he passed. >> my wife, melania, said, what happened?" i said, "those jobs have left
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facility nearby, or the 100 union workers at a g.m. supplier in austin town, or the 115 workers laid off at magna see thing systems, or the 15 who lost their jobs at jamestown industries. much of it since mr. trump took office. are the jobs coming back? >> no, they're not. >> reporter: gino defabio is editorial page editor of the "youngstown vindicator." >> he's playing on the fears and the emotions of people in areas that have been hard hit economically. >> it's great to be back in youngstown. >> reporter: at a separate event with veterans last night, the president suggested his message carried youngstown and mahoning county in november. >> democrats, they win in youngstown. but not this time. >> reporter: actually, mr. trump lost youngstown to hillary clinton, but her margin of victory, both here and in mahoning county, was only three points. in 2012, barack obama won by 28. anthony. >> mason: dean reynolds in youngswn
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congressman steve scalise of louisiana has been moved from a washington hospital to a rehabilitation facility. the house majority whip was critically wounded six weeks ago when a gunman opened fire on republicans practicing fair congressional baseball game. the hospital says scalise, who is 51, is in good spirits and looks forward to returning to work when his rehab is complete. and we look forward to it, too. a bill that would slap new economic sanctions on russia for meddling in the u.s. elections has reached the senate after the house overwhelmingly another proved it. understandably, the russians don't like it. and charlie d'agata found some of america's european allies are also opposed. >> reporter: senior russian officials say the new sanctions make no sense, and move already-tense u.s. relations into unchartered territory. andrew kourtunov, director of a prominent russian think tanks, told us russians a
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being thrown into the same basket as iran and north korea. >> so basically, the signal is that you three bad guys, you will get the same treatment from the united states congress, and with all due respect, but russia is not north korea. >> reporter: but the sanctions also have some unintended consequences. the bill, as written, now targets any company that contributes to the maintenance or construction of russia's energy export pipe lines. instead of just punishing the russians, they snared european and american business in their web. the vast nord stream ii pipe line between russia and germany, has huge financial stakes for more than a dozen european energy companies. america first cannot mean europe's interests come last, complained jean claude juncker, the e.u.'s chief executive. alexis rodzianko is president of the american chamber of commerce in moscow.
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would also pay a price. >> the ability to do business for large u.s. investment banks and global investment banks have been affected the most by sanctions. >> reporter: nobody knows how president vladimir putin will react, anthony, but a kremlin spokesman said today putin will wait until the new measures become law and then act accordingly. >> mason: charlie d'agata in moscow. thanks. a police supervisor in texas is defending the actions of a constable in a confrontation last week with a young man. millions have seen the cell phone video. some believe the constable crossed the line. omar villafranca reports. >> i'm trying to make my money. >> reporter: the cell phone video captures the moment when a harris county constable stopped 20-year-old marlon gibson last week as he and his brothers were passing out business cards for his lawn service. but the situation got tense
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after gibson asked the constable for his information. >> turn around and put your hands behind your back. >> for what? no. >> reporter: gibson, instead, left the scene. >> i still be doing this right here, my lawn service, making money. that's-- that's the goafl me. that's what we were doing, trying to support our family. >> reporter: the constable administrator says gibson left because of an outstanding misdemeanor assault warrant. >> when originally stopped and questioned by the officer, that's why he really didn't want to say who he was. >> reporter: constables came to his house later that day. gibson recorded that, too. the 20-year-old says constables broke down his door, tased him, and sicced a canine on him, leaving him with bite marks on his arm. >> can't even lift certain stuff no more. my arm is still numb in certain spots. >> reporter: but rosen says his officers did nothing wrong. >> we gave mr. gibson before the police dog even went upstairs. we told him four different times, we ideal, "police dog, police dog,
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>> reporter: the harris county constable says they have body camera video that backs up their side of the story but they have not released it yet. anthony. >> mason: omar villafranca. thank you very much, omar. coming up next on the cbs evening news, a death aboard a crews ship following a domestic dispute. and later, a computer helps find just the right puppy for a very special job. steve was born to move. over the course of 9 days he walks 26.2 miles, that's a marathon. because he chooses to walk whenever he can. and he does it with support from dr. scholl's. only dr. scholl's has massaging gel insoles that provide all-day comfort to keep him feeling more energized.
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state's territory, which means the investigation falls within the f.b.i.'s jurisdiction. it added that "our fleet security team has been coordinating with the f.b.i. and other local authorities." the emerald princess despartd sunday from seattle for a seven-day round-trip cruise. the 3,000-passenger ship docked this morning in juneau, so the f.b.i. could board and begin an investigation. no arrests have been made so far, and the authorities are trying to determine if the incident happened in international waters or u.s. territory. anthony, still a lot of details unknown but that's what we've got so far. >> reporter: thank you, stephanie. up next, trouble in paradise. wildfires force thousands off the beach on the french riviera. right? yes. so let me ask you this... how does diabetes affect your heart? it doesn't, does it? actually, it does. type 2 diabetes can make you twice as likely to die from a cardiovascular event,
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two officers responded to a 911 call earlier this month about a possible sexual assault. for reasons still unexplained, one of the cops fatally shot the woman who made the call. the officers are on administrative leave. wildfires are raging tonight in the drought-stricken hills and forests of southern france. the flames have forced thousands off the beach in the french riviera. large fires are also burning on the island of corsica, and in italy and portugal. when the cubs broke a 10 eight-year drought and won the world series, it apparently started a baby boom. nine months later, chicago hospitals are reporting a spike in births. according to the "chicago tribune," mothers are telling doctors their babies were likely conceived during the play-offs. one couple named their daughter ivy after wrigley field's famous ivy-covered wall. don't go away. we have puppies, lots of
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. >> mason: a guide dog school is teaming up with i.b.m., wall street's "big blue" to determine which puppies are good candidates to serve as guide dogs for the blind. here's don dahler with "big blue's" clues. >> reporter: if there are two things that seem to be polar opposites, it's the warm exuberance of puppies, and the cold intelligence of a super computer. >> watson can understand unstructured data. >> reporter: at guiding eyes for the blind in yorktown heights, new york, need has brought the two together. >> the
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increasing at an incredibly and somewhat alarming rate. good job, gus! >> reporter: thomas panek lost his sight in his 20s. he is c.e.o. of the guide dog organization. do all these docks that start off as a puppy, do they become guide dogs? >> unfortunately not. actually, only about 36% of the dogs make it. >> come on, buddy! >> reporter: the puppies need to be healthy, confident enough to take charge and make decisions on the fly, and most of all, they have to enjoy the work. >> that's a good boy! very nice job! >> reporter: for decades, guiding eyes for the blind has been accumulating data, some of it provided by puppy raisers like lorraine trapani who is also an i.b.m. employee. >> t.j. is four months old, and i've already started to collect data on his behavior, things that he might be interested in, a bee that's flying by-- things that we need to work on so that when he's a guide dog he can ignore those distractions. >> reporter: that's where i.b.m.'s watson comes in. so far, wa h
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a million billow bites of behavioral data and noose just the beginning. >> it's enabled guiding eyes to uncover insights that they couldn't previously do with the resource that they had. >> reporter: the system was able to predict with 100% accuracy which dogs would make it to graduation. >> come on, buddy! >> reporter: it cost $50,000 to produce a guide dog, whether they graduate or not. improving the odds for picking puppies will not only stretch the charity's precious dollars. it will give dogs like t.j. an opportunity at a rewarding life. don dahler, cbs news, yorktown heights, new york, new york. >> mason: t.j. just haches to be the name our director and he liked that story and see did we. that's the cbs evening news. thanks for watching. good night. [000:28:55;00]
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♪ at webuyanycar.com >> emancipation dominion >> >>we are service members first and transgender people second. >> what is disruptive is discrimination against an entire class of americans who are or who want to protect and defend america >> it is about military readiness, it's about unit cohesion >> we have enough problems for a socioeconomic experimentation in the military >> we thought we were making progress. >> the future is uncertain tonight for thousands of transgender military members who might feel like they've been fired via twitter
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