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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Shepard Smith Reporting 20170908 19:00:00

the storm. >> we're doing whatever we can to help. >> shepard: let's get to it. good friday afternoon from the fox news deck. we're tracking hurricane irma. florida's governor says the window to escape the path of the storm is closing. with each updated forecast, the chance of a direct hit on some part of south florida and then up the peninsula of florida are increasing. this as the head of fema says i don't know anybody in florida has experienced what we're about to get. the florida says we should expect life threatening conditions from coast-to-coast. he says this is a catastrophic storm like our state has never seen. over 500,000 people there from mandatory evacuation orders, including miami, miami beach, the keys. rick scott telling people to be patient when dealing with crowded highways. he says more troopers are on the road to help with the flow of the traffic. he says the state has sent school buses to get residents out of dangerous areas. some gas stations have long lines. others have no fuel at all. governor scott says the entire state, more than 20 million people should be ready to leave, if necessary. >> this storm is wider than our entire state. it's expected to cause major and life threatening impacts from coast-to-coast. remember hurricane andrew is one of the worst storms in the history of florida. irma is more devastating on its current path. >> shepard: irma has left a trail of destruction in the caribbean. the death toll is 23. thousands of others homeless. the storm battering the turks and caicos islands this morning with waves as high as 20 feet across that island. thousands of tourists trapped on the virgin islands in st. bart and st. maarten. witnesses saw the damage first hand. the storm destroyed homes, schools and businesses. it ripped rooftops off of houses as families huddled inside. a television station said i feel like i'm on the moon. there's not a single tree standing anymore. forecasters say the storm is extremely dangerous. maximum sustained winds are at 155 miles an hour down from 185 at the peak. still a powerful category four hurricane. the winds are widespread, extending 70 miles from the center. if it goes up the center of the state, hurricane force winds could be felt by everybody in the peninsula. we know by know whichever way peninsula of florida is dealing with this storm, probably experiencing hurricane force winds. it's a danger. we have covered these. the center does make an impact at least for the worst of the storm surge. but that also gives the indication that the others don't need to worry. that's not the case. everybody probably for the lower past of florida will experience major hurricane force winds, which will blow all kinds of trees down, all kinds of power outages across a wide swath. this is the radar. right there, over towards the bahamas. we've seen the bands get closer and closer. a couple things, the latest advisory that just came out at 2:00. it's not the complete advisory but the intermediate ones. they raised the winds. they've been at 150. the pressure has come down. >> they're bad signs that we could she a strengthening storm. it's also though moving a little more to the west instead of to the northwest. that may be has some implications for us. here's the official track. most of south carolina out of major hurricane on hands. >> shepard: thanks, rick. many people obeyed the order to get out of miami beach. you don't have to do what you don't want to do. the mayor in at least one city says they're getting out. you can see homes and businesses boarded up. sidewalks and streets empty. some people will try to ride it out. team coverage continues. phil keating on miami beach where there's no traffic on a friday morning. it's a stunner. >> it's crazy. it's a ghost town here. i have tragic news to report before we show you around. we have the first hurricane irma related fatality. a davey florida man fell 15 feet to his death from a ladder while trying to install hurricane shutters. here on ocean drive, everything pretty much is closed. boarded up, shuttered up. world famous news cafe where johnny versace used to hang outs. this is wet willie's. boarded up. that's what you see in all the buildings. this is all about storm surge and keeping flood waters out. the storm surge forecast is 5-10 feet. all of this will undoubtedly be under water. there's been a smatteders of people that have come down to take in the emptiness of it all, flying drones and driving by with cameras rolling. while hundreds of thousands have evacuated to the north, including many miami beach residents, some still as the clock is ticking refuse to leave. >> i work in the fire department. i have to be at work sunday anyways, if i can make it to work. i'm nervous but focused. >> because my building, we have electricity and we'll be safe. yeah, i don't know. i have no idea. this will be my first hurricane. i don't have idea. >> you sure picked a good one. >> yeah. >> as of about 8 minutes ago, the last plane outside of miami international airport took off heading northbound. we expect over the next several days perhaps longer depending on the destruction, no more inbound planes will be coming either. >> thanks, phil. and the mayor has ordered 650,000 people to evacuate. the mayor will join us live to tell us how they're preparing for a catastrophic storm. that's coming up from the fox news deck on this friday afternoon. prudential asked these couples: how much money do you think you'll need in retirement? then we found out how many years that money would last them. how long do you think we'll keep -- oooooohhh! you stopped! you're gonna leave me back here at year 9? how did this happen? it turned out, a lot of people fell short, of even the average length of retirement. we have to think about not when we expect to live to, but when we could live to. let's plan for income that lasts all our years in retirement. prudential. bring your challenges. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. ā™Ŗ some things are simply impossible to ignore. the strikingly designed lexus nx turbo and hybrid. the suv that dares to go beyond utility. experience amazing. i used to work at news 6 in orlando and had some of the best reporting days of my life. i know their coverage will be invaluable for viewers. we look forward to shows casing their correspondents. traffic is nightmarish. the governor says traffic is not supposed to be pleasant. get in it, live through it and have plenty of gas and get to safety and hopefully come back to a home. don't wait to evacuate. that's the specific warning from the mayor of miami-dade county. he expanded the evacuation orders to include 650,000 people in miami-dade. country's biggest -- the county's biggest evacuation ever. we have the mayor here with us. good afternoon. how is detthe evacuation going? >> for the most part, smooth. like any big event like that, we've had some hiccups. we're fixing those as we go on. some information was given out about shelters we were about to open. they weren't open yet. people started showing up. we weren't ready to receive them. we're taking care of those issues and expanding the number of shelters that we'll have here in miami-dade county the a capacity of over 100,000 people, which is unheard of. when you doing something way out of the boundaries of what you plan for, you're bound to have a couple of hiccups. all and all, it's gone well. >> shepard: great to hear. what is your thinking on what percentage of your population is doing as you're asking them to do? >> a large percentage of the population is leaving. but we're seeing people that are not in the evacuation zones that are leaving or trying to find some other shelter because maybe they went through andrew and maybe they think their home won't be able to sustain a category four or five hurricane. that's different than other storms we've had here. most people hunker down and ride it out. this is different. we're seeing that dynamic play out here. >> shepard: what is working well and what is giving you troubles? >> i think our response plan as well, we're prepared for the storm, prepared for the aftermath of the storm. right now, it's the issue of an unprecedented number of people going into our shelters. we've asked miami-dade county residents to help each other and take those folks that are evacuating from a mandatory evacuation zone. i think in terms of traffic, it's somewhat better than i thought it would be at this point. yeah, i know human nature and people tend to wait to the last minute. maybe it's not come this way and do at the last minute, maybe a shelter or take off in a car. we have to be prepared for that. the police department is prepared for that events. it's a big job. county of 2.7 million people. you know, there's a lot of working parts here that have to go smoothly. >> thanks, mayor. all the best to you and all those in south florida. thanks for taking the time with us. >> it's my pleasure. thanks very much. let's hope this storm veers off and goes somewhere else. >> shepard: we're sure hoping. >> into the atlantic and just fizzles out. >> shepard: out to sea. leave us alone. carlos jimenez. i want to show you the traffic helicopter again. this is about a mile south of ocala. the trees have blocked it as fate would have it. we've been watching the southbound lines. we saw tractor trailers headed south. there's still supplies getting down to south florida. it's raining. nothing to do with the storms. that means it's a little after 3:00 in central florida. minutes ago and said can you go live? i say heck yeah. we're busy right now. the air force reserve, we're just crushing it. we're making it happen. >> shepard: what are you learn something. >> you can see, this is an extremely powerful storm. it's going to be the benchmark storm for the next decade. katrina, as you well know and i know first hand, it's been a benchmark for the long time but now looks like irma will be the replacement for it. >> shepard: for me as far as destruction, there was hurricane hugo in the carolinas. that just snapped millions of trees and turned them to projectiles. and then hurricane andrew. with the very tight eye and small area that it crossed. when it went through cutler ridge, homestead, levelled everything. but it wasn't that big around. this thing though, it's got a little bit of everything to hate. >> yeah, it does. it's a massive storm. the big thing here, everybody listening right now, just really pay attention to the authorities and civil defense. don't take this storm lightly. i rode out andrew in louisiana when it came across the gulf as it hit florida and wiped those guys out. don't get complacent. the other thing is don't have this false sense of security. just because you made it through andrew, no big deal. that is -- the level is there for andrew, it's higher for irma. heed the warnings. >> shepard: we talk about how successful the evacuation has been. it has been. if 10% of the people you asked to evacuate don't leave, that leaves tens of thousands of people behind on that coast. that is frightening. >> that is frightening. our guys and gals in the hurricane hunters and the emergency responders are working hard to help people. it's really important that everybody leaves. if we can save everybody, that's awesome. >> shepard: lieutenant colonel cross, have you seen anything at all that would suggest outside of a overrun of the mountains in cuba, anything that might make it diminish in size. >> we don't really get in forecasting. it's been over open water. you can see the eye. it's really tight. almost like a textbook example of the most powerful hurricane. really incredible. there's things out there that will interact with it, but i can't say whether or not i think there's anything that will effect it. >> shepard: lieutenant colonel sean cross, all the best. thanks a lot. >> good luck to everybody. >> shepard: thank you. people getting out by land, air and by sea. a lot of boats. cruise ships that just dropped people off in miami and now they had to scramble. some are going to shelters. and then people leaving by boat. >> yes, some people on cruise ships came back early. they weren't able to get out of miami. so one cruise ship, norwegian -- >> do you have a live map of cruise ships? >> yes. you can see this big empty space where the hurricane is and all of these tanker ships. the reds are tankers and the blue are passenger ships. pinks are the pleasure yachts. this one, the norwegian escape, which is an appropriate name, they said they were going west. they have about 4,000 passengers on board that couldn't get out of miami. they said we don't know when we'll be back or where we're going. looks like they're going to mexico. the captain said get on board. we'll get you to safety. we don't know when we'll bring you back. >> shepard: interesting. mexico has the storm on the southeastern coast. >> yeah. they're going in this area. >> shepard: cancun. >> yeah. some ships are just headed to safety. >> shepard: think of the logistics, getting the people out, the planes and then return everyone when it's over. thanks. ahead, the latest on the evacuation efforts. we'll get an update from the miami area and up the coast. first, a look at the hurricane from the international space station. 250 miles above earth. cuba on the left there and irma on the right. right behind irma is jose. and by the way, jose now category four. and non-24 can make me show up too early... or too late. or make me feel like i'm not really "there." talk to your doctor, and call 844-234-2424. whoo! testis this thing on?! huh? c'mon! your turn! mmmm... where do pencils go on vacation? 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seems unreasonable. bloomberg reports some top executive sold off company shares before the breach announced. the company says they were unaware of the hack. shep will be right back. he'd be stopping for more pills right now. only aleve has the strength to stop tough pain for up to 12 hours with just one pill. aleve. all day strong. mom,on my car insurance of money by switching to geico. i should take a closer look at geico... you know, geico can help you save money on your homeowners insurance too? great! geico can help insure our mountain chalet! how long have we been sawing this log? um, one hundred and fourteen years. man i thought my arm would be a lot more jacked by now. i'm not even sure this is real wood. there's no butter in this churn. do my tris look okay? take a closer look at geico. great savings. and a whole lot more. hundreds of thousands of them on the move. hitting the road as hurricane irma heads their general direction. traffic going north is in some places above the lake a nightmare. a reporter with the palm beach post newspaper says the drive that normally takes two hours took him eight hours. at 1:30 a.m. that's traffic northbound. that's traffic southbound obviously. top speed on florida's turnpike at that time, 1:30 a.m., 5 miles an hour. the line to get into a rest stop for gas, at least a half mile. the reporter says families driving minivans and u-hauls and rvs packed with as much as they could hold. gas stations are out of gas in many stations. this is a fairly familiar scene. people trying to fill sand bags and board up their homes and board up their homes and businesses before getting out, going to a shelter or trying to ride out the storm system where. steve harrigan is one to do that he's in miami shores in south florida. hello, steve. >> shepard, a little wind kicking up. gusts 20 miles an hour. more and more, it's getting to be like a ghost town, a different mood here. people are afraid. people who have been here, been through a lot of hurricanes, they're afraid. they're afraid of what they've seen. the death toll 23 and continuing to rise. just the devastation on so many islands in the caribbean. complete destruction. it has people here afraid. when you talk to them, listen to them, you can see the fear in their faces, eyes and jaws. shepard? >> shepard: i heard mayor jimenez said they had some crowdiness in the shelters. >> many are filling up, especially shelters that take pets. a real concern for people. a woman across the street from me says i have three dogs. the shelters were the pets are full. you have a tough choice. do you get on highway and go 5 miles for 24 hours or stay put in a home that could be destroyed? miami-dade has more than 40 shelters and house 100,000 people and already filling up, shepard. >> shepard: steve harrigan, miami shores. thanks. on the coast -- i should say on the coast just north of miami, the mayor of ft. lauderdale says his city is ready for hurricane irma. parts of broward county under evacuation orders. major jack siler is on the phone with us. good afternoon. >> thanks, shep. >> shepard: how are things around ft. lauderdale? >> we're ready. gearing up for three or four days now, this is one of the biggest and baddest storms across the atlantic in a long time. we've been ready. started evacuations on the barrier island and most people are compliant with it. the issues you're talking about with miami shores, same issues up here in ft. lauderdale. i just had to open a second shelter for pet owners because the one shelter that was for owners with pets and their pets filled up already. they opened a second one west of ft. lauderdale. >> shepard: i know a lot of young people, some not so young say i don't want to go. i'm on the 20th floor. i'll be fine. have you made an impression on the seniors? >> we've made an impression through an active campaign. our public of affairs staff has done a lot of work. what has made a bigger impression, watching your tv storm and when they see a picture of the storm, it makes a heck of an impression. it's big and broad and we're very concerned about these storms surges. that's the major factor here in ft. lauderdale. we feel we can handle the rain, we can handle the winds. the storm surge could create a problem for people on a barrier island. you might be on the 20th floor. if your first floor elevator stops working and fills up with water and all of a sudden, the electrical and the utilities go out, i'm not sure what good it is if you can't get in and out of the building. we're making sure they're educated so it's not just about where you are, it's about first responders getting in and out and it's about the residents getting in and out. >> shepard: i was wondering about your flood areas. i realize on the beach along and over to u.s. 1, is that all a major flood area? >> not all of u.s. 1 east. we have low-lying areas. you know ft. lauderdale well. we have close to 200 miles of waterways and our nickname is the venice of america. we have a lot of low-lying areas east of federal highway, predominantly the barrier island. other areas east of federal highway are higher ground and we're not watching them as closely as the low-lying areas as we've been dealing with for the seasonal high tides. remember, this time of year, our seasonal high tides are none as king tides. you tie that in with a full moon, tie that in with an east wind and a storm surge, the recipe is there to have flooding in those low-lying areas. >> shepard: had it skirted the way they talked about, you would have had a real, real wind problem. i wonder if the vast majority isn't going to be surge and flooding as far north as you are. >> i agree with you, shep. i think a couple days ago we were focused on the wind factor. that has shifted. now we're looking at a storm surge of 5-10 feet. they can change depending on the precipitation with the storm. our real fear right now is the storm surge. every time it takes a jog one way or the other, the storm surge alters itself a foot or two. and also the timing. if it continues to slow down and comes in with a high tide, that's a bigger problem than if it comes in under a low tide. these are all things that mother nature just playing games with our preparations. look, we're ready. we've been doing this 100 plus years in ft. lauderdale. we feel we're ready. >> i believe you. mayor jack siler. hope to see you soon. >> thanks, shep. >> shepard: folks in volusia county, up the coast, which includes daytona beach, east of orlando, ordering evacuations for people in high risk areas. that's set to go in effect 5:00 east florida time. the order includes beaches, low-lying areas and mobile homes. again, that's the daytona beach area. volusia county. officials say shelters will open there tomorrow morning. if you're in volusia or brevard or any counties along the coast, your local stations in orlando will have all the specifics for you, this map shows when forecasters at the national hurricane center expect not hurricane force winds, this is when they think the tropical storm force winds will hit different areas of florida. so just around the keys tomorrow morning around sunrise, in the lower keys. by 8:00 around everglades city and then be 8:00 tomorrow night, everything south of the lake from the lake okeechobee south should have at least tropical storm force winds. that's from coast-to-coast. so lee county, collier county, down into the keys, miami-dade, broward and the palm beaches all with tropical storm force winds by 8:00 tomorrow saturday night. then by sunday morning, tropical storm force winds are well north of tampa approaching the orlando area. and then by sunday at 8:00 p.m., day after tomorrow night, by 8:00, the entire peninsula all the way over to tallahassee, almost to panama city beach area, tropical storm force winds have now reached the entire state of florida. speaking of daytona beach, the home of the 500 and a great spring break back in the day, rick leventhal is there. what a ghost town. that's nuts, rick. >> yeah, it's pretty quiet here on north beach street. most of the businesses have boarded up, they're closed. some of them have decorated the fly wood on the front of the stores. not clear how many people are heeding the mandatory evacuation order. county officials say if you're going to get out, get out by 5:00. if not, you should pack your stuff and shelter in place or go to one of the 21 shelters that will open tomorrow morning. we have seen people boarding up in the low-lying areas, boarding up their homes, boarding up their businesses. major sandbagging going on, including south daytona beach where we were earlier today. there were 21 truck loads of sand delivered to the one location. they were backing it up as quick as it could be delivered. people were taking up to 25 bags each. some of them were helping each other out. not just helping family and friends but helping strangers as well. >> this morning, got off work. filled up sand bags for my grandfather. all kinds of people helping. just kind of helping the community. >> today was the last day for sandbags. if they don't have them by now, they won't get them. >> thanks, rick. while thousands in florida try to get out of irma's way, power crews from across the nation are headed to the hurricane zone where officials say millions of people could end up in the dark. millions of them, a live look at the traffic cam from i-75 northbound near ocala. and got an estimate in 24 hours. my insurance company definitely doesn't have that... you can leave worry behind when liberty stands with youā„¢ liberty mutual insurance. fitting into my skinny jeans ā™Ŗagain? 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>> most of the power crews, shep, will be arriving in florida some time today and mobilize in lake city, florida, which is in columbia county near the georgia border. that is considered inland county and thought to be well-protected. separately, florida power and light has set up 22 staging areas across the state. thousands of fpl crews and the crews from visiting states will be disbursed to the areas with the greatest needs. if you consider that 90% of florida power and light's customers live or work in coastal areas, which are more exposed to high winds and storm surge, you get a better idea of why they are predicting that millions of people will be without power for several weeks. most of the power crews from other states have agreed to stay for at least 30 days, if longer, if needed, shep. >> shepard: trace, many of these out-of-state power company workers have helped with hurricane repairs over and over. >> they have. and florida would draw from southern states. but many of those are in texas. which is why florida requested crews from canada, michigan and other states. there's crews from indiana that have helped turn the power back on in florida after every hurricane since andrew. florida power and light has a mutual aid agreement with some companies like pacific gas and electric in can can and one pg&e worker says he can help. >> shepard: thanks, trace. officials in miami say they don't have time to move more than 20 construction cranes that tower over that great city. so they're telling people that live in the area to get out. that's coming up. constipated? trust #1 doctor recommended dulcolax. use dulcolax tablets for gentle dependable relief. suppositories for relief in minutes. and dulcoease for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax. designed for dependable relief. ā™Ŗ to err is human. to anticipate is lexus. experience the lexus rx with advanced safety standard. experience amazing. how much money do you think you'll need in retirement? then we found out how many years that money would last them. how long do you think we'll keep -- oooooohhh! you stopped! you're gonna leave me back here at year 9? how did this happen? it turned out, a lot of people fell short, of even the average length of retirement. we have to think about not when we expect to live to, but when we could live to. let's plan for income that lasts all our years in retirement. prudential. bring your challenges. people sit along the beach. there's a restaurant and watch big planes land. they have sunset beach bar it's called. dutch officials tweeted this picture out. they say they're getting the airport back up and running. it's a high priority for delivery of supplies to get the economy back moving. so far it's not yet. this is a house in puerto rico. didn't get a direct hit there. the owner says starting a generator. a million people lost power there. this is st. thomas and the u.s. virgin islands, this is system to the mass. flooding there from hurricane irma. the damage there is nothing short of catastrophic. more than 20 construction cranes that tower over miami aren't no coming down because of the hurricane. that's from city officials. people that live nearby are told to leave their homes. the deal is it can take two weeks to dismantle them and get them on the ground. now it's too late. can't tie them down. the cranes way 20 to 30,000 pounds each. city officials say they can withstand gusts up to 145 miles an hour. hurricane coverage continues after this. patrick woke up with back pain.

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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20180525 00:30:00

clear after the president spoke. but there is no doubt the president would like to see this summit get back on track at some point, but it won't be on june 12th. >> jonathan karl starting us off tonight. jon, thank you. next, to that other major story we're following, breaking news about harvey weinstein. sources tell abc news he will turn himself in to new york city police tomorrow to face criminal charges related to alleged sexual assault. a stunning fall, seven months after those first reports that unleashed a flood of accusations and sparked a movement. here's abc's linsey davis. >> reporter: former hollywood heavyweight turned poster child for the me too movement, harvey weinstein, will turn himself in tomorrow and face criminal charges. weinstein has been under investigation by the manhattan district attorney's office for months, stemming from accusations of sexual misconduct by actresses lucia evans and paz de la huerta. evans says in 2004 weinstein forced her to perform a sexual act on him. and de la huerta says weinstein raped her in 2010. they are just two of the roughly 80 women who have accused the former film producer of rape, sexual assault or harassment. actress gwyneth paltrow, who is not part of the criminal complaint against weinstein, but has alleged he made a pass at her, detailed in an interview with howard stern that her then-boyfriend, brad pitt, threatened weinstein over the incident. >> it was like the equivalent of throwing him against the wall. he said, if you ever make her feel uncomfortable again, i'll kill you, or something like that. >> reporter: these would be the first criminal charges against weinstein. he's also under investigation in l.a., the uk and by federal prosecutors in this country. weinstein has said all along that he has not had nonconsensual sex with anyone. his defense attorney declined to comment today. >> and linsey davis joins us now. linsey, harvey weinstein is expected to appear in court tomorrow, and that's when we'll learn the exact charges? >> reporter: yes, tom. we won't know what the charges are until he appears before the judge tomorrow, but we already know that at least one of the accusations against him is rape, which could, of course, carry a significant amount of jail time. tom? >> linsey davis for us tonight. linsey, thank you. and another headline out of hollywood tonight, this time, involving allegations against morgan freeman. the oscar winner today apologizing to anyone who may may have felt, quote, "uncomfortable or disrespected" by his behavior. this comes after cnn reported that eight women claim he sexually harassed them on movie sets or in other professional settings. we do move on now to the next tropical storm threat this holiday weekend. the massive rainmaker that could become the first named storm of the hurricane season. parts of the south already under water, flash flooding here in little rock, arkansas. and th raging creek, take a look, in western georgia, after a foot of rain. and tonight, the forecast on how many hurricanes we could expect to see. abc's senior meteorologist rob marciano, tracking it all. and rob, we're starting strong. >> reporter: we are. not even hurricane season officially. this cluster of thunderstorms, you see it now off the coast of cancun, a 90% chance of it developing into a tropical cyclone here, likely over the weekend, as it gets into the gulf of mexico. more tranquil conditions there, we'll wind it up. heavy rain expected. unlikely to be a hurricane. something hybrid-y, but definitely a lot of rain, five inches likely through the weekend. kind of stalling, maybe more, through midweek, and likely some flooding, tom. >> and rob, we mentioned this earlier, they released their forecast for this year of hurricanes, and it's going to be a very active season. >> reporter: hopefully not as active as last season, but yeah, likely to be more active than usual. named storms, 10 to 16, hurricanes, anywhere from 5 to 9, noaa says. and major hurricanes, 1 to 4. can't say how many of those will impact land, but as we know, it only takes one, tom. >> just an outlook, but you're right. rob, thank you so much. next, to a horrible incident on a boulevard in tamp police say a mother pushing her child in a stroller wast by two cars racing on the street. the mom did not survive. and tonight, her little girl is clinging to life. here's abc's victor oquendo. >> reporter: tonight, this toddler, lillia, just 21 months old, is fighting for her life, after she and her mother were struck by a car, driven by a teenager, who police say was street racing. lillia's mother, 24-year-old jessica was killed. >> pedestrian bayshore and knights. stroller hit by a vehicle. >> reporter: this was the scene along tampa's busy bayshore boulevard, after mom and daughter were hit while crossing the street. lillia was in her stroller, now mangled. the community reeling. >> we're devastated. it's a tragic crash that didn't need to happen. >> reporter: in the arrest report, a witness says he saw two vehicles racing each other. police say 18-year-old cameron herrin was driving this black mustang with 20-year-old tristan herrin in the passenger seat, racing alongside 17-year-old john barrineau. the drivers, now out on bond, face felony charges. including vehicular homicide and reckless driving. tonight, a growing memorial at the site of the tragedy. the toddler is in critical condition tonight. a go fund me page has been set up for the family. the city of tampa now lowering the speed limit on the road where the crash happened. tom? >> an incredibly sad story. victor oquendo for us tonight. victor, thank you. next, from milwaukee, reaction of police body cam video of an nba player, sterling brown, in an incident that escalated from a parking violation. now police accuse brown of aggressive behavior. the video showing them taking him down, tasing and then arresting him. the police chief and the mayor have both apologized. and tonight, we hear from sterling brown for the first time. abc's alex perez is in milwaukee. >> taser, taser, taser! >> reporter: just one day after the release of that disturbing video showing tasing of sterling brown, the milwaukee bucks player sitting down for an exclusive interview with robin roberts, talking about that moment. >> and physically, mentally, being tasered like that, i mean, how did that impact you? >> it was a shock. it came out of nowhere. i tensed up instantly. emotionally, like, man, i just got tased. >> how you doing? got a driver's license? >> reporter: that confrontation with officers after he illegally parked his car outside a walgreens. >> i asked you to back up and you did not do it. >> reporter: in the police report, officers claim brown became "very aggressive," but the video shows him calmly talking to officers when suddenly -- >> take your hands out of your pockets now! >> i've got stuff in my hands, hold on. >> reporter: officers take him down and tase him. >> taser, taser, taser! >> any movement i make, they still -- you know, they got me pinned down, so, i couldn't really do nothing, so i'm like, okay, stay calm, try to get out of this. try to get out of this situation. >> reporter: brown plans to file a lawsuit. the police chief here has condemned the actions of the officers involved. he says they have been disciplined, and he has apologized. tom? >> alex, thank you. >> and robin roberts will have much more of her exclusive interview with sterling brown first thing in the morning on "good morning america." next, to a series of very unusual meetings in washington today, focused on president trump's unsubstantiated claim that the fbi inserted a spy into his campaign. the white house ordering the fbi and the justice department to open their classified records to members of congress, but democrats are raising concerns that white house officials were in those meetings. abc's chief justice correspondent pierre thomas has more. >> congressman, was there a spy? >> reporter: today, congressional leaders and senior members of the white house staff heading to the justice department for a classified briefing after president trump's unsubstantiated claim that the obama administration planted a spy in his 2016 campaign. >> we now call it spygate. >> reporter: he says it's "starting to look like one of the biggest political scandals in u.s. history." but has provided no proof. the president's accusations triggered by a "new york times" report that an fbi informant questioned two trump campaign advisers about their contacts with russian operatives. the use of such informants is routine, and "the times" never mentioned anything about a spy inside the campaign. still, the president ordered justice department officials to brief republicans in congress. >> what i'm doing is a service to this country. >> reporter: when the unusual briefings ended, republicans disappeared, not saying a word. but from democrats, this blunt assessment. >> nothing we heard today has changed our view that there is no evidence to support any allegation that the fbi or any intelligence agency placed a spy in the trump campaign. >> and pierre thomas joins us now from the justice department. and pierre, some democrats were very surprised to see white house chief of staff john kelly at the meetings, along with the new white house lawyer handling the russia investigation? >> reporter: that's right, tom. democrats say it was a sign that the white house was attempting to snoop on and weaken the mueller probe. senator mark warner just tweeting that the president's aides have, quote, no business showing up to a classified intelligence briefing. tom? >> pierre thomas for us. pierre, thanks so much. and there's still much more ahead on "world news tonight" this thursday. the school bus driver charged. the 77-year-old who prosecutors say pulled an illegal u-turn before a crash that killed a student and a teacher. plus, don't ask alexa? the amazon echo that went rogue, sharing a private conversation. what amazon has just told us. and the memorial day escape is nearly here. millions hitting the roads. the surging gas prices you'll find at the pump, and how you can save. stay with us. stay with us. alicewhich is breast canceratic that has spread to other parts of her body. she's also taking prescription ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor, which is for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. patients taking ibrance can develop low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection, liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include low red blood cell and low platelet counts, infections, tiredness, nausea, sore mouth, abnormalities in liver blood tests, diarrhea, hair thinning or loss, vomiting, rash, and loss of appetite. alice calls it her new normal because a lot has changed, but a lot hasn't. ask your doctor about ibrance. the #1 prescribed fda-approved oral combination treatment for hr+/her2- mbc. how much money do you think you'll need in retirement? then we found out how many years that money would last them. how long do you think we'll keep -- oooooohhh! you stopped! you're gonna leave me back here at year 9? how did this happen? it turned out, a lot of people fell short, of even the average length of retirement. we have to think about not when we expect to live to, but when we could live to. let's plan for income that lasts all our years in retirement. prudential. bring your challenges. our because of smoking.ital. but we still had to have a cigarette. had to. but then, we were like. what are we doing? the nicodermcq patch helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. nicodermcq. you know why, we know how. back now with the memorial back now with the memorial day weekend escape. it's nearly here. more than 36 million people expected to take the road. what they'll find? gas prices on the rise. abc's linzie janis with how you can save. >> reporter: tonight, as millions gas up for the holiday weekend, prices surging. 54 cents higher than this time last year, and climbing. the highest prices for a memorial day weekend in four years. >> half a tank is 40 bucks, so, it's like full tank would be 80, which sounds pretty ridiculous. >> reporter: prices at the pump already reaching $3 per gallon in 17 states. in california, gas nearing $5. one station in orlando charging $5.95 a gallon. apps like gas buddy and gas guru will point you to the cheapest gas. for longer trips, experts say, plan ahead. >> when you cross from state to state, gas prices could be much higher or lower, so, make it a good habit to check the price of gasoline before you leave a state. >> reporter: tom, experts say prices usually go down in june and july, but according to aaa, families can expect to spend $200 more on gas this summer than they did last year. tom? >> definitely on the rise. all right, linzie, thank you. and when we come back, the runaway barges. the images just coming in, take a look at this. more than a dozen barges that got loose, coal spilling out into the river. your manufacturing business. part of & so this won't happ because you've made sure this sensor and this machine are integrated. & she can talk to him, & yes... atta, boy. some people assign genders to machines. and you can be sure you won't have any problems. except for the daily theft of your danish. not cool! at&t provides edge to edge intelligence. it can do so much for your business, the list goes on and on. that's the power of &. & this shipment will be delivered... before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, lucy could only imagine enjoying a slice of pizza. now it's as easy as pie. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? for all-day, all-night protection. 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illegal u-turn on the way to a middle school field trip when a dump truck slammed into the bus. one student and one teacher were killed. several injured. authorities have already revealed a history of suspended licenses, though it was valid at the time of the crash. more than a dozen runaway barges just outside of pittsburgh. take a look at this. this is the monongahela river, the barges carrying coal, breaking loose in the river. three of them striking a bridge that has been closed. at least two of them sinking. coal seen spilling into the river. all right, and you may want to think twice about asking alexa. a family from portland, oregon, reporting their amazon echo ver virtual assistant recorded a private conversation and sent it to amazon releasing a statement, acknowledging the echo awoke after hearing a word that sounded like alexa, and started following commands based on the background conversation. the company calling it unlikely, but said they are looking into it. and nearly a decade after the death of michael jackson, an abc news special with new reporting about his life, death and impossible standards even when his first moonwalk electrified fans around the world. >> i was angry about that, actually. real disappointed. and i didn't realize, i really did well until the next day when fred astaire called my house in encino, raving. he said, i can't believe it, you're an incredible mover. and i was -- oh, my god, i think maybe i did well. >> and we will have much more exclusive abc news reporting on the king of pop inside "the last days of michael jackson," the two-hour documentary airs tonight on abc, 8:00/7:00 central. and when we come back, from homeless to harvard. a valedictorian story you don't want to miss. it's america strong. stay with us. >> announcer: show "abc world news tonight" sponsored by claritin. like those from buddy. because stuffed animals "abc world news tonight" sponsored by claritin. feel tlarity. and live claritin clear. tailored recommendations, tax-efficient investing strategies, and a dedicated advisor to help you grow and protect your wealth. fidelity wealth management. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis, the number one cardiologist-prescribed blood thinner. ask your doctor if eliquis is what's next for you. cardiologist-prescribed blood thinner. a hilton getaway means you get more because... you get another day in paradise. get a sunset on a sunday. get more stories to share. get more from your summer getaway with exclusive hilton offers. book yours, only at hilton.com you might be missing something.y healthy. your eyes. that's why there's ocuvite. ocuvite helps replenish nutrients your eyes can lose as you age. it has lutein, zeaxanthin and omega-3. ocuvite. be good to your eyes. boarding school in philadelphia for gifted students of disadvantaged backgrounds. you must have pretty good grades. >> yeah, pretty good. >> reporter: but there's something else in his background that truly sets him apart. so, you were homeless? >> yes. >> reporter: for two years? >> yes. >> reporter: during middle school, richard got involved in mighty writers, an after school writers workshop for inner city kids. >> some people cry about it. tre was able to write about it here with mighty writers. >> it helped me gain a sense of confidence. >> reporter: he says kids used to bully him for trying hard at school. >> some people actually called me harvard back then, which is ironic, a little bit, because here i am. >> reporter: this fall, he's actually headed to harvard on a full scholarship. your mom must be so proud. >> my mom is crazy proud. she expected it, to be honest. >> reporter: from homeless to harvard. you nervous? >> i am kind of nervous. >> reporter: everybody is. everybody is. >> i would hope so, because i don't want to be the only one. >> reporter: bright future, indeed. david wright, abc news, philadelphia. >> so, tonight, we salute richard jenkins for being america strong. thank you so much for watching. i'm tom llamas. have a great evening. good night. following the law, not his feelings. today san francisco d.a. announced there will be -- >> no charges in two deadly police shootings that drew nationwide outrage. >> i'm spencer christian. get ready for some preholiday showers. i'll have a close-up look. and a simple mistake isn't always easy to fix. 7 on your side's michael finney helps out one woman who has a tough problem with her plane tickets. i'm extremely, extremely disturbed by the state of the law today, and yet i am duty bound to adhere to the law. >> he may not agree with it, but san francisco's d.a. says he has to follow it. he announced today there will be no charges in two deadly police shootings that drew nationwide outrage. thank you for joining us.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends First 20180823 09:00:00

A precursor to Fox News's morning show, featuring the news and first looks at the other stories of the day. this is why he did that, why he won. the american people rejected more of this, more blood on politicians hand, the democrats want this issue politically more than they want a solution and that is a factor. if i was advising this president i would say tell mitch mcconnell to go nuclear. national security issue, simple majority of the senate for border security. rob: the president asking congress to provide $5 billion next year to start building that wall along the southern border. donald trump approving a disaster declaration of hawaii braces for hurricane lane. incredible video showing a weather plane flying directly into the eye of that category 4 storm with winds of 150 mph. also some stunning video of the hurricane, that is the plane flying into the storm and video that will be tested but there is still blood in the water but the president saying he did nothing wrong and we hear his side of the story for the first time in an exclusive interview with ainsley. >> did you know about the payment? >> later on i knew. you have to understand, what he did and the one thing out of campaign-finance is a big thing, much bigger thing, didn't come out of the campaign? it didn't come on the campaign, it came from me. i tweeted about it, about the payments. they didn't come out of campaign. my first question when i heard about it was did they come out of the campaign? that could be a little dicey. they didn't come out of the campaign. it is not even a campaign violation. >> reporter: differing opinions, lanny davis says the law doesn't make a decision whether it comes from a campaign or personal funds and the president was the one who directed the payments. >> members of his campaign, members of the trump organization all document that the money was paid before the election and prosecutors brought charges that mister cohen was motivated for political reasons to pay hush money and mister trump is named as the person who directed and coordinated it. >> reporter: he mentioned sharks, democrats on the wasting no time blasting the president as a co-conspirator with talk of impeachment and calling for brett kavanaugh's supreme court nominee hearing to be postponed. >> this nomination is now tainted because the president who nominated him, brett cavanagh, implicated in a criminal conspiracy. >> he did not drain the swamp, he made it more rigid and more fetid. there is a cesspool around this president. >> reporter: chuck grassley says it out in front of her again and again and she still said she had reasonable doubt. 11 of the 12 jurors including yourself would have convicted him on all 18? >> yes. rob: one holdout. they found him guilty on eight counts of fraud related charges. jillian: republican congressman duncan hunter and his wife indicted on fraud charges and set to face a judge today, the california representative slamming the prosecution is a witchhunt saying, quote, the fact is there is a culture operating in the justice department that is politically motivated. a couple is accused of using $250,000 in campaign funds to pay for personal expenses and covering it up. donald trump's supreme court nominee meeting with more senators from capitol hill. brett kavanaugh will speak with cory booker and lisa murkowski who is considered a swing vote for his nomination. several democrats including chuck schumer want to delay brett kavanaugh's confirmation hearing scheduled for next month saying the convictions of paul manafort and michael cohen should take priority over his hearings but republicans say that doesn't concern lawmakers. 11 minutes after the hour. slipping through the cracks, the illegal immigrants accused of murdering mollie tibbetts lived in the us for years. is a time for tougher border security? our next guest says donald trump is the only one to give the victims a voice. rob: the school is charged with students together confiscated cell phones back. stay tuned. ā™Ŗ insurance that won't replace the full value of your new car? you'd be better off throwing your money right into the harbor. i'm gonna regret that. with liberty mutual new car replacement we'll replace the full value of your car. ā™Ŗ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ā™Ŗ as king midas, i here, you will too.nt. your oil change comes with a tire rotation as well. ooo! i could put that on an airplane banner. our $19.99 oil change also includes a tire rotation. book an appointment online. rob: slipping through the cracks, the local immigrant -- legal immigrant charged with the murder of mollie tibbetts had a fake id and social security number and worked in iowa for 7 years. jillian: we need tougher vetting, the executive director of conservative hispanic society here to react, thanks for joining us. what do you make of the fact he had this stuff on him claiming to be someone else and able to work for years? >> no big surprise. we have a complete underground in the united states that has grown up in the last 40 or 50 years of individuals being able to scan the system once they are in. my belief is he should never have been allowed to get into the united states to begin with to present his phony papers. i know our businesses have some culpability here but the exclusive responsibly in my mind rests on the 535 individuals in that congress and any particular president at any given time and it seems for the first time in my memory we have a president committed to stopping illegal immigration. i just wish the rest of congress would get on board. rob: i want to harp on one thing. the social security card, he had a social security number. how is that possible? even if you have somebody who died, the name won't matchup. how does that work? >> reporter: my understanding, a press conference with the owner of the farm in question, it was alleged he was misrepresenting himself as whoever that social security card belonged to. i recall some years back the social security administration putting out a memo, over a decade ago, 9 million social security guards in this country that didn't match the individual they were supposed to be with. at the same time our federal government was saying we have no way of locating illegal aliens in the united states, it is complete rubbish. we have not had commitment to stop this. i like what the president said. we have a young lady separated from her family. i see no protests from democrats or republicans. that shameful statement from elizabeth warren yesterday as she pivoted from the loss of this family to say the real tragedy of illegal aliens being separated from their children as they go through the legal system and forget in america we don't punish children when their parents break the law. jillian: what needs to be done about all this? >> i wish the republicans would actually live up to their hype for a change. it was suggested mitch mcconnell actually get serious and bypass the obstructionist democrats and get something done for the american people for a change but right now it seems most of washington dc, the entirety of the democrat party and alarming number of republicans are arrayed toward rights to come to the united states. i really think there ought to be a concentration on finally stopping illegal immigration and reforming legal immigration. it can be done with a proper commitment. rob: interesting when you look at it, talking amnesty for illegal immigrants in this country you are watching so many areas near this country, this crisis in venezuela, the country exploding and a real cartel and violence problem in mexico and other central american countries coming up through mexico, if you open the borders it could be a land rush. with all -- >> it already is a land rush. the excuse used around the world saying there is oppression, coming to america a huge draw, that doesn't necessitate that you have the right to do so. we need a set of legislators on both sides of the political aisle put american citizens of all races, colors and creeds first before the needs of individuals, once they establish that we have secure borders and start to legally put people into the united states that we can that things like what happened in iowa don't happen again. jillian: appreciate it. 19 after the hour, raging flames more dangerous thanks to verizon. the cell phone company coming under fire for putting firefighters lives in jeopardy. rob: the sky is the limit for this 90-year-old. how former president george hw bush inspired an epic birthday celebration. ā™Ŗ i'm free ā™Ŗ freefalling ā™Ŗ got directions to the nightclub here. and if you get lost, just hit me on the old horn. man: tom's my best friend, but ever since he bought a new house... tom: it's a $10 cover? oh, okay. didn't see that on the website. he's been acting more and more like his dad. come on, guys! jump in! the water's fine! tom pritchard. how we doin'? hi, there. tom pritchard. can we get a round of jalapeƱo poppers for me and the boys, please? i've been saving a lot of money with progressive lately, so... progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents. but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. where we're changing withs? contemporary make-overs. then, use the ultimate power handshake, the upper hander with a double palm grab. who has the upper hand now? start winning today. book now at lq.com. you wouldn't accept from any one else. why accept it from an allergy pill? flonase relieves sneezing, itchy, watery eyes and a runny nose, plus nasal congestion, which most pills don't. it's more complete allergy relief. flonase. and watch whatever you buy. wherever you are. head to xfinity.com/stream to start watching. simple to rent, easy to buy, awesome to go. rob: a firestorm over this one, education secretary betsydevos using federal funds to buy guns for teachers according to the new york times. fox news reached out to the department of education for response, quote, the department is constantly considering and evaluating policy issues particularly related to school safety. neither the secretary nor the department issues opinions on hypothetical scenarios. jillian: instead of paying with detentions and will pay with cold hard cash together cell phones back. >> i don't want to hear -- i went to hear the amount. jillian: students at a central texas will district have to pay $10 to get their phones back if they are taken during class. the district voted it was not harsh enough for students, the money collected will go to charity. we think. it is crazy. rob: the thing about kids with phones. jillian: verizon slow down firefighters internet speeds as they battle huge flames in california. rob: tracy carrasco is here with the shocking admission from verizon. >> reporter: verizon said it was a mistake slowing down the wireless data speeds of california firefighters as they were battling the largest fire in california state history. verizon said it happens because the department plan only allowed a limited amount of high-speed wireless data. the santa clara fire department chief said this had a significant impact on how they fight this fire or handle this emergency, the crisis they are in, they asked verizon to lift the data caps but verizon said it was a customer service error that has nothing to do with net neutrality. the rollback people were wondering about, verizon saying it didn't have to do with that. jillian: big bang theory no longer. >> reporter: is coming to a end in may, the most-watched comedy on television. after 12 seasons, 279 shows, it will stop at the end of may. the new season to start back up septa the 24th. this has been on cbs for many years and once it leaves it will leave a big hole in the lineup. cbs is unveiling three new comedies this fall, one being the revival of murphy brown which will take the place of big bang theory, one of their biggest shows. rob: when it came out i don't want to watch a show about a bunch of nerds and i turned it on and it is hilarious. 25 after the hour, paul manafort and michael cohen facing a hard time as a democratic it aid facing the same charges got a slap on the wrist. jillian: is it about getting to the president? a political strategist wants to know. john podesta, hillary clinton herself, live next, the unequal application of the law. ā™Ŗ with expedia's add-on advantage, booking a flight unlocks discounts on select hotels until the day you leave for your trip. add-on advantage. only when you book with expedia. until i held her.age. managing my type 2 diabetes wasn't my top priority. i found my tresibaĀ® reason. now i'm doing more to lower my a1c. i take tresibaĀ® once a day. tresibaĀ® controls blood sugar for 24 hours for powerful a1c reduction. 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(vo) ask your health care provider about tresibaĀ®. covered by most commercial health insurance and medicare part d plans. welcome to tide pods talk with gronk. i'm gronk! i'm big and awesome, but this guy is little, can it really clean? heck yeah it can! it's concentrated detergent plus stain fighters .. boom! even this entire bottle can't beat tide pods. and now a word from future gronk: ugh... tide pods. if it's clean, it's got to be tide. with who we are as people and making everybody feel welcome. ordering custom ink t-shirts has been a really smart decision for our business. i love the custom ink design lab because it's really easy to use. they have customer service that you can reach anytime. t-shirts help us immediately get a sense of who we are as a group. from the moment clients walk in, they're able to feel like part of the family. - [spokesman] custom ink has hundreds of products for your business and free shipping. upload your logo or start your design today at customink.com. jillian: we are back with the fox news alert, a live look at a paris suburb where when it did, two hurt following a knife attack. according to local reports the suspect shouted allah akbar. the suspect was killed by police. we bring you more information as it becomes available. rob: violence erupting your tourist destination, eight bodies found all over cancun, two found dead in a taxi, others dismembered in plastic bags. another found dead in a hammock. the state department has previously issued a travel warning about cancun and telling travelers to be careful driving at night and be vigilant when using an atm, robberies and carjackings. be careful in cancun. jillian: hawaii bracing for a direct hit from hurricane lane as donald trump issues a disaster declaration. the category 4 storm so big it can be seen from space. rob: easy to see from space, huge storm. millions bracing for winds of 150 mph. adam cox says it is just below category 5 status. >> we are running up to it but it should be weakening. we are seeing outer bands of rain running into the islands, that is going to be intensifying. there are those initial band several hundred miles offshore. where will the storm run and tablet timeout? a category 4 storm begins to run into upper-level winds that will weaken it a bit. and when your mind up with honolulu, down to a category one storm. a powerful storm but weakening and that is good news. where will it track? several forecast models here, this is tough because it is making a big sharp turn. these are our spaghetti plots giving all possible paths, some turning out to see before landfall, some taking you all the way to landfall. that is something we are paying attention to in 18 hours. whether it makes landfall or not it is a big system. we have hurricane warnings and watches across the island, the big island of hawaii could be seeing areas of 15 to 20 inches of rain. this is a major system. whether or not it makes landfall this will be one we will be talking about impacting the islands in the next couple days. jillian: we will see whether reports. counterproductive and senseless, russian president vladimir putin slamming un sanctions against his country, the words after the trump administration put more penalties on russia following a wave of cyberattacks, vladimir putin blaming the administration for sanctions after saying last month's meeting with the president was positive. the former nsa worker with classified information to the media faces the longest sentence ever for the crime. the reality winner pleaded guilty to emailing documents about russian election meddling to a news outlet, the plea deal calls for five years in prison, prosecutors want the maximum 10 year punishment. the man who sold ammo to the los angeles massacre faces new charges, accused of manufacturing ammo without a license. earlier this year he was charged with manufacturing armor piercing bullets. investigators say they found bullets with his figure prints on them in the las vegas government's room. he will be in court next month. vice president mike pence help the congressman ex-wife who tripped getting on air force to. the vp was walking away from the plane when belinda culberson fell to the ground. she wasn't hurt and got back up. rob: three criminals, two different outcomes, paul manafort and michael cohen facing years of imprisonment for financial crimes. former house it aid who worked for debbie wasserman schultz pleading guilty to bank fraud and was let go with a slap on the wrist. are they just going after the president at this point? it seems clear they are. joining 3 to 5 years for what he is facing at this point. that is part of a plea deal. and and then you are have on the right, the democratic it aid. and manafort, who gets 80 years, you get 15 years in this country. >> even more troubling, and and illegally accessing members of congress, some sat on house until. as you put up a graphic, and unequal application in the law in the united states. and we have a try for catered legal system. and the right political connections with a series of suggestions for you can put an email server in, classified information and no consequences for that. if you are a powerful federal bureaucrat you can perjure yourself, you can spy on congress, you can abuse your office and your untouchable. you might get bad contracts for student news outlets and a third set of laws for people like us, if we mishandled one piece of classified information, if we have the wrong political connections. and get our doors knocked down. it doesn't look like there is a rule of law, we have arbitrary law. we need to get past this illusion that this has anything to do with anything. the left is still furious it lost the 2016 election and the only thing donald trump is guilty of is he won an election he wasn't supposed to win. rob: he said the same thing. attorneys have completely different views on this. alan dershowitz last night said there is no crime for the president because he paid this money, this $280,000 in hush money to these girls to protect even if it was protecting the election and helping him when it is his money and his campaign, he can spend as much as he wants, nobody think michael cohen is going to cough up 300 grand for a client. so where's the crime? >> more important we have gone through this with the john edwards case from the 2008 election in which $1 million of actual campaign funds were used as hush money for his mistress and 0 convictions. the ftc said no charges were to be brought against the campaign. we have gone through this and the john edwards case was more serious because it was campaign funds and alan dershowitz but more importantly the former head of the ftc bradley smith also said there is no crime, no felony, no campaign violation. rob: they hope to get more out of cohen and manafort and someone will sing on something because right now it doesn't sound like they got it. thank you for your help. jillian: 37 after the hour, student vandals intensifying war on confederate statutes. our next guest, a student in the university of north carolina says this anarchy has no place in a civil society, how she is calling out the irony behind the unlawful antics. rob: patriotic attacks working outrage where dozens of american flags honoring loved ones were mowed down. ā™Ŗ woman 3: this is my body of proof. man 2: proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis... woman 4: ...with humira. woman 5: humira targets and blocks a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further irreversible joint damage, and clear skin in many adults. humira is the #1 prescribed biologic for psoriatic arthritis. avo: humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. woman 6: need more proof? woman 7: ask your rheumatologist about humira. man 1: what's your body of proof? international flights, your face is your boarding pass and id. in a pilot program at lax cameras use facial recognition to match passengers unique features to government pictures on file from passports. >> the algorithms are so sophisticated, over 99% of the time are testing. jillian: most passengers were impressed. >> it wouldn't recognize me but it did. >> so far it seems these do make it easier for people to board. some critics people may be sacrificing privacy or convenience. >> the technology would be used beyond the current scope, facial recognition will migrate across federal law enforcement putting privacy of law-abiding americans at risk. >> reporter: customs and border protection maintains the software safe and secure in the long with facial scans of those, generating a biometric record of exit. passengers who feel those might be more like big brother cannot doubt in a traditional way but customs and border protection says biometric is the future and hope to have the technology installed at airports around the country within four years. in san jose, claudia cowan, fox news. rob: when asked about the murder of mollie tibbetts elizabeth one quick to flip the switch. jillian: complaining about the treatment of illegal immigrants instead. >> this is hard not only for the family but people in the community and throughout iowa. one of the things we have to remember is we need immigration system that is effective, that focuses on the real problems. separating the mother from a baby does not make the country safer. rob: lawrence jones has a reaction to what warren had to say. >> people on the left are so focused on illegals but not american citizens. this is why i see them not able to do well in the midterms. the opportunity to say i am upset too. they say no, this president is against illegals, we don't want to enrage people. jillian: we asked what you said and most of you seem to agree. rob: this woman has taken stupid to a whole new level. she and nancy pelosi are the best thing that ever happened to the republican party. jillian: andrew says backlash shouldn't be building, she said what the left believes, illegal immigrants to be above american citizens. they don't like america or americans. rob: what a stupid thing to say at a time like this. remember when hillary clinton took a shot at call minors? >> we are going to put a lot of call minors and call companies out of business. rob: didn't work so well for hillary clinton as she didn't get the election. jillian: nancy pelosi didn't seem to learn from that. >> senator bird's coal powered plant, that is going to go. with all due respect to west virginia we are not going to have a coal powered plant. jillian: this after the trump administration rolled back obama era rules for call fire power plants as a job saver. ainsley ehrhardt getting an exclusive sitdown with donald trump. a sneak peek of that. down to dc, sat down with the president's talk about the big news of the day, michael cohen. what the president know about the payments. paul manafort, asked if he was going to pardon him, jeff sessions, rumors he could be firing jeff sessions after the midterms. we asked about the media. many editorial pages across the country writing that the president is the enemy of the people or the press is the enemy of the people, that is what they thought the president felt about the media. this is a clip of a response. >> is the press the enemy of the people? >> not at all but the fake news is in the fake news is comprised of a big chunk. what is the chunk? 80%. it is a lot. if i do something well it is not reported. other -- the new york times cannot write a good story about me. they are crazed, they are like lunatics. >> we asked about mollie tibbetts, what he thinks about ice and how the abolish ice movement is spreading across the country and the midterms, democrats impeachment push, it was a fairly long interview, from 6:00 to 9:00. jillian: a 3-hour show, plenty of time, thanks so much. we will be right back. your insurance rates skyrocket after a scratch so small you could fix it with a pen. how about using that pen to sign up for new insurance instead? for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. ā™Ŗ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ā™Ŗ as king midas, i here, you will too.nt. your oil change comes with a tire rotation as well. ooo! i could put that on an airplane banner. our $19.99 oil change also includes a tire rotation. book an appointment online. brewery donating sales to planned parenthood. the great purpose church in santa cruz, california says they are feminists and believe jesus was too. 30% to 60% to charity like planned parenthood. sometime next year. an attack on patriotism. a lawn crew accused of mowing down american flags in a pennsylvania cemetery. each flag honoring fallen heroes buried on the ground. the cemetery cutting ties with the landscaping company after the incident. the company says it will replace the flags while making sure they don't do this again. >> monument madness. taking 3 consecutive confederate statues after the silence a memorial stop at the university of north carolina. here to weigh in his campus reform.org correspondent, thank you for joining us, maggie, we appreciate it. what do you think? should the statues remain? should we be erasing history? >> thank you for having me. one thing we cannot condone is mob rule that took pl. monday night, students, staff and community members allowed anarchy rule on our campus was in this country we have a democratic process and the statute should have been removed. jillian: at least 30 cities removed confederate monuments so far. the case you are talking about, the statue as i understand has been under constant police surveillance after being vandalized in recent months. it is one of those things you look at and don't police have more important things they need to be doing other than guarding the statues because people are being so violence against them? >> i was walking across the other day and thought two police officers standing, this is not an issue that affects the university of north carolina but an issue going on across the country and the leadership institute campus reform has covered stories like that. jillian: a lot of people make arguments for reasons they don't want these statues to exist, why they don't want them displayed in public but don't you think there is something to be said about learning from our history and not repeating certain things we have done in history? >> of course, definitely. i believe the protesters the other night felt removing the statue could he race that history like we were talking about. one thing that cannot be ignored is unc have history regarding the confederacy and racism but one thing we can do is learn from that history, encourage a dialogue on campus, free speech and learn from each other. jillian: what is your message for the protesters? >> my message for the protesters would be you should feel lucky no one was injured. there was a threat to student safety that night. if they wanted the statue removed it should have been done lawfully. jillian: you were walking on campus the other day when you saw police officers guarding one of the statues, what have you heard around campus? >> around campus i have heard a vocal minority that people are happy the statue was taken down but i have heard from just as many people that the protesters that were there the other day were students that, this community members should not feel they have to walk past the statue every day. jillian: thank you for your time and insights, appreciate it. >> thank you for having me. rob: 54 after the hour, taking a leap of faith, the epic birthday celebration for a 90-year-old grandmother inspired by a former president. jillian: seeing red about playing his songs. the demands the front runner is making to the president. ā™Ŗ ns with no reported accidents. boom. love it. [struggles] show me the carfax. start your used car search at the all-new carfax.com. police. jillian: good, bad and the ugly. start with the good. a sky diving grandma. check it out. that's dotty ringing in 90th birthday by jumping out of a plane in michigan. she took the leap after seeing former president george h.w. bush do it. that's awesome. rob: he can do. i can do. that's crazy. steven tyler wants president trump to stop playing aerosmith songs at rallies. ā™Ŗ ā™Ŗ living on the edge. >> send ago cease and desist order to the president after playing living on the edge. he doesn't let anybody use his songs without his permission especially politicians. jillian: no shirt, no

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends First 20180823 08:00:00

democrats, some are pivoting back to family separation on this issue as donald trump amplifies his calls for tougher border walls. >> michelle melton says it is disgraceful the democrats failed to recognize the pain of the mollie tibbetts family. >> the case we are talking about underscores a message i have been sending. these examples are arguments for more and vigorous and better enforcement and not less and as a campaign issue you have democrats who are all lockstep that ice should be abolished, they are openly, brazenly like you to listen is saying, that we should have no borders at all. it is a disgrace, you have elizabeth warren lecturing people about which family separations they should be caring about. mollie tibbetts was probably >> foxbusiness alert, stocks begin their longest bull run ever in the midst of it, the turnaround i started 3453 days ago on march 9, 2009. the major indexes have been soaring ever since, donald trump touting success saying longest bull run in the history of the stock market, congratulations to america. >> political sharks circling in the fallout from a former trump ally. >> "fox and friends" exclusive, the president insists he has done nothing wrong. >> griffin can live in washington where there are different opinions on what this means. >> reporter: there is blood in the water on capitol hill, the president is fighting back saying he has done nothing wrong and we are hearing his side of the story for the first time in an exclusive. >> did you know about the payment? >> later on i knew but you have money was paid before the election and prosecutors brought charges that mister cohen was motivated for political reasons to pay hush money and mister trump is named as the person who directed and coordinated that. >> democrats on the hill wasted no time blasting the president as a co-conspirator with talk of impeachment and calling for the supreme court nomination hearing to be postponed. >> this nomination is now tainted. the president was nominated brett kavanaugh, implicated in a criminal conspiracy. >> he has not cleaned the swamp but made more rigid and fetid. there is a cesspool around this president. >> as for brett kavanaugh's hearing, the committee chairman says that is still a go. :has more legal woes being subpoena to testify in a trump foundation investigation. >> democrats pouncing as cohen promises to reveal what he is calling the truth about donald trump. >> fox news contributor alan dershowitz says the problem with the plan to take down the president as he points out he hasn't done anything illegal. >> he is more correct than his critics are. it is a close question, it is complicated. the president may contribute to his own campaign. if he had written a letter to these women saying you are going to hurt me in my campaign, i'm going to pay you 150, $130,000 to help me get elected president and you have to keep quiet, it is hush money, i challenge any of those saying it is a crime to find me anything in the common-law that would make a crime, if cohen himself made the contribution that would be unlawful because she has a limit of $5200 so the complicated issue is what if trump said to do it in the campaign contribution would be lawful as long as the president ultimately paid for it. >> michael cohen at sentencing is scheduled for december 12th. >> bombshell revelation ensures talked about the case before they were supposed to. and sealed documents showed one of the jurors commented on the weakness of paul manafort's defense. 's attorneys tried unsuccessfully for a mistrial. this as one of the jurors in field on fox news that a single juror prevented manafort from being found guilty on all 18 charges. >> we tried to convince her to look at the paper trail again and again. she said she had reasonable doubt. >> 11 of 12 jurors including yourself would have convicted him on all 18. >> yes. >> the door instead found him guilty on eight counts of fraud related charges. >> reporter: donald trump awarded the medal of honor to an airman killed in a firefight with al qaeda. >> as john fired he was shot and fell to the ground and lost consciousness. even though he was mortally wounded he regained consciousness and continued to fight on and he really thought. jillian: he died in afghanistan in 2002 leaving behind two young girls. he is the first airman to receive the medal of honor since the vietnam war. rob: and illegal immigrant charged with murdering mollie tibbetts, one whose son was killed, has asked how many more will it take for america to wake up. she joins us live. jillian: the happiest place on it got happier for people who work there. ā™Ŗ ā™Ŗ you ain't seen nothing yet rob: how many more? that is the question from an angel mom after mollie tibbetts was killed by an illegal immigrant. jillian: she has fought to save other families in the tragedy she went through. rob: a message for those fighting the president's border policy. i want to start with your reaction in the press conference earlier this week when they announced, and how the killer works. >> it was my already broken heart broke all over again, the numbness in disbelief that another family, i know their pain. my heart and prayers go out to them and condolences. i wish -- jillian: a lot of people have said stop politicizing this issue, let the family healed but if we can't talk about it now after another tragedy, will we be able to talk about it and what needs to be done in this country? >> we have to keep talking about it. it is not politicizing it. it is about mollie tibbetts and dominique and other victims, and the last victim, we will talk about it and help our american citizens and legal immigrants like myself, how much longer will we allow these elected officials, fight harder for illegal aliens than for american citizens and we have to stop whispering about this issue out of fear we might be called racist because illegal is a status, not a race. we have to get behind ice and law enforcement and stand in support of them and with them and clean up our country. there will be not another mollie tibbetts or dominic. we have to be end it now. >> clicks of the president's policies say illegal immigrants commit less crime and rape in american citizens do. they call this blatant racism and citizens killing citizens every day in this country. what do you say to that? >> i say to them that is a false statement. we should have 0 crime by illegal aliens. we have american criminals we are taking care of, they have a right to be here. illegal aliens don't have a right to be here and one death by an illegal or two or 10,000, and any crime by illegals for american citizens. >> we are sorry to speak to you under these circumstances but thank you for your time. >> thank you for having me. jillian: 18 after the hour. will ballots be safe from foreign hackers? the new warning from homeland security. >> they tell me about this nazi who lived in queens who walks the streets like he owns the place, he is 95 years old. >> the president opening up about deportation of a nazi guard living in the united states. his action was personal. database two years after russian hackers unlawfully accessed dnc computers. >> reporter: those foreign adversaries who seek to meddling or impact our election our message from the federal government is simple. just don't bother. any attack on a political party or campaign is important to take seriously. rob: she called on election officials to assure all ballots are verifiable by 2020. >> $15 billion of chinese goods. rob: farmers on the tent about their economic future during what could be a record year. shannon: spoke to those farmers and have their story. >> one of the biggest farm auctions in the country. we are here in hamilton, illinois. it sounds like $27 it appears. they have been battered by tariffs that have been imposed, retaliatory tariffs, as a result, trump administration terrace on aluminum and steel and hit with tariffs and the hit they are taking, experiencing tremendous yields this year probably 158 bushels an acre of corn making 52 bushels or so an acre of soybeans, the all-time record. most of these farmers we talked to over time. >> started the trade negotiations, let's do it. >> it is going to get better, a political game that needed done years ago and it is "happening now". >> am i optimistic? yes. i think they will get fixed. >> reporter: donald trump promised farmers by this terrace, taking matters into their own hands, something they are supposed to do. at the auction in hamilton, illinois, jeff flock. rob: it is amazing. jillian: i don't know how they do it. rob: a good story but close to the megaphone. 425 after the hour. a monster storm barreling towards hawaii and we need a monster. hurricane lane could make landfall in just hours. tracking the latest path next. >> one of the things we have to remember is we need an immigration system that focuses on real problems. rob: what does elizabeth warren think of the murder of mollie tibbetts, she cares more about illegal immigrants and sounding off on this one, here live. ā™Ŗ beat it ā™Ŗ beat it ā™Ŗ when lane is expected to make landfall. >> reporter: the storm beginning to the outer bands of rain hitting the island. that is what you're seeing a leading edges, some of this heavy rain, heavy stuff still a ways away. looking at the forecast track, wind still at 145 miles an hour. pay attention to the track. it could turn at any moment. it makes a big difference on how close it gets to the islands but here's your track and if you're looking at this area by honolulu that is friday at 2:00 pm. the ands are backing down as it moves that direction. making the closest pastoral major population center, otherwise towards the big island of hawaii, the largest island but not the most populated. here are several forecast tracks, this is why there's a lot of uncertainty. some of these take it into making landfall, others stay farther to the south. this means eventually we could see something close or farther off. you have a good 18 hours or so until they can nail down where it will go but it will be a major story either way. rob: potentially a direct hit. we will see. >> the head of ice is resurfacing in nearly a year, urging followers to continue fighting, celebrating the recent attacks in canada and europe and a 54 minute speech released by the terror group, he called on dynasties bombs, and knives in more attacks. it is unclear when it was recorded. there are conflicting reports whether he is dead or hiding in the desert near the syrian iraqi border. rob: violence near a tourist destination for americans in mexico. eight bodies found all over cancun, mexico, some dismembered and left in plastic bags. sounds like cartel violence. another found dead in a hammock. the state department previously issued a travel warning about cancun, be careful driving at night. be vigilant, they are seeing robberies and carjackings. a "fox and friends" exclusive, donald trump says he is pleased the nazi prison guard living in the united states was deported on his watch. >> a nazi prison guard living in queens, officials deported him. why was that important for you? >> a lot of jewish friends. he said to me about this man in queens, i grew up in queens and he was a man who was not just a prison guard but supervise the killing of many jews. he has lived here for decades. from the beginning of the campaign they tell me about this nazi who lived in queens and walks the street like he owns it. he is 95 years old and the obama administration was unable to pull it off and the bush administration was unable to pull it off and i was able to pull it off. rob: he was a guard at a concentration camp in german occupied poland before spending decades in the united states. you can see ainsley's exclusive interview at 6:00 this morning with the president at the white house on "fox and friends". jillian: the death of mollie tibbetts sending shockwaves throughout the country. rob: elizabeth warren raised some eyebrows with this reaction to her murder. >> this is hard not only for the family but the people in her community and people throughout iowa. one of the things we have to remember is we need immigration system that is effective, that focuses on where real problems are. separating a mother from a baby does not make the country safer. jillian: joining us with his reaction is lawrence jones, thank you for joining us. what do you make of that? >> this is what the american people are so frustrated with. seems like people on the left are so focused on illegals but not american citizens that are often harmed by people that shouldn't be in this country that came into the country illegally. this is why i see them not being able to do well in the midterms. every time they have the opportunity to say i and american, i'm upset too, they say no, this president is against illegals, we don't want to enrage people against comprehensive immigration reform. rob: they keep sliding back to the family separation which was a low point for the president which they wish they could take back but is there tone keep sounding more like they just want open borders, if you want to come here just come here. when you put to that people in polling that is not a popular idea. >> not that they sound like they want open borders, they don't respect the law, they want ice eliminated, they want us to cry about kids at the border but there are a lot of crimes where kids are stripped away from their parents all day every day and have to pay the consequences like the war on drugs which democrats supported back in the day. because of the war on drugs, if you want the drug laws to change then you have to go through the criminal justice reform process. the same for immigration, not a special privilege forgetting immigration done, they have to go through the legal process and if congress doesn't like the law if they want a better system, take it to the president's desk. >> let's talk about the next topic. it has been a week since the dnc said they would review domestic abuse allegations. >> many of us called for due process. people have a presumption of innocence before we start asking them to resign but that is not what democrats said during the me too movement, your guilty first and have to prove yourself innocent but now because they like this guy, he is the vice chairman of the democratic party and they feel he is an aggregate then he gets a pass and that is hypocritical and one standard, they should stick with it. >> is he at risk? running for attorney general. but his ties to radical islam. he has to deal with it but they will provide cover. jillian: alexandria ocasio-cortez posted a photo lamenting this coffee shop closure she frequented. >> reporter: your coffee shop, americans across the country. when you raise the minimum wage people lose their jobs, machines now, i don't feel sorry for her. this is a woman who benefited from capitalism and now she is changing her tune. campus reform for a little bit, these young people believe in her, they believe in socialism and it scares the hell out of me and the public, a junior senator, people who are laughing about his hope and change message became the president of the united states. we need to be a little cautious laughing at her. rob: the coffee shop in manhattan stay open because the wage hikes hurt their business, these are wage hikes alexandria ocasio-cortez is a big fan of and when they close the coffee shop she is not crazy about the idea. >> that is what happens, it is her coffee shop. all across america experiencing the same thing and her policies, socialist policies, she supports raising the minimum wage. welcome to the real world when you do it. your coffee shop is gone now. rob: the "fox and friends" all-american road trip goes from the road to the sky. jillian: todd pyro flying with the thunderbirds in atlantic city. >> reporter: good morning. we took this winnebago through my home state and what an unbelievable experience it was because we went over the boardwalk in atlantic city where the thunderbird not only put on a show but they gave me the experience of a lifetime in one of these. and unbelievable bucket list item for you when "fox and friends first" returns on thursday morning. ā™Ŗ affected. the threat was not specific to one area but details remain unclear. jillian: an officer struggling to arrest a robbery suspect, put down their phones and help. >> why did you do that? >> stop it! [shouting] jillian: now of a job after the viral video card her recording the whole thing and not helping. the suspect is charged with this arming a police officer. ā™Ŗ jillian: from dollywood to atlantic city, todd pyro hitting the roads. rob: getting a firsthand look at all the fun you can have traveling in an rv and we might have a tough time getting him to come back. jillian: an incredible show in atlantic city. >> reporter: incredible is an understatement, a tale of two rides for me. first the winnebago really is one of these vehicles that packs a punch even though it look small in size, it has everything you want from the bed to the kitchen and it handles extremely easily, perfect for tailgating and going to see airshows like the ones the thunderbirds fly but this week wasn't just any air show. i had the opportunity to fly with some amazing men and women who do an unbelievable job for our country, an experience that leaves me speechless. take a look. time to take this road trip from the ground to the sky. that was pretty cool. >> the thunderbirds represent 660,000 total active-duty national guard airmen deployed around the world. what do you do these airshows? >> our mission is to recruit, retain and inspire. we travel across america representing amazing things the air force is doing. >> not many people get a chance to do this, to strap into a fighting falcon. >> a little lightheaded. my entire life, last week, the dollywood roller coaster. >> i keep hearing this will be an athletic event. i haven't done a workout since soccer practice. >> you are going to crush it. >> say you can't pick your calls, that is not how it is done. and pyromaniac, this process works. >> ready to go? >> as ready as i will ever be. >> got your name up there? you see that? it is actually up there. show time. let's go. all right. >> how are you doing back there? >> that was so smooth. >> roll to the left. here we go. nice and easy. you ready to fly? >> what do i do? >> further. there you go. pullback on the stick. pullback further. there you go. all right. you go upside down. you ready? upside down again. and all the way around now. >> this is amazing. this is just amazing. unbelievable. >> pulling over 6g, no small feat. [applause] >> welcome back. bring it in. >> thanks for the experience and i am speechless. it is rare. the folks gave this to me. a true honor to receive something like this even though i did nothing. the gentleman on the bottom was the pilot who took me up, he was so kind and generous and gentle with what is a massive piece of machinery but it is not just major falcon. 130 individuals are team that make these things fly. they all deserve an amazing amount of credit. when you think of team, what they do on a day-to-day basis is unreal. we are in good hands here as a nation. jillian: did you get sick? >> reporter: let's put it this way. i will put it delicately. so far on the all-american summer road trip i'm over two on intestinal fortitude. in saint augustine next week does me a little better. rob: thank you so much, appreciate it. for more information visit foxnews.com/roadtrip. jillian: michael cohen's lawyer paying for his client's legal journey. >> we set up a website called michael cohen truth.com that we are hoping he will get some help from the american people. jillian: the epic mistake he made without even knowing it. rob: it got happier for people who work there, thousands of disney employees nationwide. ā™Ŗ taking care of business ā™Ŗ jillian: tracy carrasco here with more. >> reporter: it made a mistake in slowing down the wireless data of these firefighters as they were battling california's largest firing state history. verizon says it happens because the plan only allowed for use of a limited amount of high-speed wireless data. the center clarify department chief said this significantly impacted how these firefighters were able to handle this crisis, they were in the middle of this emergency situation and they asked verizon to help them with this slowdown, verizon said it was a customer service mistake, an error that caused this slowdown. they lift these caps, this all had to do with net neutrality. >> disney offering to pay college tuition for all its >> no strings attached program. for nearly 80,000 of these hourly employees they will be eligible to take classes online, the high school diploma, to take college classes, vocational class but they will do this as part of disney's program, they announced it in january, $50 million educational program. employees will soon be able to take in person classes, a biggest and if -- big initiative. jillian: the good, >> the violin rendition of natural women, beautiful. rob: michael cohen's attorney fishing for money from his client on national tv and makes a big mistake. lanny davis's go fund me page sent them to an internet page, somebody quickly buying that up, redirecting users to the president's site. dacorrected himself and gave a proper address. jillian: no shirt, no pants, no problem. a guy driving a motorcycle in florida with his feet. calm, cool and collected, he could be ticketed for several violations. not smart. rob: student vandals whitewashing history and intensifying their war on confederate statues. [chanting] jillian: a student at the university of north carolina says anarchy has no place in civil society, calling out the irony behind their antics when she joins us live in the next hour of "fox and friends first". sleep disturbances keep 1 in 3 adults up at night. only remfresh uses ion-powered melatonin to deliver up to 7 hours of sleep support. number 1 sleep doctor recommended remfresh -- your nightly sleep companion. available in the natural sleep section at walmart. i decided to make shirts for the walk with custom ink. the shirts were so easy to design on the site. the custom ink team was super helpful and they just came out perfect. seeing my family wearing my shirts was such an amazing reminder of all the love and support that everyone has for my dad. - [narrator] check out our huge selection of custom t-shirts and more, for teams, businesses, and every occasion. you'll even get free shipping. get started today at customink.com. you'll even get free shipping. enterprise car sales and you'll take any trade-in?rom that's right! great! here you go... well, it does need to be a vehicle. but - i need this out of my house. 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Transcripts For DW Reporter - Clandestine Employment Of Indians In Italy 20181013 12:15:00

it's t w dot com or follow us on twitter at d w news let's watch. a news honest mistake she's not seeing the unsub name sounds bold so-called shake up today's kind of a side box office the first. place. people who put big dreams on the big screen. movie magazine on d. w. . me take it personally i went with a little bit wonderful people and stories that make the game so special. for all true fans my. pick up more than football on line. so. hard ground for practically peanuts. these workers get just a few euros an hour typical around issues in courtships jegede soon is one of tens of thousands of. good makes business sense for the companies the agricultural industry used to get a lease second largest export sector. fruit vegetables produced in latino are sold all over europe. but the organized crime and human trafficking at play here stretches all the way to india. jacket's singh arrived in italy twelve years ago friends of his in his village in punjab in northern india had told him about latina they told him he could work in the fields and earn good money he knew that life would be difficult but not this difficult. at first he often thought about going back. it was a bit awkward when i when i was alone at the beginning i had to make my own breakfast and lunch was also clean when i came home from work where you could get me to believe now that my family's here it's all much easier. and again it's more muskogee was that. it was difficult for me to be alone for so many years my son was so small he wasn't even one year old when judge left. life was difficult when we had to travel. going to be going to even easy household things. everything in the school. so to ok. see you later there we did see why. about eighteen thousand indians work in the province of latina. most of them are six from punjab. jetties needed years before he could buy his own car find a small house to rent and save enough money to bring his family over. he's one of the few who is willing to talk with us openly about the work. others were often too scared. to leave going to get up and we are free in india. had my own business it was good that i could arrive late for work and go home early and if i needed to do something they can beat me and it's different here got on with getting in the bathroom and then you hear that you're only paid if you work. but still i'm better off than the others. he could be heard all summer only get three euros fifty an hour. they're going to get five euros fifteen got all. buns out of. my work here look at it go. in there comes a gram here i think of the company but they want letters in with a camera. and the owners are feet with just a magazine. the companies usually don't even pay a third of the official minimum wage. many of the men work seven days a week up to twelve hours a day during harvest time. but these indians are trapped in a criminal system most paid thousands of euros to human traffickers to get to italy on fake papers. it can be years before they're able to pay off their debts if it all was this debt bondage is widespread and entity and not only indians are exploited. east europeans and africans to. middlemen behind the scenes recruit the workers. they keep the costs of their wages and they also dictate the working hours all of which is illegal. i'm. careful here's the boss what's going on we're making a programme about the indian community you can't film here. the menace is a public space. i'm sorry you were in the field. that's also a public space too late what do you mean too late. well you can write down the license number. yes please do that do it. i love grand up there you will meet with. the woman we know. you most companies here are parts of the system. in the tina a police unit has been set up to fight against illegal employment come in a mosque is the head. there the one that i was. it's certainly a system of organizing a look into a legal immigration. because see what i mean there's mainly indians who work with italians to bring people over and to give them fake papers and get a fake residence permit so the fake visas you see have a glass bottle of. everything you know what with. you been drawn off you need to. market. you're in this. school of look how well this driving license has been faked. it's simply perfect. a little. bit. difficult to break the system but there's always somebody willing to testify fee show. but sometimes workers talk because they're scared of being deported to india but. others are angry with the middle medicals. and says i want there are many reasons if a. little special in there but it's hard to find good interpreters but. they're also part of the community and they're scared of cooperating with the police denouncing people and helping us to arrest other indians. one of the biggest producers of radishes in europe allowed us to feel. ok now we'll go to the canteen over there. we were able to speak to one of the managers and ask him about we created this and exploitation. you know what i once again start a company philosophy. if we were to find such a case we would find the person immediately. i mean you know we're not a company that does. treated workers well is. not proper burial so even then. activists say that the people here are also not paid the minimum wage that they are also recruited operating here . the workers themselves refuse to say anything this scared of losing their jobs. in the evening other workers visit this ng family. the men have been living here for years but they still saving up to bring their wives. well you know i. support my wife and sisters gold jewelry to pay for the trip to italy. i thought that our hands the money fast to get a bank was a better reason than the one you know they're going to get in the end we had to sell the jewelry to pay off our debts with an opera. we did that almost everyone who comes here has the same problem. the reality is different from the expectations we got then i would resume. joke gz friend also had big hopes. he's been in italy for eight years. during that time he hasn't gone home once. here. i'm neither happy nor unhappy about the working conditions. but you. know. the problem is that it's tough on the back and it always aches if they're here. but nobody wants to go back to india the money that they earn here is needed. about this like. in this. town and it's not all doom and gloom. and at the beginning when i first arrived i live near the beach and. that's when the. bell you know it was our first time i'd swum in the sea what it. it's a good enough that even though the book of. the indian community has grown over the years they have opened stores and restaurants and there are two temples in the area. the euro but there's not much contact with the italian community. and i'm going to leave sometimes i think about them here who eat other vegetables though i know that many of them are excellent to germany to restaurants that i often wonder if the people there think about are sometimes good about the conditions that we walk. south with. cancun. they meet at the border crossing without roughing zachariah and his father couldn't go any farther. the boy comes from hebron he suffers from new kenya and his only chance of being cured mine is in israel. and israeli organization arranges help for families from palestine to do so they have to overcome barriers both real and personal. three thousand next d.w. . cards lawyer. cards culture. hair. super mega. super food stylish style icon. lifestyle during. the. sixty's. upgrade yourself with d. w.'s interior design channel on. the tube of technology.

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Transcripts For DW Kino - The Movie Magazine 20181028 16:15:00

for the casual teams. that's their news wrap from day and it will have one of the top of the hour but in the meantime feel free to log onto a website that's dot com and on instagram and. other social media we're fairly easy to find at the news thank you for watching. look. good. it was a human trying to close. the first global disaster of the twentieth century. and one of. the marks the hundredth anniversary of its. what it is humankind learned from the great one. because it learned to note. but nineteen. not forgotten w.'s november focus. loop. lose. lose lose. i welcome to a new edition of kino favorites seven is a magic number in the movie in the magnificent seven it's code for camaraderie in the seventh seal it's a metaphysical metaphor and in david fincher seven shorthand for original sin today show is all about. namely seven drug. on the cusp of international stardom. the faces of german cinema you need to know. starting with these two. specializes in offbeat characters hard on the inside but with plenty of soul within . he looks a bit weird and plays weird characters. and i think the worst thing that can happen with any form of endeavor is that it turns out mediocre people say yeah it was nice just gets a lukewarm response for. but there's little chance of that happening to him he's received praise from high court. no he really said that i was the best we've ever seen he's talking about director misha hanukah who cast unhappy as. the. book. a man from the home according to. the clever guy who. was also what isabel passed side on the red carpet in cancun in twenty seventy then in twenty eight thousand he won the german film prize his best actor for his performance and was in the on. again. no you do with. what joe son spoke of skinny the new international star from. it's clearly they haven't figured out yet that i'm taller can handle just about any assignment like here as a contract killer in a swedish crime thriller. her . her first movie role ready demanded a lot of work in a science fiction film pandorum she gave ben foster a good thrashing. and says i'm fine it's always been something i could build on the fact that i can rely on myself and on my body and can handle it well. for athleticism is no accident born in east germany in one thousand nine hundred one to tell it was a gymnast before turning to acting that solid basis in sports helps her when preparing for action films such as the superman movie manish steel. but she's now being offered a wider spectrum of films getting the chance to show she can do more than just action movies we're sure can play just about anything. and hasn't yet left her alone for los angeles but she's already making a name for herself in hollywood expect to see her coming soon to a theater near you international success also seems a given for our next talent thanks to one film in particular. and you're back with us here on fox with a live for me in the poorly run promise that i'm. going to make i called up to you know to. some to hello as an ambitious businesswoman the daughter of an practical joke loving father it's the role of a lifetime. and that's good too she says because of course it's wonderful to get a role like this and to master it without failing miserably. there is no hint of failure here the film has been showered with praise and prizes including a best actress award for her love from the european film academy. was. some polo was born in one nine hundred seventy eight she studied acting at the else bush school in berlin and began working in theatre. while. she made her first big on screen impression ten years before tony adman in requiem she plays a girl supposedly possessed by the devil who was subjected to an exercise in law how very funny research going on the hot guy. is but it's thanks to tony adman that she is now on the wish list of many international directors we're sure as i'm sure her love will have a few more surprises a person leave in years to come thank you. thank you. to. join us night became one of germany's hottest young actors thanks to a television series. so it's a political post of letters no. doubt. the doj under eighty three was a flop on german t.v. it was very well received internationally. viewers in more than one hundred countries followed your last night as an east german spy in west germany at the height of the cold war. the actor has appeared on t.v. shows around the world to talk about the role that's made him famous but. born in one nine hundred ninety in the back here last night i went to his first audition after seeing an ad in a newspaper the start of an impressive career. which has included a role as a teen who gets mixed up in. any foreigner violence in northeastern germany after the fall of communism and eunice night is just getting started. and. like you on this ny our next they repeat an acting when she was still teenager she's not as well know and yet as our other favorites but we think that's about the change. lives liza frees likes to look at new roles from several different perspectives before saying yes to them an intellectual at heart she prefers more serious projects. like playing a woman with cystic fibrosis and a drama about assisted suicide can even mine. or the survivor of a killing spree who knew the murderer. lives lisa flees was born in berlin in one nine hundred ninety her career started when a boyfriend gave her a flyer from an acting school. i chose through all that was well known the family for its most content is easy to deal with. to is not an easy job as shown by this film about an artist's colony in which leslie sophie's plays jen an idealist struggling for true freedom when you know this is bizarre oh my he didn't ask me. the u.s. entertainment magazine variety has named her one of europe's top acting talents and we agree. that. he's been acting since he was eleven louise hoffman has even been a guest at the oscars. yeah ok do. this did not start and i never did get my end of mind in which he plays a german p.o.w.'s signed to clear mines after world war two was nominated for an oscar. and he appeared in dark a mystery drama and the first german series produced by netflix. i mean if you want to be an i want to like characters on the edge i really enjoy that i want tell stories that have relevance on some. such as this drama about abuse and violence at a protestant reform school. kind of purgatory. born in one thousand nine hundred seven luis hoffman is the only one of our magnificent seven with no formal acting training but that doesn't seem to be hindering his career. louis hoffman was fourteen when he got his first starring role playing tom sawyer in a german adaptation of the mark twain classic the last number of our magnificent seven is another of wunderkind not yet twenty five she's already being compared to the great romy schneider some call her the best actress of her generation that's thanks in large part to one film. it was her work with french director francois was all that got polar bear noticed outside in germany. she plays ana who's mourning her fiance killed in action in the first world war she meets the young frenchman and falls in love with him she has no idea that he is the one who killed her fiance and battle. he. says he comes with a minimum. how libya was so convincing in the role that the jury at the venice film festival gave her the marcelo must try the army award for best newcomer. thank you. i'm not interested in presenting myself in a certain way or in making sure i look beautiful because it was honest good also it's important to me that the emotional truth is there or that i show why a person decides to do a certain thing out of all meant as a physical and child. polar bear was born in one thousand nine hundred five at the age of eight she took a feature class and later studied acting in london. cast her as a young woman who falls in love with an a stony an anarchist. class isn't it. and she plays an artist's muse in the latest film by the lives of others director floyd on hang on a smoke. we are certain hollywood will soon come calling for polar bear. that was our magnificent seven our favorite faces to watch in german set about what your wife would make your list write to us with your personal favorites we're back next week with a new edition of kino until then i'll see you at the movies. kumi . good. news. to move. good. functioning an invisible enemy landmines in bosnia. mine clearance risked their lives removing mines left over from the yugoslav force. to move them one is our choice. and extremely dangerous. the mine clearing up bosnia. next on d w. one hundred salmon must treat the delis list of not to be missed german novels in the english translation. among them one of the many best set is written michael needier film kit. we visited her in los angeles and asked her what it's like to meet rice say in the u.s. . sixty minutes to. form. scars cover don't forget women in russia have to live with violence sexism and oppression to nothing and violence is normal in russia. where putin is petri arky rooms today women's rights were already gaining traction a hundred years ago. the people here don't have

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Transcripts For DW Eco India - The Environment Magazine 20181126 02:30:00

i don't. want to be. discovered. hello welcome to equal we india a sustainability magazine which puts the focus on solutions to some of the most pressing problems affecting the world to be this week we connect you could change me from india laos and germany people like you and i with the system people subdivision to see first sustainable world. coming to you from mumbai in india. over the next thirty minutes find out how an illiterate woman in india is educating to a community to build a new story moves why an activist in mumbai is holding a few. trees. and why move isn't going extinct. let's look at an issue that forty percent of india's population has to deal with every morning the government has boards toward the keys to access to clean and functional toilets in the last few years but open definition is a complex problem in india too extreme poverty and cultural conditioning for the last three decades one woman is revolutionizing access to safe sanitation in the district of in the north of the india. so. it's. in their. children so it's a village people shall go to people i love with the zeal she's a company but many of those if you set your mind on something and there's nothing you can order. you to speak it. could be five years to see these words with pride and confidence where. she's been the driving force. in history by going door to door to check it homes have functional boyhood's and also to build them. jointly began how these she describes him. they used to live like. there was a tiny pond that everyone used to be able father don't those everybody ended up going there in the cause that was the. beginning. there was a time when the norm very you went you would see feces in the open it was everywhere . a chance encounter with. a look really and you would it works towards improving hygiene insanity from of communities was when the violence of change began to dawn . below fifty five in the. mission lived deafening tools need to be dug one and the other. two pipes would pass through each opening while one gets filled up the second one we get. our fair one the kind of give our job at the. cattle get into. never mind where they may go after all when i started talking to people about sanitation they would see no good would ever come out of this by going on a strike for a full month nothing happened i was not even from want difference would i be able to me. when i got here. i do them i could leave that responsibility to me i also assured them that i wouldn't leave the slum to the job that's when they agreed to stand by me but those were very challenging days where the. people mostly ignored the women hardly of the left and the men were just not ready to listen the regard to my god we are all up and accident cannot go just about any day to avoid that why shouldn't we build and use our own toilets. this is the boy lit. and if this is the market at which the structure will set you know what i want to. be has built with two thousand five hundred. some with with. money some with government grants and some with generous donations. we should consider ourselves lucky that we have this base your good will toilets these don't even have that. any more than five hundred million. i believe that i do in the eyes that go exist a lot of country. is for that but i support us while the other lives in what is it with. these other people who are in the orbit of the biggest problem is that they live in support. of it they have no legal rights which is why they don't invest in the police because there is a true fear of their hoses being demolished. when we got much out there but then a couple uncovered mollusk of the. this lack of access to sanitation is a much more compounded problem for. more stuff with and in an open slums like roger . compelled to be complete for going in for the morning and navigate deserted streets in the dark themselves. saw the men find it much easier to relieve themselves in the open they don't feel issues well being shy or of feeling any shame but for women or young girls who go to school the problem is much much bigger it will. be in. a community without toilets also faeces the long term consequences of poor hygiene and health. he's still the leading cause of it's in india among children that in the making. and. how many. have been leaked where do you show these gods and to tell you that it's a venice programs by engineers like show me part. of the grassroots. want on their days to get on with. so while you were. creating a moan about that there was no work either there was a market for your money find innovative ways to explain to them how flies didn't discord on film and then on our food that's when they realized that each time they difficult in the open and the risk falling sick. they're going to have another. boat mccue honeywell take an american anywhere they humbly model that open the door . used all. the moment their thought and there are a lot of children who passed on these lessons on to their parents who then end up listening to them. in your car even the grooves under my sleeve was scary traces of mind in them when i entered my house carries the dog right in for the good since she came to the city of cancun as a child right this still enabled the focal out with the at fifty five she's now a good boss on the beat to the next generation. if i'm in my neck ankle matter look here from my campaign i'm working with karthikeyan when i started out and initially i used to cover my face with. the woman i spoke to and tried to ward to be used if you were covering your field how do you expect us to venture out of our houses or hungary. i remember telling them why wouldn't you be able to go out of your moses are men the only ones capable of making a difference tell me one person in this world that is beyond the capacity of women . it sometimes takes only one individual determined and persistent to bring about big change now the city of mumbai has three and a half million trees each one essential to maintaining the fragile balance in this rapidly urbanising metropolis our next story is about zora body. now and how he's been fighting to save money by strays from being indiscriminately cut down. in the end they are fifty years busting and it seems because there are new buildings there is mark let me read more of these more electricity being used more to look more like the word something doesn't float all that so do we not need more of these. i mean he did not part of the end of the development of the city. lol either not going to the nor does he need more and more trees were dying along the way you would see golden rules are for dead trees which would be to give the green trees i googled up the issue and i thought that the museum had said that there was really a bug every day meat which was affecting these green trees and therefore the trees were dying and he said to go fight of the island i court saying that this is the issue the problem is very simple that once had been infected it needs to be cut and removed. to prevent infection from spreading to the village green next no and the moment they did that many bugs stop spreading and then please don't die any longer in mumbai as they work more and more in one day more because they're all over the sea view this death destruction of becoming. that is a fear which was made in nine hundred seventy five it says that on the side of every lord there must be the governor and board sides of every one for the war department one forgot the duties the department is supposed to use their common sense and times the of that so this jihad thought it beat any application which comes up with the fear that if you visit the school mase it can lead. to this dreams only need to be cut and if they find needed to be in it to be a boom ninety percent of the cases the. we just plainly sanction it and then the. public notice in the paper saying there will be bubbles to cut so many trees are tall so in some locations if there is something where we can object about then i take the time and trouble and the effort to object about it. we had a car station there putting on your. station so there is a becoming the obvious like a photo that we are going to let be off as i said that he is not coming the only the blunder it's all these got this to you for the piece to somebody and yes back to you sometimes you need to go to be my fault which is not to. be should be cut but like i did before going away. to highlight this issue of undeceived recapping that for the metro we decided to hold a symbolic funeral where we actually got it like three on our own does from the one ordered early and we went by a month earlier there have been burgers i'm not allowed to be gone a lot of support a lot of people came out to short that symbolic protest at this and you can get a feeling it's not fair. i think actually on a cutting of fifty one hundred year old just because you can cut it is a senseless act because nothing is going to be able to replicate that hundred year old even if a plan a hundred new degrees it will not be equal to that one hundred year old trees. now protecting the natural ecosystem is definitely the need of the hour there was a time when the black bear of the moon bears as it's also called trying to cross the ship today they're ready to be found in the continent and are listed as a vulnerable species how did they get here on reporter travel to the thought course he needs. in the north the flowers to find out. that. come food is absolutely crazy about strawberry jam. there. are only four months old he's the youngest resident in the sanctuary the young bear was just getting bones when he was seized from a legal animal traders. in fact hong kong's been fattening him up since he arrived . here besides kung fu australian ngo free the bears has managed to rescue three other cubs so far here. normally young bears spend the first three years of their lives with their mothers but she's usually killed and the cubs are kept under awful conditions come from his brother died in captivity he probably starved to death the animals have a really terrible time. and. this fully grown asian black bear also called moon bear is almost two metres high standing and weighs in at one hundred fifty kilograms and cut the sanctuary they try to keep the animals under the balls natural conditions possible. the bear refuge lies in the north of laos right next to a well known waterfall the nearby tourist attraction means a lot of visitors take advantage of the chance to walsall see the bears. hardly any of the visitors can imagine the ordeal these poor animals have been through. like koby who lost his right front leg after he was trapped by poachers in a snare. he was destined for an illegal bear farm. whiskey was lost in nicholson explains to the visitors that bear bile is used in chinese medicine. and it commands a high price. a house in torn a cage is way bigger than the bass themselves live up to twenty years and saw those pages which is expected to surgical means from the day using a silver age imagine going through that torment the frequency of every couple of days living on his system is a very very big russians afraid. these pictures show up their bile farm near the lao capitol v.n. chant. the bears face is a portrait of pain. nobody knows how many farms like this are in laos it's actually illegal in laos to treat animals like this but is all too often in southeast asia enforcement and punishment are totally inadequate. luke nicholson says the greatest threat to animals is human poverty. you can find products from the illegal wildlife trade in almost every local market here they're popular with chinese tourists. think that a table is being sold for fifty us felicity. we have a vehicle here. right next to them lao whiskey with animal parts preserved in them including bits of bear. the battle to protect animals and species can't be won without environmental awareness so the bear sanctuary regularly invites school classes. i. a lot of the kids don't even know that horses to baton us is resident in their forest and also a threatened species. i followed us hidden and ball so it bears can train their natural foraging instincts oh. conservationists are supported by foreign donors. thirty eight asian moon bears now live in the open here far too many. the reserve was only designed to take ten of them. but allowing these colossal creatures back into the wild would be too dangerous. for. this number of reasons why these bays contretemps with some have physical trauma some have psychological trauma and some of the hand right for little cubs but they've been rescued the bands that have been hand raised as imprinted on humans if we would release them back to the wall. to a village looking for food and that's where we get human. and that's when people in bad start. today some monks have come from the nearby village of. a blast the conservationists work with a buddhist ritual the ceremony is supposed to bring luck to the workers there and fend off evil spirits free the bear certainly needs every bit of support it can get so that confluence and his friends can enjoy brighter future in laos. let's not shift focus to an innovation that could be a game changer for women in rural india a lack of running water. often means that women have to travel long distances on foot to fetch water an american company is trying to change that with a simple but significant tweak to the traditional water picture. collecting water is a challenge for millions of people. wells are often far away from their homes. the job is done mainly by women and it can take half a day to collect all of those for a family needs. carrying heavy loads of twenty liters for hours on end can cause health problems. those who feel it's designed by the u.s. organization well it's a rolling barrel with a handle and can hold forty five leases of course it. will cost twenty to thirty dollars not only does it lies in women's loads the wheel can also help businesses like small scale farms over outside restaurants. like them. also. tell us about. visit our website or send us a tweet. doing your bit sharing your story. can big data help us study the effects of changing ecology germany college's stefan stall is trying to find out just that at one top national park in germany once the variables are identified the data can potentially be used to study how the national park has evolved over many decades allowing us to study the good and the bad effects of human activity it has endured shows how he's breaking it down. these trees are being felled but for a good cause sunlight needs to reach the forest floor so that deciduous and can live for us woodland can grow here again the conservation zone in one fork was established three years ago the rain h. aeration of the forest progress as researchers will also be collecting extensive data on the local ecosystem a stream flows through the national park the riverbed used to be completely overshadowed by the spruce trees explains hans joachim whose yes from the proc authority. the stream and the metal will now be able to develop will ghana clee the mixed woodland that's already growing here will also evolve and light and warmth will restore the river valley to its natural state. scientists at the nearby environmental campus bill confederate collaborating on the real nature ration project they've set up probes and measuring stations around the forest the institute specializes in environmental i.t. research and teaching staff on show is a water ecologist. this is a multi parameter probe we use it in the town back stream in the national park eight different environmental parameters are measured in the water and these are sent to the campus via data transfer the data is fed into a german network that is part of a european network that in turn is part of an international network so what we're doing is making environmental data available to help politicians make decisions and react as promptly as possible to environmental problems so. the environmental campus peer confed brings together international scientists from the field of i.t. technology and the environment geo informatics is a central focus of research here satellites are able to gather data on changes in the global environment the scientists goal is to make data collected from various sources more easily available to experts in africa and asia be a global environmental data network. the major advantage of earth observation data is that it provides us with comprehensive information unlike isolated measuring stations which can only compile selective data we can also get inside ravines and look at forests on mountaintops that are usually inaccessible basically we can very efficiently get a comprehensive data and when necessary react accordingly. to problems such as pest infestations and over exploitation of the world's forests these are problems that can be tackled tackling climate change on the other hand is more complicated at the environmental campus. and his team are working on developing models based on incoming data that can predict the environmental consequences of increased temperatures the scientists run through potential scenarios and experimental setups in order to measure the reactions of plants to environmental changes as because of the main issue we're addressing is the long term effect of climate change on ecosystems one approach is to replicate an artificial ecosystem we can feed the data collected from the sensors in the national park into this artificial world to see what it will be like you and your twenty thirty and how temperatures affect plant growth and the whole ecosystem. of those consequences to. the collaboration with the environmental campus has already paid off for the national park there's more and more data on the conservation zone which eventually will be made available in real time so the park rangers buy a smartphone. we're taking measures now and plan to follow their progress to see if their measures that make sense we have no specific expectations we'll just allow nature to run its course the data we gather will help us judge whether our management measures were successful or not. the project is a long term one renae to ration in the hunt for the national park will take years and its benefits will only become apparent in decades to come. i hope you had many takers reasserted today's show for we bring you many more stories of innovation and the people driving them good bye and have a wonderful me move. the ball. move. the ball. the body. the body. the but. ultimately. the. body i'm going to. become. the be. the be. the ball. the touch the body. the ball where the coins all build the feet in some countries cash is becoming a thing of the cost of moxie like money has no material from the philosophy. book risks and benefits coming digital by human system smog. and who stands to profit from a world without money. in fifteen minutes on the job. entering the conflict zone with tim sebastian. challenging those in cars asking tough questions demanding. as conflicts intensify i'll be meeting with keep players on the ground in the senses of. cutting through the rhetoric holding the powerful to account facts the conflicts. conflict zone with tim sebastian on t.w. . bay news i was. just not suitable and some new sounds the so-called change does not include his constant boost side by most. people who put big dreams on the big screen. the movie magazine on t.w. . anxiously waiting. waiting for lifeline to syria. good morning where are you why aren't you answering. every call brings them closer together. in the terms because they feel powerless to help. feeling like i'm letting people down for what. they worry about they've left behind. but. why not try. going to be strong but deep down i'm broken the law. the war continues to point comes to flit from syria. i'm trying to reach them but nobody answers the war on my phone or to her documentary starts december eighth on t w. that. the european union has signed off on a divorce agreement for britain's departure from the bloc in brussels e.u. chief young close a sad moment and a tragedy but stress that the e.u. would remain partners and friends with britain british prime minister to resign may now faces an uphill fight to get the plan approved in parliament. russia has fired

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Transcripts For DW Eco India - The Environment Magazine 20181127 16:30:00

never would have gone on the trip without you i would not have put myself and my parents' attention to do with the what a beautifully at work. with you but even though i have serious problems on a personal level and i was unable to live there wasn't going to. want to know their story. or find remarkable information. hello welcome to equal india a sustainability magazine which puts the focus on solutions to some of the most pressing problems affecting the world to be this week we connect you to change makers from india laos and germany people like you and i were the system people their vision to see first sustainable world some of that raghu coming to you from mumbai in india. over the next thirty minutes find out how an illiterate woman in india is educating to community to build a new story lives why an activist in mumbai is holding a funeral for the city's trees. and why more beds in laos are going extinct. let's was to look at an issue that forty percent of india's population has to deal with every morning the government has voiced toward the case for access to clean and functional toilets in the last few years but open definition is a complex problem in india tied to extreme poverty and cultural conditioning for the last three decades one woman is revolutionizing access to safe sanitation in the district of cardboard in the north of india. it's. in their. children so it's a village people shall go to people i love with the zeal she's accompanied by many of those if you set your mind on something and there's nothing you cannot achieve. with the five you'll still see these words with pride and confidence where. she's been the driving force in. the street by going door to door to check if homes have functioning boyhood's and also. could join the big and how we want peace she describes is in the help. i needed the used to live like. there was a tiny pond that everyone used to be for the dog goes everybody ended up going the because there was no way to go. there was a time when an old man very you went you would see feces in the open it was everywhere. a chance encounter with the look lean she would that works towards improving hygiene insanity from of communities was when the violence of change began to dawn . fifty five. mission lived thought deafening tools need to be dug one and the other. two pipes would pass through each opening while one gets filled up the second one we get. our fair one the kind of give our job at the door hard cattle get injured but. never mind where they may go after all when i started talking to people about sanitation and they would see no good would ever come out of it despite going on strike for a full month nothing happened i was not even from want to friends would i be able to me. when i got here only i do them i could leave that responsibility to me i also assured them that i wouldn't be the slum the job was done that's when they agreed to stand by me but those were very challenging days where the. people were mostly ignorant of the women hardly of the left. and the men were just not ready to listen the regard to my god we're all an accident cannot go just about any day to avoid that why shouldn't we build and use our own toilets. this is the boy lit. and if this is the market at which the structure will set you know what i want you know that. he has built two thousand five hundred. some with precedents pulling in money some with government grants and some with generous donations. we should consider ourselves lucky that we have the space you want to build toilets in cities don't even have that. in india more than five hundred million people are forced to difficult because the lack of. memory of mom. i believe that i can do in the hours that go exist a lot of. what is for the prosperous while the other lives in what is it with. these other people who are forced to defecate in the open the biggest problem is that they live in support. of it they have no legal rights which is why they don't invest in the police because there is a bunch can feel good hose is being demolished. when the government out there but then a couple of the. this lack of access to sanitation is a much more compounded problem for. more stuff will india and it will be in slums like roger. from bell to be company for dawn in the morning and navigate visited streets of the dog eat themselves. saw the men find it much easier to relieve themselves in the open they don't feel issues well being shy or of feeling any shame but for women or young. dogs who go to school the problem is much much bigger will. a community without toilets also faeces the long term consequences of poor hygiene and health. a fact is still the leading cause of it's in india among children that then that many women. how many. have been leaked where do they usually use what's uncertain sure it's a menace programs but engines like show me the party that moved at the grassroots. want on the road to secure. so why do you in. the film. no one ever thought there was a book are that they got there. we find innovative ways to explain to them how it flies didn't discord on film and then on our food that's when they realized that each time they difficult in the open and they risk falling sick any cut their budget. but mchugh hollyweird an american anywhere three hundred. open the day her used saw. the moment there so there are a lot of children who passed on these lessons on to their parents who then end up listening to them. in your car even the grooves on the my sleep was scary traces of mind in them when i entered my house dark mode carries the dog right in for the good since she came to the city of cancun as a child right there still unable before calamity at fifty five she's now a good boss on the beat to the next generation. if i'm a man i can come after will hear from my campaign on my own what kartik me when i started out in the initial years i used to cover my face with the sorry the woman i spoke to and try to mold to be used to tell me if you were covering your field how do you expect us to venture out of our houses or hunger any kind of buying it i remember telling them why wouldn't you be able to go out of your moses are men the only ones capable of making a difference tell me one passed in this world that was beyond the capacity of women . it sometimes takes only one individual determined and persistent to bring about big change now the city of mumbai has three and a half million trees each one essential to maintaining the fragile balance in this rapidly urbanising metropolis our next story is about zorro. you know and how he's been fighting to save money by strays from being indiscriminately cut down. in the end city is busting it it seems because there are new buildings that is more traffic we need more what does we need more electricity being need more to live on like the lord something does not for all that but do we not need more trees. i mean he's not part of the. development of the city. either not going to i'm noticing that more and more trees are dying along the way you would see the wooden ruins of for dead trees which would be to give the green trees i googled up the shrew and i saw the beams he had said that there was a bug every day make which was affecting these mean. and therefore the trees were dying and he said to go find the island i caught saying that this is the issue the problem is very simple that once have been infected it needs to be cut and removed . to prevent infection from spreading to the degree next not in the moment they did that many bugs dogsledding and then please don't die any longer in mumbai as a mark modern modern world in which is that all over the city this does destruction of the government. because. that is a fear which was made in nine hundred seventy five it says that on the side of every lord there must be governed board sides of every one of the war department on top of the duties of the redevelopment are supposed to use their common sense and time see of that so this jihad thought it be any application which comes up of the three i thought if you give me the keys group names that can get me. through this trees only need to be cut and if they find needed to be in need to be i presume ninety percent of the cases the. we just plainly sanction it and then the. public notice in the paper saying that they'll be proposed to cut so many trees at all so in some locations if there is something where we can object about then i take the time and trouble and the effort to object about it and. we had a car station there putting on your. station so there is a plea coming the way it's like a photo that we are going to let me off as i said that he is not coming the only problems it's all these going got this to you for the the three is still something and yes but activity sometimes you need to go to my hope is in order to. be should be cut but like i did before going away. to highlight this issue off and this week i being there for the mental we decided to hold a symbolic funeral where we actually got either three on our shoulders from the one or the guardian we went past month period of in ferguson or the lord we got a lot of support a lot of people came out to shore that symbolic protest that this and you can get a feeling it's not fair. cutting back tree or cutting a fifty hundred year old just because you can cut it is a senseless act because nothing is going to be able to replicate that hundred year old even if i plan one hundred new duties it will not be equal to that one hundred year old tree. now protecting the natural ecosystem is definitely the need of the hour there was a time when the black bear of the moon bit as it's also called time to cross the ship today they're ready to be found in the continent and are listed as a vulnerable species how did they get here i reporter travel to the top kongsi. in the north the flowers to find out. their. food is absolutely crazy about strawberry jam. there. are only four months old he's the youngest resident in the sanctuary the young bear was just getting bones when he was safe for illegal animal traders. in fact on yonge spend fattening him up since he arrived. here besides kung fu australian ngo free the bears has managed to rescue three other cubs so far this year. normally a young bear spend the first three years of their lives with their mothers but she's usually killed and the cubs are kept under awful conditions come from his brother died in captivity he probably starved to death the animals have a really terrible time. and. this fully grown asian black bear also called moon bear is almost two metres high standing and weighs in at one hundred fifty kilograms and cut the sanctuary they try to keep the animals under the most natural conditions possible. the bear refuge lies in the north of laos right next to a well known waterfall the nearby tourist attraction means a lot of visitors take advantage of the chance to also see the bears. hardly any of the visitors can imagine the ordeal these poor animals have been through. like colby who lost his right front leg after he was trapped by poachers in a snare. he was destined for an illegal bear farm. risk was lost nicholson explains to the visitors that bear bile is used in chinese medicine. and it commands a high price i. asked him tony cages lead to give him the best themselves live up to twenty years and saw those pages. is expected to sit at the mains from the day using a syringe imagine going through that torment the frequency of every couple of days living on a subsistence of very very big rations of food. these pictures show up there bile farm near the lao capital v.m. chan. the bears face is a portrait of pain. nobody knows how many farms like this are in la it's actually illegal in laos to treat animals like this but it is all too often in southeast asia enforcement and punishment are totally inadequate. luke nicholson says the greatest threat to animals is human poverty. you can find products from the illegal wildlife trade in almost every local market here they're popular with chinese tourists. that's a tale there's a been sold for fifty us felicity. we have a vehicle here. right next to them la whiskey with animal parts preserved in them including bits of bear. the battle to protect animals and species happy one without environmental awareness. so poncy bear sanctuary regularly invites school classes. i. allot of the kids don't even know that horses to bed thomas is a resident in their forest and also a threatened species. i followed us hidden and ball so it bears can train their natural foraging instincts oh. the conservationists are supported by foreign donors. thirty eight asian moon bears now live in the open here far too many. the reserve was only designed to take ten of them. but allowing these colossal creatures back into the wild would be too dangerous. for. this number of reasons why these babies can't return to the lot some have physical trauma some have psychological and some of the hand right for little cubs but they've been rescued the bands that have been hand raised it imprinted on humans if we would release them back to the wall that gets a direct link to a village looking for food and that's where we get human being. conflict and that's when people invest. today some monks have come from the nearby village of. a blast the conservationist work with the buddhist ritual the ceremony is supposed to bring luck to the workers there and fend off evil spirits free the bear certainly needs every bit of support it can get so that confluence and his friends can enjoy op brighter future in laos. let's now shift focus to an innovation that could be a game changer for women in rural india a lack of running water and rural coombes often means that women have to travel long distances on fort to fetch water an american company is trying to change that with a simple but significant tweak to the traditional water pitcher. collecting water is a challenge for millions of people. wells are often far away from their homes. the job is done mainly by women and it can take half a day to collect all the water a family needs. carrying heavy votes of twenty liters for hours on end can cause health problems. the who's who wheel is designed by the us organization of well it's a rolling barrel with a handle and can hold forty five leases the force or the wheel costs twenty two things he done it was not only does it lies in women's loads the way real can also help businesses like small scale farms over outside restaurants. you like them. if you are doing your kids tell us about. visit our website or send us a tweet. doing your. share your story. can big data help us study the effects of changing ecology german ecologist stefan stall is trying to find out just that at one swap national park in germany once the variables that identified the data can potentially be used to study how the national park has evolved over many decades allowing us to study the good and the bad effects of human activity it has endured shows how he's breaking it down. these trees are being felled but for a good cause sunlight needs to reach the forest floor so that deciduous and can live for us woodland can grow here again the conservation zone in one fork was established three years ago the renamed to ration of the forest progress as researchers will also be collecting extensive data on the local ecosystem a stream flows through the national park the riverbed used to be completely overshadowed by the spruce trees explains hans joachim who's us from the park authority. the stream and the meadow will now be able to develop will gain a cli the mixed woodland that's already growing here will also evolve and light and warmth will restore the river valley to its natural state. scientists at the nearby environmental campus bill confess collaborating on the re nature ration project they've set up probes and measuring stations around the forest the institute specializes in environmental i.t. research and teaching staff on show is a water ecologist. this is a multi parameter probe we use it in the town back stream in the national park eight different environmental parameters are measured in the water and these are sent to the campus via data transfer the data is fed into a german network that is part of a european network that in turn is part of an international network so what we're doing is making environmental data available to help politicians make decisions and react as promptly as possible to environmental problems so. the environmental campus beer can fed brings together international scientists from the field of i.t. technology and the environment geo informatics is a central focus of research here satellites are able to gather data on changes in the global environment the scientists goal is to make data collected from various sources more easily available to experts in africa and asia be a global environmental data network. major advantage of earth observation data is that it provides us with comprehensive information unlike isolated measuring stations which can only compile selective data we can also get inside ravines and look at forests on mountain tops that are usually inaccessible basically we can very efficiently get a comprehensive data and when necessary react accordingly. to problems such as pest infestations and over exploitation of the world's forests these are problems that can be tackled tackling climate change on the other hand is more complicated. at the environmental campus kells and his team are working on developing models based on incoming data that can predict the environmental consequences of increased temperatures the scientists run through potential scenarios and experimental setups in order to measure the reactions of plants to environmental changes as the cause of faggoty want the main issue we're addressing is the long term effect of climate change on ecosystems one approach is to replicate an artificial ecosystem and we can feed the data collected from the sensors in the national park into this artificial world to see what it will be like you and your twenty thirty and how temperatures affect plant growth and the whole ecosystem. flounced off those consequences things the collaboration with the environmental campus has already paid off for the national park there's more and more data on the conservation zone which eventually will be made available in real time to the park rangers by a smart phone. we're taking measures now and plan to follow that progress to see if the measures that make sense we have no specific expectations we'll just allow nature to run its course the data we gather will help us judge whether our management measures were successful or not the board minutes were lost on a four course. the project is a long term one renae to ration in the hunt for coal fired national park will take years and its benefits will only become apparent in decades to come. you i hope you had many. many more stories of innovation and the people driving them home good bye and have a wonderful meat loaf. for the. law. blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah. blah blah. blah. blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah. blah blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah. blah. blah but. the body. modern that's the name of the electronic waste dump in across the ocean but for the ocean. it's also a treasure trove. inspired creation of. the salvage what they can from the garbage of control me. and teenager with it to eke out a living. three thousand and thirteen and tell them. this is g.w. news more live from berlin to bring in our correspondent material harms are ready for joins us from rio de janeiro we're going to find out what happened to debbie is sunny again she is the head of the environment team it with you think of the correspondents some graphics it's not funny and we do have some of breaking news that's coming into us now it's all about the prospective closer up w. news for. thank you for joining us. anxiously waiting. for a lifeline to syria. good morning where are you why aren't you answering to the free call brings them closer together. but it hurts because they feel powerless to help. they worry about the ones they've left me. with that i'm trying to be strong on. the war continues to haunt those who fled from syria. more on my phone or two part documentary starts december eighth on t w. frank food. international gateway to the best connection self in road and rail. located in the heart of europe you are connected to the whole world. experience outstanding shopping and dining offers and trying our services. be our guest at frankfurt airport c.t. managed by from. visiting w. news a lot of from brother in russia puts captured the ukrainian sailors on state television following sunday's clash of crimea today a russian call to the onyx province ordered the detention of a number of them out of all the capture vessels our world leaders have called for carbon the escalating confrontation also on the program libya's new patrol boats police the coast to stop migrants setting sail for gura despite the likelihood of

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Transcripts For DW Eco India - The Environment Magazine 20181125 04:30:00

inventors entrepreneurs and high tech professionals talk about their vision successes day to day business week to friends. it's. history you know everyone. seems to have a vision. i. need you to africa starts december twelfth w. hello welcome to equal we india a sustainability magazine which puts the focus on solutions to some of the most pressing problems affecting the world to be this week we connect you to change makers from india laos and germany people like you and i were the system people saw their vision to see first sustainable world i'm son of that raghu coming to you from mumbai in india. over the next thirty minutes find out how an illiterate woman in india is educating top community to build a new story lives why an activist in mumbai is holding a few loop of the city's trees. and why movies in laos are going extinct. let's was to look at an issue that forty percent of india's population has to deal with every morning the government has boards toward the keys to access to clean and functional toilets in the last few years but open definition is a complex problem in india tied to extreme poverty and cultural conditioning for the last three decades one woman is revolutionizing access to safe sanitation in the district of cardboard in the north of india. it's. their. children saw as the village people shall go to people. she's a company but many of those if you set your mind on something and there's nothing you can or did she. get to speak with you could be five years to see these words with pride and confidence. she's been the driving force. in history by going door to door to check if homes have functioning and also. joining big and how we want peace she describes is in the hills. my dear the used to live like. there was a tiny pond that everyone used to be a father daughter those everybody ended up going there because that was the. beginning. there was a time when a normal very you when you would see feces in the open it was everywhere. a chance encounter with the look clean she would that works towards improving hygiene and sanitation of communities was been the views of change began doing. a lot of the it all began. below fifty five committed by. machine lived never ending tools need to be dug one and the other. two pipes will pass through each opening while one gets filled up the second one we get. our fair one the going to give our job at the door. never mind where they may go after all when i started talking to people about sanitation they would see no good would ever go out of it despite going on a strike for a full month nothing happened i was not even from he'll want to finish would i be able to me. when i got here. i do then i could leave that responsibility to me i also assured them that i wouldn't believe the slum the job was done that's when they agreed to stand by me but those were very challenging days where. people mostly ignored the women hardly of the left. and the men were just not ready to listen the regard to my god we're all an accident cannot go just about any day to avoid that why shouldn't we build and use our own toilets. this is the boy lit. and if this is the market at which the structure will set you know what i want to. be has built two thousand five hundred. some with willing precedents pulling in money some with government grants and some generous donations. we should consider ourselves lucky that we have the space you want to build all of. these don't even have that space. more than five hundred million people are forced to difficult because. we're going to mark. i believe that argue in the eyes that go exist a lot of country. is for the prosperous while the other lives in what is it with. these other people who are in the open. their biggest problem is that they live in support. of it they have no legal rights which is why they don't invest in the police because there is a constant fear of good hoses being. robbed new york when we got much out there but then a couple i'm going to demolish. this lack of access to sanitation is a much more compounded problem for. more stuff will india and in the open slums like roger. from bell to be complete for dawn in the morning and navigate the suited streets of the dog themselves. call the men find it much easier to relieve themselves in the open they don't feel the issues well being shy or feeling an issue but for women or young girls and for those who go to school the problem is much much bigger it will. be. a community without toilets also faeces the long term consequences of poor hygiene and health. diageo fact is still the leading cause of india among children that in the next. hour how many do have families where do they usually use what's under ten floors it's a venice programs by engines like show me part. of the grassroots. want on the road then just enjoy your. so were you in love is the. only one about there was about god that they got there. we find innovative ways to explain to them how it flies didn't discord on film and then or now food that's when they realized that each time they definitely did the and they risk falling sick. they're going to have another. boat mccue honey we're taking an american anywhere three hundred model that hold open the day. use saw. the moment there philip and there are a lot of children who pass on these lessons on how to get their names who then end up listening to them. in your car even the grooves under my sleeve was scary creases of mind in them when i entered my house carries the good right in for the good since she came to the city of cancun as a child right there still unable to increase difficult with the at fifty five she's now a good boss on the beaten to the next generation. if i'm in my neck a matter of look here or somewhere plain among what kartik me when i started out in the initial years i used to cover my face with. the women i spoke to and tried to mold to be used to tell me if you weren't covering your feelings how do you expect us to venture out of our houses or hunger of any kind of buying it i remember telling them why wouldn't you be able to go out of your moses are men the only ones capable of making a difference tell me one person in this world that is beyond the capacity of women . it sometimes takes only one individual determined and persistent to bring about big change now the city of mumbai has three and a half million trees each one essential to maintaining the fragile balance in this rapidly urbanising metropolis our next story is about. and how he's been fighting to save money by strays from being indiscriminately cut down. are part of the end they're looking of the city. neither are going to meet them nor does he need more than more trees were dying along the way you would see the golden rules of floor dead trees which would be ziggy the green trees i googled up the issue and i saw that humans e had said that there was a really bug me which was affecting these green trees and therefore the trees were dying and you said to go find of the island i think that this is the issue the problem is very simple that once a deal in fact really needs to be cut and removed. to prevent infection from spreading to the village we next not in the moment they did that maybe bugs stop spreading and they induce don't die any longer in mumbai as they walk more and more in one day nor does the fall over the sea view this is just destruction of becoming . that is a fear which was made in one nine hundred seventy five it says that on the side of every lord there must be three govern one side of every one for the war department one to get the duties of the redevelopment is supposed to use their common sense and times the of the so this jihad thought to be any application which comes up with the fear that if you visit the school mase it can get a. blister easily need to be cut and if they find they're doing you need to be i presume ninety percent of the cases the you just blindly sanction it and then the . public notice in the paper saying that they'll be proposed to cut so many trees at all so in some locations if there is something where we can object about then i take the time and trouble and the effort to object about it. will. be headed. station there putting on your. station so there is a becoming the obvious like a photo that be unable to be off as i said that he is not coming the only the. leads going got this to you for the resistance to something and yes practically sometimes you need to be my hope is in order to. be should be cut but like i did before going away. to highlight this issue of. being there for them at all we decided to hold a symbolic funeral where we actually got to be on our walk through windows from the door to tell you we went by a month earlier a bit of your birthday so i'm not allowed to be going to a lot of support a lot of people give out to sure that symbolic protest at this and you can get a feel like it's not fair. cutting back tree on a cutting a fifty hundred year old just because you can cut it is a senseless act because nothing is going to be able to replicate that hundred year old like even if i plan on one hundred new duties it will not be equal to that one hundred year old tree. not protecting the natural ecosystem is definitely the need of the hour there was a time when the blackberry or the moon bit as it's also called time to cross the ship today they're ready to be found in the continent and are listed as a vulnerable species how did they get here i reporter travel to the. north of laos to find out. is absolutely crazy about strawberry jam. zero zero zero zero zero zero zero and only four months old he's the youngest resident. in the sanctuary the young bear was just getting bones when he was seized from illegal animal traders. in fact on young spin fattening him up since he arrived. here besides kung fu australian ngo free the bears has managed to rescue three other cubs so far this year. normally a young bear spend the first three years of their lives with their mothers but she's usually killed and the cubs are kept under awful conditions come from his brother died in captivity he probably starved to death the animals have a really terrible time. and. this fully grown asian black bear also called moon bear is almost two metres high standing and weighs in at one hundred fifty kilograms and cut one see sanctuary they try to keep the animals under the bows natural conditions possible. the bear refuge lies in the north of laos right next to a well known waterfall the nearby tourist attraction means a lot of those letters take advantage of the chance to also see the bears. hardly any of the visitors can imagine the ordeal these poor animals have been through. like colby who lost his right front leg after he was trapped by poachers in a snare. he was destined for an illegal bear farm. which was lost in luke nicholson explains to the visitors that bear bile is used in chinese medicine. and it commands a high price. the house in torn a cage is bigger than the bears themselves. it's twenty years and saw those pages. extracted through surgical means from the day using a syringe. the frequency of every couple of days living on his system is a very very big russians afraid. these pictures show up bare bille farm near the lao capital vienne chan. the bears face is a portrait of pain. nobody knows how many farms like this are in laos it's actually illegal in laos to treat animals like this but it is all too often in southeast asia enforcement and punishment are totally inadequate. luke nicholson says the greatest threat to animals is human poverty. you can find products from the illegal wildlife trade in almost every local market here they're popular with chinese tourists. that's a tale there's a been sold for fifty u.s. dollars and. we have a cool here. right next to them lao whiskey with animal parts preserved in number including bits of bear. the battle to protect animals and species can't be won without environmental awareness so i often see bear sanctuary regularly invite school classes. i. a lot of the kids don't even know that horses to bed thomas is resident in their forest and also a threatened species. oh food is hidden and ball so it bears can train their natural foraging instinct oh. the conservationists are supported by foreign donors. thirty eight asian moon bears now live in the open here far too many. the reserve was only designed to take ten of them. but allowing these colossal creatures back into the wild would be too dangerous. for. this number of reasons why these babies can't return to the lot some have physical trauma some have psychological and some of the hand right for little cubs but they've been rescued the base that have been hand raised as imprinted on humans if we would release them back to the wall that go directly to a village looking for food and that's where we get him in big. and that's when people invest. today some monks have come from the nearby village of talk want to see. a place the conservationists work with a buddhist ritual the ceremony is supposed to bring luck to the workers there and fend off evil spirits free the bear certainly needs every bit of support it can get so that confluence and his friends can enjoy our brighter future in laos. let's not shift focus to an innovation that could be a game changer for women in rural india a lack of running water often means that women have to travel long distances on foot to fetch water an american company is trying to change that with a simple but significant tweak to the traditional water picture. collecting water is a challenge for millions of people. wells are often far away from their homes. the job is done mainly by women and it can take half a day to collect all of those her family needs. carrying heavy loads of twenty liters for hours on end can cause health problems. those who feel it's designed by the u.s. organization of well if it's a rolling barrel with a handle and can hold forty five full scale foams over outside restaurants. you like them. you are also doing your bit tell us about. visit our website or send us a tweet. doing your sharing your story. can big data help us study the effects of changing ecology german ecologist stefan stall is trying to find out just that at one swap national park in germany once the variables are identified the data can potentially be used to study how the national park has evolved over many decades allowing us to study the good and the bad effects of human activity it has endured shows how he's breaking it down. these trees are being felled but for a good cause sunlight needs to reach the forest floor so that deciduous and can live for us woodland can grow here again. the conservation zone in who was established three years ago mother renamed to ration of the forest to progress as researchers will also be collecting extensive data on the local ecosystem a stream flows through the national park the riverbed used to be completely overshadowed by the spruce trees explains hans joachim who's us from the progress there already. the stream and the meadow will now be able to develop ghana clee the mixed woodland that's already growing here will also evolve and light and warmth will restore the river valley to its natural state. scientists at the nearby environmental campus bill confederate collaborating on the re nature ration project they've set up probes and measuring stations around the forest the institute specializes in environmental i.t. research and teaching staff on show is a water ecologist. this is a multi parameter probe we use it in the town block stream in the national park eight different environmental parameters are measured in the water and these are sent to the campus via data transfer the data is fed into a german network that is part of a european network that in turn is part of an international network so what we're doing is making environmental data available to help politicians make decisions and react as promptly as possible to environmental problems so. the environmental campus bill confederate brings together international scientists from the field of i.t. technology and the environment geo informatics is a central focus of research here satellites are able to gather data on changes in the global environment the scientists goal is to make data collected from various sources more easily available to experts in africa and asia the a global environmental data network. major advantage of earth observation data is that it provides us with comprehensive information unlike isolated measuring stations which can only compile selective data we can also get inside ravines and look at forests on mountaintops that are usually inaccessible basically we can very efficiently gather comprehensive data and when necessary react accordingly. to problems such as pest infestations and over exploitation of the world's forests these are problems that can be tackled tackling climate change on the other hand is more complicated. at the environmental campus kelce and his team are working on developing models based on incoming data that can predict the environmental consequences of increased temperatures the scientists run through potential scenarios and experimental setups in order to measure the reactions of plants to environmental changes as because of the main issue we're addressing is the long term effect of climate change on ecosystems one approach is to replicate an artificial ecosystem and we can feed the data collected from the sensors in the national park into this artificial world to see what it will be like you and your twenty thirty and how temperatures affect plant growth and the whole ecosystem of just blocks from the front of the consequences to. the collaboration with the environmental campus has already paid off for the national park there's more and more data on the conservation zone which eventually will be made available in real time to the park rangers by a smartphone. we're taking measures now and plan to follow that progress to see if the measures that make sense we have no specific expectations we'll just allow nature to run its course the data we gather will help us judge whether our management measures were successful or not the board thought and the minutes were lost on all four cars. the project is a long term one renae to ration in the hunt for coal fired the national park will take years and its benefits will only become apparent in decades to come. i hope you had many takeaways from today's show we bring you many more stories of innovation and the people driving them goodbye and have a wonderful eco friendly. with . the bump. from. the bull. the tube the be. the be. the be. left. in their view the stars deliver the formants see the heart of. the first salons always free. and if it is a girl one of today's best jazz boys. he's never you know only good looking. rebecca bucket from norway cameras in concert roswell park and fifteen minutes on t.w. . digital admits it is more transforming the world is humanity ready for it this time on founders valley entrepreneur a designer your system takes a trip to korea where education is key people are driven to succeed at any cost. can and tech startups help bring about a change. driven to succeed the founders valley in sixty minutes on d w this. this is d w news was it from berlin to bring in our correspondent ophelia harms a really strains of from four years you shall know we're here to find out what happened with me think of a car is fun etc it's not and we do have some breaking news if coming into it now what it's all about the perspective closer of g.w. news thank you for joining us earth home to millions of species a home worth saving. on those are big changes and most start with small steps global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world like to use the term the climate most green energy solutions and reforestation. they create interactive content teaching the next generation about environmental protection and we're determined to build something here for the next generation global ideas the multimedia environment series on t.w. . i'm. really into me. not. everyone who loves books has to go and same. thing to tell you literature list a hundred german must reads. every journey begins with the first step and every language but the first word published in the book. rico is in germany to learn german why not learn with him simple online on your mobile and free shop d w z e learning course nikos fake german meetings.

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