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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Red Eye With Tom Shillue 20170203 08:00:00

because australia is the one, they don't want those. that's why they made the deal with obama. >> obviously they are being hypocrites, okay. but when i heard tough phone call, let me tell you about some tough phone calls i've made. if you had to call a girl and say it's burning down there. look, at the end of the day, i think that trump is hilarious, watching him every time he speaks, it's a very entertaining endeavor. but to be honest with you, i feel like he is the only guy who has a prank answering machine on his cell phone. you call and you get his answering machine and he does that hello, hello, hello. just kidding, you got the president. that's all it got say about tha that. >> tom: kristin, what do you think, do you think we should have to honor every deal, this thing was assigned just before trump took office. most politicians say we have to honor all of our agreements. >> these people are not our problem. australia doesn't want them, the days are over of us being pushovers and allowing everyone to take advantage of us. america was the big kid that just sat there getting poked over and over, everyone kept poking us and we never poked them back. now guess what, we're standing up and we are saying enough. >> tom: even if he honors the deal, whatever, at least he pushed back a little. president trump is feuding with australia and an austrian. on thursday while speaking at the national prayer breakfast, the president took a jab at the ratings of the new "celebrity apprentice." the show's creator, mark burnett was sitting just a few feet away. >> we had a tremendous success on the apprentice, and when i ran for president, had to leave the show. that's when i knew for sure i was doing it. they hired a big movie star, arnold schwarzenegger to take my place. we know how that turned out. the ratings went right down the tubes. it's been a total disaster. mark will never, ever bet against trump again. i want to just pray for arnold if we can. >> he's president. >> tom: it's a nice sentiment, he wanted to pray for him. arnold schwarzenegger responded with a twitter video. >> hey donald, i have a great idea. why don't we switch jobs. you take over tv, since you're such an expert in ratings, i take over your job, because people can finally speak comfortably again. >> tom: luis, trump keeps slamming arnold, but do you think this is all a plot to raise the ratings, he still a producer on the show. >> very smart move, we are all talking about it. i like arnold schwarzenegger's idea. how about i come the president and you can be a terminator. it's unbelievable. >> dave and i are outraged. >> jimmy, look, don't tell me you haven't done the voice on stage. >> when things got rough and i need an emergency brake laugh, i don't have arnold in me. >> we should all just to this whole in arnold voice. >> who isn't sleeping comfortably if arnold isn't president. a woman on a date with bill cosby still isn't sleeping comfortably with arnold as no one, is he out of his mind? shut up! >> tom: the guy had to go terms as governor of the governor of california. i did a little arnold there. >> if trump gets in a fight with christopher walking, you're in. >> jimmy nailed it on the head, you see the lack of self-awareness of arnold schwarzenegger. >> agro aggressions, by the way. it >> that one wasn't bad. that was ronnie. >> tom: kristin, let's hear your arnold schwarzenegger impression. >> i am arnold schwarzenegger. >> that's what it's like to be a hot woman. well done. >> we all said it was awesome. >> tom: kristin. that is a problem with comedy. look what happens here. everyone is acting like trump, look, he's the reality show president. everybody else does the same thing. he's got his twitter video, they all answer him quickly, right? >> trump is better at both the things, he is better at politics and he's better at tv and he went into that with zero experience. i'm sure it arnold schwarzenegger wants to be president, but nobody wants him and technically you can't be president in this country if you weren't born here. besides barack obama. >> jimmy, i don't even remember, did i go to you yet in this segment customer >> who even knows if he did. people say trump is so thin-skinned, always has to acknowledge the stuff, i don't think that's what it is. i think he's competitive. i think he is a relentlessly competitive guy who can't let any slight go. he isn't thin-skinned, he's michael jordan and that if you knew michael jordan, you beat him in something he would insist on a rematch. >> what trump can't do is not hit back. we see mr. the entire campaign. if usace and the about his hands he has to respond. he has to hit back. >> he has a sense of humor, too. he was laughing, that's why everyone loves him. >> arnold should stick to what he's doing best, which is knocking up maids. >> what was that end? >> tom: moving on. violent protests directed at uc berkeley after a planned event featuring milo yiannopoulos. they were at least willing to debate a trump supporter who shows up. >> our cbs station spoke with a trump supporter who was drowned out by protesters on live tv. [sirens] >> tom: the next morning, trump tweeted -- what could have given the president of that idea? maybe he was watching fox and friends first and saw a conservative hero todd starnes state this. >> president trump should immediately issue an executive order blocking berkeley students from getting federal funding. free speech for all or no federal money, not a single taxpayer penny, period. did he get the president to take action quester mark i'm not surprised, because that's the power -- ♪ dave? >> it seemed like a bit of a stretch to me, the power of starnes. >> tom: he watches it every day and he practically quoted him. >> i meant to the gimmick in the song. >> tom: we wrote it. we've got to use it if we've got it. this is, you are totally into, this is your thing. >> i believe in free speech, i really don't using the power of federal money to influence speech, necessarily. it's kind of weird. it's like fighting communism with fascism, which always works out well for the people. >> tom: why cut these people a check? >> they never should have been cutting them a check to begin with, probably. what is happening is the left is being exposed. what really bums me about this is the most privileged thing you could possibly do. who do you think is cleaning up this mess, billionaires? it's literally some poor person who has to come along and clean this up. >> tom: good point. kristin, i say they're not fulfilling their duty. they have a charter, they're supposed to be about open minds and ideas, they're not doing it. cut off the money. >> exactly, i'm so glad that trump is coming in there and slaying this political correctness that's just disgusting. if these universities will not protect free speech, and if they're going to tolerate violence against conservatives, then yes, take away their funding. if they don't like it they can go to the supreme court and they can decide whether they get the funding. >> she smells amazing, she can do whatever she wants. >> tom: they're out of control control. he wants to give a speech, they started with him. >> a homosexual, can you believe it? i thought of a solution. who's going to clean up that mess, right? not the privilege, not the billionaires. those refugees from australia. them over. >> tom: i see what you did there. >> have them clean up the mess. >> tom: give a job, right? >> it's funny, it works. >> tom: i'm trying to keep this show on the air, here. whose side are you on? >> this is where my two big issues are. they made my lowe's speech and his web content and his archival content, probably not necessarily more appealing but more visible to the rest of the country by doing this. before they burned down berkeley nobody knew he was speaking there. they just ample fight his impressed. this is where i do have a spec for them, though. that's an almost impossible protests to organize, because there's no way you can get his last name past your spell check. they started sending that text a month and a half ago. a >> yogurt and such? >> tom: it's all coming, this is a boon for milo, they've got a book coming out. they said they were going to boycott the publisher. it's going to be a bestseller. >> if you were his publicist you could not have paid for better publicity than he's gotten. this is unintentional, but the craziest thing to me about milo is that he's not even that radical. milo supports people like rudy giuliani, if you get down to it he's kind of a middle-of-the-road republican. he just completely unapologetic about it. it's a conservative who's not coming in and saying he knows his narrative has been over presented. he's unapologetic, like an anarchist libertarian. if you're offended by this guy, you don't want to know what i believe. >> tom: a black conservative, a gay conservative messes with them. >> anybody who's a remember of a protected class. caitlyn jenner was a sacred deity of america on the "vanity fair" cover and now it nobody will acknowledge her. is there was a point where she was so sacred that she could kill someone with her suv, but now she's a republican so she's done. >> tom: the conservative politics. coming up, does this look like a man you can trust with your secrets western ? find out what trumps former doctor revealed about the president next. ♪ ♪ >> live it from "america's news headquarters," i'm jackie ibanez in new york. the trump administration may be striking an upper line with israel. now warning the prime minister that settling may not be helpful to middle east peace efforts. until now he has appeared sympathetic to their cost. the administration is claiming they have not taken an official position yet, in response israel's ambassador says it's too early or to tell how it might affect future building. there's also word out of washington, the white house is preparing to chiron after it testfired a ballistic missile. as many as two dozen around the individuals, companies, and possibly government agencies could be penalized. another night of violence at an american college campus. new york city, police are out in forces. gavin mcginnis was invited to attend a seminar by campus or publicans, protesters showed up to voice their displeasure. on wednesday night you may remember uc berkeley was protested following a planned a speech by milo yiannopoulos, breitbart editor. the school was forced to cancel. secretary of education, public and lawmakers say they are fed up with democratic delays. republicans are confident they have the 51 votes needed to end the debate, if so she could win confirmation by monday. i'm jackie ibanez, now back to "red eye." for all of your headlines, log on to foxnewstv.com. music him ♪ >> tom: the doctor is in capable of keeping secrets. president trump's longtime physician told all to "the new york times" ," revealig medical secrets of our new president. the doctor says trump takes three different medications. an antibiotic to treat rosacea, something to lower his cholesterol, and something to treat male pattern baldness. he has all his hair, i have all my hair. other fun facts revealed by the physician, some called dr. jekyll well probably high. come on guys, that was a good one. he hates the fun made of him. and he says, "i am probably the only person who has every phone number for him and all the wives" ." this disclosure could come back to haunt dr. bornstein. reporter tweeted -- >> tom: a lot of old guys take all these drugs, no big secrets. >> you can go out and give people's medical history. >> tom: they were begging for more of it. >> i don't pay attention to the laws, i have no idea what hippos do and why they have laws. i'm not going to sit here and always bash trump. they shouldn't be giving his medical information out. he takes stuffer his hair, right that says it's on the his confident. i'm bald, women like this. am i wrong or am i right, kristin? thank you very much. just let it go and show the world he's a confident man, now that we know this little tidbit about him i'm questioning his confidence. >> tom: a lot of his personality comes from the hair. there's nothing wrong with taking, a lot of guys take this drug, what the stuff you rub on your head, rogaine. >> people are obsessed with his hair, i don't know what's on his head and i don't care. people are just jealous. they are jealous of his money, there jealous of his hair. frankly, i don't care what's on his head as long as he secures the border, brings jobs back and blows isis the hell up. >> i care about was on his hair. i don't care what the borders so much. >> tom: what about the doctor? is this unethical? the thing that strikes me is that before they were saying look at this crazy doctor, he's not revealing anything, he sent out that one sheet that that is really healthy, and now -- >> he's in tremendous health. he's dr. trump, trump found his own trump. you would think a doctor, even when i saw the article, i thought he told all the prescriptions that he was on, he might get in trouble for this. doctors can't just do that, it literally is such a trump thing, he was making a point about how great both of their hair was. he got lost on the fact that oh, yeah, i'm a medical doctor. >> tom: they don't care, these doctors, they don't think there's anything embarrassing when taking a few drugs, right? >> you know i deduce from watching this, this is a guy that's definitely sold a few prescription pads on the side. e with the right and wrong in terms of divulging that information, could you look at a picture of that guy and tell me he hasn't moved some adderall on craigslist? all i did was skim to the bottom of the article for a phone number or email. >> a call from a girl on roller blades. >> tom: just because he has a laid-back look, he doesn't look with a manhattan doctor, he looked like he should be in long beach or something. i think he's an upstanding guy, a good doctor, but the thing is, they always make people reveal everything. they want to see all the taxes, they want to see the medical reports, we were calling for hillary's medical stuff, right? did we ever get them? >> we got her taxes. boring taxes. >> i think we had a bigger write to her medical reports than we did it trumps taxes? >> sheep fainted on 868-degree day. >> they come in the form of youtube videos. >> i get them for my dad. >> she respects hippo law. >> tom: coming up, have "halft" with tv's andy levy. a brand-new episode of the "red eye" podcast is a babel, subscribe on to be 27. hose placp changing every few months. the quicksilver card from capital one doesn't do any of that. with quicksilver you earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, everywhere. leave complicated behind. what's in your wallet? so we sent that sample i doff to ancestry. i was from ethnically. my ancestry dna results are that i am 26% nigerian. i am just trying to learn as much as i can about my culture. i put the gele on my head and i looked into the mirror and i was trying not to cry. because it's a hat, but it's like the most important hat i've ever owned. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com. calls. jimmy, you said he is doing it grandpa stuff. i think tough phone calls are totally fine, but being a [bleep] to one of our staunchest military allies doesn't strike me as a good idea. >> i like of a lot of what he's done, but i didn't like the execution. i thought the hysteria of the muslim a band, 40 countries are still allowed to come. they could've better emac done a better job of clarifying the green card situation. this is what i do like, it's cool to have some but he this competitive fighting on behalf of us. i hated roger clemens, but i like having that tough s ob throwing chin music on everybody else. >> andy: my problem is that i hate the red sox and the yankee yankees. dave, you said this is a good chance for trump to prove he doesn't just take brown immigrants and kristin pointed out that these are mostly muslims. the ones in australia, she is correct, they are from entries like iran, afghanistan, pakistan, iraq, some only a period on the other hand, kristin, like trump, you refer to these people as illegal immigrants, they are not, they are refugees. >> andy, i would expect fake news from cnn but not from you. put your pink hat and your vagina costume on and go protest with the other snowflakes. there is >> andy: they are still refugees. not illegal immigrants. >> tom: that's your call. >> andy: that's not my call. >> they came to australia -- >> andy: i don't want to go through this but we did the other night, all you need to do is go look it up. they are actually refugees. >> tom: they came in many different ways to australia. >> andy: they are in a refugee camp. >> tom: they are banning them. >> andy: they are refusing to take them as refugees. >> i looked it up on breitbart. >> tom: they are illegally coming to the country. >> australia won't even let them to the country, they're keeping them in a detention center on an island. >> andy: i understand that, they are refugees. >> keep saying that word. >> andy: i will, it's accurate. if were going to talk about fake news, let's not call people illegal immigrants who aren't illegal immigrants. trump and arnold schwarzenegger. tom, you said arnold had to go terms as governor of california. i don't recall him at being all that popular when he left. >> tom: he wasn't. he wasn't popular in the first term. i don't how he won reelection. >> he was the most popular refugee to ever be governor. >> that's why they need to shut up, how can you do that, how can you elect trump, you elected kindergarten cop twice. >> andy: i voted for gary coleman. i'm not even kidding. >> he should have stayed in, you would have one. >> andy: did you say it arnold schwarzenegger impressions are hack and follow it up with a bill cosby joke? >> that's not how it went down. we were trashing before we went on the air and then a luis went big. he did clarify. >> andy: kristin, your arnold schwarzenegger impressions onto the little bit like young frankenstein. >> thank you. >> andy: dave, how dare you suggest the power of starnes is a stretch. >> i was clearly beaten for that. >> andy: just rude. tom and kristin, you both applauded trump for his tweet. berkeley didn't stop milo from speaking or say he didn't speak there, he was supposed to be speaking there. the school condemned the violence that cause the cancellation of the speech. it trump's tweet made no sense. now explain to me why i am wrong. fake news! >> they canceled the event, is that what he's is speaking to. >> andy: they canceled the event because of violence. >> andy, did you read a -- >> andy: they didn't say milo can't speak here, they scheduled him to speak. >> if you read this statement of the university put out, before all this happen, it said we don't agree with milo. we're going to allow him to speak. they basically said we don't agree with him, which fueled this hatred, and kind of gave a path to these people to burn it down the campus. they aligned themselves with these protesters, they shouldn't be taking a political stance. that is the problem, these education institutions are becoming political. >> anybody who has extreme views, wouldn't they kind of come and say this is the view of the school. >> the school shouldn't have the view, period. it's getting federal tax dollars. >> they're dissociating themselves from of you, they're doing what you're saying. >> they shouldn't be disassociating or associating with any of you, it should be an open campus. >> andy: jimmy, you pointed out that the protesters who made him more visible. the people who peacefully protested, but the people who turned violent suck for turning in violent, and for giving him free p.r., and most importantly getting me bumped from tucker ♪ carlson's show one night. >> that's a blow to me. >> andy: trump's doctor. [laughter] >> andy: i don't have anything here, i just love this picture. >> i love that he shops from the boss hog collection. >> andy: i could literally stare at that all day. luis, that you said they shouldn't be giving trump's medical information out, tom you keep saying he they yelled at the doctor for not giving out enough information in the past. luis is right, without trump's permission, they shouldn't be giving this out. >> tom: what is "the new york times" doing visiting this guy? they shouldn't let him in. >> you're probably right about that. >> andy: kristin, i enjoyed your reaction to luis here. do we have the video? >> i'm bald, women like this, , and i write kristin? >> you're right. >> andy: the side i was fantastic. [laughter] >> andy: i do have to say, i'm quoting from the piece, at times in the interview dr. bornstein was moody, saying it was none of their business to later volunteering facts. i love this guy. but then if you read the whole piece to the end, it's really sad, he said he was invited to the inaugural but it wasn't as pleasant an experience to demand as he expected, he had to walk a long way to his spot and he thought there would be a chair, but he thought there would be no chair, he stood behind a tree" never heard anyone speak because i was so on come double from my back" ." >> he really got the hook up. >> andy: it's so sad. >> oppose your heartstrings. >> andy: it really does. i'm dumb. >> tom: thank you, andy. coming up, could hate be that key to finding love? i bet you'd hate-love to know. when a cold calls... achoo! ...answer it. with zicam cold remedy. it shortens colds, so you get better, faster. colds are gonna call. answer them with zicam! zicam. get your better back. now in great tasting crystals. >> any attack on the united states or on our allies will be defeated with any use of nuclear weapons. >> the united nations security council now looking into reports increasing violence in eastern ukraine. russia's ambassador to the u.n. claims ukraine is provoking the latest surge of violence, the u.s. and ukraine blame russia. >> the sudden increase in fighting in eastern ukraine has trapped thousands of civilians and are destroyed vital infrastructure. of the crisis is spreading, endangering messy thousands more. this escalation of violence must stop. >> to avoid further civilian sufferings is rather simple. the international community needs to step up pressure on the aggressor and urge russia to get out of ukraine. >> the u.n. is calling on the international community to get piece documents to the ukraine and yet russian separatist back on track. u.n. monitors report more than 10,000 explosions in a recent 24-hour period, the highest ever. >> nordstrom says it will no longer sell ivanka trump's clothing and accessories. they would not say that it was a permanent decision, only that decisions were made each season. >> the statehouse has designated a stretch of interstate 55. i am jackie ibanez, back to "red eye." ♪ >> tom: can hate to bring people together? a new dating app is launching next week that launches people based on their mutual dislikes, it's called hater. it's a swipe-based apps, i think the first one ever. there are over 100 topics right now. users swipe down for hate come up for love, right for like and left for a dislikes, or opt out for neutral. while the idea started as a joke, it's actually backed up by science. studies have found that people bond moreover shared and negative attitudes than a shared positive ones, jimmy does that make sense to you? >> every shopping experience you've ever had, you have 899% chance of making friends over a slow cashier or a woman paying by check, as opposed to hate, that guy is really begging these groceries. my first thought when i saw this app is wow, now will finally find some use of that ashley judd speech from the women's march, i think everyone will agree that's a low point from humanity. >> i kind of like it, to be honest. i think you could really help racist as well. if you're in the kkk, just swipe left on black people. it's a simple way to connect with other racist people. >> tom: i'm sure they have their own app for that. called okkkcupid. >> the guy who runs a company, he's watching the show and luis says it's great, great publicity, and then luis says "hey if you're in the kkk" ." nobody is posting positive things, i hate this, i hate that, this is a tone of this country that fits perfectly and with the way everybody handles social media. >> even before the age of social media, the long marriages, the long-lasting relationships always built on hate. isn't that what always kept them together? >> this makes complete sense, because there is nothing more satisfying than sitting with someone and bashing something you both hate. like obama. i could listen to someone to bash obama for hours, if you hate the same things it's probably likely that you both love the same things, for example i hate obama and hillary clinton, so i find that i enjoy being around people who also hate them because they love trump. >> tom: wouldn't you rather, i think you want to find someone, you want to look for positive qualities first and then get together and complain with them. you don't want to start there, kristin, am i right question work >> no. >> tom: you want to start with the negative? >> yes. >> tom: guys don't care about any of the stuff, they only want to look at looks. >> weather were telling you we love stuff or hate stuff, we're just yapping until we get to see you naked. >> tom: so no at least one side it doesn't care. people will say they hate anybody. >> guys want to get laid, there's no app that can cure that problem. >> this is a marketing tool, people are talking about it, there's really no difference, nobody reads the little profiles anyway. have you ever swept up to go read the profile? is she hot, yeah. is she hot, yeah. >> i just skim for the word transgender and if i don't find that -- >> tom: get ready for lonely orangutans, a new tender like app is coming just for you. ♪ mating. things don't always go well. research are struggling to find a tablet that the orangutan can break. to be fair to her, it must be infuriating when all your potential matches keep sending you nudes. of course, before the internet chimps use to meet their mates on dating hotlines. >> good boy, hang that phone up. [laughter] >> hang it up. >> always funny to me. [laughter] >> tom: i guess that wasn't a match made in heaven. thanks to america's funniest home videos for that clip, i wanted to give them credit. >> the sad thing is that monkey went on to rip that woman's face off. >> tom: that was a different video. dave, do you think this is going to work? >> america's funniest home videos, yeah, it's been going on for decades. >> tom: for the orangutan. >> you know, i have high hopes. i've always wondered what it is in their minds when the mating doesn't work out. and they bring them back in there like nothing happened, no, he's totally racist. apes are picky. >> tom: they need a match, too. it works for humans, they have to let them choose. it's just technology letting the apes choose. >> this is an innovative, out-of-the-box idea and i love it. what is the worst that could happen, you put the two monkeys in a cage, they don't like each other, they throw, that's the end of it, it's a win-win. either we get baby orangutans or we learn a valuable lesson which is that tinder does not work for monkeys. >> tom: we may learn. >> i'm not going to lie, i just read the headline to this article. it's very important when her trying to match orangutans with human beings. i think the plot of outbreak. i thought it was a terrible idea when i wrote my notes, why would we do this, i believe were going to spread some sort of communicable diseases. turns out i was wrong. >> tom: we've got to go. instead of curious george, we now have by curious george. >> tom: that's it, good night, everybody. i'm glad i waited. next.

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom Live 20180203 10:00:00

5:00 a.m. here on the u.s. east coast. it is the memo in a everyothat talking about. and does it discredit the russia investigation? congressional supporters of the u.s. president are being accused of trying to do just that. they allege that the fbi improperly targeted for surveillance a former trump campaign adviser. >> the contents of the controversial memo are highly disputed. critics say it only on shows part of the picture. and misrepresents the testimony of former fbi deputy director andrew mccabe. here is more now from jim sciutto in washington. >> i think it is terrible. >> reporter: the president and republicans leveling a new broad side at the fbi. with a four page memo alleging the bureau abused its surveillance authority in seeking a warrant to monitor carter page during the 2016 election. >> it's been a tough fight. >> reporter: the disputed memo authorized by the staff of devin nunes claims mccabe says the page warrant would not have been sought without a dossier on trump's possible connections to russia. but three members dispute that account telling that nunes mischaracterizes what mccabe says. the memo reveals that the warrant to monitor page was approved and renewed by the court three separate times. the former republican chair of the intel committee mike rogers says that would not happen without other u.s. intelligence to back up the application. >> if this is all they used, the judge ought to get in trouble too. i think there is a lot more information that supplanted the information they provided. in addition, they went through separate renewals and in each you have to actually reconfirm probable cause. meaning you had to get something off of that wire. >> reporter: the memo also alleges that the fbi and justice department did not inform the fisa court that former british intelligence agent christopher steele who compiled the dossier was funded by the democratic party. adam schiff said that it is, quote, not accurate that the secret court waunss unaware of steele's political motivations, he says that the court knew of a likely political motivation behind steele. >> what it ends up delivering is criticism of a single fisa application and its renewals that cherry picks information that doesn't tell the reader the whole of the application and as the doj and fbi have said deeply misleading. >> reporter: while the memo attempts to portray the fbi as relying on outside information to launch the russia investigation, it notes that a counter intelligence investigation was actually opened months before the page application based on a stream of intelligence separate from the dossi dossier. this includes information from the australian government can which learned that another trump campaign adviser, george papadopoulous, had been offered damaging information about hillary clinton from an individual with ties to the russian government. >> with these accusations swirling, christopher wray addressed fbi employees today via video, this reported by shall i mondimon prokupecz, and times are tough but went on to give a bucking up speech to the rank and file saying that the american people read the news papers and watch tv, but your work is all that matters. actions speak louder than words. jim sciutto, cnn, washington. >> so again, the main allegation in the memo, that the justice department misused the fisa court to target former trump adviser carter page. >> but to explain exactly what fisa is, what that court is and how carter page fits in, tom foreman breaks it down. >> reporter: in the long investigation into possible russia meddling, carter page has become a flash point. not because this one time adviser to donald trump has had a long relationship with russia or because he traveled there during the campaign, although that is true, but instead because some republicans believe the justice department improperly used a fisa court to wiretap carter page. now, fisa stands for the foreign intelligence surveillance act. and this is what is used when investigators want to spy on essentially somebody who is actually on u.s. soil. they go to the fisa court, they present information explaining why they believe this person is a suspected agent of a foreign government, and the fisa court would then give them permission if it is all approved properly to then go forward. the fisa court did that, not only that, but they approved an extension three different times and analysts say is that probably because there was something coming out of this or most likely something coming out of this that gave them reason to keep approving this. about you some republicans are saying the real problem is that there was secret political hand at work that the court was not told about. that the original information came from an investigation that was partially funded by democrats out there and those democrats were feeding it into the justice department. fisa court didn't know about it. if that is the case, why didn't the justice department say maybe we have other things that we can tell you about? the reason that would not happen according to many intelligence analysts is that there may indeed be other sources, there may be other avenues out there that they do not want to make public because that could somehow imperil the further investigation of all of this. whether or not that is true, we don't know. the very secretive nature of the fisa court is the reason that it may be hard for the justice department to come forward and say here is what is happening and why they think the memo is wrong. >> tom foreman, thanks for the explanation. and now more about the man behind the memo, the chair man the house intelligence committee republican devin nunes. he's been kricriticized and som say hurting the investigation. >> the first interview he gave with us to fox news and he slammed the democrats. >> these are not honest actors. they know they are not being honest. and i get tired of playing whac-a-mole every day with the democrats on this committee who never wanted to start this investigation in the first place. so there is clear evidence collusion, but it just happens to be with hillary clinton and their commissionittee that they to investigate. >> the top democrat says the memo is not meant to help the investigation but hurt it. adam schiff calls the memo deeply misleading. >> what it ends up delivering is criticism of a single fisa application involving carter page and its renewals that cherry picks information that doesn't tell the reader the whole of the application and as the doj and fbi have said is deeply misleading and fact ally in-accurate. you can cherry pick any fisa court application and do the same thing. >> a lot to digest mere. let's bring in a teacher of international relations in london. we have memogate to throw at you. so depending on who you listen to, it is either deeply misleading or revealing. where do you fall? >> i think it is another step in what has been an ongoing effort to undermine the legitimacy and credibility of this investigation which remember is supposed to be looking into russia's interference in the u.s. presidential election, something that is important to everybo everybody. and we've seen a number of efforts to really get people thinking about something very different. in this case it is an allegation that this was politically motivated and inspired investigation that lacks all credibility. unfortunately, it is very destructive and i think if you listen to what senator mccain said after the memo was released, this is an attack on the legitimacy of the fbi, an unfair attack on the justice department and that it is taking us away from this most important gives those that want to discredit the investigation more time to try and do that and we'll wait and see where this memo leads it. thank you so much for your thoughts, leslie. stocks chanced on wall street friday and investors are probably glad turbulent week is over. we'll look at the huge drop and what is ahead. plus this -- as far as the sentencing, to grant me five minutes in a locked room with this demon. >> this father filled with rage after he hears details of sexual abuse of his daughters. the judge's message to the furious parents as cnn continues. david. what's going on? oh hey! ♪ that's it? yeah. ♪ everybody two seconds! ♪ "dear sebastian, after careful consideration of your application, it is with great pleasure that we offer our congratulations on your acceptance..." through the tuition assistance program, every day mcdonald's helps more people go to college. it's part of our commitment to being america's best first job. ♪ no more fail! tired of false lash fail? new x fiber mascara by l'oréal. one. black primer. extreme volume. two. 20 times more lengthening fibers. extreme length. no falsies. no extensions. just fibers. new x fiber mascara by l'oréal paris. directv has been rated number one in customer satisfaction over cable for 17 years running. but some people still like cable. just like some people like pre-shaken sodas. having their seat kicked on an airplane. being rammed by a shopping cart. sitting in gum. and walking into a glass door. but for everyone else, there's directv. for #1 rated customer satisfaction over cable, switch to directv and get a $200 reward card. call 1.800.directv waysthe roasted core wrap. fat. (robotic voice) 3, 2, 1... not cool. freezing away fat cell with coolsculpting? now that's cool! only coolsculpting is fda-cleared to treat and freeze fat cells, non-surgically. diet and exercise alone just shrink those cells. coolsculpting gradually eliminates them, with little or no downtime. visit coolsculpting.com today... for a chance to win a free treatment. move could encourage other north koreans to defect, one analyst says the meeting could also raise the question of whether the trump administration is starting to push for regime change in pyongyang. white house officials won't say what is behind friday's meeting. the president was cagy when asked if he wanted to send a message to the kim regime with this meeting. >> i don't think so. these are just great people that have suffered incredibly. >> reporter: but this human rights activist says even if regime change isn't on the table, the meeting still serves to good expose the dictator's r. >> it clearly puts more pressure on chism jokim jong-un. it is clear that they are trying to white wash their record. >> reporter: this woman on snuck across the borden when she was 17. she asked president trump to stop repatriating defectors and told a harrowing story of what happened to her. >> i escaped from an arranged marriage when i was 19. i escaped a brothel and then i was arrested by the chinese authorities policemen and i was narrowly avoided being repay y e patrioted to north korea. >> reporter: the president showed empathy but didn't say whether he would pressure the chinese or not. she says the lives of many north korean defect toors depend on u pressure. >> most are carrying poison with them in case they are caught in time. >> reporter: as compelling as the meeting was, it might have made south korean officials a bit nervous because it is just one week before the winter olympics are set to begin. the south koreans worked hard to get north korean athletes to participate in the games. and could be concerned that trump's meeting with the defectors might upset that arrangement. we got no response there south korean officials here in washington to the trump meeting, but south korean president moon jae-in did speak to president trump on the phone shortly before the meeting took place. brian todd, cnn, washington. well, disgraced former usa gymnastics physician larry nassar faces several life sentences for sexually abusing hundreds. and dozens more are coming forward to share their raw and painful stories. >> and for the father of three girls, the weight of their words in court on friday was too much to bear. kale l caylee har tongue describes what happened. and we warn you, this contains graphic testimony. >> reporter: this father's anger -- >> as part of this sentencing, to grant me five minutes in a locked room with thisaimed scar man. >> would you give me one minute? >> reporter: in this angle you can see the court bailiff quickly get larry nassar out of the room. more than 200 survivors in two different courtrooms over the past two weeks have provided victim impact statements in the case against nassar. engaging and disgusting the country. on friday, randall listened to two of his daughters publicly share details of their abuse. >> he said this meant because i had back pain, he would need to put the needles on my vagina. with no coverage, no gloves, underwear and pants down to my thighs, my entire have a guy that was completely exposed. when i was there just a kid, lays on a table at msu and you put your ungloved hands all over my rear and slipped your thumb into the most private area of my body. to my parents, thank you for all your love and support through all of this. you have done everything that a parent could ever do. >> i feel that my entire family has gone through hell and back because of what larry nassar did to both my sisters and i years ago. my parents are maeheartbroken a so filled with regret. the guilt they have will never go away. >> it prompted praise on twitter calling him a hero, parents saying they would have done the same thing. >> you have to understand the compassion and understanding too from the judge who over saul his contempt rating a couple hours later. >> i cannot tolerate or condom vigilanteism, but as for the direct contempt of court, there is no way that this court is going to issue any type of punishment given the circumstances of this case. and i do -- my heart does go out to you and your family because of what you've gone through. >> i appreciate that. and i apologize to you and the courtroom. i'm embarrassed. i'm not here to upstage my daughters. i'm here to help them deal. >> reporter: in a family press conference later in the day, an apologetic hargreaves tried to explain his reaction, saying it was the first time he heard many details of nassar's assaults on his details. >> what i had to hear in those statements and i have to look over at larry nassar shaking his head, that is when i lost control. >> reporter: nassar, who was sentenced up to 175 years in prison for similar charges in another michigan courtroom last week is expected to be sentenced in in this hearing early next week. in atlanta, caylkaylee hartung,. 16 new flu related deaths among u.s. children were reported this week and that brings the total number of pediatric flu related deaths to 53 since october. >> and according to a government report, hospitalizations for the flu also hit the highest levels seen since officials started recording this data in 2010. flu vaccines are reported in short supply, but they are still available. pediatric flu cases are closely, but deaths for other age groups are difficult to estimate. president trump has arrived in florida but leaves behind a washington in turmoil. we'll discuss the controversial memo. and plus the u.s. secretary of state mending fences in latin america and offering vision when it comes to russia meddling. we're live from atlanta. stay with us this valentine's day i wanted to turn everything i love about you into one thing you'll love forever. the jared valentine's day diamond event. washington in turmoil. when you buy her setting at jared. and let our expert jewelers help you find or create the one ring that could only come from you and only be for her. only at jared. from coast to coast to our viewers around the world, you're watching "cnn newsroom." i'm george howell. >> i'm natalie allen. congressional backers of the u.s. president are alleging the fbi abused its surveillance powers against one of mr. trump's former soerkd associate. the charge is contained in a congressional memo released friday. democrats dispute the claims and say they will push to release their own report next week. >> word on wall street, the dow fell 665 points on friday. the steepest point decline since the 2008 financial crisis. though a strong jobs report is fueling fears of inflation. analysts say the political turmoil in washington is only adding to the uncertainty. the man who are targeted muslims last year in london has been sentenced to life in prison. darren osbourne plowed his car into a crowd on june 19th, killing one person and injuring 12 others. the search continues for dozens of migrants who may have drowned. the vessel was carrying more than 90 when it capsized on thursday. so far only three survivors have been found. now more on that controversial pmemo released friday. it is the talk of washington because of what it might mean for the trump presidency. at its core, the memo alleges the fbi abused its surveillance powers in targeting a former aide of the trump campaign. >> democrats and other critics say the document is not an accurate representation of the facts. james comey called it dishonest and misleading. jeff zeleny explains why some believe it is mepant on to undermine the mueller investigation. >> reporter: now there is a fight brewing between the u.s., the justice department and the fbi. president trump declined to say if he had confidence in the deputy attorney general rod rosenstein who oversees the russia investigation. now none of this changes special counsel robert mueller's investigation. this is still going along full speed. one of the next things to find out is if the president will set down for an interview with him. but the release of this memo at least in the eyes of the white house and the president, they believe it helps discredit the russia investigation. now, many republicans across washington said that was not the point of it, they said that is not the case. it is separate from that. the reality here that was the president goes into the weekend where he will be spending it in mar-a-lago, will he make a decision to have a change either at the justice department with rod rosenstein or will he fire bob mueller. those are still two possible things that could happen. most advisers here at the white house say the president knows that would be explosive. and that would continue and draw out the investigation. but the mindset of the president on this is unclear. again, he declined to say if he has confidence in the deputy attorney general here and his own fbi director said he had grave concerns about the memo. the memo was released anyway. as this moves forward here going into the coming weeks, the russia investigation still going full blast, the question is now if the white house can move beyond it and get to the point of legislating so much work here to be done. republicans believe this has overtaken their agenda, they simply want to get back to legislating. jeff zeleny, cnn, the white house. other news involving the trump administration, u.s. secretary of state rex tillerson is in argentina, the latest stop in what could be called a fence mending tour of latin america. he will also advivisit peru, colombia and jamaica. >> and among the topics discussed friday, trade, drugs and even russian interference in elections. on that, secretary tillerson had some sage advice. listen. >> you asked about russian interference in mexican elections. all i can say to you is we know that russia has fingerprints in a number of elections around the world. we hear this from our european counterparts as well. my advice would be to mexico would be pay attention. >> the pentagon under the old nuclear arms policy on friday puts simply the united states wants more nuclear weapons, not fewer. >> defense secretary james mattis says it is looking reality in the eye. it is also reversing course after years of trying to reduce the united states nuclear arsenal. >> and it comes as north korea gets closer to becoming a nuclear danger, but an old foe is still front and center as barbara starr reports for us. >> reporter: while president trump navigates the political minefield of the russia investigation -- >> there has been no collusion. there has been no crime. >> reporter: -- pentagon and state department unveiled the toughest line yet against vladimir putin's military in a report on nuclear threats and the trump administration's solutions. >> russia has increased its reliance on nuclear weapons and its capabilities and it is building a large and diverse nuclear arsenal. >> reporter: the pentagon detailing 2,000 nuclear capable weapons that could hit europe. and for the first time, confirming russia is developing an underwater drone that can potentially travel thousands of miles and strike the u.s. coastline. russia just one headache for defense secretary james mattis as he begins the second year on the job. the u.s. nuclear determent also aimed at north korea which the report says may now only be months away from the capability to strike the u.s. with nuclear-armed missiles. >> if north korea would hypothetically launch a ballistic missile tipped with a nuclear weapon at the united states that we intercepted, it is not the sort of thing that we would say, oh, well, that is the end of the story. >> reporter: because of current tensions, the pentagon may delay a routine test of a u.s. intercontinental ballistic missile until after the olympics cnn has learned. along with the joints chiefs job number one now for mattis is to convince president trump to not conduct a limited strike against north korea hoping sanctions work before a missile is fielded. job number two, mattis still has to have credible military options to back up the diplomatic effort. >> he has to present it in a way that that leads up, that manages his boss so that his boss who has never seen combat unlike general dunford and secretary matt i mattis, he has not experienced that kind of chaos. he has to understand the consequences of making a decision on the use of military force. >> reporter: critics say all of this lower the threshold for president trump to decide to use nuclear weapons. but advocates say in today's world, this strong deterrence is necessary against america's adversaries. barbara starr, cnn, the pentagon. cape town south africa is drought ridden and it is running out of water. we'll you tell you how residents are dealing with an approaching disaster. and also the latest on tv stations taken off the air in ken i can't. wh kenya. what is the government is doing about a court order to bring them back. who wants customizabe options chains? what is the government is doing about a court order to bring them back. kenya. what is the government is doing about a court order to bring them back. f the lowest ons fe are you raising your hand? good then it's time for power e*trade the platform, price and service that gives you the edge you need. alright one quick game of rock, paper, scissors. 1, 2, 3, go. e*trade. the original place to invest online. when this bell rings... ...it starts a chain reaction... ...that's heard throughout the connected business world. at&t network security helps protect business, from the largest financial markets to the smallest transactions, by sensing cyber-attacks in near real time and automatically deploying countermeasures. keeping the world of business connected and protected. that's the power of and. we are hahave received dram video to show you. you see cars and homes being washed away, this as raging floodwaters push through in northwestern argentina. >> reports say 10,000 were forced to evacuate their homes when a river burst its banks. and as you can see, some had to be pulled from the rushing water. and the water crisis in cape town is already a crisis fair to say, but its 4 million residents are facings possibility of a full blown catastrophe temperature in a little more than two months, the city could run out of water. people there waiting in long lines, stockpiling water for the so-called day zero. some are even building their own rationing systems for their homes. >> the city has restricted residents to just over 13 gallonsliters of water a day from municipal sources and the crisis is spreading. the industrial area could also face shortages because of low levels in reservoirs. >> let's bring in derrick van damme to tell us more about this. you have friends and family that are there. this is a very big deal not only for cape town, but around the world to see what is happening here. what exactly is day zero, what does it looks like? >> it is an actual date that the city of cape town has designated as the day that they will turn off the taps. that day is april 16th. so people in cape town will walk to their faucet, walk to their taps just like we do every day, take it for granted and there will literally be no water coming out of those taps and faucets. this is a day like no other. and we're going to see unchartered territory, people walking into situations that we haven't experienced before because this is the first major metropolitan to have the potential to run out of water because of drought in modern times. >> i was going to say -- excuse me, i've lost my voice. i've anchored for many years and i don't remember covering a story like this with this amount of people involved. >> there are other cities that are water stressed. sao paulo, melbourne, places like mexico city. but none of them have been forced to shut off their taps in a last ditch effort to reserve the last bits of that finite resource being water that is so crucial to humanity. so really lots to talk about. this story is wide ranging. so many angles. how do you control a population of 4 million people when you have only 200 allocation points to distribute 25 liters of water to that 4 million people. so you do the math, that is 20,000 people per allocation point. that just provides logistic issues all on its own. 71 days, 11 hour, 16 minutes, 26 seconds is how long until day zero occurs april 16th in cape town south africa. these are the latest images from nasa, they did a study and they show that the major reservoirs just outside of the city of cape town, the six big reservoirs that feed cape town its water source, and i want you to see the gradual progression. 2014 to 2016 to just last week, look at the depletion in the water especially across the tier. that particular dam here serves about 40% of their drinking water and it has been deplete, standing at only 13%. this area is just outside of cape town, beautiful part of south africa, this is the wine estate. everybody knows about this. the water system here has beeae severely depleted. look at that bathtub ring indicating where the water levels used to be. how did we get to this point? annual average rainfall here is just over 515 millimeters of rain, roughly 20 inches of rainfall. last year, their driest year on record, only 157 millimeters, that is 6 inches of rain in the entire year. level 6-b restrictions from the city of cape town, that is 50 liters per day, average consumption by you and me being an american, 375 milliliters or 20 gallons of water per day. it is incredible to see how much water that we use and take for granted and how they will have to give up major luxuries that we enjoy every single day just from turning on a tap to brushing our teeth to taking showers. they are restricting that and will be nonexistent after april 16. >> it's hard to fathom those of us that are fortunate to turn on the tap and get water. >> puts it in perspective. >> this could be a new reality, certainly something people are dealing with in cape town, but something that people around the world need to be aware of. >> without a doubt. >> thanks. all right. now to kenya, that government appears to be defying a court order to let three tv channels back on the air. at least three channels were ordered shut off on tuesday. the move came over coverage of the symbolic swearing in of an opposition leader. the court ordered the government to restore all transmissions thursday, a hear going challenging that decision to shut them down is set for later this month. let's go live to nairobi. good to have you with us. what is next for these tv channels beyond the court order, do they have any recourse? >> reporter: well, not really. the recourse that they have is that the courts as you say, they have ordered these stations to be reopened as way back as two days ago, they did this. and the private petition that went to the courts to try to get the television stations back on was telling us that he went to the kenya communications authority, tried to hand over the court's orders and they simply told him to go away and never to set his foot there again about th again. but he has managed to serve the interior minister and the minister of information and attorney general and the hearing as you say will be somewhere around february 14th. but the criticism has been completely overwhelming of the government's moves. just now i'm reading a letter from the committee to protect journalists calling the kenyan government's refusal to an bid by the court order as something akin to full-on censorship. and of course even within kenya itself, people are a little bit bitmuse ebi bitbe be mused by the government's reaction. and this is an unprecedented move to shut down four tv stapgstapgs stations like this and then be told to switch them back on and four days later they are still not back on. >> and i wanted to ask you a bit more about that, the general response. what are people saying about the fact this happened? >> reporter: they are usually easy going folk. and we talked to people on the streets and from very young women who say that their routine and to people being cross, why do they have in this day and age in an independent brightly developing and very prominent part of east africa, why do they have to turn to the internet and of course stations like cnn to get news of their own political life. these are questions that the government still has to answer and it will remain to see of course whether or not these stations will be back on air. >> farai, thank you so much. we'll keep up with the story. thank you. we'll pause and talk some olympics when we come back. because they are almost here. we'll have a live report from south korea. plus the u.s. pro football championship, it will be played sunday. the super it aptly named the su bowl? we'll explain. oh, sorry i'm late, sir. i had a doctor's appointment. when you said you were at the doctor, but your shirt says you were at a steakhouse... that's when you know it's half-washed. now from downy fabric conditioner comes downy odor protect with 24-hour odor protection. downy's powerful formula conditions fibers to lock out odors all day. hey, your shirt's making me hungry. ha ha, derek. downy and it's done. breakthrough since the new year. north korea actually sending athletes here, sending hundreds of others in what they are calling cultural demonstrations, all of it good news for south korea and what they hope will be the biggest and best winter olympics ever. i can tell you i was out there today, there is still a lot of finishing touches to be put on some of the events, but it has to be said korea has been a bit luke warm, but now it seems that ticket sales are picking up and people are embracing what they know will be the olympic spirit. what has been so interesting is to see the political effects. at one point the united states being skeptical about how the games would come off. now donald trump saying yesterday that he thinks something good will come of it. having said that, natalie, you and i both know for these athletes that train so long and hard for these games, they just want the politics out of it. and as understand, they want to get to some sports and hopefully when the opening ceremonies begin we can put some of the polt tick politics behind them and concentrate on good performances. >> i'm ready for it. i think the world needs a little bit of olympic spirit. i want to talk to you about russia's participation. is there still some back and forth on that? >> reporter: gosh, is there ever. i mean, we just had in the last hour the ioc had a press conference and again you heard earlier in the week just to update you that some russian athletes had appealed their lifetime ban. 28 of those, their appeal succeeded. they now are waiting to see whether now the ioc gives them permission to participate in the olympics. think about it, these are top athletes who now are in limbo with the olympics just six days away. i want you to listen to the ioc spokesperson mark adams to hear what he had to say about their participation. >> will it be a success? i think time will judge. but i think we can be at least be pleased that we have tried rather than going for blanket ban or letting everyone in, we've tried to actually find out on an individual basis for individual young athletes, many of whom have never competed in big games before, to try to let them have their olympic dream which would be denied if a blanket ban was applied. >> reporter: and natalie, mark adams there is really addressing some criticism of the ioc saying you have been too easy on russia here. having said that, still a few athletes in limbo and they may know perhaps 24 hours before these olympics start whether or not they can compete. >> okay. paula newton, we appreciate it. thanks. before we get to the olympics, we have the biggest annual sporting spectacle in the united states one day away. >> a lot of people will be watching super bowl lii. the u.s. pro football championship set to be played sunday pitting the eagles against the patriots. >> everything about it is enormous. according to forbes, american consumers spent an average $14 billion on super bowl day in 2017. that is the same amount spent on halloween and st. patrick's day did you know combined. >> a lot of money. and a lot of people viewing it. >> thanks for watching "cnn newsroom." i'm sure we have as many viewers as the super bowl. >> i'm george howell. >> and i'm natalie allen. >> "new day" is next in the united states. for viewers around the world, amanpour is ahead. thanks for watching. ork. unconventional, unexpected 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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Tonight With Don Lemon 20180801 03:00:00

translate in november? >> interesting. >> for example, don, another thing i'd say about that is especially in goobvernor's race. i think the voters want a degree of independence from the white house and president. when you hug that tightly, it's hard to get that separation. >> i want to play this because we were talking about how much some of the candidates are hugging the president. this is the most recent campaign add in florida. >> everyone knows my husband ron is endorsed by president trump. but he's also an amazing dad. ron loves playing with the kids. >> build a wall. >> he reads stories. >> then mr. trump said you're fired. i love that part. >> he's teaching madison to talk. >> make america great again. >> people say ron is all trump, but he is so much more. >> big league. so good. >> i just thought you should know. >> ron desantis for governor. A recap of the day's news. profile losses. the there a lesson for democrats? >> i think democrats have to keep the attention on trump nationally. that energizes the base. that's the negative -- that's the anecdote to the trump fear. but they also in these -- in the congressional races have to talk about the issues. and i think the real measure of this is not what we talk about every day and what you see on the national news. it's what's in their adds. and in their ads you see much more about health care. you see much more about wage stagnation. you're talking about the tariffs. real issues. so i think they have to do both. the democrats will face a fundamental question about where the party is going the day after the midterms as we look to 2020. this campaign, this for the midterms, it's about doing both those things. making it about trump to energize the base but also appealing to the people in the middle, particularly talking about health care. >> so mark meanwhile the president continues to show disregard'truth. let's talk more about that. first, i want to play this. this is what he claimed at his rally tonight. >> u.s. steel just announced they're building six new steel mills. and that number is soon going to be lifted but i'm not allowed to say that so i won't. and i'm very proud to report that new core is going to build a brand new 240 million steel mill. that's a big one right here in florida. >> so that -- we fact checked that, and found that u.s. steel is required to announce any major changes such as opening new plants and as of tonight they have made no such announcements. also he mentioned when he's on the road he said this is the largest tax cut in history. analysis committee responsible for federal budget found that trump's tax cut is the eighth largest since 1918. he talks about gdp. he's not right about that and jobs and all that. there are some positive things but it's certainly not what he makes it out to be. what is going on here? >> well, i mean, the unfortunate thing is there is a lot of good news about the economy that he doesn't have to fabricate all these other statements about. so if the earlier statement i said is true that 91% of his base get the truth from donald trump, when you do any fact checking on any of his speeches the standard amount of information imparted that is false by a broad cross section of fact checkers is 75% of what he says is not true at the rallies. so that's a lot of people getting a lot of bad information and we wonder why we have a problem about what's true and what's not. >> i also want to show you guys this video. watch this. so this is from a rally tonight of trump supporters screaming to jim acosta, calling him a liar and trader. the president and his son retweeting a video of chanting cnn sucks. what is going on at the rallies and why would the president and his son want to be part of that. there was eve an baby that had a button with a baby that said cnn sucks and they were holding it up smiling. what -- >> it appeals to his base. all those people get riled up because there is this sort of phony conspiracy out there that the elites are out to get them and the media is part of the elites. it's not true. and really, it's un-american. i mean, we have -- mark will, i'm sure agree with this. every president thinks the press is out to get them. no president thinks they get a fair shake. but no one has ever done this. even richard nixon wasn't this bad, and something terrible is going to happen, and it's going to be trump's fault, because he is the one spoking this up -- stoking this up. >> jim acosta said even after that people come up to him and say can i get my picture with you? >> a lot of it is all about celebrity. it's not just un-american. it truly is dangerous. and this is why "the new york times" publisher just met with donald trump to say his real fear is the notion that you're portraying the press as an enemy of the people. if donald trump has really fanatic supporters, and if donald trump and his son are retweeting this kind of rage against jim acosta and others and at cnn, then you can see how somebody fanatic, if they think this is truly an enemy of the people, an enemy 0of the president and a traitor, there could be some consequences and action that somebody is going to regret going forward. >> how do we get to the lowest common denominator? i mean, we are there, the lowest common denominator that's appealing to the country? >> it's donald trump's strategy. it's looking at people who feel grievances and it's playing upon their fears. it's a big part of the new republican coalition is are people who have been hurt by globalization where the economy has moved past them and they feel like they've gotten taken advantage of. he plays them. he didn't serve them with his policies but his strategy from the first day of his campaign -- >> he uses them. >> he uses them. and the strategy of the first campaign was to do this. in some ways it got him elected president. it continues to keep his base happy, and energized. but it's sure not helping him govern in any way. >> no. it's terrible for his base. it's terrible for the country. we're in a very sad place right now. i wish i could say i'm optimistic, but i'm not hearing the stories. when we come back, paul manafort's trial began today with the defense saying that they plan to pin all the crimes manafort's been accused of on rick gates. could that work? of our new unlimited wireless plans. it comes with a ton of entertainment options. great, can you sign for this? yeah. hey, uh.. what's in that one? that's a shark. new and only with at&t, you can get unlimited data, 30+ channels of live tv, and your choice of things like hbo or amazon music. more for your thing. that's our thing. visit att dot com. doesn't that undermine the defense that manafort was duped? no? >> well, don, it could. it depend on what happens from this point forward in the trial. how will the defense lawyers cross examine this witness? will they try to showman foert may have been the top guy but he wasn't involved in the financial transactions, the paperwork and that he left it to gates who tried to cheat him and doctored some of the documents and was the one that committed the fraud? obviously that's what the defense lawyers told the jury that they're going to try to prove during this trial. it really depends on how the defense lawyers cross examine the government witnesses. >> prosecutors brought in manafort's spending habits in their opening statement including him buying $15,000 jacket made out of ostrich. what do you think the point of $20,000 watch and a number of houses, highlighting his lavish lifestyle, what's the strategy? >> i think it's to make the jury feel that this is somebody who is not like us. the prosecutors, the government always wants to have defendant as somebody who is not personally appealing to the jury. so in a money case like this where you know the defendant made a lot of money and allegedly didn't pay his taxes, you want the jury to think he's not like one of us. don't feel sorry or empathize with him. they want to immediately set the defendant off in another place and remove him in any possible sympathy or connection that he might have with the jury. >> you're an average working person. you're playing by the rules and paying your taxes. it's tough to make ends meet. this guy is making all the money and doesn't play the rules and he's not paying his taxes. is that what you're saying? >> i am, but they can overdo it. in some cases the government spends so much time talking about how much money the guy made that the jury will start to say okay, he made a lot of money, but he worked hard. where's the meat? where's the crime he committed? i think it's important to lay it out in opening statements to try to make him appear above us all. this was a rich guy who lives a different lifestyle, but then they have to turn back to the evidence. i think they did that today with witness number one. >> so two things here, laura. first, you agree that they can overplay their hand? >> even the judge pointed out during the opening statement, derailed the prosecutor's main argument by saying it's not a crime to spend your money frivolously. reminding the jury that's not the issue. they have to tie it to money laundering or it's not that he worked hard it's that there's no other way to get the money besides nefarious means. >> pressure for a guilty verdict? >> a lot of pressure. it's not the direct tie to collusion. >> they can't even talk about trump, collusion, and -- >> that's correct. you can't do that. but everyone assumes you're going to lead with your trump. you're going to do your strongest case that ties to your directive that you had under rosenstein. there's a lot of pressure from mueller's team to be successful, especially on a document-based case, but it's important at this juncture they abide by the terms of this judge, because if they do not have success in the trial, the second trial coming up may be all for not and going forward it will be a harder battle to prove to congress and the court of public opinion that they have something. >> we've been told the president -- officials told cnn the president has been following this manafort trial closely all day. what's the danger for him? >> well, i think maybe he's concerned about two things. one is something's going to come out at this trial that negatively reflects on him, either his campaign, his connections to russia, his children, his family, something may come out during the testimony that makes him look bad. he had no control over that. i'm sure that frustrates him and the white house. this trial will be controlled by the judge. what come out during the testimony, he's a participant as far as a websiitness, but he ca control what's said. the other thing is maybe something happens during the trial. manafort says look, we need to strike a deal. let's talk. i know i didn't want to plea guilty early but now i've seen the evidence. trump is not coming to my rescue. i'm not getting a phone call about a pardon, maybe i can enter a plea and a new development occurs that changes the course of the investigation relating to trump. >> i appreciate it. but before we go, the answer in the form of a question. who does alex trebek want to take over for him? none other than who is laura coats? >> he tweeted that. he said it in an interview. i couldn't believe it. i mean, you could have picked me up off the floor. >> he did it in an interview? >> yes. for me, it was always jeopardy is either alex with a mus tach. i'm honored by it. >> that's jeopardy, but this is cnn. thank you. thank you both. i appreciate it. when we come back, a ice official describing detention officials as summer camp today. this isn't the only thing that's had people angry about the hearing on capitol hill. this school year, get a new iphone from t-mobile and keep your whole family connected. or keep tabs on them. he skipped orientation for the beach? he takes after me. join t-mobile, buy an iphone 8, get an iphone 8 on us. sfx: [cell phone dialing] no. no, no, no, no, no. cancel. cancel. please. aaagh! being in the know is a good thing. that's why discover will alert you if your social security number is found on any one of thousands of risky sites. on home and auto insurance. call for a free quote today. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ does your business internet provider promise a lot? let's see who delivers more. comcast business gives you gig-speed in more places. the others don't. we offer up to 6 hours of 4g wireless network backup. everyone else, no way. we let calls from any of your devices come from your business number. them, not so much. we let you keep an eye on your business from anywhere. the others? nope! get internet on our gig-speed network and add voice and tv for $34.90 more per month. call or go online today. an amazingly tone deaf moment on capitol hill today. a top official with imdwramigra and customs enforcement saying this about family residential centers where parents and children are held. >> the best way to describe them is to be more like a summer camp. these individual have access to 24 /7 food and water. they have educational opportunities. they have recreational opportunities both structured as well as unstructured. there's basketball courts. there's exercise classes. there's soccer fields that we put in there. >> but no parents. so i'm going to bring in maria cardona and steve cortez. maria you heard that from the head of enforcement and removal for immigration and customs characterizing the centers at summer camps. >> yeah. nothing less than disgusting. clearly ice, i guess now or especially the head of it which is even worse is getting their talking points from fox news, because we heard this earlier when this policy first started and when kids were being ripped from the arms of their mothers and getting put in these detention centers, the child prisons from laura ingram who said that it was like summer camp. i would invite others to send their kids to the summer camp if he does believe that. put his money where his mouth is. it's absolutely ridiculous. it clearly is indicative of what they know has been a debacle of a policy, has been a horrific evil policy, has been something that they know they are going to pay for politically at the ballot box in november, and they're trying to paint the best picture from something that actually is completely horrible and un-american. >> he's not the first person. i mean, that was -- as he is speaking or testifying in front, you know, of lawmakers, but other people have qualified it or classified it that way, steve. i mean, what did you think of his statements? summer camp? >> no. listen, i think he phrased it poorly. he should have said we're trying to create a facility that's like a camp, but to call it summer camp, that evokes happy memories and somebody sent there for great reasons. and the children are the victims. i have nothing but empathy for these children. they are the victims. though, primarily of their parents who made a terrible decision of breaking and entering into our country. >> they were not breaking and entering. >> well, they're not legal. that means breaking and entering. >> they are desperately looking for asylum because they were under the threat of death. >> i'm glad you mentioned that, because if you look at a map, maria, it's a very long way from central america all the way through mexico to the united states. over -- >> that's how desperate these families are, steve. >> hold on. if they're that desperate, then the first time they got to an open democracy, mexico, why didn't they ask for asylum there. >> they may have. >> they wanted to come to the united states. i don't blame them for wanting to come here. i'm glad my father came here and millions of people from all over the world come here legally. and we have a right as a country to determine who best-serves the interests and security of america. that's not accident phobic or racist. those who decide to do it their own way and break and enter into the united states -- >> can i ask you one quick question, steve, what does this have to do with separating parents and children? >> well, again, if you break and into enter into my house and bring your children, you'll be separated from their children. that's awful. they didn't do it. it's not their decision. >> but if you break into someone's house, it's a felony. right? if you cross the border, undocumented, is that a felony? >> it's a civil penalty. >> not the first but the second. and for many of them it's multiple times. >> why would you classify it as breaking and entering, then? >> because -- if you go somewhere without permission, i don't know how much i have to explain this. if i were -- >> what did they break? breaking and entering assumes you broke down a door or a window to get into someone's house. >> and that you have malice to do it. >> if i run past the guards at any office building basically in america, i will quickly be apprehended. that's breaking and entering. why should our country -- >> what if you surrender and beg for help because you and your family are under the threat of death? what then? >> once again -- >> maria, why -- >> or are you asking for asylum, which is legal to anybody who feels under the threat of death in this country? >> and we have a heart for asylum in this country. >> you don't. the president doesn't. >> once again -- >> why do they go 1500 miles for the asylum. >> here's what happens. we get sidetracked. wh what is the definition of this? you get sidetracked. let's get back to the subject about what happened today on the hill. this is hhs commander jonathan white testifying today he expressed concerns to the administration that separating children from their parents was a bad thing. watch this. >> during the deliberative process over the previos year we raised a number of of concerns in the program about any policy which would result in family separation due to concerns we had about the best interest of the child as well as about whether that would be operational supportable with the bed capacity we have. there's no question. there's no question that separation of children from parents entails significant potential for traumatic psychological injury to the child. >> so the fact that he warned the administration, warned the administration officials about a policy that would result in pain and suffering to children but clearly he was ignored, what does that tell you? >> that tells me this was not a knee jerk reaction. this was a well-thought out policy that was focussed on d discriminating and raining terror on the families who were just trying to give their children a better life. but it also indicates something even more insidious, don. this was the worst mix of incompetence, of immorality, of carelessness, cluelessness and callousness that i think comes from a very real strain within trump and his administration that is racist, that is bigoted, and that is focussed on implementing policies that are discriminatory, and that is what we are seeing. >> listen -- we lost a lot of time back and forth there when we got off track. but steve, can you answer this for me quickly? white also testified that he was told that family separation was not the official policy, but we all witnessed what happened. members of the administration describing the separation as a deterrent. >> look, family separation -- i don't know what went on within dhs. family separation clearly is traumatic. by the way the best way to deter this long term is to build a wall. if we don't have a porous board ena er and we have only guarded points of entry, that prevents a lot of human misery at the border. open borders are not humanitarian. they're the opposite. >> we don't have open borders, steve. >> well, we have effectively open borders. >> no. >> and to your point that it's allegedly racist, what's racist is allowing people to pour in and compete in the job market. i would argue that's a soft racism we've stolerated for decades. >> it would be so much easier to have discussion with somebody who knows the facts or respects the truth. people are not pouring in. this border has not been porous and open. the numbers actually do not support what you are saying. within -- >> then how do we have 10 to 15 million illegals in the country. >> the numbers have been going down. there are actually net immigration to this country is negative. there are more people going out -- >> that's not true. >> mexico it is. that's not true in general. >> got to go. >> this policy is based on complete and total lies. >> we'll continue this discussion. thank you all. thank you both. i appreciate your time. >> thank you. when we come back jeff sessions announcing a group protecting religious groups from persecution, but who is the task force really going to protect? ♪ ♪ ♪ raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens ♪ ♪ bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens ♪ ♪ brown paper packages tied up with strings ♪ ♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ is this at&t innovations? yeah, wow..this must be for one of our new unlimited wireless plans. it comes with a ton of entertainment options. great, can you sign for this? yeah. hey, uh.. what's in that one? that's a shark. new and only with at&t, you can get unlimited data, 30+ channels of live tv, and your choice of things like hbo or amazon music. more for your thing. that's our thing. visit att dot com. with recurring constipation and belly pain if you feel like you spend too much time in the bathroom talk to your doctor and say yesss! to linzess. ♪ yesss! linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation or chronic constipation. linzess can help relieve your belly pain, and lets you have more frequent and complete bowel movements. linzess is not a laxative. it works differently to help you get ahead of your recurring constipation and belly pain. do not give linzess to children less than 6, and it should not be given to children 6 to less than 18. it may harm them. do not take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain, especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe, stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include gas, stomach area pain, and swelling. so say yesss! to help for recurring constipation. yesss! to help for belly pain. talk to your doctor and say yesss! linzess. civil rights groups are slamming the new rjts liberty task force. jeff sessions says the goal is to protect religious groups from prosecution. his critics argue it's more about discriminating against others. let's discuss this with our panel. amy, we haven't seen you in a while. welcome back. dean as well, we haven't seen you. >> good to be here. >> charles critics say the task force is allowing diskrcriminatn against the lgbt community. >> this is jeff sessions. number two, it was almost a year to the day that jeff sessions also "the new york times" reported he was going to direct the civil rights division of the justice department to look into protecting the rights of white kids to get into school who they said were being discriminated against to such a degree that it required the justice department to jump in. that was kind of looking at kind of white supremacy. and this is kind of looking at what they call christian nationalism. not only believing the country was founded as a christian country but believing it should be governed as a christian country. to that degree, people who are lgbt are cut out. it's not about their liberties. it's substituting their liberty's for these people's saying they cannot co-exist, and that is not american. >> amy, i heard you grown under your voice. i just want before you respond to play this. this is jeff sessions explaining why this task force was created. watch this. >> a dangerous movement undetected by many, but real, is now challenging and eroding our great tradition, our religious freedom. there can be no doubt, it's no little matter. it must be confronted intellectually and defeated. >> what is the movement challenging our religious fre freed freedom? >> i'm not sure what he's talking about, the dangerous movement unless he's talking about the effort to go out and suppress people that are christians and want to live by their faith. look, at the end of the day i think this is to protect all americans. all of us have the right to religious freedom and liberty, and i think that's what this is about, protecting our first amendment rights, and that's why they're doing this. we are a nation that was founded because people came here to break away from the church of england because they were being religiously persecuted there. they didn't want to conform. they came to the united states of america. we have all reasonings from all over the world come here and migrate to the country and they have a right to do that. i think we all should step back and not get too wound up about this and let's see where we go from here. i do not think that it is to persecute anyone, and i certainly don't think -- >> i have a time issue here, i have to let everybody get in. amy says it's to protect the religious freedom of all religions. right? do you feel that way as a muslim? >> no. i don't think -- i think donald trump is -- >> i'm wondering if a muslim, someone went into a business and someone said it's against my religion to serve an american or woman or man or black person or christian, what would happen? >> that's not based in mislisla. secondly, donald trump is the anti-muslim bigot and chief. he campaigned on the shutdown of muslims. those words have had consequences for my community. we've seen attacks on mosques from california to new jersey. >> you think this is to protect the religious freedom of prioritizing the christian group? check this out. this is a break down of religions in the u.s. christians are 70%. evangelicals of 25% of that. >> donald trump said when he had his first muslim ban about prioritizing christian refugees over muslim refugees. he does not make muslim americans feel like part of this country. are the far right christians being persecuted? i'm down with religious liberty but not as using it as a basis to discriminate. >> we'll be right back after this break. ultra-precise lines made easy. master precise all day eyeliner from maybelline new york. precision tip. easy grip. applies with ease. waterproof. no smudge. all-day precision. maybelline's master precise all day. only from maybelline new york. it's these new fresh-fx car air fresheners from armor all. each scent can create a different mood in my car. like tranquil skies. armor all, it's easy to smell good. low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto for heart failure. yeah! entrust your heart to entresto. ♪ the beat goes on. exclusive. so, to go out -- >> no one said that, amy. i have to correct you. no one said that. >> you said they're targeting -- the community is being -- >> that's what critics said. >> okay, well, i don't think that that's the case. this is the thing, don, is that we are in such an environment where everybody wants to divide us, by sex, race, religion, whatever, and at the end of the day, the president is focused on americans. and our religious freedom is about our first amendment right. people came here to this country for that reason. and we should all be able to practice the religion we want out being persecuted for it. >> okay. >> and that doesn't matter what religion you are. >> i've got to get other people in here. sessions said that this task force would promote cases like the colorado baker who refused to -- a same sex couple a wedding cake, challenged the state's anti-discrimination law, before the supreme court. i just keep wondering, who is the actual -- i can't figure this out, because, and to say that it doesn't have anything to do with discriminating against gay people, officials from the legal advocacy group that represented the colorado baker attended sessions' event, and the alliance defending freedom is a group that has supported the recriminalization of h o homosexuality in the u.s., linked homosexually to pedophilia and claims that a homosexual agenda will destroy christianity and society. >> this is the thing -- that whole thing is -- it is the misguided supposition that you can be converted, you can be seduced, that straight people can be seduced into being gay people and once they have one gay encounter, then -- it's the theory of the vampire bite. once you had one encounter, it's a rap for you, right? >> but if you are a gay person and as amy says, you are religious and you believe in god, wouldn't the highest, one of the things that you would want to achieve is to get married in a church? >> well, sure. >> and have your marriage -- i'm just saying, or have your marriage recognized by a baker where you can have a cake made. >> but you know your gayness is not contagious. that's the problem with all of that philosophy, which is that it believes -- that this is contagious, and it is not. if you do not like penis, there is no one on this planet that can make you like penis. and the same thing goes for vagina. that's just the truth. >> that's the clinical term for it, and go on. >> in 2018, the idea of religious liberty should not be telling a same sex couple get out of my bakery because i don't serve your type here. don't forget, religion was used to defend segregation. it was cited by the trial judge, the bible says blacks and whites shouldn't get married. we're seeing this right now. and i call it christian sharia law, it angered the right, but i hope it gets their attention. >> okay -- >> that's not true. that's not true. >> the far right does. >> to be continued. amy, thank you. thank you, dean. charles. never disappoints. charles -- >> oh, my gosh. >> our coverage tonights. and a is the best way to keep in touch. or keep tabs on their "extra curricular" activities. he skipped orientation for the beach? he takes after me. you know it's true. oh yeah. join t-mobile and get an iphone for everyone in the family. buy an iphone 8, get an iphone 8, on us. only at t-mobile. sfx: [cell phone dialing] no. no, no, no, no, no. cancel. cancel. please. aaagh! being in the know is a good thing. that's why discover will alert you if your social security number is found on any one of thousands of risky sites. the winter of '77.uring i first met james in 5th grade. we got married after college. and had twin boys. but then one night, a truck didn't stop. but thanks to our forester, neither did our story. and that's why we'll always drive a subaru.

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Tonight With Don Lemon 20180801 07:00:00

A recap of the day's news. it's the idea that in the republican coalition right now it is a cult of personalty around trump, and that ad is a perfect example of it. it's i am trump. i am trump. i am with them. and there's -- it is the only strategy. you cannot win a republican primary in this country right now without siding with trump. >> this is access is reporting tonight that trump's power over politics and republicans is growing. they say his sway often flows from fear. he is a powerful hold on supporter's minds. he's refined the social issues that animate the republican base and plucks candidates from obscurity and turns them into household names. how do you describe this president's control over understanding the understanding of his base? >> well, i think it's an addition and subtraction game. he's adding to the republican say that so i won't. and i'm very proud to report that new core is going to build a brand new 240 million steel mill. that's a big one right here in florida. >> so that -- we fact checked that, and found that u.s. steel is required to announce any major changes such as opening new plants and as of tonight they have made no such announcements. also he mentioned when he's on the road he said this is the largest tax cut in history. analysis committee responsible for federal budget found that trump's tax cut is the eighth largest since 1918. he talks about gdp. he's not right about that and jobs and all that. there are some positive things but it's certainly not what he makes it out to be. what is going on here? >> well, i mean, the unfortunate thing is there is a lot of good news about the economy that he doesn't have to fabricate all these other statements about. so if the earlier statement i said is true that 91% of his base get the truth from donald trump, when you do any fact checking on any of his speeches the standard amount of information imparted that is false by a broad cross section of fact checkers is 45% of what he says is not true at the rallies. so that's a lot of people getting a lot of bad information and we wonder why we have a problem about what's true and what's not. >> i also want to show you guys this video. watch this. so this is from a rally tonight of trump supporters screaming to jim acosta, calling him a liar and trader. the president and his son retweeting a video of chanting cnn sucks. what is going on at the rallies and why would the president and his son want to be part of that. there was eve an baby that had a button with a baby that said cnn sucks and they were holding it up smiling. what -- >> it appeals to his base. all those people get riled up because there is this sort of phony conspiracy out there that the elites are out to get them and the media is part of the elites. it's not true. and really, it's un-american. i mean, we have -- mark will, i'm sure agree with this. every president thinks the press is out to get them. no president thinks they get a fair shake. but no one has ever done this. even richard nixon wasn't this bad, and something terrible is going to happen, and it's going to be trump's fault, because he is the one spoking this up -- stoking this up. >> jim acosta said even after that people come up to him and say can i get my picture with you? >> a lot of it is all about celebrity. it's not just un-american. it truly is dangerous. and this is why "the new york times" publisher just met with donald trump to say his real fear is the notion that you're portraying the press as an enemy of the people. if donald trump has really fanatic supporters, and if donald trump and his son are retweeting this kind of rage against jim acosta and others and at cnn, then you can see how somebody fanatic, if they think this is truly an enemy of the people, an enemy of the president and a traitor, there could be some consequences and action that somebody is going to regret going forward. >> how do we get to the lowest common denominator? i mean, we are there, the lowest common denominator that's appealing to the country? >> it's donald trump's strategy. it's looking at people who feel grievances and it's playing upon their fears. it's a big part of the new republican coalition is are people who have been hurt by globalization where the economy has moved past them and they feel like they've gotten taken advantage of. he plays them. he didn't serve them with his policies but his strategy from the first day of his campaign -- >> he uses them. >> he uses them. and the strategy of the first campaign was to do this. in some ways it got him elected president. it continues to keep his base happy, and energized. but it's sure not helping him govern in any way. >> no. it's terrible for his base. it's terrible for the country. we're in a very sad place right now. i wish i could say i'm optimistic, but i'm not hearing the stories. when we come back, paul manafort's trial began today with the defense saying that they plan to pin all the crimes manafort's been accused of on rick gates. could that work? take prilosec otc and take control of heartburn. so you don't have to stash antacids here... here... or, here. kick your antacid habit with prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn. of online sellers. go to shipstation.com/tv and get two months free. the trial of paul manafort underway today with branding the former trump campaign a liar with an extravagant lifestyle. manafort's team planning to blame rick gates. joining me now is laura coats and page pate. good evening to both of you. >> good evening. >> it was all the fault of rick gates and the russian oligarchs. what do you make of manafort's strategy? >> he's grasping at straws. the only defense when you have a document heavy case. documents speak for themselves. the only strategy is ignore the documents and know who is probably the main informant for the government is somebody he cannot trust. that's his only strategy here and he's trying to go full force with it. >> they're saying this guy has pleaded guilty and we may as well pin it on him. >> exactly. as a prosecutor, i don't know any prosecutor with mother teresa as an informant. it's a great equalizer. >> great. page, devine testified today. he said rick gates did more of the logistical work like planning and travel while manafort worked on the strategy. doesn't that undermine the defense that manafort was duped? no? >> well, don, it could. it depend on what happens from this point forward in the trial. how will the defense lawyers cross examine this witness? will they try to showman foert may have been the top guy but he wasn't involved in the financial transactions, the paperwork and that he left it to gates who tried to cheat him and doctored some of the documents and was the one that committed the fraud? obviously that's what the defense lawyers told the jury that they're going to try to prove during this trial. it really depends on how the defense lawyers cross examine the government witnesses. >> prosecutors brought in manafort's spending habits in their opening statement including him buying $15,000 jacket made out of ostrich. what do you think the point of $20,000 watch and a number of houses, highlighting his lavish lifestyle, what's the strategy? >> i think it's to make the jury feel that this is somebody who is not like us. the prosecutors, the government always wants to have defendant as somebody who is not personally appealing to the jury. so in a money case like this where you know the defendant made a lot of money and allegedly didn't pay his taxes, you want the jury to think he's not like one of us. don't feel sorry or empathize with him. they want to immediately set the defendant off in another place and remove him in any possible sympathy or connection that he might have with the jury. >> you're an average working person. you're playing by the rules and paying your taxes. it's tough to make ends meet. this guy is making all the money and doesn't play the rules and he's not paying his taxes. is that what you're saying? >> i am, but they can overdo it. in some cases the government spends so much time talking about how much money the guy made that the jury will start to say okay, he made a lot of money, but he worked hard. where's the meat? where's the crime he committed? i think it's important to lay it out in opening statements to try to make him appear above us all. this was a rich guy who lives a different lifestyle, but then they have to turn back to the evidence. i think they did that today with witness number one. >> so two things here, laura. first, you agree that they can overplay their hand? >> even the judge pointed out during the opening statement, derailed the prosecutor's main argument by saying it's not a crime to spend your money frivolously. reminding the jury that's not the issue. they have to tie it to money laundering or it's not that he worked hard it's that there's no other way to get the money besides nefarious means. >> pressure for a guilty verdict? >> a lot of pressure. it's not the direct tie to collusion. >> they can't even talk about trump, collusion, and -- >> that's correct. you can't do that. but everyone assumes you're going to lead with your trump. you're going to do your strongest case that ties to your directive that you had under rosenstein. there's a lot of pressure from mueller's team to be successful, especially on a document-based case, but it's important at this juncture they abide by the terms of this judge, because if they do not have success in the trial, the second trial coming up may be all for not and going forward it will be a harder battle to prove to congress and the court of public opinion that they have something. >> we've been told the president -- officials told cnn the president has been following this manafort trial closely all day. what's the danger for him? >> well, i think maybe he's concerned about two things. one is something's going to come out at this trial that negatively reflects on him, either his campaign, his connections to russia, his children, his family, something may come out during the testimony that makes him look bad. he had no control over that. i'm sure that frustrates him and the white house. this trial will be controlled by the judge. what come out during the testimony, he's a participant as far as a witness, but he can't control what's said. the other thing is maybe something happens during the trial. manafort says look, we need to strike a deal. let's talk. i know i didn't want to plea guilty early but now i've seen the evidence. trump is not coming to my rescue. i'm not getting a phone call about a pardon, maybe i can enter a plea and a new development occurs that changes the course of the investigation relating to trump. >> i appreciate it. but before we go, the answer in the form of a question. who does alex trebek want to take over for him? none other than who is laura coats? >> he tweeted that. he said it in an interview. i couldn't believe it. i mean, you could have picked me up off the floor. >> he did it in an interview? >> yes. for me, it was always jeopardy is either alex with a mustache. i'm honored by it. >> that's jeopardy, but this is cnn. thank you. thank you both. i appreciate it. when we come back, a ice official describing detention officials as summer camp today. this isn't the only thing that's had people angry about the hearing on capitol hill. when i received the diagnoses, i knew at that exact moment ... i'm beating this. my main focus was to find a team of doctors. it's not just picking a surgeon, it's picking the care team and feeling secure in where you are. visit cancercenter.com/breast patience of a saint. the new sleep number 360 smart bed, from $999. smarter sleep will change your life. does your business internet provider promise a lot? let's see who delivers more. comcast business gives you gig-speed in more places. the others don't. we offer up to 6 hours of 4g wireless network backup. everyone else, no way. we let calls from any of your devices come from your business number. them, not so much. we let you keep an eye on your business from anywhere. the others? nope! get internet on our gig-speed network and add voice and tv for $34.90 more per month. call or go online today. an amazingly tone deaf moment on capitol hill today. a top official with immigration and customs enforcement saying this about family residential centers where parents and children are held. >> the best way to describe them is to be more like a summer camp. these individual have access to 24 /7 food and water. they have educational opportunities. they have recreational opportunities both structured as well as unstructured. there's basketball courts. there's exercise classes. there's soccer fields that we put in there. >> but no parents. so i'm going to bring in maria cardona and steve cortez. maria you heard that from the head of enforcement and removal for immigration and customs characterizing the centers at summer camps. >> yeah. nothing less than disgusting. clearly ice, i guess now or especially the head of it which is even worse is getting their talking points from fox news, because we heard this earlier when this policy first started and when kids were being ripped from the arms of their mothers and getting put in these detention centers, the child prisons from laura ingram who said that it was like summer camp. i would invite others to send their kids to the summer camp if he does believe that. put his money where his mouth is. it's absolutely ridiculous. it clearly is indicative of what they know has been a debacle of a policy, has been a horrific evil policy, has been something that they know they are going to pay for politically at the ballot box in november, and they're trying to paint the best picture from something that actually is completely horrible and un-american. >> he's not the first person. i mean, that was -- as he is speaking or testifying in front, you know, of lawmakers, but other people have qualified it or classified it that way, steve. i mean, what did you think of his statements? summer camp? >> no. listen, i think he phrased it poorly. he should have said we're trying to create a facility that's like a camp, but to call it summer camp, that evokes happy memories and somebody sent there for great reasons. and the children are the victims. i have nothing but empathy for these children. they are the victims. though, primarily of their parents who made a terrible decision of breaking and entering into our country. >> they were not breaking and entering. >> well, they're not legal. that means breaking and entering. >> they are desperately looking for asylum because they were under the threat of death. >> i'm glad you mentioned that, because if you look at a map, maria, it's a very long way from central america all the way through mexico to the united states. over -- >> that's how desperate these families are, steve. >> hold on. if they're that desperate, then the first time they got to an open democracy, mexico, why didn't they ask for asylum there. >> they may have. >> they wanted to come to the united states. i don't blame them for wanting to come here. i'm glad my father came here and millions of people from all over the world come here legally. and we have a right as a country to determine who best-serves the interests and security of america. that's not accident phobic or racist. those who decide to do it their own way and break and enter into the united states -- >> can i ask you one quick question, steve, what does this have to do with separating parents and children? >> well, again, if you break and into enter into my house and bring your children, you'll be separated from their children. that's awful. they didn't do it. it's not their decision. >> but if you break into someone's house, it's a felony. right? if you cross the border, undocumented, is that a felony? >> it's a civil penalty. >> not the first but the second. and for many of them it's multiple times. >> why would you classify it as breaking and entering, then? >> because -- if you go somewhere without permission, i don't know how much i have to explain this. if i were -- >> what did they break? breaking and entering assumes you broke down a door or a window to get into someone's house. >> and that you have malice to do it. >> if i run past the guards at any office building basically in america, i will quickly be apprehended. that's breaking and entering. why should our country -- >> what if you surrender and beg for help because you and your family are under the threat of death? what then? >> once again -- >> maria, why -- >> or are you asking for asylum, which is legal to anybody who feels under the threat of death in this country? >> and we have a heart for asylum in this country. >> you don't. the president doesn't. >> once again -- >> why do they go 1500 miles for the asylum. >> here's what happens. we get sidetracked. what is the definition of this? you get sidetracked. let's get back to the subject about what happened today on the hill. this is hhs commander jonathan white testifying today he expressed concerns to the administration that separating children from their parents was a bad thing. watch this. >> during the deliberative process over the previous year we raised a number of of concerns in the program about any policy which would result in family separation due to concerns we had about the best interest of the child as well as about whether that would be operational supportable with the bed capacity we have. there's no question. there's no question that separation of children from parents entails significant potential for traumatic psychological injury to the child. >> so the fact that he warned the administration, warned the administration officials about a policy that would result in pain and suffering to children but clearly he was ignored, what does that tell you? >> that tells me this was not a knee jerk reaction. this was a well-thought out policy that was focussed on discriminating and raining terror on the families who were just trying to give their children a better life. but it also indicates something even more insidious, don. this was the worst mix of incompetence, of immorality, of carelessness, cluelessness and callousness that i think comes from a very real strain within trump and his administration that is racist, that is bigoted, and that is focussed on implementing policies that are discriminatory, and that is what we are seeing. >> listen -- we lost a lot of time back and forth there when we got off track. but steve, can you answer this for me quickly? white also testified that he was told that family separation was not the official policy, but we all witnessed what happened. members of the administration describing the separation as a deterrent. >> look, family separation -- i don't know what went on within dhs. family separation clearly is traumatic. by the way the best way to deter this long term is to build a wall. if we don't have a porous board er and we have only guarded points of entry, that prevents a lot of human misery at the border. open borders are not humanitarian. they're the opposite. >> we don't have open borders, steve. >> well, we have effectively open borders. >> no. >> and to your point that it's allegedly racist, what's racist is allowing people to pour in and compete in the job market. i would argue that's a soft racism we've tolerated for decades. >> it would be so much easier to have discussion with somebody who knows the facts or respects the truth. people are not pouring in. this border has not been porous and open. the numbers actually do not support what you are saying. within -- >> then how do we have 10 to 15 million illegals in the country. >> the numbers have been going down. there are actually net immigration to this country is negative. there are more people going out -- >> that's not true. >> mexico it is. that's not true in general. >> got to go. >> this policy is based on complete and total lies. >> we'll continue this discussion. thank you all. thank you both. i appreciate your time. >> thank you. when we come back jeff sessions announcing a group protecting religious groups from persecution, but who is the task force really going to protect? welcome back. dean as well, we haven't seen you. >> good to be here. >> charles critics say the task force is allowing discrimination against the lgbt community. >> this is jeff sessions. number two, it was almost a year to the day that jeff sessions also "the new york times" reported he was going to direct the civil rights division of the justice department to look into protecting the rights of white kids to get into school who they said were being discriminated against to such a degree that it required the justice department to jump in. that was kind of looking at kind of white supremacy. and this is kind of looking at what they call christian nationalism. not only believing the country was founded as a christian country but believing it should be governed as a christian country. to that degree, people who are lgbt are cut out. it's not about their liberties. it's substituting their liberty's for these people's saying they cannot co-exist, and that is not american. >> amy, i heard you grown under your voice. i just want before you respond to play this. this is jeff sessions explaining why this task force was created. watch this. >> a dangerous movement undetected by many, but real, is now challenging and eroding our great tradition, our religious freedom. there can be no doubt, it's no little matter. it must be confronted intellectually and defeated. >> what is the movement challenging our religious freedom? >> i'm not sure what he's talking about, the dangerous movement unless he's talking about the effort to go out and suppress people that are christians and want to live by their faith. look, at the end of the day i think this is to protect all americans. all of us have the right to religious freedom and liberty, and i think that's what this is about, protecting our first amendment rights, and that's why they're doing this. we are a nation that was founded because people came here to break away from the church of england because they were being religiously persecuted there. they didn't want to conform. they came to the united states of america. we have all reasonings from all over the world come here and migrate to the country and they have a right to do that. i think we all should step back and not get too wound up about this and let's see where we go from here. i do not think that it is to persecute anyone, and i certainly don't think -- >> i have a time issue here, i have to let everybody get in. amy says it's to protect the religious freedom of all religions. right? do you feel that way as a muslim? >> no. i don't think -- i think donald trump is -- >> i'm wondering if a muslim, someone went into a business and someone said it's against my religion to serve an american or woman or man or black person or christian, what would happen? >> that's not based in islam. secondly, donald trump is the anti-muslim bigot and chief. he campaigned on the shutdown of muslims. those words have had consequences for my community. we've seen attacks on mosques from california to new jersey. >> you think this is to protect the religious freedom of prioritizing the christian group? check this out. this is a break down of religions in the u.s. christians are 70%. evangelicals of 25% of that. >> donald trump said when he had his first muslim ban about prioritizing christian refugees over muslim refugees. he does not make muslim americans feel like part of this country. are the far right christians being persecuted? i'm down with religious liberty but not as using it as a basis to discriminate. >> we'll be right back after this break. what do harvard graduates know about cognitive performance? 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(upbeat music) charles, dean and amy are back. amy, responding to what dean said, dean said the trump administration decided to, remember, the president said he was going to do a total and complete ban on muslims. if that wasn't banning or discriminating against a religion, then how is this protecting all religions? >> this is to protect our first amendment right. and to say that this is to discriminate against gays and lesbians, that's absolutely not true. i think it's offensive, actually, to assume that gay people are not religious, because i know plenty of christians that are gay, and it's not like they're mutually exclusive. so, to go out -- >> no one said that, amy. i have to correct you. no one said that. >> you said they're targeting -- the community is being -- >> that's what critics said. >> okay, well, i don't think that that's the case. this is the thing, don, is that we are in such an environment where everybody wants to divide us, by sex, race, religion, whatever, and at the end of the day, the president is focused on americans. and our religious freedom is about our first amendment right. people came here to this country for that reason. and we should all be able to practice the religion we want out being persecuted for it. >> okay. >> and that doesn't matter what religion you are. >> i've got to get other people in here. sessions said that this task force would promote cases like the colorado baker who refused to -- a same sex couple a wedding cake, challenged the state's anti-discrimination law, before the supreme court. i just keep wondering, who is the actual -- i can't figure this out, because, and to say that it doesn't have anything to do with discriminating against gay people, officials from the legal advocacy group that represented the colorado baker attended sessions' event, and the alliance defending freedom is a group that has supported the recriminalization of homosexuality in the u.s., linked homosexually to pedophilia and claims that a homosexual agenda will destroy christianity and society. >> this is the thing -- that whole thing is -- it is the misguided supposition that you can be converted, you can be seduced, that straight people can be seduced into being gay people and once they have one gay encounter, then -- it's the theory of the vampire bite. once you had one encounter, it's a wrap for you, right? >> but if you are a gay person and as amy says, you are religious and you believe in god, wouldn't the highest, one of the things that you would want to achieve is to get married in a church? >> well, sure. >> and have your marriage -- i'm just saying, or have your marriage recognized by a baker where you can have a cake made. >> but you know your gayness is not contagious. that's the problem with all of that philosophy, which is that it believes -- that this is contagious, and it is not. if you do not like penis, there is no one on this planet that can make you like penis. and the same thing goes for vagina. that's just the truth. >> that's the clinical term for it, and go on. >> in 2018, the idea of religious liberty should not be telling a same sex couple get out of my bakery because i don't serve your type here. don't forget, religion was used to defend segregation. it was cited by the trial judge, the bible says blacks and whites shouldn't get married. we're seeing this right now. and i call it christian sharia law, it angered the right, but i hope it gets their attention. >> okay -- >> that's not true. that's not true. >> the far right does. >> to be continued. amy, thank you. thank you, dean. charles. never disappoints. charles -- >> oh, my gosh. >> our coverage continues. my name is jeff sheldon, and i'm the founder of ugmonk. before shipstation it was crazy. it's great when you see a hundred orders come in, a hundred orders come in, but then you realize i've got a hundred orders i have to ship out. shipstation streamlined that wh the order data, the weights of , everything is seamlessly put into shipstation, so when we print the shipping ll everything's pretty much done. it's so much easier so now, we're ready, bring on t. shipstation. the number one ch of online sellers. go to shipstation.com/tv and get two months free.

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Transcripts For DW Tomorrow Today - The Science Magazine 20180821 12:30:00

topics: Big data hunting; Uterus transplants provide new hope; How children develop empathy; Why do polar bears and penguins never meet? way to his next lecture. pretty soon the online computer store is sending mark a steady stream of ads to his current laptop and his phone that's possible due to mark having registered with google on both devices as a result all websites he visits that have google cookies will display personalized advertising. and google also sends out its ads itself as jessica notices when she looks up frequently used search terms banners related to those words then pop up. google's ads feature brands an option to determine which panels will show up on a search results page with time search for more frequently google charges more money from advertisers this form of individual marketing does not require behavior profiles. but it's a forty day sequence of them into music it's a stellar aria literally so what's next the mood. stay tuned. in a scene eighty three thyroid tissue in one nine hundred sixty seven hunt organ transplantation has become an every day procedure well over one hundred thousand other form a.t.m. uterine transplants are a new frontier for some women they offer hope but they're controversial. in twenty sixteen gynecologists of a poker performed germany's first uterine transplant it's a complicated surgical procedure that wasn't allowed to be filmed today she's performing a hysterectomy a routine surgery but one that spells the end of a patient's dream of baring her own child but offers some hope. the think about i want to be here this is my uterus. this is a patsy and this is a patient is having a hysterectomy because she's been diagnosed with an early stage cancer vincy in a few years she wants to have her own baby she would be an ideal candidate for uterine transplant. i may get unfun time so i want a transplant a donor uterus could give her the chance to bear a child during the first transplant professor poco was assisted by colleagues from sweden who have experience with the procedure the world's first successful uterine transplant from a living donor was carried out there in two thousand and thirteen the following year vincent was born the first child carried in a transplanted womb. in a uterine transplant both donor and recipient undergo major surgery the procedure can take up to ten hours and is not without risk. in most cases so far a mother donated her uterus to her daughter to enable her to bear her own child the organ is removed together with the fallopian tubes. but. this involves locating and severing the artery that supplies the uterus with blood. their current and i mean we can only carry out a uterine transplant if the recipient still has functioning ovary it's under i asked what's key to the procedure is that the patient retains her ovaries and they remain functional and do not before that's what makes it possible for her to bear a child that is genetically her own home just before that she needs her own eggs so . this is all for them this is an ovary and it will remain in place. after the uterine transplant eggs taken from the woman's ovary are fertilized in vitro. the embryo is then transferred to the new transplanted womb. nothing's it this is the vagina. the uterus out. as with other organ transplants the patient is given immune suppressants to prevent rejection so far there's been little research on possible long term effects on mother and child so her book or presented the results of her first transplant and her gynecology congress in stuttgart. the procedure is controversial because it's not a life saving measure like say a liver or heart transplant and many view it more as a personal choice. what tired and who decides which woman gets to have the child she wants and which doesn't it just there are pros and cons when it comes to uterine transplant and we need to have an open discussion about the issue in germany. so far that debate hasn't taken place the german ethics council has yet to officially address the issue. professor. is a member of the council she specializes in the ethical aspects of reproductive medicine and its social implications. transplants are not unproblematic in an ethical sense still under clinical trial it's not an established procedure. in which we know exactly what longer term consequences it might have. planted uterus could be rejected we're talking about a living donor transplant if the patient ends up getting pregnant there are considerable risks for the child. around the world at least a dozen babies have been born thanks to a uterine transplant but none so far in germany the legal ramifications are also still unclear the transplants performed in to begin were considered a therapeutic trial and didn't require approval from the university's ethics commission or from the german medical association. while german law doesn't ban uterine transplants it's still a great zone. for professor garman basic principles of medical research are at stake. therapeutic trials are generally a last resort for patients with life threatening conditions an option when there are no alternatives. indian file in this case we're talking about a therapeutic trial of a treatment that hasn't been approved in germany not a clinical trial that progresses from one step to the next. what happened here is that invasive surgery was the very first step. i would recommend that researches launch a regular clinical study round and carry out the sensational procedures. to once again the world medical associations policy statement supports her stance according to these ethical guidelines a physician may use an unproven treatment with informed consent but this intervention should subsequently be subjected to rigorous clinical research clinical trials of uterine transplants are under way in north america asia and several european countries but not yet in germany the scientists in to begin believe transplantation holds promise for women who were born without a uterus or who have lost it to disease. vincy. for hunch i. mean progress in medicine to be able to help people in new and better ways you have to chart new ground. to advance research you need to innovate and have the courage of your convictions. not to release you know via t.v. a sign that. a few longed for a new design to give birth to a child doesn't justify everything the desire for a child can be overpowering that all first priority should be she addressed life threatening conditions how far we can go to satisfy personal desires is an ethically fraught issue. it just looked. into being three womb transplants have so far been carried out and one woman has already received a fertilized egg implant so it probably won't be long before germany too will see a first baby born to a mother with a uterine transplant. so she wakes in the womb and the first lies emerges as a baby it happens all the time yet it's totally astounding. to bet development just keeps on going. all the time experiments let psychologists observe these processes in real time. children observe the world with immense curiosity eager to understand events around them the most difficult thing to understand is what's going on in other people's minds developmental psychologists like sabrina power and have discovered that children start to develop empathy at a very early age carla is twelve months old with the help of these toys professor power and wants to find out of carla can identify the preferences of other people carl a shown how the man seems fascinated by animals while the woman can't take her eyes off of the cars and that remains the case when the cars and animals switch positions the test is repeated ten times will carla managed to conclude who prefers what asking her directly obviously isn't an option. fortunately there is an alternative in the last part of the test the man now looks at the car and the woman at the animal will that change of preference be visible in karla's visual focus. we can see how she's analyzing events far more intensively. she also takes a closer look at the objects. little mind is working away trying to figure out why everything's changed. even the twelve month old babies register a change in preference for that always fascinated by the faces. and they really thought it what people are looking at and how the motions they're exhibiting is totally exciting. yo is at a more advanced stage as is typical for three year old he displays empathy when he sees the researcher getting his hand trapped in a box he seems concerned and is eager to help. when the same man loses a balloon you know again intervenes by giving him another one in its place. but children also look very carefully to determine whether their help is genuinely needed or whether someone is just pretending. here i only trap my sleeve and you can immediately see from her cheeky reaction that she's not taking you seriously. after a while she thinks ok i will open the box so that the game continues. here she needs a bit longer to intervene. when the child knows that the researcher didn't actually hurt himself before so when he now loses the balloon will it take longer for her to console him. to see how she hesitates first she looks at me then up at the balloon then eventually back to me it takes a little longer to decide to help me after all and possibly one of her balloons. so even here children display an urge to help what psychologists call empathic concern. that means putting myself in someone else's shoes and trying to think what the most helpful thing would be for the other person to lessen that suffering. these children exhibit a clear expression of sympathy. for you. but can children as young as three predict the behavior of someone who's thinking something completely different to them. this is sally and this is that she's wearing a gray dress and has red hair the two of them have a box and a basket. that's the cool. they also have a ball. and they put the ball into the box by. one tuning into kissed. the butt is in the box yes then sally goes to the playground commissioner now she can't see or hear what's happening with the box. and goes inside and takes the ball out and puts it in the basket. it's come to sell it on now sally comes back from the playground and looks for the ball that where will she look. in the well caught the basket on why. why because it's inside it that yo gives the wrong answer like all three year olds at this age children still assume that other people are thinking the same thing as them but once they reach five like elza children can correctly predict that sally will look for the ball in the wrong place but where will she look. why. because that's where the ball was before was that where the ball now in the basket. what the child knows about the world is not the same as what sally knows so when the child has to predict what sally will do next they have to understand that what sally is thinking is different from what they're thinking. as children grow so does their empathy also from observing adults. children don't just learn when we try to teach them something they also learn from their social environment all the time keep your children are faced with the task of getting used to the social and cultural environment they're growing up in and learning all the rules of conduct. so when adults interact with children we should assume that the children absorb that information so that makes us adults role models and gives us a certain degree of responsibility for. researchers meanwhile are faced with the task of understanding how children think in feel and what exactly is going on in their little heads. and that there are animals to figure them out only can do as it is a. feeling nothing likely evan green day had an observation and asked us a very interesting question. while there are no polar bears and talk to no penguins in the arctic. hankerings are mainly at home in antarctica thanks to evolution some penguins do live in warmer climes so just to come up against our. otherwise the birds presence is limited to the southern hemisphere. they never try to venture further north. the stay can fly on one ling wouldn't get them very far given the thousands of kilometers of ocean between the two poles although they are pretty decent swimmers. but there is a different explanation for penguins not moving to the arctic. they live off the fish that are in plentiful supply and cold sea currents heading north would mean crossing the woman waters near the equator. and that would probably constitute an impassable barrier. so penguins and polar bears will never meet in nature. they're well adapted to their respective habitats the problem for this guy is that the sea ice vital for catching seals is melting due to climate change polar bears are strong swimmers but not a splash the seals in open water they're facing a food crisis. so with their natural habitat shrinking how about simply relocating polar bears to the south pole it's nice and cold there too right. years ago scientists began toying with the idea of relocating animals threatened by climate change to similar habitats elsewhere in the world. but moving polar bears to the antarctic has been ruled out as it would happen foreseeable consequences for the ecosystem that. penguins for example would be completely vulnerable to this new imported predator. undersides the antarctic is warming up as well. if outlet is right why. do you have a science question that you've always wanted and say we happy to help out send it to us as a video text over a smell if we answer it on the show we'll send you a little surprise as a thank you can i just ask. can visit us on the web at d.f.w. dot com slash site. on twitter facebook. that's all for now next week we'll take a look into the brain. scientists in switzerland have done amazing things using electric current. join us then for a stimulating experience. and see you soon. these creations. just brand. colors gotta take on the. look what do we really noted above the minimum three hundred or cheats what motivates it how does he think and feel private moments when the wife of a great fashion designer is going to some small. start september not double. time for an upgrade. how about furniture that grows on buying. a house with no. poor design highlights you can make yourself. trends tips and tricks that will turn your home to a special. upgrade yourself with d w's interior design channel on you tube. my first boss i was a sewing machine. where i come from women are almost by this ocean for. something as simple as learning how to write a bicep those isn't. since i was a little girl i want to talk albums by cycle of my home and it took me as the months might have. finally gave up and went to buying young guys like this but returned because sewing machine sewing i suppose was more apt procreates fargo's than rising above as now i want to reach out to those woman back home who are bones by the duties and social norms and inform them of oded basics like. my name is them out of the home and i wore ads see them.

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Transcripts For DW The Day - News In Review 20181210 20:30:00

paris will finance all these proposals all together amounts reaches several billion euros chris the christmas bonus on the taxes on the christmas bonus the raise of the minimum wage tax to lower taxes on on pension is. and paris has already difficulties to me it's the budget criteria and they must retire terry on the european level. margin is really narrow actually and he has to know that and you know it brings us to the question then what kind of risk does this put for all of europe seeing the french president give in to violent protests by basically opening up the state coffers if european countries face similar difficulties we so demonstration in belgium in the netherlands in that respect it was also interesting to hear dealing cochairman today benjamin siga saying he was forcing similar protests in germany. with the raise of rents in bigger big german cities the issue of the working poor could also gained ground in germany and what about mr macro and international reputation media he has been seen by a lot of people around the world especially with the german chancellor leaving the political stage as you know curing the torch for your there's a kind of addicted to me in the perception of the man who in my career is a lot critic scene was very critical even in france and you still celebrate it outside of fronts but if france doesn't meet and meet is obligation on financial obligation of european level you will have no leverage to implement these reform is that you've been i joined up and you know where do we go from here it's interesting we have been reporting that mccrone was elected as the president of reform and now he's being derived did as the president of the rich. yes very good question actually now my car and his feet she said you know he made all these concessions and he was be being modest and everything but he also said i'm going to continue with my reforms and the next reforms that are coming up the pension and the unemployment system reform so that it's really that he that these are crucial pieces of his reform puzzle and we will see if you will be able actually to push them through it looks like he wanted to make concessions he also said you know this is really a very important moment for this country and now it's the start of a new social contract say to say but it also looks like he wants to really stay on course to push through his program and he said do we know why mr macron has basically been in a missing in action for the past for we submit you know tonight's speech on television was the first time that he's been seen in public in what four weeks or so right. ten days ten his last speech was about ten days ago and the thing is that when he spoke last time around it kind of backfired because people say you know you're actually not offering much you know offering too little too late at the time he withdrew the tax and the rise in fuel tax for a few months but he didn't even say we're going to scrap that that tax and people are saying we actually if we fall. over this now we need more measures said it actually i think he didn't want to speak publicly because last time it didn't work out very well so you put forward his prime minister he was making a new concessions new nonsense and whenever it off you need the prime minister came out and spake it was never enough so i think he just didn't want to get burned and he waited until he couldn't wait no longer article responded lisa louis and paris and look under here in studio with both of you you thank. and then on to another leader under fire britain's prime minister theresa may says that parliament will not vote on her brights a deal tomorrow as planned but he says that it is clear there's just insufficient support for the deal on the table and following her announcement today european council president all toast called a meeting for thursday to discuss brights it but he says the e.u. will not renegotiate the terms of the deal to rescind may's problems not getting any small. think it was a difficult day for to reason may britain's embattled prime minister i think some very carefully she was has been said in this chamber and in the. she had hoped the draft breaks that deal on how the u.k. leaves the e.u. would somehow get through parliament facing her detractors as she was forced to admit she was badly wrong as a result if we went ahead and house the post tomorrow the deal would be with you guys but. we will therefore to further that chance will for tomorrow. and not proceed to divide the house at this time politicians of all stripes angry with a reason may they were loud calls for her to quit. this house mr speaker this is a bad deal for britain a bad deal for our economy and a bad deal for democracy our country deserves better than this the prime minister is trying to buy himself one last chance to save this deal if she doesn't take on board the fundamental changes required then she must make way for those who can. well and he's passionately debated inside parliament outside there was that mentally of pro and anti breaks it demonstrates is. that squabbling representative of the mood of the nation. it is a half hour trade off the trade is with your opinion and also so i don't consider myself. a first time that much so it's actually meant something i am very worried that it's going to. trace in my is going to sign this up to something that will never get out of and i think remain look at that day through it through the back door. many people have many problems with may's draft breaks it deal what everyone is united in opposition to is her proposed border arrangement between ireland and northern ireland the so-called backstop it guarantees that the only land border between the u.k. and the e.u. will remain open something everybody wants but while she and her e.u. counterparts figure out how to do that under the draft agreement northern ireland will behave as if it was still part of the e.u. in terms of trade and the movement of people this would either effectively create a new border within the u.k. or else the whole of the u.k. would have to keep e.u. trade conditions both of these options race fierce opposition amongst breaks it is may will head to brussels soon to talk this out but brussels has already said it won't renegotiate. here is a million other stories now that are making headlines around the world or media's reformist prime minister has further cemented his authority after winning snap parliamentary elections and dealing a crushing blow to the longtime ruling party of a former newspaper editor nicole or shimmy on came to power after spear had massive protests earlier this year left wing groups in the philippines capital manila have marked international human rights day by protesting president do territories plan to prove long martial law in the south they say the measures have fueled political sellings and a crackdown on dissenters and they fear that it could be expanded to the entire country. a russian former policeman who was already serving a life sentence for multiple murders has been found guilty of fifty six more killings making him the country's most prolific serial killer of recent times. was jailed in twenty fifteen for raping and killing twenty two women that he'd given lifts to while working or being off duty. all right now to morocco where leaders are representatives from around one hundred sixty countries have adopted a landmark pact on migration and a united nations conference in. the u.n. says there are now more migrants worldwide than ever before were two hundred in sixty million the proposed agreement aims to tackle the challenges are rising from this massive movement of people but this agreement has also come under heavy criticism with dozens of european and other nations pulling out of the process. tens of thousands of ringette muslims living in crowded refugee camps in bangladesh it's one of the many faces of today's global migration issue now a u.n. agreement once to pave the way for a better handling of migrant flows but what does the pact actually say. increased information and data collection is one part migrants should be given information about their chosen route and they should be informed about the risks people living in countries on the route and in host countries should also be informed about the consequences of migration and to ensure that information is based on facts or it is should exchange data at an international level the pact also urges origin countries to address the root causes of migration to work toward eradicating poverty creating jobs and meeting basic standards for nutrition and education another key point is the respect for human rights standards should be set to protect those who do decide to leave the pact also encourages c. rescues the pact calls for coronated border management countries that should make safe and legal border crossings possible they should cooperate against people smuggling networks by for instance exchanging information on smuggling routes but not all countries agree with the pact demands the u.s. was the first country to announce it was not going to sign among others hungary astray poland israel austria and the czech republic have already spoken out against adding their signatures they criticize what they see as a too positive view of migration and say the pact could lead to an increase in illegal immigration but what do governments have to do legally nothing the contract is non-binding the agreement is more about sending a political signal migration is a global phenomenon and the international community wants to tackle it together. there is absolutely no doubt about whether this migration compact is going to be formally adopted today here mara cash there is growing skepticism among some u.n. member states what this agreement may actually bring in fact just ahead of the ceremony today of this formal agreement today several countries have opted out have withdrawn their support from this agreement citing concerns that this agreement may actually to mass migration or even pose a security threat to their countries or a security threat to europe as a whole but if you look inside this agreement you find it is a non-binding agreement which at its best can serve to create minimum standards for migrants worldwide how to protect your rights it's not going to change their situation overnight it's not going to change that on the mediterranean sea overnight neither is it going to change the horrific conditions in detention camps for example the ones in libya but as the secretary general of the united nations mystical terrorist has put it it can serve as a quote roadmap to prevent chaos and suffering benefiting everyone. there was a funny chart reported there the norwegian nobel committee has awarded this year's peace prize winners at a ceremony and also a yazidi activists not here in your rod and congolese doctor didn't know which one the award for their efforts to end rape as a weapon of war a victim herself your dog was praised for having the courage to speak out about abuse the way was recognized for helping female victims of sexual violence from his country's civil war. a pioneering gynecologist is treated tens of thousands of women at his clinic bearing witness to mass atrocities against women. they are learning to fight back these patients at the pennsy clinic haven't rolled in self-defense courses. most of those being treated at the hospital or survivors of rape or sexual assault. dr dennis mccuaig originally had the idea for the program contains a two zero. when they arrive here secret they all have serious mental problems toma to traumatic memories that make them unable to have normal relationships with no one. can see hospital is located in bukavu a city in eastern congo a civil war has been raging in the country for years women and children are the ones bearing the brunt of the conflict dr mcgee vegas clinic is the only refuge they have me about and that was there was seven people who raped me not by that but i think of us. after a while my vagina travels and. my hand i'm a man and valid. i also became pregnant. they like to do it. they like to destroy me. they laughed and spoke badly to me. so they did what they wanted with me. to one foot dr mcvey gives team not only performs restorative surgery on the women they also provide them with psychological care married women often remain alone their husbands leave them because they have been raped this says document vega has great consequences. that you don't understand how right can destroy not only the victim but how right it is destroying the fabric of the community and over the country. and i think that to really put attention on this question for me is very important women are really fired two two bricks. dr mcvey guy has long been a hero to his patients now they're happy to celebrate his winning the nobel prize. are the talk about the postponed briggs but it's causing turmoil everywhere isn't it that's right brant because as you know there's a lot at stake british prime minister of tourism a decision to delay the vote on the negotiated breck's a deal in parliament is dragging down international markets because of that the british pound sank to a twenty month low and the euro fell as well things didn't look much better on wall street either. from lemons to artichokes the british company purchases most of its fruit and vegetables from france spain and other e.q. countries. for the c.e.o. the imminent briggs' it already entails logistical difficulties and the uncertainty as to whether there will be a regulated briggs's or so-called hard breaks that with the e.u. adds to these problems if products take longer to transit or if. there is added bureaucracy in terms of moving product across because we're dealing with an incredibly fresh product or every every hour counts it is it is worrying in that respect. opinions across britain are divided some don't mind leaving the e.u. without an agreement in a hard break that others fear the british economy will suffer. but. whatever happens it's likely to get turbulent from a european perspective of course it would be best if brakes it failed and britain remained in the e.u. but of course the current divorce agreement would have to fail too if it does fail in problem and we don't know what will happen the new referendum which could be good or a hard break is it which would be very bad. the vote on the negotiated brigs that

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Transcripts For DW DW News - News 20181210 12:00:00

no the country. did donkey's. december twenty ninth on t.w. . this is deducted news coming to you live from budding rich a woman to british media say a crime in the cities of me is considering with a to push ahead the teams do all the mentoring vote on the briggs to deal or to delete that's all to warnings from lawmakers that she will lose we'll go live to london for the day latest also coming up monday does adopt a migration path at a major u.n. conference in morocco it aims to see if god humane treatment of the millions of people on the move was why but several missions of poor adoption of the past including the u.s. . and china songlines the us ambassador holbrooke the indictment of a senior while wade executive has a company really undermined u.s. sanctions against iran or is washington using the as a pool on its feet conflict with beijing. plus in sports cross city rivals travel ten thousand kilometers for the final one of football's talked on the length of the cup on the above the board it's the too big to argentinian rivals from ones i displayed in the spanish capital madrid where revoke played to needed extra time to beat book jr as they were celebrations both in spain and italy. little. my. son of a will welcome to you i'm on the thai cheema is the british prime minister tourism a pulling out of the vote on briggs it now there are mixed reports coming out of london this hour i'm a spokeswoman insists the vote will go ahead while several media reports say that it is off the british parliament is due to hold a crunch vote on tuesday to decide whether to indorse may's widely criticised plan for leaving the european union but the future of the deal hangs in the balance over one hundred lawmakers from may's conservative party say they were rejected and the chances are slim that it will pass through parliament. for the very latest let's go to london and to deed of news correspondent barbara this is. hi barbara getting mixed messages out of london is the most going to go ahead or is it going to be delayed what are you hearing. we're still waiting for official confirmation on rita but numerous sources here usually well informed sources say that she's going to pull the vote the problem was that is that she needs a good reason to do that she can't just say oh folks let's just delay this for another week and think about it again that would really lose her the last stats part of standing that she still has and parliament but she needs to probably tell them i will go back to brussels and try to renegotiate something particularly with regard to the irish backstop that's pretty much the only options she has and next week the vote more or less becomes inevitable because after that it's a christmas break and parliament will not be happy if she postpones even further so this is just delaying tactics and we don't quite know yet but rumor is rife that she's going to pull it does he was adamant that the deal is not open to read negotiations so well does that leave there is a me in case she does decide to delay the vote. it leaves her in the bad and in a particularly weak spot and the tactics and strategy behind this is really difficult to understand it must be more or less just an expression of despair because people on her own side the male loyalists have been telling her since the weekend that she is walking into disaster that she is with her eyes open walking into a crushing defeat and the party doesn't want that of course because they know what will happen next there will be a severe leadership crisis afterwards there will be a vote of no confidence probably from the part of a from the part of the labor party the opposition and nobody knows what will then happen in the end. and but it will threaten the government and so they are really stepping inside stepping going backwards and forwards and trying to wiggle out of the tight spot they are in whether they will be successful it's highly doubtful and government and what's all this uncertainty cause for the second referendum on breaks that have been getting louder but britain's foreign minister jeremy hunt who's this out in a second listen to what he said. but i think it's irrelevant because just imagine how the fifty two percent of the country first writes would feel if any professional writer to lay. on the tracks i think people would be shocked and very angry and upset you know the intention becomes. so not really could the phone lines to the ruling out a second referendum on breaks it completely but could that be the only way to break this terrible deadlock that we seem to find ourselves in. it pretty much is the only way that it is the only way for the a position to say listen we need to ask people again what they really think now that they can see what's on the table and of course they've been made numerous arguments have been made that people can change their minds particularly now if they see what it means to leave the e.u. how difficult it is how divisive it is because the country is really still split and the mood against between bricks and cheers and remain or is is a spa isn't is as it has been has been four weeks ago or three months ago so it is quite clear that there needs to be a decision somehow and it seems that politically the country is more and more interrupted it's it's at a point where this decision cannot be made by politicians alone and that leaves the second referendum as the only decent and way out that could unite people against behind a new decision and of course it seems everyone wants to have a say we're seeing a lot of protests. demonstrators behind you barbara visit in london thank you very much for that update. turning now to morocco where leaders and representatives from around one hundred fifty countries have adopted a landmark pact on migration as a united nations conference in mara the u.n. says there are now more migrants worldwide than ever before some two hundred and sixty million the proposed agreement aims to tackle the challenges arising from this massive movement of people but the pact has also come under heavy criticism with several european and non european nations pulling out of the process we talked to our correspondent live in just a bit but first this report. tens of thousands of ringette muslims living in crowded refugee camps in bangladesh it's one of the many faces of today's global migration issue now a u.n. agreement wants to pave the way for a better handling of migrant flows but what does the pact actually say. increased information and data collection is one part migrants should be given information about their chosen route and they should be informed about the risks people living in countries on the route and in host countries should also be informed about the consequences of migration and to ensure that information is based on facts or it is should exchange data at an international level the pact also urges origin countries to address the root causes of migration to work toward eradicating poverty creating jobs and meeting basic standards for nutrition and education another key point is the respect for human rights standards should be set to protect those who do decide to leave the pact also encourages c. rescues the pact calls for coronated border management countries that should make safe and legal border crossings possible they should cooperate against people smuggling networks by for instance exchanging information on smuggling routes but not all countries agree with the pact demands the u.s. was the first country to announce it was not going to sign among others hungary astray poland israel austria and the czech republic have already spoken out against adding their signatures they criticize what they see as a too positive view of migration and say the pact could lead to an increase in illegal immigration but what do governments have to do legally nothing the contract is non-binding the agreement is more about sending a political signal migration is a global phenomenon and the international community wants to tackle it together. find funny is that the un conference in monaco is funny as we heard it's a non-binding pact in many countries have pulled out of it even before it was signed so what's going to really achieve. as you have just heard actually in the report it can actually send a political signal at least and already it is seen sort of as a diplomatic success that representatives delegates of at least hundred fifty countries here behind me have convened that actually came to an agreement or rather formally adopted an agreement that was already made in july by the much much more countries many more countries but so many of them at least ten have opted out in the meantime citing fears that this agreement they actually interfere with their national sovereignty that their own national migration policies which as the creators of this migration migration pact keep repeating is not going to be the case so as you hear i'm also a bit careful with girding because at the moment this pact is nothing else actually than that a platform a roadmap to have certain guidelines but it is a soft law so nobody can enforce any country to actually implement these agreements that we are agreed upon today but there is the hope that at least minimum standards when it comes to migration policies when it comes to the rights of migrants will be implemented in the respective countries and finally the german chancellor angela merkel is also there and she's praised the migration backed as a big step towards a global approach to the migration debate let's take a listen to what she said. we all know that because of the different opportunities around the world illegal migration causes some very great fears in our countries and now the opponents of this pact are tapping into these fears to circulate false report about what's really at the core of this pact and at the heart of the dispute surrounding it is the principle of multilateral cooperation. so that we thought for america the pact is a big step forward and we have to remember the journey took in a lot of refugees and migrants back in two thousand and fifteen but how much would really change for the migrants who are struggling to escape the situation. other human rights violations in detention centers in libya for example are going to stop the moral of course i will have to say no if you if you ask me about that the death of the military in c. is going to stop through. not making it to europe but actually washed ashore as dead bodies at the tunisian cause for example also have to say no but and as also the us secretary general put it this agreement should serve as a quote as a roadmap to prevent suffering to prevent chaos looking at had of course it does depend on this global community that came together here today and mark has what they make of these non-binding softball agreement if you will what i already hear here in marrocco by the way when i speak to a lot of young people who actually want to go to europe as well is that they are hoping that they can it is actually some hope coming back to the table that that migrants are actually seen as human beings that should be protected and not in a way. their rights being violated and being volatile just because they're pursuing a better life across the mediterranean sea in europe so there's a lot of hope a signal of hope that is stemming from this agreement especially for the south for the countries in the cells while in the north of course as you have heard some countries that are quite skeptical especially the state hungary just to name a few who fear that this agreement can actually insert one way or the other in force them to implement certain migration policies that is in their view not what they want to see for their countries funny for john at the u.n. conference on migration in medicare thank you very much. you're watching the ws coming up ahead china has called the u.s. request an arrest of qual ways chief financial officer inhumane investors are worried about what this could mean for the fragile trade truce between washington and beijing. but first let me bring you up to date with some other stories making news around the was a russian policeman already serving a life sentence for multiple murders has been found guilty of fifty six more killings making him the country's most prolific serial killer of recent times because coffee was jailed in two thousand and fifteen for raping and killing twenty two women he'd given a lift to while off duty. left wing groups in the philippines capital manila have mocked international human rights day by protesting against president assad we go to test this plan to prolong martial law and the south this is the measures have fueled political killings and a crackdown on dissent and they fear it could be expanded to the whole country. french president emanuel mccraw has been holding crisis talks with union and business leaders after another weekend of gallo vest protests the demonstrations erupted last month over a planned fuel tax and spiraled into a mass movement against the president mccraw is due to address the nation the city name. more then three hundred thousand households in the southeastern united states have been left without power after a storm hit the carolinas bringing snow sleet and freezing rain the weather severe weather has paralyzed road and transport and the national weather service is forecasting more disruption on monday. the region nobel committee is awarding this serious peace prize winners at a ceremony in here's the the activist nadia and congolese dr denis mccready won the award jointly for the efforts to end rape as a weapon of war a victim herself was praised for having the courage to speak out about abuse brigade was recognized for helping female victims of sexual violence from his country's civil war. the binary got a college of history to tens of thousands of women at his clinic varying witness he says to mass atrocities against women. they are learning to fight back these patients at the panzi clinic haven't rolled in self-defense courses. most of those being treated at the hospital or survivors of rape or sexual assault . dr dennis macwhich originally had the idea for the program. to. when they arrive here they all have serious mental problems. traumatic memories that make them unable to have a normal relationship. panzi hospital is located in bukavu a city in eastern congo a civil war has been raging in the country for years women and children are the ones bearing the brunt of the conflict dr mcgee vegas clinic is the only refuge they have. with seven people who rapes me. but. after a while my vagina to. my hand i'm a man and village. i also became pregnant. they like to do it. they like to destroy me. they laughed and spoke badly to me. so they did what they wanted with me. to run for. dr mcveigh goes team not only performs restorative surgery on the women they also provide them with psychological care married women often remain alone their husbands leave them because they have been raped this says document vega has great consequences. that you don't understand powerhead can destroy not only the victim but our hope is just to fight with as a community and or as a country. and i think that to really put attention on this question for me is very important women are really fighting a lot to bricks. dr mcveigh has long been a hero to his patients now they're happy to celebrate his winning the nobel prize. now thousands for snooze the argentinian football club river plate have been crowned champions of south america's cup i live birth adonis the defeated are showing us i just drive this book and she is three one the second leg mash was moved to madrid from argentina because a fan violence the repercussions of that means this might not be the end of the cold. bucket junius team boss arrived at the game unscathed unlike before the original second leg at river plate stadium. madrid wanted a classic football match the nothing else and that's just what was served. got it all benefits ok pocket the lead to send fans who would travel thousands of miles into delirium. but lukas plateau equalised a river to prompt extra time. one can tattled and put river in front with a fabulous finish. and gonzalo martinez sealed the three one win river triumph in the first ever final between argentina's two heavyweights. look i'll try to meet the expectations in a positive way we couldn't let negative thoughts get to us because it would have made it worse i mean more after staying silent and not saying anything about other matters or that we've shown on the pitch we are superior. and what i wonder now i'm just going to put it back in one as it is the river fans went wild after a rollercoaster few weeks following the two two draw in the first leg and if any man's enjoyed it took all the weight off my shoulders i have not slept for weeks and i lost my voice i missed days at work because i went to the other two games that were postponed but today nothing gives me more pride than to ride this shirt. there was sporadic violence but nothing like the attack on the bus last month and the story might not end here the cotton operation for sport could still disqualify river because of their fans antics for now though they're taking that trophy home with the game in madrid having given the cuppa more global publicity than anyone could ever have imagined. jan joins me now for some breaking news into central bank governor or just the team has resigned that's right i mean resignation comes after a standoff with prime minister narendra modi's government over the bank's independence mr patel cites a personal reasons for his decisions to step down but media reports have suggested that he was increasingly annoyed by repeated government efforts to influence central bank policy the modi government seeks to reduce curbs on lending and wants access to the r.b.i. reserves mr patel has been in the top job at the in the us with banks since september twenty sixth more details on that evolving story in our business update with a beneficial in the next hour the arrest of wise chief financial officer marks a further escalation of trade tensions between the us and china and has hit asian stocks today huawei c.f.o. men one jew was taken into custody last week at the behest of u.s. authorities and is fighting to be released on bail for health reasons the government in beijing some of the u.s. ambassador to demand another day another sign that bunga rust could spill over into the u.s. china trade dispute this time claims of poor treatment in the media. now there already some media reports revealing details of mung one shows treatment in custody including some inhumane measures such as not giving her fundamental medical support he feels. we believe this is inhumane and infringes on her human rights issues under engine and that's one more reason for investors to worry stocks in asia continue to slide this week in the wake of the arrest tech stocks are among the biggest losers in tokyo hong kong and south korea chip makers like hynix and producers of smartphone displays like japan display among them. the chinese foreign ministry accuses the us of violating the legal rights of money one joe it urged the americans to withdraw all the arrest warrant. money was taken into custody in canada last week while changing flights in vancouver her arrest followed a u.s. federal warrant and is expected to lead to an extradition effort by the americans federal prosecutors allege that huawei used the hong kong shell company to sell equipment to iran in violation of u.s. sanctions they also said that monk personally misled american banks about qualities business dealings in iran mung is fighting to be released on bail for health reasons. the us government is trying to downplay the impact of her arrest washington says it's a criminal matter which is separate from the ongoing trade negotiations but investors seem to doubt that it will work out that way. german exports rose eight point five percent in october to one hundred seventeen billion euros according to fresh numbers released by the federal statistics office today i'm going to say it's a sign that europe's biggest economy is still robust despite international trade tensions germany is the third largest exporter in the world off to china and the u.s. cars like most say his b.m.w. and germany's top sell as around the world and make up around one fifth of total exports machines chemicals and electronics are also in high demand of rolled. so pretty positive new figures within the studio now as our correspondent stephen beard sees stephen why are these numbers significant will get her there was actually a great article a few weeks earlier in one of the business dailies here the talk about how oriented german businesses are overseas excuse me and he said that four out of every five euros earned by germany's thirty dax companies that is the biggest companies on the index the dax come from overseas a four out of every five years that they earn in revenues so the german economy runs on exports is an export economy and so to see whether exports are going up or down is obviously what everyone here is watching investors looking to see the way things are going global demand is what drives the german economy and with a lot of the challenges the that the global demand is facing right now the global economy is facing whether it's trade issues whether it's maybe decreasing demand merging economies and these things are happening they're putting their finger to the wind and they want to make sure there still is the market for them this new shows their exports are up a bit surprisingly considering flass quarter they had dropped a little bit due to some domestic issues and also the trade balance the trade surplus shrinking a little bit because german imports are also up so that's significant as well as the trade so. well focus on trade balances these days since since trump became president only absolutely for him it's a metric. trade fairness and economists dispute whether this is really the proper metric of determining trades relationship to the economy but for him he feels obviously put out when there's a trade deficit that the u.s. is running against china against germany so while this may not really matter as much domestically for germany it matters politically for them to see that surplus shrink a little bit it's something they can go to trump with because of course he can hold such things as auto tariffs over german companies that are in the u.s. if he's very unhappy so this is sort of a political win you could say for the german government coming back to the rest of the who are way executive which is also kind of a warning shot that the u.s. is filing it seems it is seen by some is that many businesses in europe also have close business ties with iran that's what the arrest is about iran sanctions should businesses in germany and in europe be worried as well you know i would say maybe that the iran sanctions is one aspect of it obviously but german and european businesses have already sort of taken a lot of this into account they've already pulled their stake out of iran and sort of disconnected ties in many ways much of their chagrin but this is also about the ongoing dispute between the u.s. and china and that has ripple effects that can affect german businesses in european businesses a lot of german carmakers are operating in the u.s. making cars that they're exporting to china and so this could affect them steve this is thank you very much. prosecutors in tokyo have just formally charged full on this and sham and colors going on allegations of financial misconduct he was arrested in mid november used of under reporting his income by about forty four million dollars over a period of five years he's since been detained in this facility charges today would mean further detention for going and one of our executives japanese media also reports the comic itself is facing indictment for making false statements in an annual report. and that's it you're up to date you're watching news the more news out the told off the off followed by a business update who've been busy but next year only twenty one is up next and the washing up on. the top of. his productions have achieved cold status. coming from his energy is contagious. operas by director barry kosky are setting new standards see. who is the man behind these masterpieces. come next. eight million tons of flowers dumped into the gun she's an indian every. test the sign sometimes. now a start of converts use flowers into charcoal and chemical free incense sticks. bein able to see someone being gay g.'s a good mystery science from getting into the a. good. game sixty minutes on t.w. . or. with him her to being done did go sagal as well the highest high you know if i had known that the boat would be that small i never would have gone on a trip i would not have put myself and my harrison in that danger a lot of the themes of the davis lead with. that one little bit

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Transcripts For DW DW News - Live Coverage French President Emmanuel Macron Addresses The Nation 20181210 19:00:00

airport city managed by from. this is due to be a new life for a dog and i'm still going to welcome to the program emanuel macross six when the weeks of violent protests across france the french president is due to address the nation in the next few minutes is expected to offer concessions in terms of the end weeks of violent protests let's go straight to the french president. has even more the sit down have so many events over the last turks and france and overseas have troubled the nation team a million people on this one and to have revealed that amid claims and at miscible violence and i would like to tell you you know this isn't violence is not going to receive any indulgence radical by any means we have and you have understood that opportunists are trying to take advantage of a legitimate. if they claim and have only tried to destabilize the republic and create good there's just a few nothing justifies that police men are. attacked that a public building will be there or a store is destroyed with explain this is opinion are republican allows opinions to be expressed and not everybody needs to share them about if we don't. to have discord like that or violence when violence arrives is often. a low voice we really don't come and republican order must drain now and we are going to do it you know what it takes for that because nothing is going to be built as long as we need to be afraid to reveal more i have given the government very strict instructions made with the beautiful for the but in the beginning i understand that people are angry and book we don't know and upset about that and many among us with many intimate are you a bottom french citizens can share that but that does not excuse the inexcusable behavior that i have that i just and then you know we all told you about a group of mothers from cleaver border to be there for him he said clearly prepare for that but the levels i can feel really deep anger in us but there's no place that is justified and can be a chance for us but i'm why sort of for instance or you know a couple of years that gets up early morning and cause not to worry and civil need to move more than that but if we don't leave or a single mother found them or cannot afford child care and has not any hold left i have seen them i have seen those brave women and for the first time they were able to voice their distress and he really took a lot of the modest pensioners that who contributed only their whole life and who can't manage a fire here because they are the most of the french i'll want to plus don't associate in her sons are good citizens of the place and that but their distress as nothing new. left but that was the ability we had all become used to it us cowardly to use to it really and for us they started to feel forgotten and left behind i made the movies it was forty years of my live that did it well feed off workers of territories of the villages where the public services are being but i've read you mr mccarthy democratic like the modern i'm an easy millions of us where they have the impression of not playing the herd in the street not being able to follow the changes in our society and to feel more and more barriers arise with the law it's an ancient unease and it is here now and to take us through you know it to me and in the last year and a half we have probably not been able to map our attitude as we should have and i assume my responsibility in that specific maybe i have given you the impression that i did not care that i had a more urgent priority is not and i think i must have hurt some of you by what i said before tonight was chaotic and i want to speak openly for mystery but and be very clear to the system but it i fought to be treated with you began sed the privates have hard currency to donald and because of them their rigid system in malaysia to me that i did it because i love a long country looking good and when i am not a legitimate because i'm on any party or anything else only because of you know what would be obvious to most of you other countries have the same kind of on the knees as ours move that i am convinced that we can find a way out of this all together but i wonder for france still that is too although we heard this from our other britons are we we have managed joke or world away together nobody has ever taken before the new paths of duty this upon you know this because it was ill and i have people around me that it is divided it is of people that does it as that clear running towards a precipice of the of a placebo poorly conceived in me and. because when you divide decided to run for president and that's also because i wanted to improve all our sister kind of. because of the cookie and i want to ruin your game because the state of emergency all of you want your emergency off a social in the pacific about and then marriage was even if you think the that appointed an orderly formats to improve the situation really need better education recovery and give everybody the means to be free and to worry god in the fullness and it is ghoul willing and vocational training also will provide our animal the paramount supply i want a country where one can live a dignified life in it and make a dignified living that the model will know more about asking the government to do what it takes it in order to be able to make at least some of the living god to solve the whole problem what is the the minimum wage is going to be increased by one hundred euro's starting at the beginning of next year but if i want to exit through it really what i would hunter with a fair idea to promote there for the thieves and shell it of media is a starting and two thousand and nineteen bill that over time will be tax exempt at least on put your feet of the vet and i want to ask you supreme all of the companies that are able to do or else will to get the lowest wages they will quit their bell and has bought the place here in the us for possibly push one to demean or bomb what better mobility you want to me in view of the two thousand and nineteen than me. we are going you know i give them all the if it were possible to abolish the increase of solidarity tabs for old age pensioners new equipment because we have been asking them too much. this is going to be presented to parliament liberals want to know that this is not all in it before i companies and are richer setters and so you are going to have to help you also say i'm going to unite them and this year we are going to start taking decisions with all of you so i may be that some would like me to go on don't change the reform of solidarity tax on wealth like we could have had it for forty years would be the feeling but was it an advantage for us want to know because our richest citizens were left our country you know on this sort of tax was abolished it in order to create more investment in our economy will evolve with. except for real estate well many good muslims want out of a war but we are creating jobs and all other sectors will know more about all the all the government and the parliament will have to go even beyond that. and stop tax evasion on the belief that. a french company and its leaders have to pay their taxes in france. this is only fair we've all you know but as you can see a good many if we are going to react to it and the whole showed me the emergency with bobby i just spending and better distribution will know more about the government and it's going to continue the ambition to transform our country in one which was of all of the voters elected eighteen months ago and i've been in this family from out the op like we are going to reform pensions and a number of time and because it has to be fairer clearer and those who work need to be paid for that fairly good neighborhood and we need to to reconnect what you are a collective a project without this is why the grand debate up must be even broader of all before and we need to assume all our judicial order to gather our joe to to produce and to distribute to people you learn to be a free citizen and to change of in order to take into account our climate and budget that you and it was only in order to manage we need to unite and treat each of the national questions that with that are the most hardened of together news on pondered on obviously the why dick to take his place on diversity into account have a fair and actual process to not bother and be closer to the citizens was elected and in the not leave the election process as only the priorities if you are taxation has to be fair and because what was the and or than i would also want to ask the question of our daily life solution in front of climate change when it comes to mobility and heating dwelling. and i think what good solutions are also going to come up bottom up manual to the google cannot only be the restaurants ability of the state to really think that paris is probably the only silver truly done with a centralized francis to centralized and paris good image that go then and we also have and you don't get there to find our deep in his identity our national identity and talk about migration it's all the more the phone the demand those idea changes that need a deeper through that questioning us would be and debate like we have never had it before going you have in our institution and everywhere everybody need to get a little side to support the government and parliament and you will also be able to emerge as a player because i'm going to go arjun it over at myself and take the country's pulse of us are more filled with all this but we are not the only institutional representatives with this debate to has also to take place in the territories all of this awfully woody and the only man the mayor says but that i would be because of the deal who represent the republic and the territories that are going to gather all the questions from the territories and i am going to meet with all of them in order to write the new contract for the nation and the appointed by the government most of them we are not going to back one dollar but to business as usual on the level and be on it because in the past we have had too many crisis like this with the story we have come to a has toric point. for our country you know with and through dialogue right is backed and your engagement comment meant to some as we are going we're going to them into a manageable war we are working on it and i am going to speak to you malek care about as you people only fight as for you update and all of we only fight for front ziba long live the republic and long of france. moving on dr so you were watching the french president emmanuel there and there in a taped it was a taped address quite expected who's expected to be alive but that was actually recorded she's probably why he started on time. there not much in the way of detail in there as far as a change goes he talked about an increase of the minimum wage of one hundred euros from next year talked about tax exemptions didn't specify who those might be for but also talked about abolishing the increase in solidarity tax on pensions this was all in response to the riots france has seen over the last month or so with me here in the suitors you discuss what we just heard from the french president is that pascal t.-bo who is a bergen correspondent for audio from welcome to d.w. pascal am i being too harsh on the president that there was a lot of empathy that a lot of idea your i feel your pain but not much in the way of substance yeah there there was but a lot of empathy which is maybe new for him because it was a big big critic of a lot of the of the people in the streets against him because of of our guns because of. some foods made about french people being too lazy and cetera so i think he wanted to show he had i have heard you i. am modest i have to engage a dialogue it was very important topic in the last part of the speech saw not only to announce some measures but also to to start a new dialogue with french people. to to break the silence ball less which exists in. these kountry between the president advancement and the normal citizens and how you see me it's interesting that you say that this is actually quite a change of style for this president because i was in. here just about every you k. u.s. politician every english speaking politician. i have ever come across as utter mouths those sorts of class issues where you say this is new for this president because like i say aside from a few things. i picked out he talked about. a saying guess the people are angry but there is no reason to break the place up and if you do it again i will come after he make that quite clear it's seems obvious to me as a known french person that this man who made he who was sent it to the presidency on the basis of breaking the mold of politicians should have such a tin ear when it comes to listening to the people yeah that's true i mean he had since he has been elected eight months ago. the way to act to lead the country which was very technocratic and with a huge majority without any discussions in his majority and. to quite a lot of decisions there were some important reforms in front in france with a lot of protests too but. the problem is that. is the is electoral basis was quite thin and that style the measles the impression that he was the president of the rich people's. prude used these these big in popularity so you had to he has to change without. abandoning old the reforms in reverse reforms in made in the last eighteen months that's the challenge for him is going to change but not too much what he has announced here. today and he's he's listening tour he's going to listen they always say that as well that i do want to miss and then i've got your message i will listen it's likely to appease people. i think i think so probably we will see if it's just if it's just something. out any content without any future or not. i think it's if it works and if it's if there is something real behind these announcement maybe it could were because that's the problem in our society we see we sued we see also these problem in germany that there is a lack of communication between the voters and the elected person and specially in france where all these organizations we have normally between the government and the people they exist they are very weak the parties the trade unions etc so and the people are very angry they have the improved impression that nobody listens to to them so there is a need for a dialogue and what in those sound sounded to me like these are new who just before the french revolution when the when the king started also you know that a form of course. also a dialogue collecting all the complainings of. citizens at that time and ok we will see if it works also spoke about the mayors so it has also to be a very robust route a grassroots movement of to be to be effective or to wise each wheel on the p.r. let me let me finish last year of a slightly rude question. what's wrong with french people. i can think of this one macro. before him both elected on the basis that i am going to change things because this country is i think there will be worse sclerosis use up one point you will lose too slowly and there's a massive state if we are going to compete in the wider world than we have to cut that out both go electric and the minute they start writing changers. stop the french people stop destroying the capital what's what what's that about. yeah i think yeah it sounds it sounds like like like it would it would be impossible to reform this country that that impression a lot of people have especially brody we can read that in very often in in german editorials. i think that's absolutely true we had reforms in the last years also of the with also a lot but yeah i think there is. i think the big problem is also that. we have these very important presidential elections but afterwards there is a lack of communication there is and to take to explain what they are doing and to persuade french people of the goals of these reforms and that we have a very we have quite big. we have different fronts different countries different societies and different people we have the one we are the winner and the other one is special in the territories you mentioned several times in his address we have the impression nobody listened to them the public services are disappearing there is no supermarket there is no there is no hope hospital in the neighborhood there is no a bus line to go to the nearest city etc and all these people often have the impression they are they are lost and these. interests coming from these. from these are struck retic schools moralists don't have a very real a different way with the normal beavers ok well i suppose the test will be does everything change or does he just hope people forget what they were angry about will doubtless speak again pascoe a ti vo about income support of already or france international thank you. for you watching the w. news our life from let's move to another european leader with problems in britain the prime minister is a may has delayed a planned parliamentary of votes on the bracks it deal offered by the european union. told members of parliament it had become clear there was insufficient support for the deal on the table following her announcement european president daughter of tosca has called a meeting to discuss press it on thursday but he says the bloc will not renegotiate the terms of the deal vote was supposed to take place tomorrow tuesday and now let's listen to what the theresa may told the parliament today it is clear that this house faces a much more fundamental question. just this house wants to deliver bricks it. i. think it is now still. does it want to do so through reaching an agreement with the e.u. if the answer is yes and i believe that is the answer with a majority of this house and we all have to ask ourselves whether we're prepared to make a compromise because there will be no enduring and successful brics it without some compromise on both sides today. many of the most controversial aspects of this dealing kluge in the past are all simply inescapable facts of having a negotiated brix it those members who continue to disagree need to shoulder the responsibility of advocating an alternative solution that can be delivered. well our correspondent barbara faisal has been following these developments in london i asked her what options are left for theresa may if brussels gives a hard no to renegotiation. well auctions are of course to try again and failed their option is of course to be somehow thrown out of government voted out by her own party to suffer still the idea is still there vote of no confidence even though the neighbor party is really aiming at having new elections the option also is of course a heartbreaks and that is coming close to no because time is really running away from the british negotiators in brussels there is not really much to do the european parliament needs to needs to sort of say yes agree to the deal and leone is three months more or less from britain leaving the e.u. so heartbreaks it can still happen it becomes more likely the more trees a make kicks the can down the road today there were rumors in london that she might really push things out into the general the trannies first of january is the last day she will have to hold a vote that's a lot of time for parliamentarians to stew over breaks it and whether that will save her head and the powerful party nobody knows. the norwegian nobel laureate was by the face of reporting by the way the no wage and nobel committee has awarded this year's a peace prize winners out of money in is if you have to mr not you're more out and kobe stuck to things like a one below what you don't think for the efforts to and to write a soundbite from the gulf war i think to yourself brad was so praise for having the courage to speak out about the appears to be quaking was recognized for helping female victims of sexual violence his country's civil war the pioneering gynecologists history tens of thousands of women this is clearly witness he says to mass atrocities against them. yes they are learning to fight back these patients at the pennsy clinic haven't rolled in self-defense courses. most of those being treated at the hospital or survivors of rape or sexual assault. dr dennis mcveigh a originally had the idea for the program. to. when they arrive here they all have serious mental problems. traumatic memories that make them unable to have a normal relationship. panzi hospital is located in bukavu a city in eastern congo a civil war has been raging in the country for years women and children are the ones bearing the brunt of the conflict dr mccoy vegas clinic is the only refuge they have. seven people who raped me. after a while my vagina. they burned my hand i'm a man and valid. i also became pregnant. they like to do it. they like to destroy me. they laughed and spoke badly to me. now on so they did what they wanted with me about it bend it enough to one foot doctor mcveigh his team not only performs restorative surgery on the women they also provide them with psychological care married women often remain alone their husbands leave them because they have been raped this says document vega has great consequences. they even don't understand how our head can destroy not only. the victim but how our help is destroying the fund as a community and or as a country. and i think that tool really to attention on this question for me is very important for him and. really hard to a lot to brookside us. dr mcvey guy has long been a hero to his patients now they're happy to celebrate his winning the nobel prize. as a cio upsets more the talk with a frantic gulf islands around the clock on the website the state doubling of the day. after. the man who saved the lives of tens of thousands of women conducted one operation after another nobel peace prize laureate dr nucleic in. florida as well as treating children some of the seats rape and couldn't fathom how to treat their grandchildren some of their. bodies to measure g.'s line to flushing sexual violence in the come to the halls of the talk which seems to be right one of the most up next on g.w. . like. germany which. any time any place. video never. kept out of the back of. zones to sing along to download the code from super lucky. to. have their each course is put into active x. the site is about that d w dot com slashdot on facebook in the app store. german for free w. . the system the entire. empire scream for

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Transcripts For DW DW News 20190518 13:00:00

helping to improve the success rate of assisted reproduction treatments. among the latest and the most advanced methods now available is the so-called timelapse incubating. going to. when you open it shares a gap the built in camera travels a lot of measures and assesses the cells well creating the timelapse footage it's a very small area that's intentional in order to create very stable cell culture conditions for the for the open tubes where the egg cells would usually develop are close to no lead can enter and there are no chance which are fluctuations this time to. that allows a more natural and unhindered development in the extremely sensitive early phase as well as careful monitoring by the doctor says. it is easy for terrorists to lie in those one big advantages that the incubator can function without interruption without being open to the 2nd pleased we can see how the cell division inside is developing. we know a far better resolution of every single movement so there's much more information about the quality of the cells development which is a huge advantage is that said if you can see. within 5 days the fertilized eggs are implanted into the mother's uterus evangelist treatment was successful now she's pregnant. and i discuss the story of the baby's completely healthy everything's great each time the doctors told us how well the baby was developing and everything was normal so it couldn't have been any better just great. for couples like the villa's the time lapse incubates a method significantly improves the chances of becoming pregnant. about 40 years ago the 1st test tube baby was born her name is doll and they're different. at efficiency nations so what kinds of how they to choose from so we look either on in vitro fertilization test tube baby or we combine it with the exit method when you inject one sperm into the egg so normally it takes the in vitro fertilization that means you have the major x. and then you put around the eggs about $200000.00 sperm and you hope that one goes into the egg and fertilized the egg on the other hand the exit procedure then you take one sperm inject this one directly into the eggs and then you hope you have a fertilization as well so the 1st monday in vitro fertilization is more natural with the extreme method and what about the result of. that too because you inject it directly into the you have a little a little higher number of fertilization but the body is important at the end the baby take home or it is just the same it's more in favor of the even more natural procedure of the i.v. you have sold the baby take over it is a little bit better in i we have procedure so it's always a good idea to stay with nature you have to give the woman home or the preparation for the stimulation why is that so normally you have only one egg during a menstrual cycle but for successful in vitro fertilization you need $12.00 to $15.00 eggs and you can make a calculation because half of the eggs as never able for a pregnancy or for a delivery so you need more and some of the eggs don't get fertilized so that's the aim to do had 12 to 15 eggs which are major and then you can use them for the in vitro fertilization or for the masses and isn't it dangerous to beef those homes are the side effects yes you have to look to the side effects of the long term ran into the short term run on the long term run we know that there is no high. probability for getting cancer breast cancer in woman or utils cancer or ovarian cancer but in the short run you have problems that there is a possibility of foreign hyperstimulation that you have not only $12.00 to $15.00 x. but maybe 30 and then you ovaries are enlarged and something that much smaller than that the woman has to go into the hospital to begin with an update on the sex history of the in-vitro fertilisation souls of 1st success rate is said to have after the embryo transfer you have a pregnancy the pregnancy rate can be expected of about 30 percent. but that is not the most important for the women most important is a baby take home braid and the baby to collaborate it's between 20 and 25 percent so if you counsel the couple you have to tell them ok we have to take it to call 2 or 3 or terms and then the probability of 4 having a baby is higher than the probability for not having a baby and when you take a look at the babies i mean there are some reports that suggest that there are higher rate of organ failures or have problems true are things this is true because we have to be aware that we do a lot of artificial things we give a lot of hormones for the majority of the eggs and then in the incomplete of the the eggs and the sperms and the embryos are between 2 and 5 days and the possibility for developing are not just the same as in the women in the philippine troops normally it takes place in the fallopian tube and that we have to be there may be that some harm on the embryo and on the end we are never on the safe side it when we do artificial things so we have to counsel the patient and we could do it only if the patient agree on the procedure well we just focused on artificial insemination let's take a look at the. for today's edition so we got viewer questions from donald from us and he asks is there are certain positions that increases women chance of getting pregnant no you should just have sex and the position is not important and it's not also important that you stay in bed because we know after 10 minutes these problems are not in the vagina not in the order of we are in the fallopian tubes you can do what you want just have sex so there's no headstone necessary no. doubt wants to know abstinence in proof sperm quality it's the opposite because normally human beings have sex all 2 or 3 days so if you wait too long then you get not better spreads you get worse so not waiting for a long time just have sex it's really good news things like this very interesting talk so if you want to get pregnant you have to become active and if you want to have your questions answered get active 2. on an upcoming show we'll be looking at fruit and vegetables do they give us enough nutrients or would it be better to take supplements to stay healthy send in your questions about that issue to in good shape but d.-w. dot com just write nutritional supplements in the subject line we look forward to hearing from you. if you want to write us do it right now because postponing things means that they often don't get done i am myself a master in procrastinating but this way out of it let's take a look at the next report i will watch this report maybe later. a quick burst of activity but you run out of steam almost immediately. if you see exercising as a chore you might want to try finding a sport that. and as a sports psychologist at the university of putts tom he loves running and he advises people to find a form of exercise that suits them in the muscles albeit you need to try things out perhaps there's a sport you used to enjoy what you like doing most and then just go and do it before you can. try mixing it up the main thing is to enjoy working out. lots of people say they would exercise but they just don't have the time. kind of tight so how saying you don't have time is not an excuse everyone is busy you have to find a way of fitting exercise into your schedule how ever busy you are. to put it in your calendar that's what you do with the work appointment make it non-negotiable just put it in the calendar and stick to it. schedule your exercise. and make sure you're well prepared. pack what you need in your sports bag well in advance. and the realistic people need to exercising tend to set themselves over ambitious goals they have no chance of reaching. advice as it's really important not to overtax yourself and do a bit less than what you think feels right and only keep it up as long as it feels comfortable. and don't forget to reward yourself that way you'll stay motivated. sometimes our brain is pretty straightforward a reward means the brain says well done do it again treat yourself. and sooner or later that feeling of achievement after a good workout will be rewarded not. you know what i like to put into my phone all the things i eat because i want to stick to a healthy diet but sometimes pursuing a healthy diet can be compulsive if you get upset by it but can a healthy diet be an illness and i didn't want to lose weight i wanted to put on weight but i was also afraid. and i eat really healthy fruit and vegetables hardly any fat actually counterfeit. canned food was a no no i would never eat canned tomatoes say because they have additives in them which i will hold us up and a healthy diet has never been more fashionable but paradoxically sometimes it can make people on healthy mindful eating can become an obsession so fear is 19 and suffers from orthorexia nervosa and excessive preoccupation with eating what's perceived as healthy food she's been in treatment for 6 months she's learning to understand the condition. at the beginning i thought you were eating healthily and you also exercising so a healthy lifestyle but at some point i realized i was losing weight even though i didn't want to but i was also worried about putting it back on and that's when it started to become compulsive and kind of. people with orthorexia are less worried about the amount of food they're eating and more preoccupied with what they're eating they have a fixation with what they believe to be healthy and unhealthy food. a study involving nearly $1400.00 test subjects at the university of distilled or showed that 3 percent had symptoms of orthorexia bianca shrine and has also observed a rise in the disorder. people are looking for the healthiest diet possible and that can make them increasingly restrictive when it comes to what they eat. and they no longer see food as sustenance it becomes their main focus in life and that's what orthorexia is basically. when sylvia 1st arrived in the clinic she weighed just 36 kilos when someone as orthorexia their entire day tends to revolve around what they eat they set themselves strict rules about what they're allowed to eat and follow them rigidly. that's what happened to sophia too and one key factor played a major role. is to madonna feeding i believe that the media was to blame these days you'll always hearing about the dangers of sugar how the whole world is eating fancy much sugar and too much fat so. that was what started my anxiety. tips on healthy eating are all over social media a bridge study revealed that regular instagram users are more likely to think about the issue of eating and exhibit symptoms of orthorexia. is an exit nutrition is a major topic in society and the media i'd say that coverage of issues related to how we eat certainly plays a role in orthorexia such as factory farming or a salmonella outbreak. some viruses that are transmitted through food that's had this i instills. anxiety about diseases can feed the fixation on healthy eating here in the clinic the young women are really learning how to eat normally it doesn't happen overnight. in the store so why is there that says that's a problem for me. to cut isn't fruit mean there's already sugar in it sounded so kind of done by the man that said this is the amount of sugar isn't all that much. try getting used to the idea that small amounts of added sugar are just fine so that's what on behalf of. young women are particularly at risk of developing a disproportionate fear of unhealthy food. but so are people who work in areas related to nutrition such as fitness trainers and dietitians doctors keep a close eye on their patients various rules are designed to help them develop a healthy relationship to food. they have half an hour to eat so they can get used to normal quantities normal meals a normal meal rhythms that's why we have this half hour rule then they can leave the table or. they get 6 meals a day all the food is fresh and flavorful even so for many of the young women here checking in to a lot of determination it's hard for them to relinquish control over what they're eating. and what the goal is for them to eat more or less

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Transcripts For DW Reporter 20190922 01:15:00

i the iconic signal someone's the superhero in the comic book series which is celebrating its idea of anniversary this year batman has since grown into a multi-billion dollar global franchise of course with characters like catwoman and the joker getting their own spin offs. that's all for now sure to be back with more news children. welcome to the what is the game here for adults. to talk about. so. that's a little. so you don't want to. look. like a male and i'm going to look at a brand new delusion environment it's person it's device it's about topics that affect us all water pollution climate change and the return. of. the incense cut out. playing. and as far as society is concerned we don't exist we're sort of invisible many people don't even know what this is. is intersexual neither male nor female when he was young he had surgery to make him a girl the doctors had advised his parents to raise him to be a woman but he feels like a man and he wants to know exactly what happened back then and why. was he. because dan's gender isn't clearly defined but he wants to be seen as a man he works out at a fitness studio almost every day. so his claims can i use the butterfly machine look at going to. the surgical reconstruction to make girl made his self-esteem plummet. in this regard with this with the fitness means so much to me because for a long time until puberty actually i hated myself i never accepted myself and it was only with the help of weight training and fitness that i learned to love myself . now it's like an addiction i really enjoy. it have a. as a kid i had so many idols i saw arnold schwarzenegger in a magazine and all the movie stars so bester stallone and so on. i was totally fascinated by their a static in all their muscles and i thought to myself hey i'd like that for myself just imagine getting bullied teased and even beaten as a child you lose respect for yourself. so that this will give anyone like that up to a certain age. i've been doing this for 6 years now 4 years consistently and it's really taken a long time i'm no arnold schwarzenegger but my life's dream would be to compete on stage one day. a few minutes ago. but from the ones that i have a look at i think we need to deal with this whole topic more openly and easily there are only strictly males or females who are also many stages in between there are different chromosomal nuances i guess you could call that where it's not just x. x. or an x. y. chromosome people need to see that nature didn't limit itself to those 2 christiane carries the male x. y. chromosomes but when he was born his gender wasn't clearly identifiable penis. the doctors adapted his external anatomy to the female gender now he lives as a man and likes to ride his motorcycle. it's almost like flying it's pure freedom like i can't describe the feeling it's nothing like driving a car when you're boxed in you really feel totally free it's like freedom on 2 wheels. as a mom to me my motorcycle is like a woman we're practically married or engaged to be precise. her name is bettina and she's in my favorite colors red and black i love her and she loves me. yes it is very sure i'd love to have a proper family with a wife and kids and grandkids and everything that goes along with it who wouldn't like to see a mini version of themselves. but sadly i can't because of that operation back then that really makes me furious they destroyed my life. but why that's what christiane wants to know why did the doctors turn him into a girl when he was only one year old he calls the surgeon who performed the operation. hi this is mr moldovan asking for a doctor. i used to be a patient of hers. and i'd like to make an appointment with her to talk. kristin lives with his parents near stock got this is the 1st time in 28 years they've ever talked about what really happened back then when he was born. of the frog his mama want to know if it was a boy or a girl and the doctor just said we don't know and i said what do you mean you don't know that can't be he said they couldn't tell yet it could be one or the other it could be a boy because he has male sex organs but it could be a girl because the organs are not external they just didn't know they'd have to have the baby examine further. than the their bodies have been missing for so long on the wires. you were such a handsome little boy and to be honest i'm so sorry it pains me to this day that i gave my consent if only our doctor had said leave the boy the way he is but i consented they cut you up it's my fault and i'll take that to the grave i'm sorry about it now the doctor promised us you'd grow up to be a happy girl. she guaranteed it. made you think that we just got on the air you know when done it and then when you were 13 we discovered what they told us in the reports it wasn't right to talk but they were the ones who had operated the how could i have known. all i could see was what they'd written down the report set of the china was present but no. later they realized it was the prostate gland not a vagina now imagine i'd consented to what else they wanted to do they wanted to expand the vagina with this device if they'd done that with your you rethrow you might have been dead by now. i think the hybrid are a special unspoken business. when he was just a year old christiane was operated on by a doctor in to bring in now she works in or in as a further through a pinnacle i'm going to the clinic and it's actually a children's clinic but that's where the doctor who operated on me works the one who messed up my life. as a rule. that i want to confront her and try to find out why she did that back that . why she operated on me and maybe i should be able to answer a few other questions too. in germany doctors perform about $700.00 cosmetic operations per year on children sexual organs often one child has to undergo several procedures so the actual number of children affected is unknown as a whole for me i hope i'm able to make peace with myself to some extent and that i don't lose my cool when i facing her. i just wish she'd apologize for what she's done. that would be the very least. we weren't allowed to film the conversation between christiane and his former doctor for quote there is reasons we were told the surgeon also refused to respond to the questions we submitted in writing after 2 hours christiane re-emerges from the clinic. going to talk with supreme is good for the not happy at all with the way the conversation went i didn't feel comfortable and she didn't really answer all my questions especially not the question why. all she said was things like well that's just how things were back then or that's how we practiced medicine back then we couldn't do anything about it. but that just sounds like an excuse to me. it doesn't justify her actions against me at that time. but one good thing was that she at least apologized to me i thought that was great and it was different. from this woman i wouldn't have thought she'd apologized to me just like that but she remained very professional and cool to both of us she didn't respond emotionally. but she did say she could relate to my situation but for me personally that didn't really come across it was only miserable. when he was 14 christan himself decided to have his understand the testes removed so he could feel more like a real. girl that was 3 years after his father had told him he was intersexual. why didn't you tell me that earlier i always told you that i sensed something wasn't right with me but i was different why didn't you tell me earlier. because they told us to raise us ago we didn't know how so we just tried our best smidgens with c. and evocative then we didn't want to confront you with those thoughts or make you sad but it was pretty hard on your brother he was embarrassed to explain to his friends the way things really were. his friends would have just lost the 10 it was hard on him too. that's how it was for me too yes it was hard i kept asking myself what my classmates would say that's why i chose to have my testicles cut out i didn't want to stand out i just wanted to be normal and fit in and i thought i'd fit in if i just stuck with the identity of the doctors had assigned to me back then. yes say that it's your life. you have to think positively others have it much harder because i almost jumped off the bridge back then in 7th grade. i just couldn't go on we've always had our problems than sad had our fights i should have thought we could tell that you weren't developing like a real girl. your problem was you didn't tell any of the family it was a taboo and we were ashamed and we were ashamed period. so you were ashamed of me of the way i am not off you we were ashamed that we wanted to protect you because in your world your society that was unhealthy so that if i did our day you just didn't talk about those things the way you do today about everything i didn't want them to make fun of you. and they did anyway whether they knew about it or not they made fun of me anyway and they hit me they teased me and they humiliated me yes that was a mistake. i just bottled up inside and didn't say anything and that made things even worse we made a mistake and if you had said anything at that time but there were always people who would have understood you not just today back then too back then too but we were wrong who's the media are you blaming me and your mother for the decisions we made back then. when i was younger i did i couldn't stop asking myself why you would make that decision as i got older i realized it hurts you as much as it hurts me and pointing the finger doesn't get us anywhere it just breeds more resentment i know you couldn't help it if anyone is to blame it's the doctors but i don't blame you anymore. parties like the various types of tomer fest more why. the world's 2nd largest october fest is held in chained down china. it's meant to look just like her. though the beer tents and trappings aren't quite right. this party takes place in the summer and the music just isn't the same. place next to. the king on costs. a world without plastic trash by 2030 small could become a has promised to complain. about cyber object it. is also financing some regulations aimed to protecting the environment. plastic tight . 45 minutes on d w. e takes a personal leave us. with a little bit wonderful people and stories that make the game so special. for all true fans. the because more than football online. when your family is scattered across the globe. to.

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