Even as we enter this 9 00 hour. For me on the lower east shore, it was a headache. It has now been one week since the president ial election. The market has been fairly good since president elect donald trump has made his way for the win there. A lot of green on the board though. Today, you saw the dow jones is down. The nasdaq though is up. Retail sales pretty good so far on this tuesday. Some of the new numbers coming in. Welcome to the 9 with Gasia Mikaelian and sal castaneda. Im mike mibach. Hope youre having a wonderful morning. Good to see you. If youve never seen an interview with a astronaut, mike put his space twice, fixed his hubble. I cant wait to talk to him. And tweeted from space. The first person to tweet from space. We begin with politics. We are expecting to find out who will be appointed to Donald Trumps cabinet. So far the only named confirmed is Republican Party head Reince Priebus who will be the chief of staff. The longest serving chairman of the Republican Party and being seen as a bridge between trump and long time republicans. Were hearing that Rudy Giuliani is a favorite for secretary of state. Alabama senator Jeff Sessions could become secretary of defense. One name we apparently wont be seeing in a trump cabinet is former republican president ial candidate ben carson. He reportedly said he is not interested. Of course he had been considered for secretary of education or many people had mentioned health and human services. Donald trump has been tweeting this morning. He said if the election were based on total popular vote, i would have campaigned in new york, florida and california and won even bigger and more easily. As we have been telling you, while trump won the Electoral College vote, Hillary Clinton won the popular vote. Back in 2012 when president obama was reelected, donald trump called the Electoral College a disaster. The speaker of the house paul ryan reiterated that the party and the president elect have a common goal above everything else. I talked to donald so many times this week. Lets make sure that we get people back to work and take the uncertainty in the economy that is plaguing it and get it back to work. I am very confident that we are going to have a unified government that works hand in glove with this administration to make good on the commitments and get people back to work and fix this countrys problems. We will be following the news about trumps appointment to the administration and bring them to you when we get them. We saw the overcast overcast skies there down at san jose international. I want to bring in steve paulson. Things are changing. They are indeed. No doubt about it. A change finally after dry warm weather. We see a change. Low clouds moving in. Mist made it in into pet loom a i know petaluma. Not a strong system. But after all of these north northeasterly breezes and temperatures above average, that is not going to hold right now. We will see a decrease in the temperatures. 73 in santa rosa. And they will be colder tomorrow. Theres a weak system coming in. Rain to the north. Thats where the focus of the system will be. Mostly in the north bay. The system is holding together. That will gives you a mostly cloudy day. You see a little bit of rain up in lake county and cloverdale. As we talked about parts of the Russian River now. The breeze has picked up. That has helped stir up the atmosphere. Look at the southerly breeze in advance of it. Upper 50s to low 60s. The system will cool us down. Thats a lot of cold air coming down. That will be here tomorrow. A mix of sun and low clouds. Light rain to the north. If theres anything tonight, it would be light. A cooler, breezy pattern. And were trying to sort out the details. It looks like rain returns for many by this weekend. Thank you, steve. Youre welcome. The super moon continues to impress people across the area. Take a look at the moon starting to rise. The next super moon wont happen until the year 2034. And that date, that year really is what inspired our question of the day. What changes do you hope to see in the world by then . I love this answer. I hope to have my house paid off. Dr. Randall tweeted us, cal in the rose bowl. I can get behind that. Pony says what a loaded question for a site that only allows 140 character responses. So much to say. Keep saying it. We will keep checking your responses throughout the morning and share them with you at 9 30. The hashtag is ktvuthe9. Firefighters accused of harassment are fighting back. At 9 30, why they say the allegations are designed to distract from the real issue. How the events of today will be remembered in history. Claudine wong talks to a pannell of teachers and panel of teachers and students about the black lives matter movement. Is the internet back on . No. Is the internet back on . No is it back no sweetie, call any one of your friends who has internet and have them read us the internet honey its not swiping come on. What are you doing . I have no idea what games are streaming right now, so i thought i would just root for everyone. Get at t internet with over 99 reliability. And an everyday price with no extra monthly fees. Keep calm your internets on. Imagine a world where the holidays are about joy again. Where days are filled with magic instead of madness. At t. J. Maxx, marshalls and homegoods, weve imagined the holidays this way for decades. Its why we never have crazy sales. Never make you clip coupons. And always have amazing prices on popular brands and thoughtful gifts. Its time to bring back the holidays with t. J. Maxx, marshalls and homegoods. Last week here on the 9 we showed you a conversation between ktvus Claudine Wong and a panel of teachers about how they are teaching about this election to their students. The conversation was a good one and continued with another topic, the black lives matter movement. Here is what some of the students had to say. Its a cry for for for the eyes and ears of the government to do something, to change the system. You shouldnt have to have these massive protests and massive gatherings to make a point that should be just common human sense. As their career in education continues, claudine asked the panel of teachers how the moments will be remembered in history. 30 years ago how will people view what we did today. Here is what they had to say. The power of people. When youre in the middle of history, it is hard to know how history will look back. I think it is a continuation of the Civil Rights Movement. I think the value is kind of disrupting the narrative that the Civil Rights Movement is over or we achieved racial equality. We have a long way to go. When a history teacher is teaching this 40 years from now and teaching the black lives matter section of history, how is it taught. I hope it carries the same weight as the Civil Rights Movement. Thats definitely how i see it. This generations Civil Rights Movement. For a while we have been in the shadow of the Civil Rights Movements from the 50s and 60sand carrying on to the 70s. This is this generations ability to make people of aware of what is going on and then fighting to change that, fighting to, you know, create justice for africanamericans in this country. And i hope its not viewed as just another example of the watts riots or the rodney king riots. That means we wouldnt have accomplished until. It will be another footnote in history that people will use to point back and say this hasnt changed. Im hoping that we will have moved forward and we can point back to black lives matter and say, look, this made an impact. Here is the legal impact it made. Here is the Cultural Impact it made and it is a positive one. It is the equivalent to the Civil Rights Movement. It is just as relevant. Giving a voice to the younger people, to show them how to mobilize, how to protest. It is has been the Biggest Movement in probably the last decade. Reporter where we go from here, teachers say, will determine how future generations will see this moment. You can look at the people protesting against black lives matter. And in some ways the arguments were heard in the 1950s and 60s in the same way. We just dont know because the Civil Rights Movement wasnt universally popular either until it was. If you get some concrete legislation because the biggest impact of the Civil Rights Movement wasnt Martin Luther king marching. The biggest impact was the civil rights act, title 9 and things like that that actually made longterm legal differences. So we dont know yet. Do you have fears. Any time that these types of issues come up, its going to bring up some very serious feelings in people and how people react to that. I dont want to call it fear or concern but it is knowledge that history repeats itself. With that knowledge, knowing that it could end in a number of ways, this is our country. This is how things have gone down for a very long time. I do agree. I think its becoming a really powerful moment. I have concerns. I have worries deep inside that it is coming to a head. It may be coming to a violent moment, are things going to break and go a certain way in which we see. Were seeing that already in many ways. And ways that people are talking about each other and the inequity. Making the majority population of america more aware. Thats what the Civil Rights Movement did with the tv cameras. I showed them littlerock. When you see the 15yearold kids out of Central High School and they see the mob, they get that in a way that reading about it doesnt. I think it is our job as teachers to create the space for them to be able to interpret it. And im glad that my class, you know, thats that space to say how they feel about it. And these these are not new problems. These are old problem thats have not been properly addressed. But its this generations way of addressing and going at it. And i think definitely it is a difficult conversation. But on the other side, i think its a beautiful time in history. Uhhuh. And i think the kids know that. They know that and they see that. And for a lot of them, there is pride that goes along with that. All right. Claudine joins us in the studio this morning. Im curious because when i was in high school, it seems like the teacher set the curriculum. Im wondering if the students are saying we want to talk about this. Can we take a day or an hour or so. Is that happening. Here is what is interesting. Keep in mind, we had two different schools, areas. A private school in walnut creek and middle School Teachers from the Oakland Unified School district. I asked how often does it come up. Every day. When i asked the same question to the private school in walnut creek, they said it doesnt come up as much for them because of the personal experience what was their kids bring in. However, that private school in walnut creek have brought in a diversity consultant. Just because it doesnt come up doesnt mean this is not an important conversation to have. Because it is a predominantly white staff of teachers, they want to know what they dont know. With everything going on, do you think that the students are more engaged . I felt i was more engaged when teachers brought up Current Events because i could see it on the news. Do teachers tell you that the students are more engaged because of this. Yes. In oakland they participated in protests between the honor band and the football team, theyre very engaged. We talked about Colin Kaepernick and we talked about whether or not you agree with his protest or not, i asked them how much that has changed the conversation in the classroom. When it comes up on sunday football and the kids come in asking about it, it starts the conversation. And that is what they say the Colin Kaepernick protest did. It started a conversation, how to interpret the events around them. And kids were engaged. Is there any push back from parents in the schools saying, hey, look, that isnt what we believe at home. Dont tell my kids about what i have chosen to keep out of the dinner table conversation . I think its how you have the conversation, right . We talked about the president ial election. They said we did not come out and necessarily say we are supporting this as a school this. Same with black lives matter. They equate it to history. Civil rights. How people protested. What people said. How it made a difference. Then they say what will change in terms of black lives matter . Will we have more body cameras on Police Officers because of this . Will use of force policies change . How will there be more communication between the Police Departments and communities. And all of that discussion becomes ai bigger becomes a bigger discussion than black lives matter. None of the kids didnt see a prop with kaepernick protesting. In their generation, what they have seen and view things are different there adults. When kids are talking about the subjects, they can be controversial. Are they also taught how to be disagreements with others and in a civil way. That was the election discussion. How to have a conversation. How to have a debate and disagree and have that be okay to disagree. And how to examine your own feelings. That was a big part of it. Why do you stand . Think about why you do it. And listen to other peoples viewpoints. Right. And that is something that a lot of People Struggle with. Coming up on bay area people saturday, talk a little bit about this barbershop and what is going on inside. Yeah. This is now a conversation among adults. Also a difficult subject. Black lives matter. Paul chambers had this discussion inside of the barbershop. This was a discussion that was kind of precipitated in a lot of different ways. We got an email at ktvu. Conversations have been happening in the community and Law Enforcement saying we need to get together and say lets talk about the divide and how to strengthen relationships and make it better. We got a chance to air more of that discussion and went behind the scenes. We talked to the barber and asked why he got involved. We talked to paul about the feedback. It was interesting. There is a next step in that one discussion. Saturday. Saturday, 6 30 in the morning right before mornings on 2. Thanks for coming on. Thanks for having me. The developer of a Controversial Oil pipeline has asked a federal court that it has the right to build under the Missouri River in north dakota. That happens as there are protests across the country and here at home against the project. One of the demonstrations is happening in San Francisco. Allie rasmus is there with the march from city hall to the army corps of engineers. Reporter yes. We are at Market Street and 11th street. There are about a couple thousand people i would estimate out in the middle of Market Street. Market street is blocked off to traffic. It is closed from 8th street all the way over to van ness. It was about an hour ago that the group marched from San Francisco city hall over to this location. Theyre in front of this building, ill pan off to the right, in this building on one of the top floors is the army corps of engineers office. How are they involved in this . Thats the agency in charge of giving the permits to the final phase of construction for the Dakota Access pipeline. Thats what the people are out here are concerned about. They are protesting the construction of the oil pipeline. About 1200 mile thats would transport crude oil from north dakota to illinois. Were hearing a lot of people concerned about the issues of Climate Change and the issues of reliance on fossil fuel. Also the issue of American Indian rights. They are concerned that constructing the pipeline will contaminate the water supply and disrupt their ancient grounds. Diversity of issues and causes here all centered around the issue of the oil pipeline. They are frustrated that the army corps of engineers kept stalling a final decision on this. They werent sure if they were going to issue the final permit. They wanted to get marin put. There are about a dozen protesters. Protesters have locked arms and theyre blocking the entrance to the building. There are also a lot of barricades and Law Enforcement presence out here. Again, a number of different issues. We found Michael Franti in the crowd. I believe that we should be invested in a renewable future. I believe that fossil fuel dependency will lead to more and more Climate Changes. It is an investment in the fossil fuel business. In addition to that, i believe we should be supporting the people of standing rock, not trampling their way of life. Finally if this pipeline should burst, its going to cause irreversible damage for millions of people along the Missouri River. Reporter that was the singer who is taking part in the demonstration. Youre looking live at van ness and Market Street. Thats where the police have the streets closed off. Behind me, you can hear the protesters. The organizers plan to be ute here until theyre asked to leave basically. Thats what the organizers said. She said even when theyre asked to leave, some of the protesters will be willing to risk arrest in order t