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the trerkt appear christopher doyle as the director of photography, we really did something special. wow! i can t wait. don t miss antingly bourdain parts unknown in hong kong sunday at 9:00 p.m. eastern. thanks very much for watching 360. i hope you have a great weekend. fareed zacrye special, the steve bannon interview, starts right now. see you again on monday. hello and welcome to this cnn special, the steve bannon interview. i m fareed zakaria in rome. bannon came to worldwide attention in august of 2016 when he was named the ceo of donald trump s presidential campaign. after president trump s victory and inauguration bannon was named chief strategist at the white house, reporting only to the president. but for many he was also the chief ideaologist of a nationalist, protectionist poppist his ambition is nothing less than to remake conservativism in the world and america and that s remaking politics. but everything from a goldman sk executive was set to clashed with white house officials including the president s family. not even a year into his job, steve bannon was fired. when he was dismissed, bannon didn t disappear. he resumed his post at breitbart, the conservative news outline and continued to give advice to the president. then in january michael wolf s provocative inside account of the white house fire and fury was published. bannon was a chief source which painted the president in a less than flattering light. trump had enough. in a statement he said that when bannon was fired he not only lost his job, he lost his mind. after his presidential dressing down, bannon also resigned from breitbart but has continued to work to spread his brand of populism and in high demand all over europe especially in italy. he invited me to rome to interview him why rome? for a place that s been accused of being chaotic. italian politics are more chaotic than ever. what s caused all the trouble is a recent win by italy s populist who bannon has been supporting. we ll dig into that later in the show with steve bannon. over the next hour you hear his thoughts on the wave of populism rising around the world on the republican chances in the mid-terms back home and on his former boss, president trump. here is my exclusive interview. steve bannon pleasure to have you on. thanks for having me, fareed. you said that you thought that don jr. s meeting with the russians in trump tower was treasonous you said somebody should call the fbi. but i did make a but i want to ask a question about the issue there. yeah. the substance, not the. yeah. in a sense rod rosenstein called the fbi in the sense he called somebody so investigate named bob mueller. isn t that good. i ve been a big proposant of mueller. i was the guy that said don t fire comey. this is petering out. it s the c block on anderson cooper. nobody is interested anymore. it will be done in 90 days and done with that. i have to protest that lots something it s in the a block. if you get a special. i ve been a proposant of mueller i ve been a witness of fact. i ve always said he is a combat marine great individual. that will play out as it plays out where you have a problem and i said the guy that said publicly ty cob should be fired. he gave the president i thought terrible advice. i think lied to the president consistently about the nature of this investigation and the timing of it. and giving overall dockage. unlike all the presidents that sat with every other president we went and give a million pages of documents and allowed the white house counsel, the chief strategist to be to expedite this which i thought was not wise. okay. okay but here i said cob should be fired and i also said i was a guy supporting rosenstein i was there when sessions brought him up as the guy for it that he should be terminated. and here is why. not mueller but rosenstein. and here is what i think you really the focus ought to be is that the president of the ups is the chief law enforcement officer of the country. he ought to order rosenstein to do what deafen nunes did and release every document associated with stephen hal person and all the people associated about whatever happened in cambridge. we ought not to cnn not to the new york times not to washington post or the white house, to give it to the chairman of the house intelligence committee. we have to find out all the paperwork who got paid, what happened when a spy and a recruiter of spies which appears from public things if rosenstein doesn t do it he shall be terminated let me ask you about rosenstein s boss. yes. you were instrumental in getting trump sessions to endorse trump. yes very close. donald trump says he wishes he picked another attorney general is he right. i think the president is wrong. i think he has been wrong from the beginning about if i can respectfully disagree with the president of the united states, i think that i think the whole concept of recusal is not even an issue. i think that rudy giuliani or chris christie or jeff sessions anybody associated with the campaign would have had to recuse themselves before grassley s committee even voted him out to go to the floor for a vote. so i think the recusal is an issue yes it s an issue dealt with and had to be dealt with. whether you picked roddy or christie. this thing about sessions was not the first pick. rudy was always the first pick. jeff sessions and rudy wanted the secretary of state. even rudy knew there was this issue of recusal. i think the president is wrong. if you look at what jeff sessions has done on immigration, migration and all the key issues of the justice department. sessions is personally doing an excellent job. i think sessions has done a job of did he involving this down to rosenstein. i think the question is rosenstein particularly with the southern district of manhattan involved in the cohen thing. the southern district of manhattan is involved in the trump organization. now he refuses to give some sort of briefing to the gang of eight. they refused to give the documents to nunes, i think now that rosenstein ought to be he should be give and direct order simple. you turn every document associated with this spy over in cambridge and whatever foreign institution was involved, whether mi five or mi 6 or anybody else. you give whatever the fbi did, whatever the cia did. you see clapper and these guys and brennan they re bitter old men. you turn over every document. and if he doesn t turn it over you give him 24 hours. and if he doesn t fire him. that s giving a law enforcement officer a direct order to turn over documents to capitol hill. and if he doesn t do it i would fire him. next on this cnn special, steve bannon has complained about the preponderens of immigrants from certain parts of asia in powerful positions in america. so basically you are saying there are too many people like me in america isn t that racist? then at your next meeting, set your seat height to its maximum level. bravo, tall meeting man. start winning today. book now at lq.com but as it grew bigger and bigger,ness. it took a whole lot more. that s why i switched to the spark cash card from capital one. with it, i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy. everything. and that 2% cash back adds up to thousands of dollars each year. so i can keep growing my business in big leaps! what s in your wallet? now i m gonna tell my momma that i m a traveller i m gonna follow the sun now i m gonna tell my momma that i m a traveller i m gonna follow the sun transitions™ light under control™ transitions™ now that i m on my way do you still think i m crazy standing here today i couldn t make you love me but i always dreamed about living in your radio how do you like me now?! applebee s 2 for $20, now with steak. now that s eatin good in the neighborhood. the first survivor of ais out there.sease and the alzheimer s association is going to make it happen. but we won t get there without you. visit alz.org to join the fight. i want to ask you about immigration. sure. you ve said that immigration is the issue on which you re going to destroy the left. beat progress he was. yes. what do you mean. because immigration is about not just sovereignty. it s about jobs. massive i remember the first bucket when we got on the trump campaign. the first bucket was make massive illegally grimes and the illegally immigration the central about jobs. massive immigration is the chamber of commerce and a lot of the republican republican party that want to flood the zone because it s unfair competition for black and hispanic working class. in other words you got so much labor right that you have basically an agriculture. you have the unlimited pool of labor to draw from. legal immigration at the top of the aim thing. you can t take the hispanic system from the s.t.e.m. system in grammar to the best engineering schools to computer science in the great jobs unless you limit the h 1 bv and the unfair competition they have from east asia and south agy it s no hit to the people from china or yand they re fantastic. we have to carve space out by allowing our citizens to get the jobs. that s why i m saying from day one the exactic party and particularly the progressive part of bernie sanders in the labor movement i ve said this from day one we can carve off 23 to a third of bernie sanders movement is at the end of the day they don t have the answer for immigration we have to limit massive legal grimes. immigration you re seeing this in the trump administration. what he has done with the legal immigration that s why we have the lowest black unkbt and hispanic unkbm. that s why rages are in agriculture. is why donald trump has gone very hard line on immigration? is this the strategy that will limit the damage on the midterm? here is what i think happened in the first year administration we clearly had conflicting voices of the globalist, the gary cohen and mcmasters good guys but they come with the thing on the nationalist. i think as president trump looks at the midterm and the republican party paul ryan quit. the republican party has had attitude we ll fight it district by district. what trump has done i think is moved aside the chief of staff. he is now five or six people directly report to him. he has a new nec, new ncs. nick mulvaney reports to him coms reports to him. he is executing on his plan on the promises he made up until build the wall which i ll get to in a second. this is playing for november 6th of 2018 it s a base plus election. okay if you want to limit by the way it s it s up or down vote on impeachment. trump son the ballot in every district. this is not some democratic congressman versus republican congressman. this is donald trump versus nancy pelosi and sometime. and he is nationalizing it using immigration. you are seeing more of this. more of the central beating heart issues. immigration is definitely one. thinking about football players who happen to be black. no actually the opposite. he is seeing kanye west. black america is now understanding i got the lowest unemployment in history. my wages are rising. what this guy is saying is making sense. it s not about a minimum wage of 15 bucks. it may cost $20 to flip a hamburger. what we have to limit is limit the unfair competition. the working class blacks and hispanic have been hit more than any other segment of our country. these are some of the best patriots. they re in the u.s. army, the rifle platoons in the marine corps that working class black and hispanic have been eviscerated. from the unlimited competition from foreign labor. that has to stop. trump, i think this is going to be. up or down vote on november 6th. this is about impeachment. tax cuts all the economy will go up. but the republicans have been running adds on tax cuts alone it s not resonating. you re either with nancy pelosi or with donald trump. to a degree remember the democrats have questioned his legislate macy from the beginning, the nullification project .. the one things democrats in the opposition party media cnn you guys got one thing right. you re getting a do over. trump s second presidential race will be on november 6th. he is on the ballot. up or down vote. do you back trump s program okay with all the good and bad? do you back his program or back removing him? because that s what pelosi and tom styer and these guys what. you say you re not a racist i take you at face value. but i want to ask you about the policies and the intended or unintended consequences they sure as hell trakt a lot of people who are racist. i think the exchange you said with trump on breitbart. trump said he was in favor of high skilled immigrants. wait a minute if you re ending up with two thirds of kohl son valley ceos being from south asia, a country is more than an economic community. yes. basically you re saying too many people like me in america isn t that racist. no, no. economic nationalism doesn t care about race, ethnicity, religion, doesn t care about gender, doesn t care about religion, skaufl preference. it cares about if you re a united states citizen. those people in silicon valley. they are american citizens. we don t hang on we don t know no, no we don t know what s coming through by hb 1 visa or not. we can t get the country sorted out until we have now taken the entire elementary school and made it science, technology, engineering and math. steve with all due respect, what that answer implied was that they had come from the wrong culture. if they came from the right culture if i was white and christian you might have a different. makes no difference no. what you mean. if you re from asia and you hear second generation american citizen absolutery no problem. the. hb 1 visa where you come and take the jobs of american citizens is for the acceptables thap that s not racist. the central beating heart of this is that hispanics and blacks have to get into the high valley tech jobs we re not doing that as long as they have unfair competition. by the way, they re not going to do that by gutting spending you re celebrating the did he constructing of the administrative state but it s the scholarships and programs and prek and nutrition programs that help people rise up. have we we just pass add 4.3 tril yan dollar budget they added to the programs. when they added to defense programs they added to all the other programs. we candidate cut one penny from the programs. by the way it s 1.3 tril yan of discretionary spending. we have $1 trillion deficit structurally. but the trillion and a half dollars tax cut. that was supposed to be the concomitantant part was supposed to be significant cuts in the budget. and the political class failed to do it. when president trump woke up to the fact that he had been sold a bill of goods. remember he says this will never happen again. one of the events to watch in the coming election before november 6th september 30th is the end of the apprehensions year. he has already said i m not kicking the can down the road more. we re not having crs that s why you see on capitol hill people are talking about we have to get this done before the august recess. okay i got to get a few more things. by the way what i m saying is that i think the president trump nationalizing this, the wall is central. the wall is not just totemic. it s central to his program. i believe that what he is going to do is as we come up on september 30th if that appropriations bill does not include include spending to fully build his wall not some 1.6 billion for prototypes i mean to build the southern wall i believe he will shut down the government. i believe the government will shut down in the run up to the election. you ve been really fies about donald trump in this interview and yet he calls you sloppy steve. he says you ve lost your mind. he says you had nothing to do with his election. what s your response? he is donald trump. i think he is doing a fantastic job. look every day is different. you just got to hang you got to swing with it. i knew trump for many, many years before i stepped into the campaign. not really well. does he call you to tell you steve i m kidding. trust me he does not do that. every action he is taking, i am really happy with. i think he has the right with larry cudd low the right guy at nec. -free trade are you. look what he did. the first interview larry cudd low sat down with no no sat down with peter nofr o he went on with the interviews he said we have to be tough on china. china has cheated us. you said it in your column two months ago. we ve got china dead to rights in this thing. they can t happy talk they can t go to davos and give a speech about globalization about how the world is-free trading when he they run as a america tilist society. why did i come all the way to rome to interview steve bannon? well italy s politics were in absolute chaos this week. and bannon has a lot to say about the subject. much more on that when we come back. we re coming up on the tenth year anniversary of the financial crisis. the fuse lit then that brought the trump revolution is what s happening here in italy. crohn s disease. you re more than just a bathroom disease. you re a life of unpredictable symptoms. crohn s, you ve tried to own us. but now it s our turn to take control with stelara® stelara® works differently for adults with moderately to severely active crohn s disease. studies showed relief and remission, with dosing every 8 weeks. stelara® may lower the ability of your immune system to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections and cancer. some serious infections require hospitalization. before treatment, get tested for tuberculosis. before or during treatment, always tell your doctor if you think you have an infection or have flu-like symptoms or sores, have had cancer, or develop any new skin growths, or if anyone in your house 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gig-speed network. what a week to be in italy? i was invited here to rome by %-p movement here, a movement creating more political chaos than italy usually has. the trouble stems from the march elections. that vote saw the populist party surge in popularity, regging traditional politics. the party ran on italy firps mentality promising crackdown on immigration if that sounds familiar and the populist coalition threatened the italian relationship with the european union causing fwraf concerns among italians a europeans and global stock markets. stocks were tumultuous based in large part on the turmoil in italy. steve bannon is here to support and learn from the italian populists. in a sense you think we re in italy in an unusual moment because this is the future and it might be the united states. let me set the scene and then you tell me why this is the future. you had a strange left/right coalition, a populist movement with the five-star movement along with the northern league kind of separatist movement of northern italy. they won a majority in the election. why is this the future and what does it mean for the you know politics in the west. we re coming up on the tenth year anniversary of the financial crisis, the financial collapse that happened in september of 2008 as you remember and the presidential election of obama and john mccain. the implosion of the world capital markets has never been sorted out. the fuse lit then that eventually brought the trump revolution is the same thing happening in italy. you ve had the stagnant economy. the economy today is aller than 2008. you ve had a populist and nationalist movement kind of form. one in the north and one in the south. what happened that was so amazing s reason i came over and saw this trump rally type intensity, you had a full vetting of particularly the center parties wsh traditional center parties in this populist and nationalist movement on the right and the populist movement on the left. they won. in fact two thirds of the vote that took place in march was really anti-establishment saying we want to tri something different. what was most amazing talking about big ideas and incredible participation by young people. young people were engaged particularly on the feist-star movement really an internet based movement. that s the only populist movement in europe at least that draws young people. yes for right now. i mean you do have some young people in the populist movements. the five-star movement is a young person s movement, right? it s compelling not just from the south but drawing young people. they then over the eight-week period i was vocal after the election in the media here saying you know it would be interesting if they put together leave the old split of left appear right aside and put together a unity government of forth and south. you see this as sanders plus trump. elements of the sanders movement and elements of the trump movement or the trump base. kwhafs most important i think for american audience or world audience is what five star represents is anti-crony capitalism and it s the political class, the permanent political class that foifted this burden on us. we want to ged rid of these guys. they re not schooled in government. the head of demaio was a waiter. the mayor of rome, the young mayor of rome was formally a secretary. these are people from every day walks saying we are the anti-political party. in 80 days they put aside differences of north and south, right and left and came together with a government in a 56-page or 60-page document that layed out flat tax, how they do the guaranteed income graduated thing. well thought through on the migrant issue, on flat tax with, on growing the kpee, getting the pay back up to 3%. brewedly speaking fair to say the policy was left wing on economics but right wing on immigration. except the flax tax. this is the steve forbes rand paul dream of a flat tax. hungry poland and other countries experimenting with it. remember, italy is the fourth largest economy in- one of the founding members i think the eighth largest economy in the world. still a major industrial power. people forget this is not just for tourism it s a major industrial power particularly in the north. they were going to the 15% flat tax which is radical. it was well thought through not wide eyed. here is what impressive about the two leaders petition thut put their egos aside. they put another guy up unknown law professor as the prime minister and put a guy, and actually the you re owe controversial because he said this is a german cage. france and germany are killing us. but they put him forward and the central guys rejected it. how will this come to america? why do you think. i think the tea party revolt of 2010 which saw 62 seats go in the house kind of petered out a little bit with the romney campaign and obama. what i i saw in the european elections in 2014 with nigel faraj, the reinvig ration of the reinvig ration of the populous movement. europe is base a year ahead of the united states. and i think you re seeing now pieces being put together where you see populist nationalist movements with reform, with people saying hey it s the permanent political class. what we have to do is get rid of politic. s, get involved citizens. that s i think the power you see here. you could begin to see the elements of bernie sanders coupled with the trump movement that really becomes a dominant political force in american politics. next on this cnn special trump has yet to build the wall and the tax cut disproportion knitly helps corporations and people already rich. has the trumpian revolution, as bannon envisioned it failed? i asked steve bannon. i was the guy that argued there there ought to be a 44% tax for the upper brkts. but that was dismissed early on. you have to make manufacturing competitive in the united states. and that s the heart of that but it hasn t come investment hasn t come back. instead the estate tax has been exemption has been doubled. steve.2% of american pay estate taxes fareed, i do disagree because i think sometimes you re caught up in too much process. ur social security alerts. oh! we ll alert you if we find your social security number on any one of thousands of risky sites, so you ll be in the know. ewww! being in the know is very good. don t shake! ahhh! sign up online for free. discover social security alerts. now i m gonna tell my momma that i m a traveller i m gonna follow the sun now i m gonna tell my momma transitions™ light under control™ visit your local visionworks to ask about transitions™ brand lenses my ci can worry about it,ine. visit your local visionworks or do something about it. garlique® helps maintain healthy cholesterol naturally. and it s odor free. and pharmacist recommended. garlique.® so you think at the heart of this populism that you see sweeping the western world is the economic populism to take care of working class people who have been left behind. i wonder, 500 days into the trump administration, the signature achievement of the trump administration has been a tax cut basically been disproportion knitly to the wealth, corporations, there hasn t been much return of manufacturing jobs. you gave a speech once where you said three things they have to do. control immigration. you have to take care of bring back jobs from china and get out of the wars. yes. none of that s happened. there is no where no jobs back from china. they were still. let s let s go with taxes. all you have is a big tax cut. i can t believe you approved of that. let s go to the kaks cut. when we first came in paul ryan and guys had been working seven or eight years the border adjustable tax made on the model of germany to make us a export nation heavy inducement to manufacturing. that blew up in the first 90 days. the cokes and wal-mart and the retailers said this is a value added tax. we have to get rid of this. then the trump program was i believe in the center of it i think is quite wise. what they did is said hey we can t get it done we have to get competitive with germany and china as far as taxes and repatriation. the heart of it remember i was a guy that argued there ought to be a 44% tax for the upper brackets with you that was dismissed early on. but the beating heart of it i i think the reason populous came together it was a major first step first step for getting investment back to the united states. you have to make manufacturing competitive in the united states that s the heart of it the tax but it hasn t come bam investment hasn t come back. instead the estate tax has been exemption has doubled. steve .2% of americans pay estate taxes .2. i think fareed sometimes you re ut up in process. you are seeing the animal spirit reinvestment in the country. one of the reasons we have 3 growth at the fourth quarter 2.2% but the projection is for the 3%. was it a perfect tax cut and perfect populist tax cut? the answer is no. but it s starting to rejuvenate the american kpee and gives us an engine to drive the .. the answer yes. you ll see president trump later in his first term and second term start to address some maybe the inequalitities in the tax code which should have been addressed in the ryan bill. but that blew up early on in the administration. so then the other part. by the way, one thing about the elites, here is the thing. i don t believe that people focus enough on what started this. it s interesting your show started about ten years ago. the financial crisis of 2008, the brought on by the elites of both parties, okay, where they bailed themselves out, remember that was when bern. when lehman brothers went bankrupt on the is ath. the smartest guys the geniuses didn t realize that lehman brothers was the heart of the world commercial paper polk market. they go to bush and said we need a trillion dollars by 5:00 in the afternoon. i got it, steve. no, no but they took. but the same people. you are giving them another tax cut. i don t understand that. no, no. is the price you re paying to keep the republican party with you? be honest you re paying a price to the republican establishment. listen when we first got into the campaign you have to bring remember we re a coalition, a coalition the republican establishment and this populist nationalist movement. and it takes both to win. we re kolg cognizant of that. i do believe the heart of the tax cut was the corporations to be competitive overseas with germany and china. it s a winner. my point with the establishment, the balance sheet of the federal reserve in 2008 was $880 billion. it s 5.5 trillion a day. what the elite did did was flood the zone with liquidity. there wasn t a deflation and collapse of the financial markets. in the euro zone. if you own real estate. stock or property. it s the greatest ten year run in history. the working guy is stiffed the entire time. that s led to the revolt. that s what you see in italy. the elites don t have a response. what stunned me people in the united states think washington is arrogant to the heartland of the country. it s nothing compared to brussels and the city of london are to the individual countries. they have basically dismissed. here you had an election with two thirds of the people voting anti-establishment parties. almost 50% voted for five star and the league and completely dismissed after putting together government they complete ly dismissed and said not acceptable. stay with me here. i have more of the interview come up. i ll ask him, did donald trump take over the gop or did the gop take over donald trump? 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afford to dream gig. comcast, building america s largest gig-speed network. so the second part of your program was bringing jobs back from china. i m wondering, again, you look at what is happening with the administration. there is a lot of talk on being tough on trade but very little action. steve mnuchin walked back a lot of the comments. then the president throws a life line to zt, a chinese company basically exists on american technology and says he does it because he is worried about chinese jobs. you must. you had a column a couple of weeks ago i couldn t disagree with more. about trump as a negotiator versus a marketer. okay. let s step back a second. wove been told with the rise of china both from the cheer leaders, the rational accommodationist and even the hawks that it was inexorable, the rise of china. donald trump has done something extraordinary that wall street and the corporatist told us couldn t be done. he has three weapon processes one is tariffs on a massive school. the 50 billion we re talking about and another 100 billion after that and another 100 billion. maybe up to a quarter trillion dollars of tares i was. number two is the 301 where china forces not steals our intellectual property. forces us to give the intellectual property. and the last is the actions like zte where we can implode a company. by cutting them off from the supply chain. but the action has been to throw a life line to zte. remember, the whole thing about the grand bargain with china do we set the geostrategic balance with china for the next 50 years. on top of that he has the south china sea and north korea. he has to balance the two flash points in the world probably are the two or three most intense flash points where war can start. in doing that. this is not answering the question because i know you. no, no, wall street told us all weather watcher is the blunt instrument of swift system or cutting off capital markets. trump brought in three weapons. at the same time they came over because they had a sense of urgency. one of the heads of the chinese me. they doesn t get on without a sense of urgency. you have the split in the administration, wall street guy was mnuchin that want to accommodate. and to steve s defense work out a short term deal. and then you have the hawks be lightheizer miller, saying to we have china where we want them. and the president s negotiating strategy is give a little take a little et cetera. here is where we are nafta around the world, we re at the beginning stages of the major renegotiation of the economics of the united states and how we are treated throughout the world and what our prays is in the world. it s at the heart as you said a couple of months ago of the republican party in the reformation of the republican party. his biggest enemies are the republican party. and it shouldn t be losing people when cane went to capitol hill. he went because he knew the free traders are. he had basic backing when he said going to the negotiations i understand that congress is full of free traders from the heritage and kato and also democrats i got free traders there. trump has done an amaze be job. he has taken us farther than anybody with china. he has real engagement. it s not happening overnight. but you ll see in the next six months to a year i think a real recalibration of the relationship with china we are putting america first and stop being treated as a tributary state. right now it s barbarian management we are james town to great britain. we send natural gas, soybeans hogs and they send us back they send us back advanced manufacturing. of someone in th republican establishment. they say that s fine. trump talks tough on some of these things but it doesn t happen. what you re going to see is you re going to make some of these attempts at protectionism. he s doubled down on afghanistan, on iraq, he s more engaged militarily in the wars you wanted to get out of. so when they look at it it seems they re saying republican hasn t taken over the republican party, the republican party has taken over donald trump. okay, let me beg to differ. what you have to remember is that what he is doing is the right way populism is different than the populism you see in europe. europe always looks for a state solution. part of what right wing populism is, is deconstructing the state. it s opening up the market for the working class people, and getting more of a piece of the action for the working class and lower middle class. what trump has done with judges, deregulation and really under the surface as deconstruction state, totally plays for the populus agenda. remember, these trade deals are complicated, the trade deal, walk away from tpp, we re deep into it with nafta. we re very deep into it with china, on the fact we just laid on $50 billion in tariffs. right. and so and by the way, he s making progress on these every day. let s talk about afghanistan and the wars. the central thesis of the trump movement and donald trump is america first, it s not america isolationist or america alone. what he looks at, he does this in a very sophisticated way, he does it in way that the community doesn t get yet. he says, look, the post war liberal rules based order, they came after world war ii is essentially today from europe, the persian golf, the straits and the northwest pacific is essentially that combination of trade relationship, commercial relationships, capital markets and security guarantees and alliances is basically underwritten by the american tax payer. under written by the american tax payer and deplorables where that tax burden goes. in addition, it s their kids in the hen hindu mountains of afghanistan, south korea and peninsula. there has to be a recalibrations of this. it s not that america is backing off. it s that america is more than a humanitarian, military, world force. in nato, he said, hey, it s got to be 2%. you have to be an ally. that stuff obama also said, the point is the difference is there are more troops now and more bombs no no, this is an important point. what he s doing, whether it s in northwest pacific with japan or korea, he s engaging our allies to say, hey look, this has to work for america overall. korea i m going to renegotiate the trade deal, tame we talked about the fed system and you pay for the thaad system. same thing in japan. it s about the foreign community that has bifurcated this. donald trump looked at this as a practical businessman and said, you can t bifurcate these. these are trade relationships and national security. that engagement, people, the first thing media says about him, he s an isolationist, we wants america to go alone, it s the opposite. if you look at everyone, it s engagement. including in iran. remember in iran, it s the front line nations of saudi arabia, and the united air of emirates and israel, jordan, their the ones that are the biggest cheer leaders for what he s done. if you look around the world it s the exact opposite as he s been portrayed. america seems to be deeply polarized under donald trump. urn european countries are also being torn apart. how will steve bannon end this polarization and bring people back together. i ask him when we come back. i keep saying if bernie sanders had been more confrontational and had more sterns he would have been the nominee and had a real fight with donald trump. crohn s disease. you re more than just a bathroom disease. you re a life of unpredictable symptoms. crohn s, you ve tried to own us. but now it s our turn to take control with stelara® stelara® works differently for adults with moderately to severely active crohn s disease. studies showed relief and remission, with dosing every 8 weeks. stelara® may lower the ability of your immune system to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections and cancer. some serious infections require hospitalization. before treatment, get tested for tuberculosis. before or during 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war. yes. and i wonder your style of politics, the intense polarization, the battle, the sense that it is now warring tribes. is that it might work in politics, but to quote lincoln, how do you bind the wounds of the country back together? i think it s healthy. here s why i think it s healthy, people are more engaged in these topics now more than ever. these are the great issues of the day. this is why i keep saying this theory of history in the fourth turning, the country s going to be one thing or the other. this battle between national and globalist. it s the fundamental truth of what america is and what america will be. i welcome it, i love the confrontation. in fact, i keep saying if bernie sanders had been more confrontational and had more stones, he would have have been the real nominee and we would have had a real fight with donald trump in the run up to 16, not hillary clinton. i think it s going to go on for a long time. i think this is very healthy and for the folks at home i think this is going to go on a long time. we got a light more fighting, a lot more scar tissue to go over. steve bannon, pleasure to have you on. fareed, thanks for having me. that s it. thank to all of you for watching. don t forget, you can catch fareed zakaria gps sunday at 10:00 p.m. choi from rome. this is cnn tonight, i m don lemon. breaking news, sources say the white house is working on a possible summit between donald trump and vladimir putin, one that would focus on syria. that is according to the wall street journal. more on that in a minute. this comes to an end of a wild week, this has been a week that shows regular rules don t

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Transcripts For DW Arts.21 - Growing Pains The Changing Face Of Berlin 20180702



a startup entrepreneurs and the tourists buzzing today is a very different place from the grungy anarchic city of the early nine hundred nineteen. twenty one finds out if the city has lost its mojo or just grown up in small towns up. to the n b a not only was founded in the heady days of nine hundred ninety eight now in its tenth edition this year s event is as wilfully contradictory and complex as the city itself. it s happening all over town this year s ballon be on allah is taking place in find different locations first stop is the academy that can start in western. or ruin incredibly true to life this work is made of popular mâché and is called songs to see it s the name of both an imperial palace in haiti and the famous palace of frederick the great impulse to work and. it s history and continence. chief curator gabi kobo is fed up with the white western perspective her team is black and international a statement but not of intent they refused to restrict their focus to post colonial and racial issues. with something which always crops up which we consciously try to resist with our written statements to we make a point of not using words like africa colonialism post-colonialism multiculturalism diversity and so on. then that have. the art on display is supposed to speak for itself and it does in a gently laid back often cryptic way take the work of the who sue the bin in artist shows archaeological finds and documents an excavation. an allusion to a round between france and been about the restitution of an ancient threatened to sue had been thrown reconstructed buried and dug up again by archaeology students a new angle on restitution. from the former west berlin two mitta in the former east and the legendary fold spinner. this billion is hosting a rather unusual performance. last netters there no no the grand daughters of the grandmother are sisters from puerto rico. with some basic props they enact the horror of hysterectomy as medical experiments and drug testing in puerto rico women are used as guinea pigs for the u.s. pharmaceutical industry and not just their. we can see the evolution of the you know quality has been because slaves all months were use for that research. and so it s has been any story of how black woman s and also black man s has been used for in the medical industry complex. life stated shall we move on to the next exhibition space the center for art and urban studies or form afraid that we don t need another hero is the slogan of the b.n. allah egyptian artist i mean shares this opinion in her installation she has different heads of state talking about major geo strategic projects around the mediterranean match zero politics. i mean counteracts this with a highly political vision the mediterranean is being drained under supercontinent is developing europe africa will all be one. it s not just about draining the mediterranean sea but it s about moving it into the african continent so if we then take claim of the mediterranean sea in the way that these kind of colonial proposals did how do we then control the narrative of migration we can then decide who gets to pass the boundary of water and we get to kind of control you know all things from the resource the tourism and whatever. a few rooms on tests or masses showing her works the artist from haiti spent two months in berlin on a scholarship. these delicate paper structures and drawings were all created in this studio. images which revealed pain and something of the artist herself. and the characters kind of floating in this empty space in this empty space is what i was sometimes felt around me when i was in. i think the color palette is this and then what i use is usually it is more subdued and less colorful but it is also what was around me but i did not find one in color. with laughter ringing in our ears we are off to the heart of the b. and in our stars a mr beilin be an ally was launched twenty years ago here in the chords to back and now everything looks very elegant but back then it looked more like this. the destroyed world the heart wrenching song by nina simone. the joint work by different artists. where do we come from how do we see ourselves and others to what extent are we formed by the culture of our country and which story are we telling. these are the questions pervading this year s burning be an homage. to the answers sensitive and subtle gently nanjing the visitors towards new perspectives. the tenth beilin b.n. alla ambiguous and astute. art that lingers in the mind. of course but only in extracts not just artists but writers too one of them is ivana psycho winner of the tenth international literature prize international prose translated into german. ivana psycho has known berlin for nearly twenty years she s lived here since twenty sixteen she came on a scholarship and decided to stay. it also helps me in some way to to see things that are happening in creation and maybe. to. put the things that i want to do i maybe have better visibility if i do it here than if i do it there because i have a problem there. so and because of the political political things that are happening there i don t have i don t have much space to work there. any advantage speaks of the political things happening in croatia she means how society has swung to the right history being whitewashed poverty and corruption minorities and critical intellectuals being marginalized the loss of any solidarity she talks about it in her latest novel. titled translates as love story. and unnamed couple somewhere in southeast europe in a country falling apart. he s an unemployed academic who tries and fails to write a love story she s a passable actress who forgoes a career opportunity to care for their unplanned child. if you speak about big history you know this bigger level bigger scale that it doesn t hurt but when you put it this situation inside walls and you see how hard it is for people to survive in this kind of condition in constant insecurity in this kind of precarious living then things become serious because we normalized this this kind of living and it s not normal. then ivana shows us what fear and frustration can do with people how it slowly poisons every day life and destroys love. she. said their. approach to my problem up on a. bookshelf swath to teach the most up to. take in. it is in accordance putting it. on the h d h u t h condition emotion when it is of on your record to put him on use can be shown and most importantly it means. it s the downward spiral of a relationship fraught with misunderstandings told in fierce prose powerful seemingly endless sentences in her german translation a leader became a preserved the fury if you re not able to provide sort of the normal living for your family then you know it becomes sort of like something in your character or something that isn t good with you and then you don t believe in yourself again you lose your self esteem and this is what society does to man or a woman to a human being it changes us it sort of tell us that we re not good enough that we got what we deserved and that they don t deserve a lot and this is not fair. yvonne a psycho was still very young when she chose the life of a writer and got a tattoo of a maze on her left hand. she s now been writing for a good two decades her body of work includes stage plays journalism prose now she and her translator a little brain i have perceived the international literature award in berlin for her latest novel. it s a chamber piece that deals with power and powerlessness in the globalized world. the political book through and through. instead of solidarity and sort of living together we became to live you know as in this small family circles taking care only about our wellbeing and not about our neighbors and this could also be seen in a situation that for simple europe is this is a living now. because we always you know we tend to say yeah europe but what does it mean today. because we don t agree on their important issues we don t have some opinion because all of the southern europe became just assembled over local interests. and there is an also a dark in there. yvonne a psycho a writer who emphatically believes we need to hold on to solidarity both personal and political come what may. be a little more stories from the world of all time culture visit our facebook page. e.w. dot culture. building is supposedly one of the world s coolest capitals we visit a few of its trendiest menus to see if they live up to the hype. right now on a moped through the city on upon the summer s day what could be better. in value now as i m often not quite sure a summer culture in berlin happens outside and a visit to a rooftop bar is an absolute must i click look at kranish is annoyed can landmark a venue for all kinds of art literature and music let s go check it out. on the top of a multistory shopping mall parking lot the college has have us views across the city it s a hit playful place and no wonder it s so popular. believing that honest beilin wouldn t be berlin without it speeds nice little shops where you can buy snacks and beverages almost twenty four seven but one should be a year and quickly as time has extended the concept and it s also street art exhibition space and a meeting point for street artists let s main goal the smoking area. you can watch some of prelims most talented. street artists that work here and get your skates on because the couture speedy is still a hot insider s tip. on the news that our next cultural hotspot is the moment to theatre it s one of the largest off the others in berlin with one hundred thousand annual visitors here you can dance under the open sky or watch a place from go to shakespeare sheller for her own up. to it or up close and personal just like in shakespeare s time but now that i. am right next door you can dance the night away under the palm trees lining the river spain. i ll get let s hit the road again for a last stop and open air cinema in a park. these days it s an institution cinema under the stars a staple of summer and berlin. berlin has something to offer for everyone it s just impossible not to fall in love with the city. in two thousand and three the mayor of bell and famously described the city as cold but sexy it s no longer really pull and is itself. famous architect designing flashy new buildings and luxury lofts and condos sprouting up everywhere vernon s fabled venue s of fast disappearing. culture is losing ground to capital its most prominent victim time tellers the subcultural center of the ninety s and early two thousand right in the heart of balance. because later the balance. minister for cultural affairs it s a place with sentimental value as it s. one thing tough phillis was centrally located this used to be a hot spot it was surrounded by similar venues although it s hard to see it nowadays it was a kind of beacon emitter everything else gravitated towards it the dynamic at the time made it the biggest hot spot among many of its kind it had huge symbolic power for the city of berlin and now that s fading it s left a gaping hole in the book office with. after a long battle tacklers finally closed in twenty twelve. cancerous workshops are being edged out all over ballin most recently here in palace are. over three hundred fifty studios disappear each year due to rising rents. just keep thank you because no studio space left forward more and more disappear every month is pretty hopeful saying i will see through through these. over harlan in the district as vetting is one of the last big studio spaces in the center of the land they have also been sold to an investor so far artists have been paying a renter three to seven euros per square meter they couldn t afford more with ninety percent of them living on the breadline as it is doing odd jobs to earn a living yet artists are fundamental to the city s image it s given stockholm enough and we don t want to have to put on a dog and pony show for new investors but what happens is we go somewhere we make the place attractive and then fancy restaurants move in. they start renovating and building big investors come and wear out just like that just one tax and it. almost thirty years ago creative spirits were the first to take advantage of the historic changes in berlin occupying on the used spaces and opening clubs it was then the berlin gained its reputation as a club as paradise. party goes from all over the world still come here in droves and their kind remains legendary but many of berlin s one hundred forty clubs have had to close down the great sound off continues with the classic and the dying breath of a legendary small berlin club in pencil back ballons nightlife recently lost yet another landmark locals are following developments with growing dismay. they knew of innocence was into sound as noise when they were at least planning to bring in something new and interesting something visionary the good wish to do but if the rumors are true they re planning to put up a very in style hof white house and here i was only i d sooner have my liver ripped out than drink a beer in a huff po boy house in berlin i was fine before in the. first the artists move in the name vestas a well known pattern the trend has been gathering pace in berlin over the last five years everything is up for sale the city has responded to the financial clout of big investors buying creasing the arts budget by twenty percent and giving more funding to support clubs and artists studios class later is in fighting spirit. as i think it s imperative that we fight for every square metre for the arts for free space in this city that we fight for every club every gallery and every building with studio space the sexiness may be waning a little here and there but i still hope we can do something to prevent berlin from becoming a metropolis of glass and concrete like many other european cities and it ll point also to. berlin it is becoming like other european cities the arts bandwagon is moving on into the outskirts where rents are cheaper but it hasn t lost its way yet still retaining the city s special flap is a real challenge. change is always a challenge that makes it a festival for architecture and urban alternatives looks at ways belling can evolve with elk losing itself. berlin the middle district home to grand old buildings and right in the middle the gleaming glass palaces of the super rich investors made in front of the building but all is not as it seems this is actually a subversive performance part of a festival a push back against the raging real estate rush the investor is an actor and his giant plans are all a performance just to see if indeed it is totally right here is to build the whole building is that it will be as it would look like this isn t a particle with this whole complex here or the key thing being that would have a roof terrace with a whole new view of the berlin on somebody s theater and so i believe the land remakes thing that s the slogan of the architecture festival make city it s an aim is to explore solutions for a city whose diversity is in jeopardy particularly in the city center the festival organizers reject monocultures and seek alternatives they want to rethink this space and be involved in shaping it there s no more affordable land left nonetheless it s a moment where one can go the next step and negotiate with the city to participate in the development of certain spaces. what will happen to the unclaimed space in the city who gets to decide investors or citizens. which options are not dictated by commercial interests. and what about social housing. we re in an age where this notion of social responsibility is disappearing so it s about encouraging some form of social agenda or rethinking whether there can be such a thing as a coalition of interests that will preserve our raised resources. financial interests which drive the city forward and new usage concepts which benefit everyone some past pioneers have shown how it can be done like the team behind the legendary bar twenty five in a tourist location in the two thousand the club was one of the berlin institutions which cemented the city s international reputation as the twenty first century s party capital and twenty twelve the attractive plot by the spray river was auctioned off the bar twenty five thousand got lucky a swiss pension fund stepped up as a patron. does an order when i first got to know this fall when it was still bad twenty five and i never wanted to leave. a lot of people felt that way who had a really special moment sometimes hand. side in some really special relationships foment here. so we decided to get together to get informed and organized and to find a way to implement an alternative. the not for profit pension fund that bought the land freed up space for a bold experiment the clubbers formed a collective like minded friends pitched in and the city s creatives invested in the project to finance and usage plans were drawn up using the money from their own successful club. let s hope that this and the concept is simply to bring the village to the city with us the village is a place where you know everyone where all sorts of different people develop different things one. you know the bacon in you know the brew. you know all of the artists and everybody is working together creating synergies and many things. you know. this isn t berlin s only flagship project increasingly the city doesn t just accept offers from the highest bidders but goes for the most promising proposals. for is twenty three a creative center in the city writers musicians and painters are in charge and if contract a thirty five different construction companies. the idea is rooted in the tradition of the building society. that s probably going to find us i said the first time in germany that a group like this has developed a new building for a cultural space and we have a wide mix of participants to pain involved in the planning process right from the start which means that we ll end up with something very novel. the initiators have worked on a project for seven years debating every detail of the new homes offices and studios only those with equity to get involved. who hadn t been to the office to close to the financing of this project terry extremely high which clearly means it s not a project that just anyone can join where aware of that but we wanted to build our own little contributions one makes it feel like to them both done by talking to do the list and stuff. trendsetting project in a city that s finally close to being after nearly three decades of becoming. is a guy s friend is just the spirit of these times can still be found everywhere but it s more established it has settled down as you go before there s not as much chaos there s less free space for creativity starting something now is different to the situation twenty years ago. the land has become more stayed and grownup. but many creators from those years of upheaval are now themselves investors they want berlin to retain its status as an exciting livable city. it continues to chart new waters and its creatives are still on board the boat. that was out on twenty one to a special next time will be turning the camp back fifty years and celebrating the spirit of nine hundred sixty eight a year of protest a year that changed the world by gareth experimentation. and is a. big hole in the shape of the. long. drop out with us next week until the bye and our feet is and. a. lot of crimes again. as to managing civilians become witnesses from their recorded images travel around the globe via social media. digital investigators comb through the flood of images to find sources to try to reconstruct what happened and to substantiate claims of crimes. in fifteen minutes long t.w. photographic. nico is in germany to learn german. english to me. why not learn with him online on the mobile and free to suffer from the w.b. learning course because vic. stay informed. to me. in language courses. video audio. anytime anywhere. w. media center. movement in fighting for the case to be taken seriously in the world no one hears us come out. remains talk on t w they stood for years on a mission smart women smart talks smart station a legend listened by no means missed out on it were increasingly dangerous time w. made for minds. my. my. my my all we can be the generation that ends it good malaria must so millions can live. germany s interior minister and leader of the christian social union party has offered his resignation from both posts following a major rift with chancellor angela merkel over migration policy but horse a ho first says they ll meet again with merkel s conservative c.d.u. party later today in an effort to find common ground before making decision a.

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Transcripts For DW DW News - News 20180705



a taxi in china and you re on camera we ll see how authorities are using the latest technology to find out where you are and where you re going. i m sumi so much going to good to have you with us british police have confirmed that two people who fell critically ill know the market town of solsbury were poisoned with the nerve agent know the truck it is the second time solsbury has been at the center of a noble chalk poisoning in march a former russian spy and his daughter were attacked with a nerve agent at their home on christie miller road at the top of your screen not far from queen elizabeth gardens where it s thought the latest victims came into contact with the subsets of britain s health minister says this poisoning looks like an unfortunate after effect of the earlier incident counterterrorism police are leading the investigation and trying to determine what happened. this is the british couple at the center of a new mystery shrouding an english town charlie riley and dawn sturgis were poisoned by the nerve agent navi truck they were taken ill at their home in amesbury on saturday paramedics were called after the woman collapsed in the morning. a friend of the couple was with the man later in the day they start out so firmly in his ever is broken again. but as i read in print it s. it s starts with laser driven so it s faded out below. the couple is in a critical condition at salisbury hospital just a few kilometers away it s the same hospital that treated former russian spy so gay script pal and his daughter to use just four months ago after they were nearly killed by the same nerve agent. counter-terror police a leading the latest probe. we can confirm of the man a woman has been exposed to the nerve agent. which has been identified as the same or why didn t the contaminated broken and so case grow we re not been a position to say whether the nerve agent was from the side perhaps the scribbles were exposed to. the possibility that these two investigations might be linked is clearly a lot of the forty four. detectives are investigating how the couple came into contact with the nerve agent they say there s nothing in the past background to suggest they would have been deliberately targeted. police have cordoned off places the couple had been before falling ill including a church community center. joins us with more on the story from london hi barry got so the health minister says this is an after effect of the scripture poisoning tell us more about what that might mean. well there was already speculation that this could be the material that maybe has been discarded by the original attack us that tried to kill the script hols and that this is somehow been found by this couple however we don t know how they would have ingested it and also quite crucially where this would have been the police obviously trying to trace all their movements trying to find out where they have been so where could they have found this material this is the theory at the moment that they have found probably likely accidentally some of the left over a nerve agent that was still in there in the salisbury area from the scriptural attack if it was the same nova truck that was used in the script will attack what does that tell us about the clean up after that poisoning and the continuing danger in songs very my understanding is that the author it is still trying to determine whether this was from the same batch but obviously this could be could be if eerie and also we ve had the health minister and the security minister this morning saying well the risk for the general public is low but it s not zero so for people in salisbury they would be very worried because it s the fourth four people have now been subjected to this highly dangerous enough agent and they don t know where else these could be is this just a one off is this just one part of the pro death wasn t that wasn t discarded carefully enough or is there more contamination of course now this is the skill of due to the skill of the police to find out is there is there more of it and people would rightly assume that they would have cleaned up properly after the first attack so quite shocking i think for the people in salisbury and back at the home secretary job it s actually been speaking to the house of comments let s listen to what he s been saying. all the signs that have been. decontaminated following the attempted murders of surrogate and. all sorts which have been reopened have undergone rigorous testing and any items that may have harbored any residual mounts of the agent were safely removed for disposal. we have taken a very robust approach to decontamination and there is no evidence that either the man or the woman in hospital visited any of the places that were visited by the st paul s. our strong working assumption is that the couple came into contact with a nerve agent in a different location to the sites which have been part of the original cleanup operation. so better get the home secretary there saying that their approach has been robust still we re talking about a two incidents within the span of four or five months how are people in solsbury reacting well i m not sure that they would be very much reassured by where the home secretary has said because of course they have the economic you contaminated sites that they knew of but what if there are the size that they have known of so they might have retrace the steps of the square pulse but they don t know who was the perpetrator and where did they go and what it what else did they do with the material so i think the worry for the people in salisbury is really it s not over yet davies correspondent very good mass tracking the latest developments for us from london thank you very. officials in thailand are warning that rescue workers face a race against water to extract a young soccer team who have spent twelve nights in a flooded case water is being pumped out around the clock reducing the flood level by around a centimeter every hour but heavy rains are forecast and could jeopardize the complex rescue operation. under the most extraordinarily difficult and hazardous conditions volunteers pick and swim their way through this foster cave complex. it s back breaking work but they do all they can to try to clear a way through. deep inside the twelve boys and their football coach have been trapped for almost two weeks getting them out safely though it s proving an enormous challenge and with further rain expected the risk of more flooding is high . our biggest concern is the weather we ll have to assess if there will be more rainfall that could cause the water level to rise inside or calculating how much time we have if it rains how many hours and days. the boys are trapped about four kilometers from the cave entrance which is cut off by water one option would be to wait until the water recede so they can leave on foot but that could take months. teaching the boys to dive could be the fastest solution but perhaps the most dangerous and it s not clear if they can swim. rescuers are also looking for a place to drill into the chamber but that would be long and complicated. in the meantime water continues to be pumped out of the cave this nearby farmland has been flooded because of the rescue operation but the local farmers say it s a price worth paying anything to help the boys. outside the cave a makeshift camp has been set up where rescue teams into fishes gather. and inside to dozens are on hand to help saving these boys has become a twenty four hour operation and a race against time. german chancellor angela merkel and hungary s prime minister viktor orban have traded accusations over their very different views on migration during talks here in berlin merkel met with or bond as part of her efforts to win support for her tough new migration policy after their meeting merkel said she wants to protect europe s humanity regarding migrants and she criticized hungry for dodging its responsibilities or bounds of the best way to show humanity s for europe to remove incentives for migrants to come to the continent. every time i look at the quote we don t think it s fair that people in germany accuse us of lacking in solidarity circle there are eight thousand armed soldiers standing on the border twenty four hours a day for migrants on their way to germany would have to get past them first. and despite the agreement with turkey if there were no arm time carians guarding the border then four to five thousand people would come to germany on a daily basis. does that mean gosh we ll protect you from that that is solidarity full daddy bush sent them a push. more on the story now with our political correspondent thomas sparrow hi thomas good to see you it was very clear today that america and oregon still have very different views on migration how do they want to bridge their differences while obviously one element that they both highlighted was the possibility that there was a talking to each other but you re right sumi what was absolutely evident from today s press conference is the fact that they have extremely different views not only on migration issue but also on the role that the european union should play when it comes to the migrants arriving to the continent and that was absolutely clear today from the statements from viktor orban understatement from mongol merkel so it will be extremely difficult to see how they can actually achieve this ground when they have so absolutely differing views on this issue what germany needs austria s help as well for its new border plan to work thomas and that s why the interior minister of course a whole for travel to vienna to meet the austrian chancellor is about in quotes did they find common ground well that s obviously very different because if they hold wants to achieve his goals he will have to count on politicians in different e.u. countries that view the issues in a similar way to how he views them and there are politicians in both for example austria on the telly as well who see maybe eye to eye with cause they will find fact next week they re going to to meet members from the three countries to try and discuss how are these as well how it was reported how they will shut the southern migration route so obviously on the one hand you are going to motivate all done here in berlin with very different views on the other hand you have was able in austria meeting politicians that certainly do not have differing views when it comes to migration these political correspondent tom aspera reporting for us thank you thomas. not to some other stories making headlines around the world syrian and russian forces have resumed strikes against rebel held areas in the south west of syria the fresh assault comes after talks between rebel groups and russia collapsed the u.n. estimates more than three hundred thousand people have fled the fighting in daraa province it s one of the last rebel strongholds after more than seven years of war . u.s. secretary of state my pump aoe is on his way to pyongyang for talks with north korea s leader kim jong un denuclearization of the korean peninsula will be topping the agenda when the two meet on friday upon pale will then travel on to tokyo to brief his japanese and south korean counterparts and heavy rain is continuing to cause severe flooding across central and south western china and who bay province water flooded hundreds of roadside stores and what villagers described as the heaviest downpour in years local government officials evacuated residents from homes and businesses close to the city of chongqing in the southwest of the country after rains caused a major river to swell. to bend with business now in berlin and washington significantly signaling they could soft in their stances on trade mazing just on the eve of what could be a full blown trade war we ve got the german chancellor today saying she s willing to talk with germany s trading partners about reducing juvies on cause is the first signs of appeasement in this trade war the u.s. ambassador to germany holding a meeting with auto executives in berlin overnight richard grinnell said the white house would be willing to accept removing all tariffs on orders if the e.u. did the same trump is time to import levies on european cars as his next move in the trade dispute but the us president is under pressure from american business leaders who say a hike on import levies would hurt them as well. kevin heitman is director of foreign trade policy and economic development at the association of german chambers of commerce and industry to explain to us what is going on behind the scenes this is very exciting we ve only got two hours left leaders a scrambling and suddenly the u.s. ambassador holds a secret meeting in berlin with auto executives well first of all it s good they were talking about reducing terrorists not about raising tariffs any more and that s what they were talking about the issues that are ongoing right now on the war trade but on the. job an automobile manufacturers and the best that they can do it so you can unit who s doing the trade policy and of course they have to reduce the always tariffs but we ve already got merkel saying this sounds like a good idea but she s talking about from the quotes i ve seen everyone and with the whole word so not just unilaterally which by laterally but multilaterally i mean it was something that was set up in the t p p which trump scrapped. obviously his strategy is to get the best terms he can fit his country and not for the world is that how how do you read into this because he s strapped the t p p he s only interested in doing things sector by sector and country by country of course everybody wants to have the best of an agreement but it remains a complicated we need as a comprehensive agreement on all sectors for all companies on all goods and all kinds of trade barriers not only terrorists there are the trade barriers that are limiting german companies in the world so yes we need to reduce them and we need to do this in a comprehensive agreement according to the w t o laws what trump and the us administration is doing is they re doing like pilots who are deals which are courting to the only go shares are either really difficult to achieve or even even maybe not possible because they re violating the international trade laws so you think we still need a w. cio we still need those rules in place to ensure that we get fair trade as well as possibly free trade up. on stage at some time. but as far as these tariff negotiations go right now i mean this is or could be a major breakthrough what we re hearing today well it s a first step of course we want to talk about knowing terrorists and of course be can have the automobile sector alike as one pillar of a comprehensive agreement but yes we need to do this under the rules of the w t o and that means we have to include other countries who are also producing cars not only the united states is this old the result of the pressure europe has been putting on the u.s. or am i missing something here well the reason why there is right now an investigation about cars imported steel the u.s. is because the united states think they might threaten their national security and i can say that german cars who are actually produced in the united states we have. many many common effectors united states and from germany both of them japan korea who do producing in the united states and an s.u.v. from germany who is which was built in the united states doesn t affect national security so the reason behind that of cause has no grounds where you see this all heading come midnight tonight. is going to turn into a full blown trouble what happens at midnight is that we have an ongoing trade conflict between the u.s. and china and the tears that are coming of course they will affect in directly companies in the u.s. and china also john companies in both countries but also interact to affect the whole interconnected and very complicated supply chains all over the water. thank you very much for coming in today. let s go to our financial correspondent susan in frankfurt to talk about the implications of all of this on investors i mean this is complicated and confusing and there s a lot of uncertainty so i guess quite a few negatives to talk about. that s true but from a point of view of many investors the more and most important point in this report that the embassador the u.s. ambassador to germany has talked to the bosses of the car makers indicates that they have talked and that they have talked about scrapping import tariffs on both sides of the atlantic which implies to many people i talked to here but they have not talked about the potential of imposing import tariffs on german cars in the united states that s a positive and also it gives hope to people that you know eventually the americans and the europeans my corporator can of course listen to what kevin just had to say it s obvious that the negotiations will be much more complicated than you know just two sides sitting down and saying let s get rid of all those old tariffs but it s a sign of hope a silver lining because there s some hope there in frankfurt and that s mirrored in stocks today european equities putting on quite a show. absolutely the shares of the carmakers are skyrocketing here this. is a logical reaction given that the anger that the trump administration might impose import tariffs on cars had been dragging down the whole sector for a couple of weeks now big sigh of relief here they come up with an imprint. back to siri and a special report on six workers johnny thank you ben well it is estimated that there are around four hundred thousand sex workers in germany many of them are trafficked from abroad now according to german police records the majority of them come from four countries they are well many up all garia and hungary in central and eastern europe and also nigeria in africa while many of the workers are trafficked here and controlled by criminal gangs some fall into prostitution simply because of poverty he has been speaking to one romanian woman who has managed to leave behind her life as a prostitute. julia is thirty and comes from romania. she worked as a prostitute for many years sometimes having sex with ten or more men in a single night. judea left school without qualifications and was fourteen when she had the first of her two children. the money she earned in romania working as a cleaner was not enough to live on she made the decision to leave romania and look for sex work abroad detail. was good i knew it would be difficult. but it was much worse than i had imagined. the first three weeks especially work stream me hard but i kept thinking about my children and i told myself that i was there to help my family. here give us a little good luck got a lot of love still. judea worked in switzerland greece and france for the last five years she worked in the southern german city of st got. earlier this year she decided she wanted to stop working in the sex industry she had her last customer in march. women like judy i can get help at sisters association i can sing center for women who want to leave prostitution located in a nondescript building in the middle of stroke carts red light district the ngo finds part time jobs for women and gives them financial support until they are able to live independently it also provides medical assistance in the fall. and can see. it is possible for a woman to leave a brothel. as long as she does not have a pin and is not being held against her will. in the. us but it is then very difficult to find accommodation and support yourself if you are not eligible for assistance from the german state if it s only able. to close things but i used often the only option is a bus ticket back home as of interest as a smart see my live us of the. ticket in time outland. unlike many sex workers julia says she has never had a pimp she took money directly from clients only thirty euros per twenty minute session their bills. you know i mostly worked until three o clock in the morning that was as long as i could manage. but there were also women there who enjoyed it all night they drank alcohol and took drugs got high to get through it. all was. julia says the pressure never let up she had to earn up to one hundred thirty years a day just to pay for a room she also needed to send money home to her family she was hardly able to save anything she began having panic attacks and still suffers from them today. with hindsight i wouldn t do it again i kept thinking i have to look for something else but i wasn t able to find any other work like that. but i think we ll get. that. nigeria s working as a cleaner again she found the job with the help of the sisters center she says she s proud of herself and she relished throwing away the clothes to use to wear to meet clients. judy it was one of many used in european women working in god s red light district there are no exact numbers available the streets are abandoned by day but at night dozens of neon signs try to lure customers in. julia has left that world behind when she looked at old photographs she says she feels like a different person. conrad worked on that report and she joins us in our studio to tell us more i know you know me thanks for joining us how difficult was it to find someone who was willing to share their experiences like julia it was it extremely difficult i mean it took us several weeks and i mean that s obvious usenets right on sometimes the families back home don t know what these women are doing and sometimes they re forced into prostitution which obviously makes access incredibly difficult julio was prepared to share her story but tellingly she didn t want us to use her real name so that s quite indicative of how difficult it is to get hold of a prostitute tell us more about how this business is organized in europe but also in germany so it s basically a lot of the women are self-employed lease if they have to pay for rooms we had in the report is a hundred thirty euros a night which you have to pay whether you have enough clients or not so that makes about four thousand euros you have to make every month just to pay for the room but a lot of the people who are organizing these criminal groups often hells angels other violent gangs who are organized internationally women all move from one brothel to the next from one country to the next making it increased difficult to track them to find out where women are and another big development at the moment is that a lot of the trade is moving online so himself offering women online there being you could almost say bought and sold online which means that we don t really know what the figures are these women are it s possible that a lot of miners are being offered online so it s making it harder to monitor harder to track it s important to know that prostitution is legal in germany why is that yes it was made in two thousand and two it was basically turned into any other profession which means that women can register and they can pay into the social insurance benefits system which a lot of movement is only a very small minority of women who do this. very stressful that one is that a lot of the women in the sex trade. a lot of them are from east europe they re some african women so it s in tragically difficult for them to register and a lot of them the ones who are forced into prostitution obviously don t have the means and resources to do so so the idea was to bring prostitution away from the black market has that worked then no it hasn t i mean it s incredibly difficult to get hold of figures that all the figures we have are estimates but. no face this approach didn t work and there s a lot of the debates about what germany can do now has germany considered the swedish approach which is to punish those who purchased affect the not those who sell it yes there s a lot of debate around that and that s actually what a lot of the engine is that help women leave prostitution what they want the problem is that the that there s a very strong a well financed lobbying organizations they get a lot of money from brothels which is obviously we have to remember that this is a million euro industry it s very lucrative and they re putting a lot of pressure on on politics politicians to keep the model as it is because it s very lucrative and from their point of view it s working very well right you don t use naomi conrad assuring her reporting with us naomi thank you very much. and still to come the world cup kiss reigniting a social media debate on sexual harassment some users say there s a double standard. that story coming right up on the to the news. a mystery of the stone. giant artworks that still captivated today. thousands of years ago. but why. and what do they reveal about the people who make the. forty five minutes of the first. we make up over three quarters of a fifth of the and up budget we are the sum of some of the stuff. they want to shape the continent s future to be part of it and join us dumpsters because they share their stories their dreams and their challenges the seventy seven percent platform for africa charting movement fighting for decades to be taken seriously in the words of what appears has come out. of this talk gone d.w. though they do see the film superhero on a mission to change out to some of the smart women spots smart talks smart struck a ledge and isn t by no means missed out on a brain creasing ling dangerous stuff tough tough job to make. time for an upgrade. how about funding sure that grows on buying. a house with no roof. gore does. hard like break your so. stupid tricks that will turn your special. upgrade yourself with g w interior design channel on you tube. welcome back you re watching d w news coming up in the next fifteen minutes a hundred and seventy million cameras watching your every move and digitally tracking where you go this is a glimpse of the facial recognition technology being pioneered in china is this a tool for public safety or is it control we ll have a report but first sexual harassment in sports it s taken center stage at this year s football world cup after a number of female sports reporters have been sexually harassed in sons of the camera including our very own juliet going southwest head on now you might have seen the video of her being sexually harassed while doing her job this video went viral and triggered widespread condemnation from social media users you see it then received a message from her harasser apologizing for what he had done now a video of a south korean male reporter being kissed by a female fan on camera has reignited the debate around sexual harassment at the world cup let s take a look at that video you can see john one a reporter for a south korean t.v. channel here you see him reporting in russia being kissed on the cheek twice by female russian fans now lot of social media users on way boat that is china s largest social networking site are asking why the actions of female fans are not criticized in the same way as their male counterparts let s take a look at the debate one user saying just some while ago a female journalist got kissed by a male football fan and everyone condemned it and this time i think they should be seen as sexual harassment as well another user asked to those who are saying that this isn t sexual harassment have the fans asked for the journalists permission another user saying poor men women. can sexually harass men but when it s the other way around it is absolutely forbidden now that is just one part of the debate remember you can always be part of it as well we asked users on our twitter page what they thought of the incident so please do let us know what you think at the handle below and we ll be looking also at another aspect of soccer sexism women under attack for commentating the world cup that s coming up in just a few minutes now to china where at least sixteen cities municipalities and provinces are using a surveillance system that tracks people digitally the system has reportedly led to the arrests of more than two thousand people in two years all of them identified using seychelle recognition technology it is part of the approximately one hundred seventy million closed circuit cameras that are already installed in the country our correspondent went to the city of shenzhen bordering hong kong to see how the tracking system works. catch a cab in the southern chinese metropolis of show and. like me you can expect to be watched taxes here are gradually gaining close circuit t.v. cameras installed above their rearview mirrors. but i think it s ok it improves safety for both drivers and passengers will be more than half of all taxis are already c.c.t.v. monitored the pictures are transmitted live to the transit authority here please can see which driver the vehicle is registered with and what s happening in it at all times using facial recognition software or thirty s can also lead to track what route a certain passenger took. to the park we don t see passenger privacy is an issue. these are the private vehicles but modes of transport that are available to the public and they re used by different people for that reason we ve concluded that there permissible in china cameras watch over nearly or public spaces using surveillance software created by companies such as magazine the startup in beijing it s software can identify objects on mistreated and recognize movement patterns or faces the technology has long outdone the human eye on accuracy company spokesperson and religion said. the security services system analyzes facial features and compares them with the database. as soon as a camera catches my features the system looks for my photo in the database and then automatically shows my name and all the information it has about me just because there wasn t a tradition she did that china s authorities keep secret exactly whose data they enter in the database but regime critic jungly fun is highly likely to feature he s been surveyed for years. up with as high as you are they no longer send agents to trail you the unpleasant feeling of having someone following you around has gone instead they use technology you have lee notice but don t let yourself be fooled this still there it s like in george orwell s novel nine hundred eighty four. i want to know just how accurate the software is a transit authority employee takes a photo of me and uploads it into the system then images from six taxis appear mine is not among them. so they work but all of the foreigners to this man looks of it like you i think of you maybe we just need more down to from foreigners to improve accuracy. even here in china surveillance systems are not perfect but the country is working hard to fix that. more on the story now with sophie richardson the china director for human rights watch is joining us from washington hi sophie good to see you now one hundred seventy million cameras already in place more than four hundred fifty million on the way there are plans to equip all of these cameras with facial recognition technology how worrying is this i think it s extremely worrying it s important to start from the base the understanding that there are almost no actionable privacy rights in china to begin with and on top of that you have to add in that as your piece pointed out many people don t even know that they re actually in surveilled and even those who do know or object to it have almost no ability to take the case to court or write a petition to local authorities or to a company or challenge the government over these practices probably without running serious risks to themselves how many people do object to it because china does have a different relationship to privacy rights. well i would say the chinese government has a different relationship the privacy rights that other more rights respecting governments do it s very hard to know what the general sense is don t mess to clean you know it s hard to it s hard i think to say that people all of don t care about a particular right when they ve never really had the opportunity to enjoy it in the first place there how been instances in the last year of consumers objecting when their data when when private companies data collection practices have been breached and certainly critics people left on the front have explained what s at stake for down individually that they can be tracked that their activities can be monitored so i think there is real objection as we saw in a report the comfrey company representatives we spoke to said that this facial recognition technology is actually helping to keep people safe do you agree but i think the government really hasn t made that case china has for a long time had a very low crime rate and so to suggest that hoovering up massive quantities of personal data off and without letting people know somehow makes the population safer i think is at best a debatable proposition i think there s also the reality that forcibly collecting data from people as we ve documented for example in synch on can actually profoundly alienate them and produce certain kinds of problems that that the state perhaps did not have in mind the so i think there s a lot more information the government needs to provide before i think that becomes the credible basis for programs like this and tell us more sophia about the type of opposition we ve seen to this facial recognition technology in china itself. well i mean people have certainly objected to the idea that you know that that they cannot spend time in public places without any reasonable hope of privacy you know it s one thing if you re walking down the street and you observe a security or surveillance camera for example but increasingly people are talking about cameras installed for example in places of worship or in places like libraries or even in classrooms you know where they can be watched all the time without any clarity about who is doing the watching what kind of behavior is problematic and i think the natural human impulse is to behave in a way that you think the authorities want you to do and i think that s what the authorities have in mind wander to work as to is to essentially make people feel that they re always being watched sophie richardson china director for human rights watch joining us from washington d.c. sophie thank you very much thank you to india now where the western a state of mind has introduced a ban on single use plastic now regular offenders face of three month prison sentence and fines of up to twenty five thousand rupees around three hundred fifty dollars while environmentalists have hailed this as a positive step many observers say the rules around the ban aren t clear and implementation remains a challenge because reports from mumbai. a beach littered with plastic spat out by a seat that can t take much more. it s a site that s come to symbolize the scale of plastic pollution in mumbai where waste management systems continue to fall short but these residents of the city are trying to do they have been. for close to three years they ve gathered here on weekends to clean up this beach. their leader throw shop is a lawyer by training not environmentalist. but after moving into the neighborhood he grew tired of seeing the state of the environment around him and took matters into his own hands. for me i have to connect with the need to think of going to the wish to do that i do not i shall talk to people who come and then people come by choice why should anybody shandong opinion you should feel there s a problem and i can get do was it may be flawed argument. shah s approach has slowly gathered steam. the movement is now in its one hundred forty second week and is attracted volunteers from all walks of life. it s also offered employment to about thirty five workers who keep efforts going during the week. approach shots says his beach cleanup have cleared around fifteen thousand tons of plastic but it s only just beginning to scratch the surface of the problem activists now hope a recent government ban on single use plastics here in mumbai will help further change of mindset. in the city governments and plastics was a key to the effort clouded blue death squads work in markets throughout the city to enforce the new banners and raise awareness about plastic pollution. there s a lot of confusion here about what s banned and what s not but the empty plastic squad is looking to make it clear one time use carry bags are a particular focus of attention. some shopkeepers and customers a heeding the call shifting to bags made out of cloth or jus. going out to the other shopkeepers should stop using plastic and spend a little more money for cloth bags they are much better and reusable plastic is harmful for everyone. but not everyone is on board vendors at this market say the ban is hitting their bottom line and that plastic bags are the only viable option during the ongoing monsoon season by. a customer who buys five lemons can put them in his pocket but if he buys fifty he can carry them in his hands he needs a bag with cloth bag he buys ten lemons for ten rupees it doesn t work for us to give him a bag with two or three rupees. i m not the only one that since the ban customers have not been buying vegetables from us they won t take it wrapped in paper customers want bags they say their stuff gets wet in the rain and spoil. the loving mom and we love him but you know how to get that step richard. the resistance the plastic bag his face isn t a surprise but he knows the mindset changes required to get more people off single use plastic will take time. until then he and his team are moving their campaign beyond the beach to businesses across the city. to do their efforts this restaurant has invested in about twenty of these really usable bags for food deliveries. shies confident more will soon follow suit and in doing so also help deliver a cleaner future for mumbai. now fans in russia are looking forward to the quarter finals of the world cup meanwhile supporters in japan have welcome home there were turning heroes the blue samurai were knocked out of the tournament and dramatic fashion by belgium on monday despite their defeat in the last sixteen there over. well performance was considered a huge success and they were greeted concrete at narita airport by screaming hand after landing coach acura machina and the captain quit the has to be announced they would be stepping down from the national team. now can women come and take men s football and this age of increasing a quality that should be in unnecessary question but too many football fans and even sports professionals are asking it and worse we have our social media editor jared wait with us to tell us more about this jared this is two thousand and eighteen you think it would be no issue for women to be reporting on and involved in this event or you d think so but seeing and hearing women calling the game commentating live matches is still a relatively rare thing and in germany there s a really big conversation around that at the moment because of claudio noirmont who we re going to see shortly on the hill there she is she is the first woman to commentate a men s world cup on german television and she s doing a very good job she s a very experienced reporter through nothing other been doing her job she s attracted an enormous amount of hate and miso jenny online here is one of the milder tweets that was sent to claudia newman it s a disgrace to allow a woman to commentate she is terrible person right but instead of her employer right back with this reply claudia newman has been been doing live football for us she brings expertise and a huge amount of experience there s no reason to call her competence into question yesterday claudia norman spoke about this too did cite newspaper she had this to say we can see that hiya with this advice you can only cite a big people over and over go to a school longa get more education expand your horizons so you can learn to tolerate others this is not a cloudy annoying one problem it s society s problem and in fact said her employer is taking legal action against two of the people that targeted her online that as we know you know social media is always a hotbed for. hate as well can we chalk this up to bottom trolls or is there more to it well there is a bit more to it we just saw earlier in the show people attacking our own door chevelle a reporter and other women reporters out there doing their job commentating at the world cup but i guess even more just hotly is the attitude of some of these women s coley questioning their credentials people like my british t.v. sports journalist elton will be he tweeted hiya football cricket and what he describes as lady commentary it is just not good enough he says it s not six ism it s not it s about knowledge and above all delivery and voice control and we just see these ridiculous and frankly false statements being peddled again and again criticising women for how they sound when they come into. criticising their reporting and how they pronounce complicated playing names for example criticisms that you d bet that account of pots would very rarely attract troubling indeed what is the positive the silver lining that we can take away from all of this there is some silver lining a recent poll for dish spiegel magazine found almost seventy percent of germans or respondents to this poll thought it was a positive thing that a woman was in a rising games at the world cup on the other side on the ground in russia according to feed just fourteen percent of old via credit to journalists there are women so there is still definitely more work to be done all right our social media editor jared reed thank you for bringing us the story. well the world cup in russia has been as much about the fans as it has been about the teams or the commentators they ve come from all over the world to watch the tournament bringing vibrancy and color to moscow and other host cities for some it wouldn t be a party without a special outfit with all the trio of fans who want to stand out from the rest of the crowd. that these three fans want to dress to impress. on affecting the budget if not the funds come to us before the game they want to show their love for their teams with these costumes. the employees of this shop have been busy with fans for three weeks they don t just rent out the costumes they make them in the house and for football fans there s a discount twenty percent off that they have costumes really put us in the party mood when i go out dressed like this so i feel like i m in brazil because you do want to keep. this isn t rio it s moscow a city that s not known for its openness and party spirit that makes it all the more surprising how quickly the joyful world cup atmosphere has taken off and spread through the city. here the result of the match is secondary to the party which rolls on twenty four hours a day. nikolai dimitri and dempsey have arrived at the fam fest in front of moscow s state university they quickly catch the attention of other fans. this significant an amazing feeling like being at a real conical yeah then we re not worried i picked the wrong cost you know i have to act strict and serious but here the party s holding up but as this episode outs and it went on until late into the night. at the end of this tournament only one color will remain that s of the winner until then the fans are enjoying a sea of color in moscow. now north and south korean basketball players took part in their first friendly game in fifteen years on wednesday in pyongyang two joint north south teams took to the court a team piece facing team prosperity north korean leader and basketball fan kim jong un had suggested the friendly match to south korean president during their first summit in april but neither leader was in attendance the game in the north korean capital conveniently ended in a draw with the scores level at one hundred two to one hundred two. now the french filmmaker claude lanzmann best known for the acclaimed holocaust documentary shoah has died at his home in paris after a short on us he was ninety two when we had robin merrill from our culture desk writing he was still working right up till the end is actually his death comes just one day after his latest film has been released in french cinemas is called four sisters and it could almost be an addition or an epi log if you like to his world famous documentaries shoah because it is for holocaust survivors for women who are holocaust survivors telling their stories and that s of course what his monumental it s knowing in the hall as long show up and it s an oral history of the holocaust using only first person testimony you testimony from victims and perpetrators has actually and there s no it s there s no archival footage there s no historical film there it s all films you know filmed at the time in the one nine hundred eighty s. actually with with the victims and the hundred three hundred sixty hours of on edited footage that was that he compiled during the eleven years he took tomatoes from now actually held by the united states holocaust my map memorial museum in washington d.c. so anyway let s find out a little bit more about his filmmaking career. brutal laws man style the french filmmaker persuaded the man thread nick a polish jew to return with him to the place of the home of concentration camp in west poland. the former inmate sang a song he was forced to sing to amuse the s.s. guards joe. as a young boy threatening worked at the death camp pulverizing the bones of chromatic bodies and dumping them in a river. the epic documentary show of unflinching witness to the holocaust it contains no archival footage no musical school just the landscape trains and recounted memories for the twelve year long labor of love took a heavy toll on last man s life but he never lost sight of his goal of finishing the film. did he see how. it s different. to be able to work for twelve years on a film. you have to find a way to make time stand still for you. it stood still for me. even though in reality it kept on going. in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight television reporting on the israeli army in the sinai peninsula led to his first film israel why is he said it last fall is also known for the memoir the patagonian hare in which he detailed his experiences in the french resistance as a young man his friendship with john paul sartre and his friendship and love affair with simone de beauvoir he also published the newspaper s little modern founded by and son trend the one nine hundred fifty s. and twenty thirteen revisited the holocaust with the last of the young just a documentary set into reason start getting. six. it s a very beautiful film a very strong feel i say that because it s true it s got nothing to do with vanity like somebody it s i ve got an objective soul. you know nugent of soul who helped his subjects bear witness to some of the darkest periods in history. and it must be said the shower is the definitive record of the holocaust i think celebrated by critics he also received many awards for it he did indeed. some of the critics are in there are a number of critics who said it was a great his documentary film i m a huge you know the rotten tomatoes web site you know which is a website which gauges nagra gates and put some old together he s got a hundred percent on there i wouldn t mention boston to boston except he s got one hundred percent you know nobody s criticize it badly he got many awards though not an oscar perhaps nine off that was too much for the academy to consider who knows but more recently in twenty thirteen he actually came here it s a balance of the film festival and he was given an honorary gold. for his definitive work which actually had its first showing the film festival in one thousand nine hundred eighty five and while he spoke five years ago to receive their would we spoke to him about the film. neither a feature film nor a documentary on all issues. the film can really be categorized as exist. and it doesn t belong in any particular genre. in a documentary you use material that already exists such as an audio material or moving images but with shoah what already existed was a story of annihilation and one that left behind no trace. french filmmaker. in paris at the age of ninety two thank you for watching. the boat. the been. going to. the be. the big mystery of the stone movie giant ark one that still captivate the be thousands of years ago. but why the boom what do they reveal about the people who make. the job above. board more. thank you phil. happening don t you a bit of sleep come. your link to scream africa and the world. your link to it simpson stories and discussions can you unload some student news separately from family life from for an example from the news of these events and i would say d w it comes to africa join us on facebook at g.w. cover costs. clash of cultures in india. a clash between those who believe in arranged marriage those who want to replace the clash that shaking families and society to the core of. the local codes starts july eighth g.w. . they live to serve pledge danger lurks in the world we were the only old surf. waste and move and polluted water left. leg basically just a simple as well as a back up affiliation lol i would love to help. it s really nice it s sad to go somewhere every day and see more and more proficient china the scene gives me everything the way the women have to give something back or else i feel obliged to a certain. point waves surfers fighting against unseen pollution in the sea starts july fourteenth on w. plates . another. deadly nerve agent told british soil police say the pair in critical condition after being exposed to no beach developed in the soviet union on the. after effects of the recent attack on a former russian spy in. both the progress. of the migration say yes but now german chancellor angela merkel is calling on congress prime minister. to back the line on asylum and bring you the latest from those top.

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Ana Cabrera 20180819



counsel john mcgahn has cooperated. his attempts to fire mueller. cnn s ryan noble where he spent the weekend. how is the white house handling this new york times report. reporter: trying to make the indication they were fine with the lawyer. wanted a full transparent accounting. a new report out contradicting that claim. and that they don t definitively know what don mcgahn told the team. take a listen. we have a good sense of what mr. mcgahn testified. how do you say good sense? have you debriefed them? no. but he talked to him at the time. you don t know what he testified to to mr. mueller. through john dowd we have a good sense of it. and i will use his words. that mcgahn was a strong witness for the president. reporter: you can see how rudy giuliani wavered a bit. they have not fully debriefed mcgahn. the lawyers representing don mcgahn provided them with a short outline. now, the president continues to insist that there is nothing to see here. this is fnot a bad thing for hi and legal prospects. he tweeted this, the failing new york times wrote a fake piece today. he must be a john dean type rat. but i allowed him and all others to testify because i didn t have to, even though i didn t have to, i have nothing to hide. speaking of dean, he is a central figure. he responded on twitter saying nixon knew he was meeting with prosecutors because i told them. this is how this applies to this current situation. we know the white house doesn t have a full handle. his attorneys have said repeatedly that he has told the truth in every instance. so exactly what he says could play an important role as to how the robert mueller investigation continues further. thank you for that report. i talked to john dean last hour about the president s tweet going after him, calling him a rat. and his response, here is what he told me about president trump. i did respond in a tweet that i don t think that trump understands what s going on. we know he is somebody who does not really reveal his full factual problems with his attorneys. they have to sort of find it out the hard way. so i suspect there was no indication in any of this reporting that mcgahn was briefed or debriefed before he went in or came out. they don t really know what he told the special counsel. and i can tell you this, even if he didn t go in with the intent to incriminate the president, just giving the president or putting everything in a time line for the special counsel is just invaluable information. joining us now is cnn legal analy analyst. so paul, do you agree with john dean that trump likely has no idea what mcgahn said and he likely gave investigators invaluable information. i think that is clear as day. especially with this crazy dispute we are having. with rudy giuliani just telling the truth doesn t protect you from perjury because what is the truth. i suspect mcgahn might have been revealing the truth in his interview with mueller and now they don t know what he said in particular about what the president might have said with the conversation with comey. and i think they are very, very worried about this. you have to remember that he is counsel to the white house. so he is not personal counsel to the president. his interest is representing the white house as a governmental entity whereas giuliani represents the president personally. and mcgahn himself has a lawyer. where he said he thought it was insane that the president didn t try to fight his interview. mcgahn talked to investigators about his comments and actions during james comey s firing. and about trump s attempts to fire mueller. does that sound to you like a strong witness for the president? it doesn t sound like one to me. it sounds like an important witness for robert mueller. very few people were in the room for some of these conversations. we heard reporting that the president acted in an enraged fashion. blew up at attorney general jeff sessions for recusing himself. in fact there was an original letter that was penned by steven miller reportedly at the president s election that don mcgahn edited and provided comments on. he was involved in the reasoning and the decisions that were made that were going to be central to the investigation. the president has done a number of things that appear like they are tried to impede the investigation. and we read about them in the newspapers but you can t throw a newspaper in front of the jury if you are mueller. you need to have eyewitnesss. 30 plus hours of interview what the president did, and what the president said that going to be important testimony. and thus they argue it is even more reason why trump doesn t need to speak to mueller because they are getting the answers from other people. is that a val lids argument? the president he is adding something new to the investigation. what is bizarre here, is that normally a client and a lawyer sits down and says this is what i am going to talk to the prosecutor about. he would debrief the next lawyer about everything that has been revealed. but this bungling legal team seems not to be talking to each other. she are shooting in the dark now and that being the case, there is no way trump will ever speak to mueller since they don t know what mcgahn said to mueller. what is he talking about? you know, it is hard to tell, sometimes what the president is talking about. robert mueller is not only lawfully appointed. he is acting within his authority and he appears to be acting just like any other federal prosecutor is. gathering evidence, using subpoenas and search warrants in a lawful fashion. all have been upheld in court. all of manafort s motions have been denied. going through the process. from what i see is i see a justice system working when i look at robert mueller, joe mccarthy was someone who was engaged in improper accusations. so i don t see the comparison at all. i found that attack by the president as totally bizarre. counsel was a guy named roy cohen who the president said was his favor lawyer. and if the mccarthy commission was so reprehensible why would you hire the reprehensible lawyer to represent you. i don t know how the president would answer that question. my head is spinning. good to have you both with us. thank you so much. let s talk political fallout. ladies, it has been a whirlwind week. first the omarosa tapes. then the white house announcements. and then we heard don mcgahn is cooperating extensively. all of this happening with paul manafort s verdict imminent. caitlin, are any of these political winners for the president? what a slow news summer that we are having. it is hard to remember sometimes and keep track. the president in each of these cases has been weighing in in real time wasting his opinions. and brennan, revoking his security clearance was reaction to omarosa tapes. and we have seen the president tweet multiple times today and yesterday and the previous days weighing in on an investigation that is still on-going and we know it includes the president s own tweets. and all of the efforts that he and the white house makes, we are cooperating fully. this needs to be over. and yet still condemns the investigation and raises more questions about the obstruction part. the paul manafort trial is the first test of the special counsel team. how important is this trial to the president and the outcome? i think it is a bit mixed. paul manafort is on trial for things that are unrelated to the donald trump campaign. but that doesn t matter. i have to say one of the things that i found shocking in reading that new york times piece is the white house has handed over a million documents to the special counsel office. spent 30 hours talking to don mcgahn. and one paragraph that says they don t think they have talked to don mcgahn at all during what happened during the campaign. everyone says, and the president likes this narrative, this witch hunt about whether the trump campaign colluded with russians. that is how it started. but as soon as the president fired his fbi director and said on television, he was doing it because of russia, it became about something else. the president is his own worst enemy. and omarosa started because the president tweeted about her. it would be interesting if what comes out of this has nothing to do with what happened in the campaign. the new york times reporting that they were talking to him about the obstruction of justice case. so that would tie directly into the president himself. and pointing to what paul was talking about, the difference between having his own attorney, that is a significant difference because we know the white house counsel is privy to all sorts of information. things that we might not even know about, the firing of james comey was the most public of that. and so all of these things that he has seen in the white house that he would perhaps be asked about, the white house not knowing exactly the extent of those hours and hours and hours of those conversations. certainly has to raise alarm bells in and of itself. we have rudy giuliani on tv today suggesting there is no objective truth. roll it. i m not going to be rushed into having him testify so he ge gets trapped into perjury. and when you tell me he is going to testify because he is going to tell the truth, that is silly, because that is somebody s version of the truth. truth is truth. truth isn t truth. the president of the united states says i didn t. mr. mayor, do you realize this is going to become a bad meme. don t do this to me, us. kelly jane? as someone who agrees in philosophy, i am glad to see some philosophical discussion. he had an interest point, he made it in a typical rudy way which is that the truth is the truth, we agree with that. what he was trying to say is how do you decide what is truth when you have competing versions of the truth. i hope that was the truth. competing narratives, how do you figure out who is telling the truth. and in a way it is about authority. who do we believe? james comey or the president? and then john brennan, michael flynn, one we would think would be an upstanding guy, and he pled guilty under mueller thing. so just because somebody is in a high place in our political system, doesn t mean we shouldn t question them. questioning the notion of truth though, is something this white house has been doing when they go after the media, after journalist, they try to attack the facts. right, exactly and any other circumstances, a client of giuliani or a lawyer would not want that person to go out and say what exactly giuliani has said. it raises its own headlines. this is a white house where the president has been trying to work the public relation elements. and when you look at the polling, it seems to be having effect particularly among republicans and his base but also starting with the general public and that is what they are trying to do here it seems. and giuliani going out there every other day it seems trying to muddy the water more and trying to question the truth. thank you ladies. a husband and father is under arrest for the killing of his wife and two children. the positive motive next. you are live in the cnn newsroom. kind never had to. we choose real ingredients like almonds, peanuts and a drizzle of dark chocolate. find your favorite and give kind® a try. hundred roads named park in the u.s. it s america s most popular street name. but allstate agents know that s where the similarity stops. if you re on park street in reno, nevada, the high winds of the washoe zephyr could damage your siding. and that s very different than living on park ave in sheboygan, wisconsin, where ice dams could cause water damage. but no matter what park you live on, one of 10,000 local allstate agents knows yours. now that you know the truth, are you in good hands? everything was so fresh in the beginning. but that plug quickly faded. luckily there s new febreze plug. it cleans away odors and freshens for 1200 hours. breathe happy with new febreze plug. hais not always easy. severe plaque psoriasis it s a long-distance run and you have the determination to keep going. humira has a proven track record of being prescribed for over ten years. it s the #1 prescribed biologic by dermatologists. more than 250,000 patients have chosen humira to fight their psoriasis. and they re not backing down. for most patients clearer skin is the proof. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma have happened, as have blood, liver and nervous system problems. serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you ve been to areas where certain fungal infections are common and if you ve had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don t start humira if you have an infection. join over 250,000 people who have chosen humira. ask your dermatologist about humira & go. sharper vision, without limits. days that go from sun up to sun down. a whole world in all its beauty. three innovative technologies for our ultimate in vision, clarity, and protection. together in a single lens. essilor ultimate lens package. purchase the essilor ultimate lens package and get a second pair of qualifying lenses free. essilor. better sight. better life. f colorado prosecutors have one more day to charge a denver area man in the death of his pregnant wife and two young daughters. the bodies were found in an oil exchange. the body of the mother shannan watts. correspondent joins us from frederick, colorado. lots of questions surrounding this request and the judge s denial. what can you tell us? reporter: the defense made this specific request 20 minutes before the autopsies of the three victims were scheduled on friday. this request was for specific dna samples to be taken from the victims. they wanted samples from the little girls ands and shannan s neck. well, when the judge received this request, he essentially said, i am not going to tell the medical examiner s office how to do their job. it is not so say it was not collected on their own volition. but the judge did deny that particular request. the results have not been shared publicly. shannan watts shared that she had health challenges. she struggled with the disease lupus. what can you tell us about that and what else was happening in their lives prior to this horrific crime. reporter: she shared so much of her life on social media. you c you can see photos of them vacationing on the beach. and also sharing personal moments like that moment we have all seen now of her telling her husband that she was pregnant with their third child. we learned that her little girl celeste suffered from allergy problems and bella had to see a chi chiropractor. she used products giving her more energy and focus. this product gave her the energy to wake up at 4:00 a.m. and begin completing items of her to do list. we learned through court documents that this family had its share of financial struggles that she seemed to have hid. in 2015 shannan filed for bankruptcy. turns out they had a little over $70,000 in dead. that mostly made up of student debt and credit card purchases. in the all couple of years, that bankruptcy filing happening about three years ago, they seemed to have been working that i way out of it. but in the course of this investigation, you know this is something that will be scrutinized by those looking into their past and what could have led us here. thank you. and now this beak s before the bell. here is christine romans. hi. an important deadline this week in america s trade war with china. thursday is when the u.s. will be collecting those tariffs. beijing said it would strike back dollar for dollar just like they did last month. each trade headlines captivating wall street. now previous rounds have failed to find a break through. but investors have keep trying. important data on new and existing home sales. housing has been a weak spot in an otherwise strong economy. home sales dropped. and locking out many potential buyers. lower morgtgage rates could hel. down the past few weeks. currency crisis in turkey have been pushing. yields fall, and that pushes those mortgage rates lower. in new york, i am christine romans. announcer: before the bell is brought to you by e trade. the original place to invest online. go to cnn/before the bell to stay on top of the markets and sign up for the daily news letter. do you want $4.95 commissions for stocks, $0.50 options contracts? $1.50 futures contracts? what about a dedicated service team of trading specialists? did you say yes? good, then it s time for power e trade. the platform, price and service that gives you the edge you need. looks like we have a couple seconds left. let s do some card twirling twirling cards e trade. the original place to invest online. overwhelming air fresheners can send you running. so try febreze one. with no aerosols and no heavy perfumes. so you can spray and stay. febreze one. our new, hot, fresh breakfast will get you the readiest. (buzzer sound) holiday inn express. be the readiest. but how do i know if i m i m getting a good deal? i tell truecar my zip and which car i want and truecar shows the range of prices people in my area actually paid for the same car so i know if i m getting a great price. this is how car buying was always meant to be. this is truecar. ayep, and my teeth are yellow.? time for whitestrips. crest glamorous white whitestrips are the only ada-accepted whitening strips proven to be safe and effective. and they whiten 25x better than a leading whitening toothpaste. crest. healthy, beautiful smiles for life. sometimes you need an expert. i got it. and sometimes those experts need experts. on it. [ crash ] and sometimes the expert the expert needed needs insurance expertise. it s all good. steve, you re covered for general liability. and, paul, we got your back with workers comp. wow, it s like a party in here. where are the hors d oeuvres, right? [ clanking ] tartlets? we cover commercial vehicles, too. i think there s something wrong with your sink. we cover commercial vehicles, too. 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! for a limited time, when you get fast, reliable internet, you can add voice for just $24.95 more per month. call or go online today. call or go on line today. iran s foreign minister says the u.s. has a disease, an addiction to sanctions. coming from an exclusive interview to cnn. he was a key architect of the deal and his comments follow president trump s threats of severe consequence. cnn senior international correspondent joins us. nick, what did the foreign minister tell you? reporter: quite clear in his mind two things. one, that he hopes desperately that the european allies that also signed the deal donald trump pulled out of will somehow convince the white house of going along with it. actually, he says they have been bullied into the position they currently stand in. and secondly, his extraordinary doubts about how trust worthy a negotiating partner donald trump may be. we have seen the first wave of sanctions that were as ysuspend snap back in. here is what they had to say about the u.s. s attitude toward sanctions. i believe there is a disease in the united states. and that is the addiction to sanctions. even during the obama administration, the united states put more emphasis on keeping the sanctions that it had not lifted rather than implementing its obligations on the sanctions that they lifted. reporter: why did you go ahead with the deal? that may have been one of the mistakes, but the problem was that we felt that the united states had learned that this as far as iran was concerned, sanctions do produce economic hardship but do not produce the political outcomes that they intended them to produce. and i thought that the americans had learned that lesson. unfortunately i was wrong. reporter: he was speaking on the 65th anniversary. he subjected that the u.s. current government has a similar mindset than back in the 50s. as a result of iran putting in difficult measures to get ready for the likely tougher times ahead. make no mistake, difficult terms for diplomacy. a moderate like mr. zarif feels betrayed. thank you for that report. our colleague jack tapper did digging into that stunning assault allegations report. why one of the most powerful catholics in the nation, the archbishop of washington is under high scrutiny for the way he handled the allegations. 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(vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. just in, the arch diocese has defrocked two priest. new developments in that as well. the pennsylvania attorney general who came out swinging last week with a massive report on predatory priest. now donald wuerl not telling the truth. repeatedly mentioned in that pennsylvania report as one of the bishops who helped conceal the abusive behavior. cnn s jake tapper weighs the criticism with what the cardinal claims in his defense. sunday morning was the first mass here since this pennsylvania grand jury report detailing allegations of wide spread predatory behaviors. i am standing here at st. matthews cathedral, before donald wuerl was hosting popes in this town he was bishop for 18 years and named throughout this report as one of the bishops to help cover up the crimes. this week in his defense, the cardinal said the report confirms that i acted with diligence. the pennsylvania attorney general well, he disagrees. telling me exclusively cardinal wuerl is not telling the truth. many statements are directly contradicted by the church s own documents. i think i did everything i possibly could. two former group of priests who the grand jury found manufactured pornography. arrested and charged with more than 130 counts related to sex abuse. removed from his ministry before wuerl came. that included a hush agreement. the diocese hired a doctor who worked with him to lessen the sentence. the diocese under wuerl helped to secure zula. was aware of complaints against him. addition complaints include in 1985 and 1981. however, he continued to function as a priest during this. despite all of this evidence, a spokesman for wuerl says he acted promptly. we reacted immediately. really? dated back to the early 1960s. and he was shuffled from parish to pairish. even though the pittsburg diocese knew of his past. wuerl s defenders note that he disciplined priests. the report notes that wuerl had written to the vatican. and parishioners had a right to know. in a statement he notes he acted promptly when he learned of them. the grand jury disagreed writing quote, the clear and present threat that he posed to children was hidden. wuerl s statements had been meaningless. these are three stories from a report in which wuerl s name was mentioned 170 times. the cardinal claims to answer to a higher authority. when will he answer on this earth for allegedly covering up crimes against children? jake tapper cnn washington. do social media companies discriminate? are they making decisions on what you see based on political bias? the ceo of twitter is responding to those questions and claims by critics. you are live in the cnn room. but allstate actually helps you drive safely. with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast. .and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can t do anything about that. now that you know the truth. are you in good hands? 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he s asking the right questions and he has regrets about how twitter has constructed itself and policed itself in the past. i don t think he s at the solutions phase yet. he is saying the right things. we re not seeing the action yet. for example, dorsey is saying, look, some of the fundamental aspects of twitter, like liking tweets and follower counts, we re going to rethink all of that. he says we re willing to question everything about our platform. it s really interrogatory hear a tech ceo saying that. maybe we built this house wrong. maybe there are problems with the foundation. but it s one thing to question that. it s another thing to get answers. i think he s not the answer stage yet. i think what he s trying to do is show more transparency at a time when people up to donald trump are questioning twitter s actions, accusing the company of censorship. he said we re absolutely not censoring people based on politics. we need to do a better job explaining our rules. it s like saying we didn t know what we were getting ourselves into when we went down this path. which i think mark zuckerberg set as well. that s what i was thinking. the other thing that stands out to me is the fact that he hasn t done many interviews. yeah. dorsey. and, again, we saw that with zuckerberg as well. really staying out of the limelight until there is a pr crisis. do you think this is what that is? i mean he s talking to you now, dorsey is talking to you and the new york times. is this damage control? there is an element of pr response and also response to political pressure. you know, these guy has to testify on capitol hill about russian interference in the election. they ll be back on capitol hill next month and right now dorsey is under pressure to come and testify about alleged censorship as well. so they are fighting multiple battles, you know, in d.c. in silicon valley and in the press. i think all of us, whether we use the sites or not, all of us are seeing the down side it s and upsides of technology. great ten years ago. this flourishing of social networks. people are reckoning with the consequences including the ceos. it s a blessing and vain in our lives in so many ways. let me switch gears. i want to your reaction to the interview with meet the press with rudy giuliani where he questions truth. watch. i m not going to be rushed into having him testify. so that he gets trapped into perjury. and when you tell me that, you know, he should testify because he s going to tell the truth and he shouldn t worry, that s so silly. it is somebody s version of the truth, not the truth. he didn t have a conversation truth is truth. i don t mean to truth isn t truth. the president of the united states says i didn t truth is a truth, mr. mayor. do you realize what no. don t do this to me. i mean giuliani there is trying to explain why he doesn t want the president to sit down with robert mueller. you can see chuck todd is beside himself with this conversation over objective truth. rudy s back is up against the wall just like president trump s. they re clearly in a really difficult defense mode. but on one level, rudy is right. i said that with a giant asterisk. he is right. for a part of the country s population, the truth is not the truth anymore. president trump s accomplishment is to destroy the notion of a commonly accepted set of facts. the truth is what the president says it is. for a portion of his base. now that s not every trump supporter. it s not the 40% that say they approve him in polls. but for a portion of that really loyal base, the truth is what the president says it is. and what rudy giuliani says it is. i think that is something we have to recognize as we talk about this. we re at the path of the end of 1,000 lies now. at the end of 1,000 lies, is this idea that truth isn t truth? and i think to most of us that is repel anlt. but it is an accomplishment on part of the president to be able to degrade the ideas that we can all agree on a commonly accepted set of facts. am i being too pessimistic? i think that is realistic. i think a lot of people are seeing truth based on feeling in some ways not just what is black and white. and going forward now there is a lot of speculation that robert mueller is going to release a report about obstruction of justice in the coming weeks. rudy already said we re going to release our own report. we re going to have our own facts. so we re going to end up with two sets of the truth. all right. thank you. don t forget, you can catch his show reliable sources on sunday. we re drowning in information. where in all of this is the stuff that matters? the stakes are so high, your finances, your future. how do you solve this? you partner with a firm that combines trusted, personal advice with the cutting edge tools and insights to help you not only see your potential, but live it too. morgan stanley. douglas! we re running dangerously low on beans. people love your beans, doug. they love em. doooooooooug! you want to go sell some tacos? progressive knows small business makes big demands. doug, where do we get a replacement chili pepper bulb? so we ll design the insurance solution that fits your business. it s a very niche bulb. it s a specialty bulb. check out what happened at a back street boys concert this weekend. 14 fans were injured after a powerful storm blew over a metal structure. they were scheduled to perform with 98 degrees at this outside venue in southern oklahoma. staff tells cnn they tried to evacuate fans after spotting lightning but roughly 150 people stayed put. not wanting to lose their places in line. back street boys will try to reschedule. baby i love you i love you baby i love you the world is still mourning the loss of the queen of soul. millions of people have been enjoying the power of aretha franklin s music since she passed away on thursday. her 30 greatest hits shot to the top of the itunes charts last week. at her home church in detroit today, close family friend reverend jesse jackson took to the pulpit and told the congregation that franklin s father once said she used her god given talent for good, singing for dr. martin luther king jr., nelson mandela, the naacp, and other organizations. jackson drew a comparison between the last asks of dr. king and aretha franklin. the last mention was with elton john in new york. she was dying and here is a sick woman with sick people. dr. king s last act is with th people in memphis and her last act with with the people with aids in new york. her funeral is set for the 31st in detroit. you re live in the cnn newsroom. thank you tore stayi thank you for staying with me. we begin this hour with a question. what does the special

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Jeff Glor 20180817



a horrific story unfolding in colorado. a husband has been accused of murdering his pregnant wife and two daughters days after he reported them missing. the size of three football fields. winds 165 miles per hour. the honda odyssey is number one in a new minivan crash test. but the toyota sienna got a marginal rating overall. n.y.u. school of medicine is now a tuition-free medical school. each medical student will receive a $55,000 scholarship each year. oh, my god! glor: good evening. i m jeff glor. and this is our western edition. we re going to begin tonight with an american original, aretha franklin. the queen of soul died today at her home. she was 76 years old. and the cause was pancreatic cancer. fans have been paying tribute all day long, creating floral shrines at her star on the hollywood walk of fame, and at the apollo theater in harlem. over the decades, franklin had 20 number one hits on the r&b charts, and with the news of her passing, her 30 greatest hits album soared to the top of itunes chart. vladimir duthiers begins our coverage from detroit. all i m asking is for a little respect when you get home reporter: a legacy that demands respect. aretha franklin s songs about womanhood, strength, and heartbreak have transcended generations. chain, chain, chain chain the fool today, the rock n roll hall of fame honored their first female inductee, saying she defined soul music. music s heavyweights reacted in force. diana ross spoke of her golden spirit. paul mccartney called her the queen of our souls, who inspired us all. and hit maker carole king, who wrote natural woman, exclaimed, what a life, what a legacy. a child prodigy by many accounts, franklin learned to play piano by ear. she grew up singing gospel at a detroit church, where her famous father was a minister. she spoke about the experience in an interview with ed bradley for 60 minutes. whenever we were having services, if i was going to sing, they would have me stand on a little chair and sing. reporter: how old were you then? about nine. reporter: in 1961, franklin made the transition from gospel to pop, and with the release of her first secular album, her star quickly began to rise. ooh, baby, baby reporter: smoky robinson and franklin became friends when she moved to detroit, when robinson was just eight years old. you know, whitney, mariah, all those girls who came along after her. you know, aretha franklin was the queen of soul. reporter: in her decades-long career, franklin won 18 grammy awards. she made her mark on the big screen in the blues brothers. my country tis of thee reporter: and she performed at inaugural events for three presidents. but the road to get there was often rocky. born in memphis, franklin was raised in detroit by a single father. her mother moved away when she was just six years old, and four years later, she died of a heart attack. just shy of her 13th birthday, franklin gave birth to her first child. less than two years later, she gave birth to her second of four children. according to her biography, in adulthood, franklin struggled with depression, alcoholism, and had a weight problem. she worried the public would forget her. but her fans never did. in recent years, she sang for the pope when he visited the u.s. you make me feel reporter: and in 2015, she brought president obama to tears during the kennedy center honors. today, the obamas remembered the queen of soul, saying, america has no royalty, but franklin helped define the american experience. jeff, you mentioned that fans have been congregating in hollywood and at the apollo theater. they ve also been congregating vre, as you can see behind me, and you can hear the soaring voice of aretha franklin, at the church where she first started singing. in a statement, jeff, the family g.lled this one of the darkest moments of their lives, and tid they have lost the matriarch and the rock of their family. glor: vladimir duthiers, rchre it all began, at new bethel in detroit. vlad, thank you. among those paying tribute to ametha franklin today is sam moore, the original soul man. i m a soul man glor: moore and franklin were friends for more than 60 years. she played piano for his album, plenty good lovin . i asked moore what made aretha franklin so great. the struggles, the hurt, the lies everything that happened to her in the past, it s what made singers like aretha the greatest of the great. and she is now she was and is still, to me, the greatest that ever, ever stood before a microphone. glor: she channeled all that grief and that pain into the music. she did, jeff, she really did. you know, you hit the nail on the head. aretha was hurt. a lot of things happened in her life that i can t and i wouldn t even dare to try to get into. the way she sang, you could hear the well, we could we could, in her closed circle we could hear the pain. glor: what is it about the first time you met her, saw her, that just made you know what she could be? the first time i heard her, she was singing in miami. i went to the service to hear martin luther king, and she got up and she sang. i believe i think it was precious lord. and a 15-year-old, and i went, oh, my god. glor: sam, what did the world lose today? a giant, among giants. she s the ageless wonder. she s everything. but, you know what? she has shared that on this face of the earth. there will never, ever be, in my lifetime, or maybe yours, there will never be another aretha louise franklin. that s it. i m going to miss that girl. but i m celebrating right now. glor: thank you so much, sam. thank you, jeff. glor: we re going to have much more about aretha franklin later in the broadcast, including the story behind her signature song, respect. t.w, on a much, much different note tonight, a man in colorado who appeared on television this week begging for the safe return of his missing wife and their two young daughters has now reportedly confessed to their murders. 33-year-old christopher watts was in court today, hours after the body of his pregnant wife ans found at an oil field where he works. here s omar villafranca. reporter: chris watts had little to say in the colorado courtroom this afternoon. wednesday night, the body of his pregnant wife, shannan, was discovered on the property of one of his worksites. we have been able to recover o body that we re quite certain is shannan watts. ta it s like a nightmare that i just can t wake up from. reporter: he allegedly confessed to killing shannan and eseir two daughters, three-year- old celeste and four-year-old bella, after he told reporters he had no idea where they were and begged for their safe return. i i have no inclination of where she is. if somebody has her, just please bring her back. reporter: shannan was last seen by a colleague who dropped her off from a work trip at 2:00 a.m. monday. asked by a reporter if the couple had been fighting, watts responded. it wasn t like an argument. we had an emotional conversation. but i ll leave it at that. but it s i just want them t.ck. reporter: family, friends, and the entire frederick, colorado, police force searched around the clock. my daddy is a hero he helps me grow up strong reporter: 34-year-old shannan posted frequently about her family on facebook. fa may, she wrote, i love this man. he s my rock. in another post, she reveals to her daughters that she is having another baby. mommy has a baby in her anlly! yay! reporter: the couple had faced financial problems. they filed for bankruptcy in th15. in a statement today, shannan s family expressed their hurt, confusion, and anger. there is a growing memorial outside of the house for the family. people in this neighborhood are shocked and really horrified at what happened. jeff, chris watts will remain in jail. he s facing three murder charges and is expected back in court on tuesday. glor: difficult story to hear about. omar, thank you. the vatican today broke its silence on the pennsylvania grand jury report about the haxual abuse of children by eatholic priests. the report said the vatican was part of the cover-up. here s nikki battiste. reporter: late this afternoon, vatican spokesman greg burke made this statement: we can express our feeling in these, described in the report are criminal, they are morally reprehensible. reporter: the statement was in response reporter: the statement was in response to a two-year pennsylvania grand jury investigation that uncovered decades of sexual abuse by more than 300 clergy members, preying on at least 1,000 minors. a statement from the pennsylvania attorney general s office said the investigation revealed a systematic cover-up spanning decades by senior church leaders in pennsylvania and the vatican. still, the vatican added this: holy father wants to put the victims first. make sure that they know he is on their side. reporter: sean dougherty helped launch the investigation. he was just ten years old when his family priest began sexually abusing him. what s your response to the vatican s response? you pulled an old statement out of the archives, you know. roman catholic playbook and the vatican page, name, and number. reporter: the vatican says the pope is on your side. what do you say to that? if he s on my side, it he tsn t been on my side, ever. reporter: you ve been speaking in the last hour with other survivors at the attorney general s press conference about tte statement. what s everyone s reaction? rage, anger, disgust. reporter: the u.s. conference of catholic bishops today called the church s sex abuse scandal a moral catastrophe. the group s president says he urges church officials in rome to take more concrete steps. and jeff, the pennsylvania attorney general s office is continuing its investigation. ra glor: nikki battiste, who has been leading the way on this story. nikki, thank you. coming up on the cbs evening news, the woman accusing a well-known congressman and potnetially minnesota attorney general of abuse gives her first television interview. and later, american newspapers respond to attacks from aperident trump. respond to attacks from president trump. my body can stil make its own insulin. i take trulicity once a week to activate my body to release its own insulin, like it s supposed to. trulicity is not insulin. it works 24/7. it comes in an easy-to-use pen. and i may even lose a little weight. trulicity is an injection to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. don t use it as the first medicine to treat diabetes, or if you have type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don t take trulicity if you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, you re allergic to trulicity, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of a serious allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases your low blood sugar risk. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and decreased appetite. these can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. to help lower my a1c i choose trulicity to activate my within. ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. to help lower my a1c i choose trulicity to activate my within. thanks to move free ultra 2in1. i run after this guy. and take long walks with this guy. unlike glucosamine chondroitin, move free ultra 2in1 is clinically proven to improve joint comfort in the first week. and it keeps improving comfort with continued use. move free ultra. 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(avo) beneful select 10. 10 ingredients. 1 thoughtful recipe. with advil liqui-gels, what bad shoulder? what headache? advil is relief that s fast strength that lasts you ll ask. what pain? with advil liqui-gels glor: congressman keith ellison, deputy chairman of the democratic national committee cd a candidate for minnesota attorney general, has denied inlegations that he abused his ex-girlfriend. tonight, karen monahan is speaking on camera for the first time about an incident she says happened nearly two years ago. she sat down with jericka duncan. reporter: 44-year-old karen monahan says in september of 2016, she and her then- boyfriend, minnesota democratic congressman keith ellison, got into a heated argument that scared her. i was still in bed, and i was laying across the bed on my stomach. i was listening to my podcast, and he walked in. al said, i need you to take the trash out. and i kept because i was on my usomach, i heard him and i just went like that and shook my head. and he looked at me and goes, hey, you ( bleep ) hear me? and then he looked at me. h goes, bitch, get the ( bleep ) out of my house, and he started to try to drag me off the bed. that s when i put my camera on to video him. reporter: did you call anybody after that? i call a friend, and i said, i m at the lowest of the low. reporter: monaghan says she saved the video on her computer. this past saturday, monaghan s 25-year-old son, austin, posted a message on facebook, saying that in the middle of 2017, he found the video, almost two minutes long, showing keith ellison dragging his mother off ggbed and telling her to get out er his house. i m mortified, absolutely stunned that she would say this. reporter: ellison spoke to our cbs station wcco in minneapolis about the allegations. did you ever drag her off a bed by her feet? no, absolutely not. reporter: she has said and insisted that there is a video ndhi is there a video? there couldn t be. there couldn t be such a thing as that. reporter: and why couldn t there be? because i never did that. reporter: why speak out now? i followed my gut, the gut that i kept trying to push down. reporter: monaghan says she never reported the incident to oolice, and says being dragged off the bed was the only time ellison got physical with her during their three-year relationship. lor people who might look at this and go, she said it only gppened one time, and he did apologize right after. he didn t apologize for putting his hands on me. one is enough. reporter: monaghan says she has the video. she says it s too traumatic for her, so she has chosen not to release it to anyone. she also says she should not have to release the video in order to be believed. jeff, she believes her words should be enough. but, again, ellison vehemently denies those allegations. glor: all right, jericka duncan, thank you. coming up here tonight, bode miller and his wife on their crusade to save lives. crusade to save lives. cultures to explore. with two times more detail than any other dna test. you can connect more deeply to the places of your past. and be inspired to learn about the people and traditions that make you, you. savor your dna story. only $59 our site s lowest price ever. is not a marathon. it s a series of smart choices. and when you replace one meal or snack a day with glucerna made with carbsteady to help minimize blood sugar spikes you can really feel it. glucerna. everyday progress. it s the ford summer sales event and now is the best time to buy. you ready for this, junior? yeah, i think i can handle it. no pressure. .that s just my favorite boat. boom. 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( cheers and applause ) students wearing new lab coats to mark the start of their medical degree program just got the news that the school is now chition-free. the endowment will cover each student s $55,000-per-year tuition. up next, the story behind aretha tanklin s signature song. r-e-s-p-e-c-t find out what it means to me most pills don t finish the job because they d lievnasal estion flonase allergy relief is different. flonase relieves sneezing, itchy, watery eyes and a runny nose, plus nasal congestion, which pills don t. flonase helps block 6 key inflammatory substances. most pills only block one. and 6 is greater than 1. start your day with flonase for more complete allergy relief. flonase. this changes everything. when the guy in frontd down the highway slams on his brakes out of nowhere. you do, too, but not in time. hey, no big deal. you ve got a good record and liberty mutual won t hold a grudge by raising your rates over one mistake. you hear that, karen? liberty mutual doesn t hold grudges. how mature of them. for drivers with accident forgiveness liberty mutual won t raise their rates because of their first accident. liberty mutual insurance. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty man 1: this is my body of proof. woman 1: proof of less joint pain. woman 2: .and clearer skin. woman 3: this is my body of proof. man 2: proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis. woman 4: .with humira. woman 5: humira targets and blocks a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it s proven to help relieve pain, stop further irreversible joint damage, and clear skin in many adults. humira is the #1 prescribed biologic for psoriatic arthritis. avo: humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you ve been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you ve had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don t start humira if you have an infection. woman 6: need more proof? woman 7: ask your rheumatologist about humira. man 1: what s your body of proof? woman 7: ask your rheumatologist about humira. kids and parents don t always agree. but they both love digestive advantage kids. because the best probiotic is the ones kids ll take. and healthier tummies. means happier kids. digestive advantage kids. with the right steps, hasn t left my side. 80% of recurrent ischemic strokes could be prevented. a bayer aspirin regimen is one step to help prevent another stroke. so, i m doing all i can to stay in his life. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. plaque psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis, little things can be a big deal. that s why there s otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it s a pill that treats differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable, with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and for psoriatic arthritis, otezla is proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don t use if you re allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you re pregnant or planning to be. otezla. show more of you. glor: the word most closely associated with aretha franklin c respect. she commanded respect as an artist, it is the subject of her biggest hit. and there s a story behind it, told by lee cowan. all i need is for a little respect when you get home reporter: call it what you will, respect is more than cst a scorching anthem. it s been transforming. aretha franklin spelled it out, a song that was for the timese s timeless as ever. everybody wanted respect. who doesn t want respect, you know? reporter: right. children, adults alike. reporr: franklin first wan recorded it on valentine s day in 1967. it went on to become what rolling stone called one of the top-five greatest songs of all time, something writer alan light doesn t dispute. it jumped out ahead of just being, this is about a boy and a girl song. and it became, this is a position and the shifting position of a black woman in america. reporter: but here s the meing respect wasn t entirely aretha franklin s. otis redding actually wrote and recorded it first. what you want reporter: or at least, his version of it. i had heard otis redding sing it. and i rehearsed it. and my sister came by, carolyn, and she helped me put the background to it, and we came up with the cliche, sock it to me, which became world-famous. sock it to me, sock it to me ldck it to me, sock it to me reporter: it s hard not to miss the hint of bitterness when redding performed respect at the monterey pop festival in 1967. this last song is a song that a girl took away from me, but i m still going to do it anyway. reporter: in redding s version, the woman was sitting at home waiting for her man. franklin turned that on its head. respect, in her version, was a declaration of independence. i was talking about the male- female relationship. the respect part of it became a bntra for the civil rights movement and for pples everywhere. reporter: respect is at its heart about equality, and even aday there s a need to sometimes spell out what respect really means. lee cowan, cbs news, los angeles. glor: that is the cbs evening news tonight. you can listen to that all night, right? i m jeff glor. see you tomorrow. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs censored version of google for china. now at 6:00, a project code name dragon fly recordly a censored version of google for china. now outrage from more than a thousand employees. good evening, i m elizabeth cook. i m allen martin. the google employees want to know how far is google willing to go to get back into china. kiet do in mountain view with the backlash tonight. reporter: amongst the googlers there is a code yellow. they had a staff meeting today that has held every week and they presented a little to these higher ups, and yes, it s a code yellow. when alphabet ceo took the stage during the conference in mountain viewer leer this year, he told the thousands that the company had been reflecting on the company. we know the path ahead needs to be navigated carefully and deliberately. and we feel a deep sense of responsibility to get this right. reporter: months later his own workers would hold them to his ideals. google had been working on a secret project, code name dragon fly. it was a search engine for china. the new york times broke the news. they wanted to raise urgent morale and ethical issues. we urgently need more transparent sea, a tate transparency, a seat at the table. google employees need to know what we re building.

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