PBS News Hour - Full Show - May 28, 2026 - PBS News Hour full episode
Episode Date: May 28, 2026Thursday on the News Hour, the U.S. and Iran close in on a deal to extend the ceasefire. We report from the Strait of Hormuz for an up-close look at the embattled waterway. Stock trading tied to the p...resident fuels accusations of corruption and profiting off the White House. Plus, Ukraine's foreign minister touts improved drone capabilities and how they could change the course of the war. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy
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Good evening. I'm Jeff Bennett. Ammanavaz is away. On the news hour tonight, the U.S. and Iran close in on a tentative deal to extend the ceasefire. We report from the street of Formuz for an up-close look at the world's most embattled waterway. Stock trading tied to Donald Trump fuels accusations of corruption and profiting off the presidency.
And Ukraine's foreign minister highlights his country's rapidly advancing drone capabilities, how it could reshape the war with Russia.
We proved how effective we could be.
In Russia, there are no safe place.
We could attack them as a distance up to 2,000 kilometers.
Welcome to the NewsHour.
Tonight, Vice President J.D. Vance said the U.S. and Iran have made what he calls
a lot of progress in their talks to end the war, but that it wasn't clear when or if President Trump was going to sign off.
Those comments come after a White House official told the NewsHour and other outlets that U.S. and Iranian negotiations,
had agreed to a framework. Iran today said no agreement had been made while Iran fired a ballistic
missile at Kuwait and as the U.S. and Iranian militaries again traded fire. Nick Schifrin is
tracking all of this force. So Nick, let's start with this talk about a deal. What at this point
is President Trump demanding? Well, before we get to what he's demanding exactly, because it's going
back and forth, I think let's examine these conflicting statements that we've got. The White House
told me earlier today that, yes, there was a deal between the U.S. and Iran. They agreed on a 60-day
ceasefire in order to basically open the Strait of Hormuz and kickstart nuclear negotiations.
But as you said, the vice president tonight not saying that. He not only said what you
mentioned that it's not clear when or if the president was going to sign, but he added,
that requires us to make a little bit more progress, and I can't guarantee that we're going to
get there. So that is not the same at all as what the White House was saying earlier today.
that there wasn't a deal. But regardless of all the posturing, perhaps, the core of your question
is, what are we looking at? What kind of deal are we looking at? What is the president holding out
for? European, U.S. and Arab officials all confirmed that this is the deal on the table.
It's a two-phase deal. The first phase would open up the Strait of Hormuz, including no tolls,
and the U.S. would end its blockade. The war would end, including in Lebanon, and then there
are in-principle agreements that Iran would limit its nuclear program, and the U.S. would lift
sanctions. And that brings us to the second phase. Iran would freeze uranium enrichment,
uranium enrichment, for TBD years. U.S. and Iranian officials tell me the U.S. is pushing for 20 years.
Iran has offered five to ten years. Number two, Iran would export or destroy. It's 1,000 pounds
of highly enriched uranium. The president recently softened his position on that. And thirdly,
the core of the U.S. offer lifting sanctions and unfreezing assets. Earlier this week, a senior
administration official put it this way, no dust, no dollars, as in if there's no
highly enriched uranium export, Iran gets nothing.
So what the officials around the president
are really emphasizing is that until Iran agrees
on highly enriched uranium
and really limiting its nuclear program,
there is no deal.
And so that's where we think the rub is tonight.
And that's what Scott Besson said,
that there would be no deal until Iran agrees
to what the president's demanding.
Nothing is going to be on the table
until we see the straight of removes open.
And the Iranians agree.
that they have to turn over the highly unrestridium
and that they can't have a nuclear program.
So despite the apparent progress, Jeff,
Iran has still not publicly confirmed
that it's willing to restrict its nuclear program
in any way, and a reminder, U.S. and Iranian officials
say that this would not restrict in any way
Iran's ballistic missile program,
or at least in writing, its support for proxies.
And there is still military activity
between the U.S. and Iran.
What happened today?
Today, U.S. and Kuwait said that Iran had fired
drones and at least one ballistic missile at Kuwait.
A U.S. official told me it was intercepted, but, quote, fragments of the interception did make
impact. The official said there was no one seriously injured.
The U.S. military called it a dangerous, egregious violation of the ceasefire.
It also said that it intercepted five Iranian attack drones.
This follows another exchange of fire on Monday.
Now, Iran hasn't confirmed any of these details, but it did release this video today,
posting posters on a missile and firing a missile.
And today Iran's deputy foreign minister
blamed the U.S. for violating the ceasefire.
What the United States did was met
with a decisive response from the armed forces
and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
And it was certainly a violation of the ceasefire
and Iran will respond to any violation of the ceasefire.
So bottom line, Jeff, where we are tonight,
the U.S. and Iran, bickering over what's happening,
disputing statements by the war.
within the U.S. of how far progress is, but all sides saying there is progress, there's clearly no deal yet.
All right, Nick Schifrinner, thanks to you as always. Thank you.
Well, the Strait of Hormuz has been the focus of this war since Iran chunned it down in the war's first days,
but rarely do American reporters actually get to visit this crucial body of water.
So tonight we have this rare look at the Strait of Hormuz from the land and on the water from special
correspondent Rezasea, who was based in Iran.
All right, here we are, the Strait of Hormuz.
Hormoz. By the way, that's the correct pronunciation. It's Hormoz, not Hormuz.
This is the waterway that's made headlines over the past three months, the focal point of the conflict
between Washington and Tehran, the waterway that's squeezed the global economy, the U.S. economy,
and likely cause you to pay more of the gas pump.
Iranian authorities have granted us permission to come here and look around. There's no one
accompanying us. We have our cameraman Kastrow behind the last.
lens, Captain Audamide, and we're going to look around here and show you what it looks like these days in the strait of Hormoz.
In all directions here, we see the impact of the conflict between Washington and Tehran.
Ship after ship, stuck, sitting in waiting, the outcome of a three-month-long Iranian blockade
of any commercial ship with links to what Tehran deems.
hostile nations. Last month, Washington answered with its own naval blockade of ships
traveling to and from Iranian ports. The United Nations says the competing blockades
have stranded roughly 1,500 ships with more than 20,000 seafarers on board. Most of the
international ships are anchored west of the strait, deep inside the Persian Gulf. Closer to the
we see mostly Iranian ships.
All right, this looks like an Iranian oil tanker.
It is an Iranian flag.
It says, Gesm on the hall, which is the name of a nearby island here in Iran.
It is quite possible that this is one of the Iranian vessels being blocked in by the U.S.
naval blockade.
We're going to see if we can talk to someone on board, see what they're carrying,
and how long they've been here.
Saddam!
I'm, I'm.
Kast'n't be.
How many of the Kahnkhas did you?
I asked them how long they've been anchored here,
and they say they're not allowed to talk.
Boretun what their cargo is again.
They're not allowed to talk.
The narrowest section of the strait is about 24 miles wide.
Seemingly, plenty of room for ships to pass through,
but the waters here are shallow.
are shallow, with an average depth of 165 feet that's less than half of a football field.
The United Nations has recognized a traffic separation scheme for large ships with an inbound
in-outbound lane, each less than two miles wide. Washington says international vessels are guaranteed
the right of transit passage. Tehran says these are their territorial waters. Authority belongs to them,
and Oman, whose coast borders the southern part of the strait.
In the face off over the strait and its blockade, both Iranian and U.S. forces have clashed,
most recently this week.
On Monday, the Pentagon said U.S. jet fighters hit and destroyed a couple of IRGC speedboats
of the Strait of Hormoz.
These are the speedboats Iranian forces used to block some of these vessels from exiting
the strait.
Behind me, and it's very difficult to see in the distance, is Larak Islands.
Many locals here say it is very likely that the Revolutionary Guard speedboats that were hit were somewhere around that island.
Out of all the islands here, LARAC sits deepest within the strait.
Iranian state media on Tuesday reported that a number of their Revolutionary Guard officers were martyred,
but they didn't provide any other details.
One of more than a dozen islands that sit at or near the straight is Hormoz Island.
Around 6,000 people live in this tiny resort destination that puts in view Iran's diversity.
Along the beach, sheik cafes serve the island's bohemian lifestyle.
A few blocks away, the island's conservative population holds their nightly rally in support of Iran's war with the United States.
States in Israel. This is where we learned that three of the Revolutionary Guard members killed
on Monday were from this island. Esmail Hormoz says the island is small. Many knew the officers
killed.
They were my friends. They were my family, my brothers, my friends. Just a few days ago, we were
chanting slogans together. We were spending time together. Hormuz is an island where we all know one
another. We're one. Their bodies have still not been recovered. The remains have yet to be returned
to their families, and they want us to sit at the negotiating table? No way.
Muhammad Rezhanik says he knew the officers too. He says they gave their lies for Iran. Many here
are willing to do the same.
Is the color of my blood different than theirs? It's not. We can all have the honor of
of martyrdom, is my blood different from the Supreme Leader's blood?
This is our duty.
Whatever we have comes from this soil, from this country.
Defending their country is their duty, many here say,
and that includes defending the Strait of Hormoz,
which remains a major flashpoint in the conflict
between Washington and Tehran.
For the PBS News Hour, I'm Reza Seya,
in the Strait of Hormoz, Iran.
In the day's other headlines, officials at the Treasury Department are laying the groundwork for a new $250 bill featuring President Trump's image.
A mock-up was first obtained by the Washington Post.
It's meant to commemorate the nation's 250th anniversary and would be the first time a living person is featured on American currency in more than 150 years.
But its fate ultimately rests with Congress where legislation has stalled that would overturn a federal law prohibiting living Americans from appearing on U.S. currency.
At today's White House press briefing, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the $250 bills would be ready for circulation should the legislation pass.
At present, no living person can be on U.S. currency. At Treasury, we prepare things in advance.
So we have prepared in advance that if the legislation has passed, but we will stick to the law.
Congress outlawed images of living people back in 1866 after a Treasury.
official printed his own likeness on a five-cent note leading to widespread outrage at the time.
A federal judge in Washington is refusing to block President Trump's executive order limiting
mail-in voting. At least for now, the order was issued back in March and would also direct
the creation of a federal voter list. In his 26-page opinion, Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee,
wrote that it was too soon for the court to intervene since the Trump administration hasn't
implemented much of the order yet.
Democrats and civil rights groups have argued that the move exceeds the president's authority
since the Constitution gives the power to set election rules to Congress and the states.
The Justice Department has reportedly opened an investigation into former columnist E. Jean Carroll
who won multiple civil cases against President Trump on accusations of sexual abuse and defamation.
The Associated Press and other outlets say the DOJ is looking into whether Carol lied during the course
of the litigation. She accused Mr. Trump of forcing himself upon her in a dressing room in the
1990s, which he denies. It is the latest example of the DOJ taking action against one of President
Trump's perceived enemies. In Central Africa, international aid is making its way to areas
most affected by a growing Ebola outbreak. These supplies were donated by the European Union,
and they come as health workers have reported being poorly prepared to tackle the fast-spreading
disease. The Democratic Republic of the Congo has been hardest hit with more than
1,000 suspected cases and 220 suspected deaths. Meantime senior Trump administration
officials confirmed today that the U.S. will open a 50-bed Ebola quarantine
center in Kenya tomorrow. It's meant exclusively for Americans though, which is
frustrating some locals.
Why would you create a facility in my country and it doesn't serve me? Yet the same
some same facility is going to host people who are endangering my own life.
Yet if I end up contacting Ebola, God forbid, I can't be taken care of.
Also today, the U.S. State Department announced it's sending $80 million in aid to affected countries.
The money is meant to help with protective equipment as well as screening and testing for the virus.
Major League baseball owners proposed a salary cap for the first time in decades today,
something the Players Union has vowed to never accept.
Under the proposal, teams would need to maintain a payroll of at least $171.2 million
and couldn't exceed $245.3 million.
Eight teams currently spend more than that, including the World Series champion, L.A. Dodgers.
If the two sides can't reach a deal before the current contract expires in December,
owners could lock out the players.
The last time that happened was back in 1994, and it led to a seven-month strike that canceled the World Series.
On Wall Street today, stocks climbed to new records after the latest round of strong corporate earnings.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added about 25 points on the day.
The NASDAQ jumped nearly 250 points or almost 1%.
The SMP 500 also posted a solid gain.
Still to come on the news hour, a Palestinian woman detained for a year after protesting the war in Gaza
speaks out about her experience.
A push to rename a common hormonal condition aims to improve care for millions of women.
And as the World Cup approaches, we look at the decades-long effort to improve the U.S. men's national soccer team.
This is the PBS News Hour from the David M. Rubenstein studio at WETA in Washington, headquarters of PBS News.
Earlier this month, President Donald Trump disclosed that his trust is actively trading individual stocks,
an unprecedented practice for a sitting U.S. president in the modern era.
The arrangement is raising new questions about whether the president's actions, policies,
public statements could directly benefit his personal financial holdings.
Our White House correspondent Liz Landers takes a closer look.
It'd be hard to find a president in recent history who has spoken publicly about the stock
market more than Donald Trump.
I just turned on the television and wanted to see how the stock market's doing today.
You know, we hit 50,000 on the Dow.
We had 7,000 on the S&P.
Our stock market is now at the highest point in history.
And perhaps it's not all that surprising.
Donald Trump has built a multi-billion dollar personal brand, and he is one of the only people to go directly from the boardroom to the White House without holding any other elected office.
Look at the numbers. Look at the stock market. It's one thing to watch the market, but it's another thing altogether to actively trade stocks while in office.
Mr. Trump's most recent federal financial disclosure form filed earlier this month reveals more than 3,700 trades in the first three months of this year, a flurry amounting to tens of millions of dollars in.
and transactions. The disclosure filing called a Form 278 is required of senior government officials
by the U.S. Office of Government Ethics within 45 days of any financial trade. It doesn't list
specific amounts, only broad value ranges, and it's designated to ensure some level of transparency.
The fact that he not only owns stocks but is actively trading them, there's just no precedent
in recent history. Dan Alexander is a senior editor of Forbes magazine and the author of White House
sink, how Donald Trump turned the presidency into a business. The key question here is, are those
holdings impacting the decisions that he's making? And what's tricky about this, like some of the
other things, is that in order to answer that question, you really have to get inside Donald
Trump's head. In his statement at PBS News Hour, the Trump organization said, quote,
President Trump's investment holdings are maintained exclusively and fully discretionary accounts
managed by independent third-party financial institutions.
These institutions have sole and exclusive authority over all investment decisions,
including asset allocation, trading, rebalancing, and portfolio management.
Investments are executed and allocated through automated, model-based portfolios,
and direct indexing strategies administered entirely by those firms.
On the morning of March 23rd, after nearly a month of war with Iran,
the president announced on Truth Social,
that the U.S. and Iran had been having, quote, very good and productive conversations,
and that he was extending his deadline for a deal by five more days.
Oil prices plunged nearly 11% on hopes the war was ending.
Energy stocks sold off, and the brokerage account in Trump's name spent the day buying them.
Philip 66, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, along with defense and aerospace names like Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics.
All companies that stood to profit, the longer the war continued.
Is it illegal for president to own?
positions within the stock market to own individual stocks.
Unfortunately, the financial conflict of interest statute does not apply to the president,
the vice president, and members of Congress.
Richard Painter was the chief White House ethics lawyer for President George W. Bush.
He says the power of the president to affect the market is profound and should be more
tightly restricted.
If through his official actions, he actually can change the price of a stock and he owns the
stock, that's a financial conflict.
of interest that should be prohibited.
It's also ensure that members of Congress cannot corruptly profit from using insider information.
In his state of the union this year, President Trump threw his support behind efforts to ban stock
trading by members of Congress.
But what he didn't say is that there's no such ban for presidents, and he didn't call for one.
A Treasury Secretary who owns bank stock, a defense secretary who owns stock and defense contractors,
would commit a felony if they participate in decisions that affected those investments.
And this is why every official in the United States government is required to duck vast.
Every president since Ronald Reagan has either put their assets in a blind trust managed by independent trustees
or sold off their stocks to eliminate conflicts of interest.
While President Trump did transfer his assets into a trust, it is not blind, says Dan Alexander.
The trust doesn't hand over the ownership of those assets to anybody else.
as kids to make decisions about them on the day-to-day basis. Those assets are still owned by Donald
Trump, so therefore all the potential conflicts with them and all the money that comes with them
still rolls back to Donald Trump.
You have any regrets about your president?
Alexander says Trump's wealth has grown exponentially since he first left office in 2021.
When he left office, we estimate that he was worth $2.4 billion. We now estimate that he's worth $6.1 billion.
A lot of that is an increase in liquid assets, principally through his crypto ventures.
that have brought in a lot of money.
In 2025, Mr. Trump's accounts traded almost exclusively in municipal and corporate bonds,
which didn't raise conflict of interest concerns.
But that changed in January this year when Mr. Trump's accounts started to actively trade
individual stocks.
And some of the companies have ongoing direct involvement with the federal government.
Take Palantir Technologies.
It has billions of dollars in contracts with the Trump administration, including a $1.3 billion
dollar contract with the Pentagon to develop AI systems to help orchestrate military operations.
Since January, Mr. Trump's account has made nine purchases of Palantir stock worth up to $680,000.
When the stock declined nearly 15% in early April, Trump posted on truth social, quote,
Palantir Technologies has proven to have great war-finding capabilities and equipment.
Just ask our enemies. Within 10 days, the stock had more than regained its value.
NVIDIA's next generation of AI chips is in full production.
In early January, the president's account purchased between $500,000 to $1 million worth of
Nvidia stock.
A week before, commerce officials approved the sale of some Nvidia chips to China.
In February, he purchased between $1 million and $5 million more, just days before Nvidia
announced a major computer processing power deal with META.
Vice President J.D. Vance defended the trading in the president's portfolio.
Number one, the president doesn't sit at the Oval Office on his computer on his like Robin Hood account, buying and selling stocks. That's absurd. He has independent wealth of advisors who manage his money. He is a wealthy person. He has had success in business. He's not making these stock trades himself. The Trump organization says, quote, neither President Trump, his family, nor the Trump organization has any role in selecting, directing, approving, influencing, or soliciting specific investments. They received no advance.
notice of trades cannot alter or override the manager's strategies or models and provide no input
regarding investment decisions or portfolio operations. The structure, the Trump organization says,
is to avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest. But Richard Painter says it's
difficult to separate the president from his portfolio. It doesn't matter who's making the trades.
The president knows what's in his account. It's right there on the form 278. He knows what he owns.
And Painter says the bigger issue is the erosion of public trust.
The public is not going to have confidence in the securities markets.
If we have people with access to the United States government information,
actively trading in the markets at the same time as other investors who don't have that information.
When it comes to presidential trades, perception matters.
For the PBS News Hour, I'm Liz Landers.
With the war in Ukraine now well into its fourth year, Russian President Vladimir Putin has intensified attacks across the country.
But even amid the barrage, Ukraine says it's adapting, pushing back along parts of the front
and carrying out increasingly sophisticated drone strikes deep inside Russia.
Special correspondent Simon Ostrovsky sat down with Ukraine's foreign minister to discuss the state of the war
and the battlefield lessons Ukraine says are reshaping modern combat.
As Russia falters on the Ukrainian battlefield, Moscow has attempted to rattle nerves in Ukraine
with threats to renew attacks against the capital, including a warning to Washington
to evacuate its diplomats from Kiev.
Meanwhile, Ukraine has continued its campaign of long-distance strikes on Russian energy facilities,
describing them as long-range sanctions designed to cripple Moscow's main source of revenue.
In an exclusive interview with NewsHour, Ukraine's foreign minister Andri Sibija had a warning
for Russians, saying they were no longer safe anywhere in their vast country because of Ukraine's
improved drone range and capabilities.
We proved how effective we could be.
In Russia, there are no safe place.
We could attack them as a distance up to 2,000 kilometers, even to conduct this so-called
Parade, Putin had to approach us to a lot to conduct this parade on the 9th of May.
And Donald Trump put pressure, I think, on your country not to attack Moscow during the parade.
We are not talking about any kind of pressure.
We have great cooperation with our American friends and we are thankful for their efforts.
Without the United States, it is not realistic to achieve tangible results in our peace efforts.
The Bika is keen to downplay any tensions with the United States, which he said Ukraine still
relies on for air defense weapons, such as Patriot missiles and intelligence on Russian targets.
We are buying this type of weaponry from the United States.
No delay, by the way, with the supply, despite the situation in the middle, is we have such
an advantage that could test our products immediately on the battlefield.
What does it mean?
That means highest quality.
It also means immediate feedback.
Well, we heard our president say that he didn't need any help from Ukraine.
Yet, recently, hasn't there been an agreement between your military and America's military?
We have pragmatic cooperation with our American allies.
We are ready to share with our experience, with our technology.
Our position is clear.
We are open for this type of cooperation.
But hasn't an agreement been signed, a new agreement on defense technology cooperation?
No, not yet, but we are ready to propose, and I'm confident it will be our true contribution in American security.
We have now this experience, which is also needed for such great countries as the United States.
We've seen reporting about the fact that the United States may have had to abandon a lot of its military.
military positions in the Persian Gulf because of an inability to defend those bases against
drone attacks from Iran.
Ukraine has a wealth of experience with interceptor drones, which are cheap.
And I think that's the sort of cooperation that you're talking about.
And you're willing to share that with the United States.
Absolutely.
And we already proposed to the Middle East countries our expertise.
Now we are a security partner for them.
And for us, this is also important.
So is Ukraine selling interceptor drones to partners in the Middle East?
This approach is not about selling, just selling a drone.
Not just selling, but you are transferring equipment?
We are talking about long-term arrangements, agreements.
Do you feel you can still trust the United States and the White House in the way that
Ukrainians once did?
Our security and the security of the United States, the Atlantic security, they are indivisible.
Everything is interlinked, and I think that strong Ukraine is also a national interest of the
United States.
Europeans talk about Ukraine less frequently as a case for assistance, and more frequently
has an example of a military to follow.
Have you noticed a change in the way other countries look at Ukraine?
Yes, definitely.
We became a security provider, a security partner.
Our European allies now need Ukraine.
Ukraine with its defense capacities is an essential part of transatlantic security.
And it is a smart approach to keep us in.
Do you see Ukraine joining NATO and the European Union in the near future?
Definitely, Ukraine must and will become the member of EU.
After the Hungarian elections, probably we eliminated the most difficult political obstacles.
Orban.
Regime Orban.
So, yes, it's true.
Now we have the chance to speed up our efforts to become a full member of EU.
Prime Minister Viktor Orban's defeat in last month's election in Hungary cleared the last remaining
barrier for Ukraine's EU ascension negotiations.
The most important now to end this war, Ukraine wants to end this war.
We have doable proposals.
We are in the momentum to use our leverage to pressure Russia.
not to its sanctions, but on contrary, to increase pressure on Russia.
And to raise the price of further aggression personally for Putin, he must admit that he
will never achieve his goals on the battlefield.
Yesterday, the new head of British intelligence said more than half a million of Putin's
troops have been killed in Ukraine since he invaded four and a half years ago.
with Ukrainian forces gaining backland in the east. Putin's goals on the battlefield seemed further
than ever from his grasp. For the PBS News Hour, I'm Simon Ostrovsky in Kiev.
In 2024, massive pro-Palestinian protests swept college campuses across the country, including at
Columbia University. As the Trump administration intensified its immigration enforcement and deportation
efforts, several non-citizen student protesters were taken into ICE detention.
One of them was detained for more than a year. Lisa Desjardin has more.
Lecah Cordilla arrived in the United States in 2016 on a tourist visa from the West Bank
to reunite with her mother, a U.S. citizen living in New Jersey. She enrolled in English school,
started working as a waitress, and applied for her green card in 2017 through a family
petition. But that application did not give her a legal status to stay in the country.
and she says she unknowingly became undocumented.
In 2024, Khadilla participated in the pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia University.
She was arrested and not charged.
Then she was detained by immigration and customs enforcement nearly a year later.
She was in detention in Alvarado, Texas from last spring until this March, as immigration courts decide her fate.
McCabe and her lawyer, Sarah Sherman Stokes, join us both now.
Thanks to both of you.
LeCala, you came here 10 years ago.
Your visa ran out in 2022.
But I want to start with your hopes.
You hope to get a green card.
Tell us, first of all, why do you want to become a U.S. citizen?
Well, I ran out from a country that's under occupation.
I grew up under fear all the time.
I grew up separated from my own mother all these years.
I always say that I didn't actually experience freedom until I came to the United States.
You were detained for a year.
We do have some video of when you were released.
And in that video, you can see your emotion.
You can see your relief from that day.
What was that like when you were in detention?
First of all, we were overcrowded.
So if you want to sleep, like I, for example, I slept on the floor for three months,
surrounded with cockroaches, bugs, and all of that.
For food, it's literally inedible.
Can you talk about the health care there and the impact on you now from detention?
So health care is over there.
It's almost zero.
The fever that I had that was very, very bad to the point that I literally felt like I'm going to die this night.
I was reciting my prayers.
I was asking God for forgiveness, which after a few days, I suffered my first seizure ever.
Doctors said that because of lack of proper nutrition,
lack of sleep and constant stress.
Now I'm diagnosed with epilepsy after suffering my second seizure on April 30th.
I cannot drive, I cannot swim alone, I cannot hike alone.
So many things that used to make me feel free, now I can't do it.
Now I have to stay on a specific place.
diet, taking heavy anti-seger medication every day.
The government, I, slowly, missed up my health.
You mentioned prayer.
You clearly left detention, changed by it.
What was it like trying to practice your faith in detention?
My religious rights were often violated.
My simple, basic religious rights as eating halal food, for example.
Like having a clean, quiet place to pray and to perform prayers.
They were all violated.
I didn't find the holy Quran.
I didn't find anything.
They didn't have hijabs for girls who want to perform prayer,
but they're not wearing hijabs.
I kept asking about hijab, actually, for 50 days.
Your detention and release in some part have made headlines
because you've been a vocal protester.
DHS gave us this statement about you,
and they did mention that they said you're detained
because your visa ran.
out, but they went on, and they wrote, previously in April of 2024, Cardia was arrested by local
law enforcement for her involvement in pro-Hamas protests at Columbia University in New York City.
She was also found to be providing financial support to individuals living in nations hostile
to the U.S. The facts of this case have not changed.
La Cacardia is in the country illegally.
Now, no charges were filed against you for the protest or the financial support.
I want to ask your attorney, Sarah, how do you respond to this DHS statement, including the notion that she was supporting Hamas?
The government has had more than a year to provide any kind of evidence that would back up this kind of false and frankly dangerous allegation, and they have failed to do so.
La Cah has been providing in the past money to her beloved family members.
Many immigrants send remittances to their family members abroad, just like La Cah did.
La Cah was punished not because she overstayed a visa.
La Cah was punished by the government because she spoke out in support of Palestine.
Sarah, can I ask, what's your evidence that she was targeted because she was Palestinian?
Because that's what the government has said.
They've made these false allegations, false and unsubstantiated allegations, that she is, quote, pro-Hamas.
There is absolutely no evidence.
They have completely abandoned those arguments in court.
They like them for press releases because they garner a lot of attention.
But in court, the government has offered absolutely no evidence to support that assertion.
Lekha, you are out right now on a $100,000 bond.
That is a very high amount to be asked for.
What is your response to DHS and the way that they say you deserve to be deported?
I mean, to be imprisoned for a whole year,
simply for practicing my freedom of speech
and to be accused of horrific things that I have nothing to do with.
It's outrageous.
You still were here at an undocumented status, and there are many Americans who would say you should have left and if you wanted a green card applied for it overseas.
Why should you be allowed to stay?
Simply because if I went back, there is a high possibility of like jailing me, even killing me back in Palestine or what's so-called Israel, where they want to deport me, actually.
There is a high risk on my life, really terrified of the idea.
Because you're a protester here, or why?
Because I'm protester, because I'm outspoken, and because I'm Palestinian.
And Sarah?
So, in fact, the immigration judge held that it is more likely than not that the Israeli government will persecute La Cah if she is removed to Israel, which is where the government wishes to remove her.
And one last question for me.
Laka, you grew very close with many of your fellow.
detainees, some of them still in detention.
What do you want to say to them?
Stay strong, stay hopeful.
We didn't forget about you.
Keep fighting.
Keep dreaming.
You didn't do anything wrong.
All what you did is just dreaming.
And dreaming shouldn't be a crime.
La Caudia and Sarah Sherman-Stokes.
Thank you both so much for your time today.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for having.
Now, new understanding of a health condition
affecting millions of women. An estimated 1 in 10 women worldwide live with a hormonal disorder
long known as PCOS, that's polycystic ovary syndrome. But the condition is getting a new name.
And as Stephanie Sye reports, the change is about far more than terminology.
Supporters say it could lead to better diagnosis, treatment, and care.
That's right. PMOS is the new name for the hormonal condition associated with a wide range of symptoms.
from irregular periods to excess hair growth and acne, pelvic pain, and even anxiety and depression.
The change was announced in The Lancet by an international collaboration of physicians, specialists, and women living with a disorder.
Researchers say this new name is more accurate, and it's hoped it will lead to better diagnoses and medical care.
Dr. Melanie Cree is a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado and Shutes and a doctor at Children's Hospital, Colorado, who,
was a key lead in the name change, and she joins me now. Dr. Cree, thank you so much for joining
the news hour. You know, it's interesting. The new name doesn't even mention the word
cis. Does this change reflect a new understanding of the disorder, or was polycystic ovarian syndrome
always a misnomer? The name was always a misnomer. There are young eggs that were mistakenly
called cysts. There have never been cysts part of the condition.
Women with PCOS, as you know, have often faced a labyrinth of providers before they even get a proper
diagnosis. How does changing the name account for the fact that this is a disorder that can affect
multiple body systems, the endocrine system, the metabolic system, how does that lead to better care?
What we're hoping is that it shouldn't matter what kind of doctor a patient presents to.
So if they present to an endocrinologist who lives in the polyendocrine metabolic world, they'll think about the ovaries.
If they present to a gynecologist who normally sits in the ovary world, the gynecologist will think about the metabolic consequences.
And a primary care doctor will hopefully think about it all.
And the name will help remind them of all of the pieces of this disorder.
The diagnostic criteria have not changed.
What we're hoping changes is that whoever is taking care of these women that they look at their entire body and the entire condition, not just the ovary.
Right, because PCOS has often been linked to having babies.
And advocates have complained, I understand, that that ignores a lot of women who are suffering with symptoms, they may not be trying to get pregnant.
How has that focus on women's reproductive capacity affected patients over the years?
patients haven't been given accurate information about associated conditions. So type 2 diabetes or extra fat in the liver, high
cholesterol. And they've been made to think that any weight gain or difficulties losing weight are
their fault. And they're absolutely not. It is tied to the hormones and the insulin hormone in
PMS that is causing all these problems. And so in some cases,
cases, if women are tested for type 2 diabetes obstructive sleep apnea or extra fat in the liver,
they could get our weight loss medications for those conditions right now.
Their FDA approved and most of them are covered by insurance.
So it can change care for millions of women right now.
There's another thing with PCOS that I think it's worth putting awareness on,
which is that women with PCOS are often at greater risk for heart disease.
Of course, the leading cause of death for women in the U.S.
Can you briefly explain why that is and how this change might actually better address those types of concerns?
Absolutely.
So what happens with insulin, and insulin is released to help us store the sugar that we eat,
and it also helps store fat.
And high insulin levels in somebody with testosterone makes you store fat.
inside your blood vessels.
One of the research studies that we did over a decade ago
showed that 15-year-old girls with PMOS
have thicker plaque in their neck arteries
than girls who have regular periods.
At the age of 15 years, we can measure this.
I also want to go back to this issue of body fat
because women with PCOS are often told by their providers
they simply need to lose weight.
That is obviously a fraught thing.
to say to a lot of American women. And I know plenty of women who have had PCOS with a lean body type.
So can you clarify what can and can't a woman do in lifestyle change, diet and exercise, et cetera,
and how should she take that type of advice? So the primary point for lifestyle change is to lower the
levels of insulin. And insulin, as I said, is released when we eat in particular sugary foods.
insulin works better when we do activity.
And so that's where those recommendations come from.
And everybody with PMS, regardless of body size, has insulin resistance.
And again, our research has shown this from the University of Colorado.
And so everybody needs to make those changes.
The other things that are part of lifestyle that I think real difficulties for women are, if you're very stressed out and depressed,
your stress hormone, cortisol is a little higher.
Well, cortisol makes you crave sugary, fatty foods and too tired to exercise.
So if we're really trying to make food and exercise changes,
but we're not doing anything to manage our day-to-day stress,
we're working against our body.
The same with sleep.
If we go to bed after midnight, get less than seven hours of sleep,
or have obstructive sleep apnea,
all of those increase your overnight cortisol.
And so your 24-hour cortisol is just slightly higher,
but enough so that you try to make lifestyle changes, and you can't.
And I think that's what's really important for people to realize
is it's all aspects of lifestyle, not just food and activity.
That is Dr. Melanie Creed joining us. Thank you.
Bye.
Well, we are just weeks away from the first men's World Cup on U.S. soil in more than 30 years.
There's great anticipation around it, plenty of complaints about high prices, and questions about how the U.S. team will fare with a home field advantage.
The squad was finalized earlier this week with a 26-man roster for the first match on June 12th.
We care so much, and yeah, it means a lot to us.
We want to do our best, represent this country best we can.
And, yeah, the nerves are there.
You get the excitement.
You feel those jitters.
Now that we're here, hopefully we can just try to live in the moment and do the best we can.
For a preview of the men's prospects, we are joined now by veteran soccer writer Leander Charlochans.
He's the author of the new book, The Long Game, U.S. men's soccer and its savage four-decade journey to the top or thereabouts.
He's also a columnist for The Guardian.
Leander, I got to say, the book's subtitle is extraordinary.
Thank you.
Thanks for being with us.
So let's start with the basics.
where this U.S. men's team stands right now.
What are the realistic expectations?
I think if they make it to the quarterfinals of this World Cup,
they'll have done very well.
And that's not a thing Americans always necessarily like to hear
that making it to the last eight means that you've succeeded.
But you have to consider that there's 211 countries
that have national soccer teams.
Only eight of them have ever won the World Cup.
And the tournament's been expanded to 48 teams.
So for the U.S. to get to the quarterfinals, they have to not only survive the group stage,
but they have to make it through two knockout round games.
And in all of their history at the World Cup, they've only won one of those.
So that would make it a successful tournament, I think.
But to add on to that, what's also important here is that the country cares and that they
move to sport forward in a significant way, the way the 1994 World Cup did.
And so that means not only doing well on the field, but kind of catching the country.
entry in a soccer fever and to really bring them along and to really get them to invest in this
sport and really help it break into the mainstream long term.
Well, who are the players that casual fans should keep an eye on and why?
So you had Christian Polisic there in the little clip. He's the star of the team. He's really
interesting because for decades, American soccer on the men's side has been waiting for this
sort of breakthrough player who can really help push into the mainstream and become an American
star. And now a player comes along who can potentially do that in Polisic, except he has no
interest in fame whatsoever. He's not into doing press, into doing media. It's very painful
to him. He's an introvert. And so that's kind of ironic in a sense. Another player who I think
American fans are going to learn a lot about is Weston McKenney. Like Polisic, he plays at a major
club in Italy. He's this really
cheery, goofy army brat
who's incapable of being serious
until the game start. He can play
anywhere on the field, has played just
about anywhere but goalkeeper
for Juventus in this past season.
He's going to be a big weapon for them.
There's just interesting characters
up and down this field.
There's players who grew up
in the Netherlands and in Germany
and in England to American
fathers who offer
really interesting accents to the
locker.
room. There's guys from the borderlands like Ricardo Pepi, who when he was a teenager,
had to make an agonizing decision of whether he was going to play for Mexico or play for the
U.S. Two of the U.S. goalkeepers are really interesting. Matt Turner, when he tried to get in
the college soccer, couldn't get any team to look at him. He sent out hundreds of tapes and
emails to college programs. And Terrell Fairfield University finally took a chance on him.
and then he made it to the Premier League,
and he was the starting U.S. goalkeeper at the last World Cup.
The other goalkeeper, Matt Fries,
is the son of a famous neurosurgeon who pioneered gene therapy.
And even though Matt has a degree from Harvard,
he's sort of an underachiever in his family
because they're all scientists and they have PhDs
and they work in tech and finance.
And here he is slumming it in professional soccer.
Slumming it.
Well, tell me about the coach, Maricio Pochitino.
He's known for his...
unconventional methods, his intense style. What should folks know about him?
So Pocetino is a world-class soccer manager and the kind of manager that the U.S. has really
never had before and they were only able to get because they had a World Cup on home soil.
He's from Argentina. He's coached some of the biggest clubs in European soccer.
He's an interesting character. He's very affable. He's very pleasant.
He also believes that keeping a tray of lemons in his office will absorb
He believes that he can read the oras of the players and use it to kind of channel their performance and figure out who's going to play well.
So he's a really compelling character as well.
But he's got them believing.
And he offered the team this hard reset that they needed 18 months ago and got them back on track.
And it's looking promising under him.
Let's talk about the criticism around this tournament.
The high ticket prices, the expensive lodging and transportation, concerns about attendance in some cities.
what happened? How did this event that was meant to build excitement for the sport all of a sudden become inaccessible to so many fans?
Well, the thing you have to appreciate is that FIFA came to North America because it understood that this is where it was going to make the most money.
And it has done everything it can to just suck up every bit of cash that it possibly could.
So whereas previous World Cups would be run basically by the domestic soccer federation, this time around, FIFA set up headquarters,
in Miami. They rented some space in Trump Tower, although what I hear is nobody's ever there,
and it was really done more for political reasons. And they just made sure that they managed
every bit of the cash flow of this tournament. And so, you know, ticket revenue, they keep,
broadcast revenue, they keep, sponsorship revenue, they keep, even concessions and parking,
they get to keep. And basically, they left the local markets that are putting on these games,
16 and all of North America, 11 of them in the United States,
to deal with the expensive stuff.
Transportation and security and putting on the fan fests,
all of which are really hard to monetize.
So what's happened is that these markets
have had to find other ways of paying for this stuff
rather than have to put the cost on the taxpayer.
And that's why you're seeing these stories
of $150 train tickets and inaccessible games
in all these different ways.
And that's on top of the ticket prices, which are extraordinary because FIFA has basically argued, look, we're bringing 104 Super Bowls to your country.
And we're going to price them accordingly.
Leander Charlochans, really enjoyed speaking with you.
His new book is The Long Game with the subtitle, U.S. men's soccer and its savage four-decade journey to the top or thereabouts.
Lander, thanks again.
Thank you.
And that's the News Hour for tonight.
I'm Jeff Bennett for all of us here at the PBS News Hour.
Thanks for spending part of your evening with us.
Thank you.
