The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/05/10 at 03:00 EDT
Episode Date: May 10, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/05/10 at 03:00 EDT...
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How did the internet go from this?
You could actually find what you were looking for right away,
bound to this.
I feel like I'm in hell.
Spoiler alert, it was not an accident.
I'm Cory Doctorow, host of Who Broke the Internet
from CBC's Understood.
In this four-part series, I'm going to tell you
why the internet sucks now, whose fault it is,
and my plan to fix it. Find Who Broke
the Internet on whatever terrible app you get your podcasts.
From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Claude Fague. US and Chinese officials are meeting in
Switzerland and what comes out of it could determine the future of the global economy when it comes to trade wars.
Lisa Jing reports.
After weeks of escalating tensions that have seen more than 100% tariffs on goods shipped
between the US and China, talks are happening, reportedly initiated by the states.
Chinese Vice Premier He Li-feng will meet with US Treasury Secretary Scott Besson and
US Trade Representative Jameson Greer in Geneva, Switzerland.
A sign things could de-escalate, says Trump.
The talks come after the US and UK announced a trade deal, a first in a worldwide terrafore
that has wreaked havoc on financial markets
and thrown supply chains into chaos.
The door is open for talks, though China will firmly safeguard its own interests, said Chinese
Commerce Ministry spokesperson He Yadong earlier this week.
Lisa Shing, CBC News, Toronto.
There may be a plan in the works to bring aid into Gaza.
It's a U.S.-backed proposal that includes private companies handing out supplies.
Sasha Petrasek explains.
There still remains a desperate need for humanitarian aid.
U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee says Washington is working on a plan to deliver more food
through an organization it's creating from scratch,
deliberately bypassing UN agencies which Israel has accused of sheltering Hamas militants.
A lot of challenges to be able to make this work.
He couldn't say when the first food will be distributed or who will be involved,
except it won't be Israel. Hamas also won't be involved who Israel accuses of hijacking and hoarding aid.
The plan has been condemned by UNICEF spokesman James Elder
as prioritizing Israel's military goals not Gaza's famine.
We've had more children are likely to suffer and risk death and injury as a consequence of this plan
Sasha Petrusic CBC News
Toronto US federal transportation officials want to temporarily cut flights at New Jersey's Newark
Airport on the heels of recent equipment and staffing issues late Friday night
The FAA announced it plans to meet with major airlines to discuss a temporary reduction in the number of flights in and out of Liberty International Airport.
Air traffic controllers directing planes into Newark lost radar signals yesterday morning
for the second time in two weeks.
Traffic was being directed from a facility in Philadelphia.
The Toronto Blue Jays are facing the Seattle Mariners this weekend.
In fact, the Jays won the series opener last night 6-3. Now the games are
normally sold out with thousands of Canadian Jays fans flocking south. But
the opener fell about 16,000 fans short of a sellout. As Jasmine Granea reports,
many north of the border are choosing not to go this year
because of Canada-U.S. tensions.
I just don't feel like 100% comfortable.
Vancouver resident and Toronto Blue Jays fan Julie Nimick tries to go down south every year to watch the games,
but she's skipping the tradition this time amid U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs,
51st state rhetoric and scrutiny
at the border.
A nice sunny afternoon here in Seattle.
The Jays Mariner's annual showdown has long been a summer staple for Canadian baseball
fans and is normally a sold out event.
Yet hundreds of tickets were still on sale Friday.
There are hundreds of people walking the waterfront.
Not a single one of them has a Blue Jay cap or a Blue Jay sweatshirt on.
Bob Donigan owns a seafood restaurant chain in Seattle.
He and some 40 other business owners are trying to entice Canadians this weekend by accepting
Canadian cash or giving a 30 percent discount to those who show Canadian ID.
Donigan says businesses will consider extending the Canadian discount depending on how long
the travel
anxieties persist.
Yasmine Rane, CBC News, Vancouver.
And that is Your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Claude Fague.