The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/08/07 at 02:00 EDT

Episode Date: August 7, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/08/07 at 02:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the dudes club, a brotherhood supporting men's health and wellness. Established in the Vancouver Downtown East Side in 2010, the dudes club is a community-based organization that focuses on indigenous men's health, many of whom are struggling with intergenerational trauma, addiction, poverty, homelessness, and chronic diseases. The aim is to reduce isolation and loneliness, and for the men to regain a sense of pride and purpose in their lives. As a global health care company, Novo Nordisk is dedicated to driving change for a healthy world. It's what we've been doing since 1923.
Starting point is 00:00:38 It also takes the strength and determination of the communities around us, whether it's through disease awareness, fighting stigmas and loneliness, education, or empowering people to become more active. Novo Nordisk is supporting local changemakers because it takes more than medicine to live a healthy life. Leave your armor at the door. Watch this paid content on CBC. Jim. From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Neil Hurland. A man in Chilliwack, BC, has been found not
Starting point is 00:01:13 criminally responsible for killing his wife last year, after the BC Supreme Court found he was suffering from delusions at the time. The court ruling says the man, now 70 years old, killed his wife, who can't be named under a publication ban, while believing. he was saving her from being tortured or raped by people who were targeting the couple. It says the man became preoccupied with concerns about not getting paid from his job and began acting in unusual and paranoid ways in the lead-up to the killing. Ontario Premier Doug Ford had some harsh words about U.S. President Donald Trump and his negotiation tactics, speaking with reporters Wednesday,
Starting point is 00:01:55 after a virtual meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney and his fellow premieres, Ford warned that Trump will target Canada's free trade deal with the U.S. and Mexico known as Kuzma. And he'll try to renegotiate the deal that she yields many Canadian goods from the American tariffs earlier than the 2026 review date. He said Canada has to be ready for anything. He's want to go on record. He's coming full bore out of us. He's not, this isn't going to be a church picnic. This is going to be, let's get down, down to it, and we'll see what happens. I'm praying. that everything's going to go fine. But if it doesn't, I'm going to ask the people,
Starting point is 00:02:34 do you trust President Trump? I don't. Meantime, sweeping new tariffs are now in effect for goods from dozens of countries entering the U.S. Last week, the Trump administration extended a deadline for trading partners to reach a new deal with the states. The question of whether NATO countries, such as Canada, should pour billions of fresh defense dollars
Starting point is 00:02:55 into high-tech, high-cost weapon systems, or cheaper disposable technology, is coming into sharper focus. A new report says sanctions have eroded Russia's tech sector, and they'll be forced to get by with weapons that are good enough. Murray Brewster has more. This is a long, long-running debate. Andrew Rosulius is a former Canadian Defense Department Arms Control expert. NATO nations, including Canada, are trying to figure out these days where to put their money. Another $9.3 billion going into this country's defense budget this year, all of it for badly needed new equipment. A new report by the UK-based Chatham House says sanctions are forcing Russia to produce less sophisticated military hardware. NATO has always had
Starting point is 00:03:42 the technological edge over Russia, and Rosulia says going forward in deciding between quantity versus quality, governments like Canada are going to have to look not at defense spending targets, but at what makes sense militarily to deter Russia and potentially its allies. Ukrainian intelligence has warned Russia is training North Korean workers to mass-produce Shahid drones, something bound to increase tensions in the Pacific. Marie Brewster, CBC News, Ottawa. Victoria Mboko has done it. The 18-year-old Canadian tennis player has advanced to the finals of the National Bank Open in Montreal, beating her opponent in the semis tonight.
Starting point is 00:04:21 Sarah Levitt reports. She has done it again, the new Canadian queen of the court. Victoria Mboko now onto her first ever major final in the big leagues. The storybook continues. The 18-year-old came into Montreal's National Bank open relatively unknown, but her smashing success has won over the crowd. She says she's grateful for it. Playing in front of the home crowd obviously has its advantages.
Starting point is 00:04:50 You know, you always have everyone pumping, up as much as much as they can. Tournament director Valéry Tetreau has watched it all with excitement. Just a couple months ago, she was probably the one still talking about who her role models were. Mboko has gained quite the fan base, and her success at this tournament means she's ensured a spot at the U.S. Open's main draw at the end of the month, a first for her at a grand slam. But right now, the finals here in Montreal. Sarah Levitt's CBC News.
Starting point is 00:05:22 Montreal. And that's the CBC News.

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