The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/08/21 at 04:00 EDT
Episode Date: August 21, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/08/21 at 04:00 EDT...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Guess who just bundled their home and auto with Desjardin insurance?
Well, look at you, all grown up and saving money.
Yes, I am.
Mom told you to do it, didn't she?
Yes, she did.
Get insurance that's really big on care.
Switch and you could save up to 35% on home insurance when you bundle home and auto.
Dejardin Insurance, here for your home, auto, life, and business needs.
Certain conditions apply.
From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Neil Hurland.
The United Nations Secretary General is speaking out against Israel's plan
to launch a new military operation in Gaza City.
Antonio Guterres made the comment today during a visit to Japan.
I must reiterate that it is vital to reach immediately a ceasefire in Gaza
and the unconditional release of all hostages
and to avoid the massive deaths and destruction
that a military operation against Gaza City
would inevitably cause.
The Israeli military says Gaza City is home
to one of the last strongholds
of the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
The Texas House of Representatives
has approved a controversial plan
to redraw the election map in the state.
88 I's and 52 days, House Bill 4 has finally passed.
The move would gerrymander districts to improve the chances of Republicans winning more seats in the U.S. Congress.
The plan still needs to be approved by the Texas Senate and the governor.
Mahala Pisa is a Democratic state representative.
The next battlefield is the courts, and we will win there.
And then we take the battlefield to the ballot box.
More than 50 Democratic politicians from Texas temporarily left the state this month to try to delay the vote.
There are questions about claims of indigenous investment in a proposed natural gas plant in New Brunswick.
The plant is to be built by an American company, and it's been controversial on a number of fronts.
Now it appears a First Nations ownership stake is only hypothetical. Jacques Poitra has more.
North Shore Migma Tribal Council is a minority equity.
holder in the project. That claim by Pro Energy Executive Landon Tessner at a July online meeting
is a calling card for the proposed 400 megawatt natural gas plant. New Brunswick's power utility needs
the extra electricity the plant would provide, but there's growing opposition, including to the
choice of pro-energy, a U.S. company, to build it. So far, though, there is no equity investment by any
First Nation. So I think there was a step missed. Pabano First Nation Chief Terry Richardson says
the MiGMA agency working with the U.S. company may have moved too quickly.
Richardson supports the plant but says the process has to be right.
It's important that we have that down, you know, how we're doing this consultation
and how we're moving forward so we don't end up with stumbling blocks that cost money and
cause bad feelings.
The U.S. company refused to comment.
Jacques-Protra, CBC News, Fredericton.
A deadly tick-borne illness is spreading in Canada.
More common in the United States, the infection is being carried north,
as Jela Bernstein reports, it is treatable if caught early enough.
Don't stop enjoying the Great Outdoors, but do take precautions.
That's the advice of McGill University biologist, Virginie Millien.
Proper closing. Then when will you get back home, tick check.
Human-driven climate change means ticks are surviving farther north,
and Lyme disease isn't the only threat they carry.
This week, a case of rocky mountain spotted fever was reported in Quebec.
Doctors suspect that infection was picked up in southern Ontario or Quebec's eastern townships.
This is sadly not surprising.
Dr. Isaac Bogosh is an infectious diseases specialist with Toronto General Hospital.
It's a very serious infection and it can result in death if it's not identified quickly and treated quickly.
The signs of Rocky Mountain spotted fever are right in the name.
Fever, headache, nausea, and a rash, usually pinpoint spots or red splotches.
Jaila Bernstein, CBC News, Montreal.
In California, parole hearings for the Menendez brothers begin today.
Eric and Lyle Menendez are serving prison sentences for murdering their parents in 1989.
The case drew sensational headlines, and thanks to a recent Netflix show,
there's renewed interest in the story, and may a judge reduce their sentences
amid new evidence that their father sexually abused them.
And that's the CBC News.
Thank you.
