The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/14 at 02:00 EDT
Episode Date: September 14, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/09/14 at 02:00 EDT...
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from cbc news the world this hour i'm neil kumar we begin in toronto where police made
several arrests at a downtown park on saturday responds to a protest and a counter protest centering on
the issue of immigration namo wine garden tells us more about the rallies and what it shows about
the political climate in canada and beyond christie pitts park turning into a pressure cooker
a standoff brewing when a demonstration dubbed the Canada First Patriot Rally came about,
opposing Canada's immigration policies.
When you allow millions of people from other countries around the world, it puts strain on our resources.
It's already unrecognizable in this country, and I know many people share that same sentiment.
I'm not saying no to immigrants. I say we need to slow it down. We need to be more, I guess,
careful about who we bring into this country.
Groups opposing their message came together to organize a counter-rally,
saying racism has no place here.
In London, over 100,000 people attended an anti-immigration rally,
one of the biggest far-right to demonstrations in the U.K. in recent years,
with counter-protesters outnumbered.
Here in Toronto, a different scene.
Nama Wine Garden, CBC News, Toronto.
The widow of Charlie Kirk is vowing to continue her husband's work.
Erica Kirk made her first public comments since his assassination,
addressing the quote, evil doers who are responsible for his death.
You have no idea the fire that you have ignited within this wife.
The cries of this widow will echo around the world like a battle cry.
To everyone listening tonight across America, the movement my husband built will not die.
Kirk says her husband's organization, Turning Point USA, will continue its tours of university campuses.
A professor at the University of Toronto has been placed on leave after posting a comment about Kirk's death.
Screenshots of Ruth Marshall's ex-account show a post on Wednesday, which says, quote,
shooting is honestly too good for so many of you fascist expletives.
The university says it took immediate action.
CBC reached out to Marshall, but is not heard back.
An Ontario man is issuing a warning about a rare but real phenomenon,
the experience called AI psychosis.
Alan Brooks says a simple question to a chatbot about,
about the number PII, rather PIE,
spiral into a 300-hour long exchange over three weeks.
He says chat GBT tried to convince him
that he had created a new way of seeing the world.
Terror, paranoia, obsession.
I was oscillating between reality and delusion
on a regular basis.
I wasn't sure to believe it or if I shouldn't believe it.
It's messaging and its gaslighting is so powerful
when you're engaged with it,
especially when you trust it, right?
Brooks is calling for tech companies to establish safeguards for artificial intelligence chatbots.
In Halifax, protesters continue to voice their opposition to Israel's participation in the Davis Cup tennis tournament.
Tennis Canada chose to hold the matches without spectators citing safety concerns, but security agencies are denying giving that advice.
Julana Grillo has more.
Three local and national authorities are denying they were part of Tennis Canada's decision to hold a Canada-Israel Davis Cup match.
without spectators this weekend in Halifax.
On Tuesday, Tennis Canada announced fans would not be allowed into the Scotia Bank
Center due to escalating safety concerns, citing intelligence received from local and national
security agencies.
When asked which agencies were referred to in the statement, a spokesperson for Tennis Canada
pointed to Halifax Regional Police, the RCMP, and Canada's National Intelligence Service ceases.
But all three told CBC News via email,
they were not consulted.
Tennis Canada declined an interview
and said the organization had received
credible information from multiple sources.
But the spokesperson did not reveal
where the information came from.
The matches are proceeding behind closed doors.
Julian Agrilylo, CBC News, Halifax.
And that is your world is out.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kumar.
Let me
