The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/06 at 10:00 EST
Episode Date: November 6, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/06 at 10:00 EST...
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Hey, I'm Sarah Marshall, and there's one story from the past that I've been circling around for years now.
This eight-part series traces the hidden history of the satanic panic in North America.
We'll connect the dots from Victoria, BC, to the backroads of Kentucky.
Satan was having a moment, the sensationalist heartthrob of our time.
The Devil You Know, available now wherever you get your podcasts.
from cbc news it's the world this hour i'm joe cummings the supreme court of canada has announced it will not hear an appeal case involving a bc farm ordered to call hundreds of ostriches
the birds are among a flock that contracted avian flu last year and that triggered the call order from the canadian food inspection agency today's decision means there is now no further legal justification
to delay the call of the 300 birds.
At the same time, the Supreme Court has also announced it will hear an appeals case
in the challenge to Saskatchewan's school pronoun law.
The law prevents children under 16 from changing their names or pronouns without parental consent.
In passing that legislation, the Saskatchewan government invoked the Charter's notwithstanding clause.
Now to Blenheim, Brazil, where world leaders are meeting ahead of next week's opening of the COP 30,
climate summit. The summit's being held against a backdrop of rising climate emergencies and growing
pushback from major stakeholders like the United States. Susan Armistin reports.
Brazil's president made a bold decision to invite the world here to Belana City, less visited in
Brazil and surrounded by the Amazon rainforest in a year when climate politics in some quarters
are really under attack. The U.S. has pulled out, no official delegation here. Prime Minister
Karni also won't be here. He was once the UN envoy for climate finance, but the PMO says with the
federal budget vote looming, he can't afford to be away. And some will read that as a step back from
his climate change focus in the past. It's fair to say that this cop is about trying to retool
how countries tackle the climate crisis. The Paris conference was 10 years ago. It set that
important target of limiting heating to 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius. Well, we're missing that
target consistently. The world is still heating up. So it's a reality check. Susan Olmiston,
CDC News, Berlin, Brazil. With the government shut down in Washington now into its fifth week,
the Federal Aviation Administration is being forced to limit the number of flights in and out of
some of the country's biggest airports. Willie Lowry explains. Starting Friday, air travel
in the U.S. may get a lot more complicated. That's because the Federal Aviation Administration
says it needs to reduce flight traffic by 10% at 40 of the country's busiest airports. The
government shutdown has dragged on to a 37th day. Air traffic controllers, already in short supply,
have not been paid since mid-October. Come next week, if nothing changes, they will miss a second
paycheck in a row. Now, controllers are forced to work without pay during the shutdown, but
But as that period extends to historic lengths, the Department of Transportation is looking for ways to reduce pressure on them.
Starting tomorrow, there will likely be a 4% reduction in flights, and the FAA will ratchet that up to 10% over the coming days.
Willie Lowry, CBC News, Washington.
As part of the Gaza ceasefire, Hamas has now released the remains of another hostage.
The body returned last night has been identified as a Tanzanian student who had traveled to Israel on an internation.
ship. Crystal Gamansing has more now from Jerusalem. At the time of the ceasefire,
28 hostages were declared dead, but still being held captive in Gaza. Six remain.
The hostage families collectively will continue fighting until all the hostages are back,
until the last hostage, and hopefully that day will come very soon.
Hostage families met earlier in the week with the government coordinator demanding a meeting
with the Prime Minister and for the government to do more to get the remaining.
hostages home. Slow progress on the return of the bodies has reportedly stalled talks between
Israel and Hamas from progressing to phase two of the U.S. brokered peace plan.
Crystal Gamanssing, CBC News, Jerusalem.
And that is the World This Hour. You can listen to us wherever you get your podcast. The
World This Hour is updated every hour seven days a week. For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings.
Thank you.
