The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/10 at 07:00 EST
Episode Date: November 10, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/10 at 07:00 EST...
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from cbic news it's the world this hour i'm joe cummings a cbc investigation is revealing the details of a secret
neo-nazzi conference held this summer in vancouver among those in attendance were mixed martial arts
coaches trainers and gym owners who were believed to be on the front line when it comes to the
recruitment of white nationalists.
Eric Sito reports.
You as a white person, they want you to be alone and isolated.
Make no mistake, we are at war.
These are parts of speeches from the Exiles of the Golden Age Conference held this summer
at a secret venue in Vancouver, organized and attended by a who's who of Canadian
neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and fascists.
CBC's visual investigations team looked into many of the more than 50 people who were
there, thanks to verified video gathered by the Canadian
anti-hate network. Evan Balgord, their executive director, says the conference shows white nationalism in Canada
is growing. They have managed to sort of figure out a unified and coherent strategy, and they are
successfully recruiting large numbers of people doing it. CBC News is also identifying several mixed
martial arts gym owners, trainers and coaches who attended the event. Experts say this sport is increasingly
becoming a gateway for white supremacist recruiting. We reached out to some of the conference attendees for
comment, but the exiles of the Golden Age group told anyone who is there not to respond to our
requests. Eric Cito, CBC News, Toronto. For more on the neo-Nazi conference, the full CBC visual
investigation report is on our website. A U.S. Justice Department official is saying U.S. President
Donald Trump has pardoned Rudy Giuliani. The former mayor of New York appears to be among a number
of Republicans being pardoned for their efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. The list also
appears to include Mark Meadows, Trump's former chief of staff.
There's a breakthrough to report on the government shutdown in Washington.
The Senate has approved a new funding bill that could be the first step toward ending the 40-day stalemate.
Katie Simpson has more.
The yeas are 60 and the nays are 40.
A procedural vote on the Senate floor kicked off the major breakthrough so many Americans had been hoping for.
A bipartisan agreement was reached, a series of compromises to reopen and continue funding
the U.S. government.
Mr. President, again, I am optimistic that after almost six weeks of this shutdown, we
finally will finally be able to end it.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune acknowledging it could take a few days for the process
to be finalized, eventually bringing to an end the longest shutdown in U.S. history.
Strain on the American public was clear.
Federal workers were not being paid.
Food assistance programs were in limbo, and thousands of flights were canceled or delayed
because of staffing shortages and safety concerns.
The deal does not include an extension of health care subsidies that expire at the end of the year.
The same subsidies Democrats had demanded be extended in exchange for the votes needed to fund the government.
Katie Simpson, CBC News, Washington.
Three months after a wildfire destroyed about 200 homes in Newfoundland's Conception Bay North,
workers underway to rebuild the community.
Arianna Kelland has the story.
There are signs of newness in Western Bay, Newfoundland.
amid the charred remains of what once stood.
Gary and Norma Slade are rebuilding a home from scratch.
This is my home.
This is my life.
This is it.
I just can't give up on it.
The Slates weren't always certain they would rebuild.
A lot has been lost since that August fire that burned out of control for nearly a month.
Entire communities were destroyed.
We never expected to see the fire grow into what it did.
probably one of the most devastating events in the province's history.
Roger Gillingham led a team of volunteer firefighters into what they called the beast.
They worked for weeks, watching as their neighbor's homes and sometimes their own went up in flames.
There was no stopping it.
Now months later, committees have been formed and plans are underway to get parts of Conception Bay North back to its former glory.
Arianna Kelland, CBC News, St. John's.
And that is the world this hour. For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings.
