The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/10 at 08:00 EST

Episode Date: November 10, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/11/10 at 08:00 EST...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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 this year's u.n climate summit clock 30 is underway in brazil and with scientists saying the earth is warming faster than our efforts to reduce fossil fuel pollution the agenda for the summit is direct and to the point susan armistin reports in summary heat
Starting point is 00:00:57 money and motivation. I mean, 10 years after Paris, the world has missed its goal to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius. So how will countries dial up commitments to turn down the heat? Also, money last year, countries agreed to pay $300 billion a year to countries at the worst end of climate damages, but only a fraction of that has come in. And motivation. You know, without the U.S., it's not here as an official delegation. And with the president of the U.S. calling climate change a hope, How are countries going to work together to solve the big challenges, including making good and a promise two years ago, to transition away from oil and gas when oil production here in Brazil and in Canada has reached record highs. Susan Ormiston, CBC News, Belen, Brazil. There's a breakthrough of sorts to report this morning from the government shutdown in Washington. The Senate has approved a new funding bill that could be the first step toward ending the now 40-day stalemate. A group of moderate Democrats are supporting a plan that would see the government funded at least into the new year. Last night's Senate measure now goes to the House.
Starting point is 00:02:04 Still in Washington, a U.S. Justice Department official is saying U.S. President Donald Trump has issued a pardon for Rudy Giuliani. It appears the former mayor of New York is among a number of Republicans being pardoned for their efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. The list also includes Mark Meadows, Trump's former chief of staff. Two senior executives at the BBC have resigned. The resignations follow a leak internal review that accuses the public broadcaster of distorting a speech delivered by U.S. President Donald Trump. Chris Brown has more. Just before the last U.S. presidential election, the BBC program Panorama ran this clip of Donald Trump speaking to supporters before the storming of the Capitol in 2021. We're going to walk down to the Capitol, and I'll be the last.
Starting point is 00:02:54 there with you and we fight. Only Trump didn't actually say those words in that way. They were from different parts of the same speech. Last week, the Telegraph newspaper leaked an internal BBC review that concluded the edit distorted what Trump said. In his resignation statement, Director General Tim Davy said he was taking responsibility for the mistakes. In her resignation statement, BBC head of news, Deborah Terness, pushed back against the criticisms, saying while mistakes were made, the accusation that the broadcaster is institutionally biased is wrong. Chris Brown, CBC News, London. For the first time, the faces and the names of Japanese Canadian veterans who served in the First and Second World War
Starting point is 00:03:43 are being displayed ahead of this year's Remembrance Day throughout the streets of Vancouver. Ashley Burke has a story. These were young men who gave their whole lives and no one remembers them. Debbie Jang spent more than a decade digging through wartime records and tracking down descendants of heroes she says never got the recognition they deserved. I feel like I'm bringing back to life that person and their names would otherwise never be known. She says almost 200 Japanese Canadians fought in the First World War for Canada. But despite their service during the Second World War, veterans like private Atoji Kamatic.
Starting point is 00:04:19 were among the 22,000 Japanese Canadians, the government forced out of their homes, placed in internment camps, and sold off their belongings. Canada deemed them a threat after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. Now Kamachi's image is on a large banner on the street in Vancouver with 20 other Japanese Canadian veterans. Their faces sending a powerful message their stories still need to be told. Ashley Burke, CBC News, Ottawa. And that is the world this hour.
Starting point is 00:04:51 For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings.

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