Chris downey had constructed the life hed always wanted, an architect with a good job. That whole exterior. Happily married and coaching his tenyearold sons Little League. But then something awful happened. He went blind. And that threatened to end his career. Is that different . Oh, yeah. Or did it . Im a kid again. Im relearning so much of architecture. It wasnt about what im missing in architecture, it was about what i had been missing in architecture. ticking rang and riding in utah. The Wright Family is the first family of american rodeo. World e roughest rides look like a ballet. Are you kind of dancing with the horse . I like to think you are. I dance a lot better with a horse than i do with my wife. laughter i aint got no rhythm. ticking im lesley stahl. Im bill whitaker. Im anderson cooper. Im scott pelley. Those stories, tonight, on 60 minutes. ticking the race is never ov. The journey has no port. The adventure never ends, because we are always on the way. And still going fo
ticking wertheim rightwing populism is making a not sosubtle comeback in europe. We found an interesting example in hungary, where a Government Program intends to stimulate birth rates by taking over fertility clinics, offering free treatments, giving cash loans, and even subsidizing minivans for young, married couples who become new parents. ticking whitaker do cowboys still exist . We found generations of them ranching and riding in utah. The Wright Family is the first family of american rodeo. World champions who can make the roughest rides look like a ballet. Are you kind of dancing with the horse . I like to think you are. I dance a lot better with a horse than i do with my wife. laughter i aint got no rhythm. ticking im lesley stahl. Im bill whitaker. Im anderson cooper. Im jon wertheim. Im scott pelley. Those stories, tonight, on 60 minutes. ticking [indistinct chatter] thisll be what they was waiting on from me thisll be the realest story that ive ever told its a trap if they s
Hampshire, this was his first swing on the campaign. Thank you. Im looking out there, i see some very friendly faces. Good morning nashua. Some energy, come on, i want to get going here. [applause] not that hard, its sunday morning, you slept yesterday, right . It is great to be back in the granite state, a second home for me. Ive got two second homes, iowa and New Hampshire. [laughter] i love this state. Growing up i have great memories of visiting here with friends. Squam lake, getting up the highway there toward some of your blue ice that you get to ski on sometimes and high school in concord where i would really look forward to taking that first cut of the hockey season on the black ice and now the ice doesnt even freeze, so its hard to do today, but i love the primary tradition of the state. Not just because you voted for me. It goes a lot farther back than that, folks, to be honest with you. When i was 24 years old stationed on the other side of the earth, when Radio Broadcasts a
Accountable. translated the morning that i won the nobel prize, i asked my husband, abid, to see if there was a way i could decline, because the prize would make my life difficult. But, fate and god sometimes bring you something so that you can stop crimes and help others. ticking i start seeing the colors and the geometric designs and then boom. Visions began. Visions brought about by the powerful Psychedelic Drug psilocybin. Administered by scientists, aimed at helping people suffering from depression, anxiety, and addiction. Do you ever have a day where you wake up and youre like, man, i wish i could have a vodka right now or a beer . Not at all. Which is the craziest thing. Because that was my favorite thing to do. The image on the left shows connections within the brain before psilocybin. On the right, after. ticking im lesley stahl. Im bill whitaker. Im anderson cooper. Im scott pelley. Those stories tonight, on 60 minutes. ticking about making choices. Well i didnt choose metast
Can be accomplished [ inaudible ]. Why dont you go ahead and take it. So let me first say, i think you touch upon an important observation about too big to fail which so much relies on the discretionary decisions of government and government decision makers, whether it is the d. O. J. Or the s. E. C. There is nothing about too big to fail economists. It is by political decisions and of course when eric holder goes before congress and said that somebody is too big to jail, that reinforces that perception. And on the data point, so again i would start with data can be suggestive as best and during the crisis we saw suggestive data that the funding advantage for the largest institutions had expanded and yes that has contracted but in my opinion you would expect that to contract post crisis. I think you could compare the funding cost today versus precrisis over time. People forget before the crisis, say in 2006, the largest banks paid more to borrow than the smallest banks. It was complete