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Interview with Former Washington Governor Jay Inslee; Interview with Conservation Biologist Steve Boyes; Interview with "Ghost Elephants" Director Werner Herzog; Interview with The New York Times Former Opinion Columnist and The Atlantic Staff Writer David Brooks. Aired 1-2p ET

Aired February 27, 2026 - 13:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


[13:00:00]

PAULA NEWTON, CNN ANCHOR: Hello everyone, and welcome to Amanpour. Here's what's coming up.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

JAY INSLEE, FORMER WASHINGTON GOVERNOR: This is a cataclysmic blow to American health.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

NEWTON: The truth behind Trump's repeal of a landmark climate ruling, a move that could fill the nation's skies with pollution. Former Washington

governor Jay Inslee tells me why, despite it all, he's still hopeful.

Then --

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

WERNER HERZOG, DIRECTOR, "GHOST ELEPHANTS": The largest elephant ever. Does it matter if they are a dream or a reality?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

NEWTON: -- the search for a lost species. I speak with acclaimed director Werner Herzog and explorer Steve Boyes about their new documentary, "Ghost

Elephants."

Also, ahead --

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

DAVID BROOKS, FORMER OPINION COLUMNIST, THE NEW YORK TIMES AND STAFF WRITER, THE ATLANTIC: You know, when I reflect back on the times since I

joined the Times in 2003, it's -- there's been just a tremendous loss of faith.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

NEWTON: -- "Time to Say Goodbye." As his 20-year tenure at the New York Times comes to an end, columnist David Brooks reflects on how America has

changed during his decades at the paper.

Welcome to the program, everyone. I'm Paula Newton in New York, sitting in for Christiane Amanpour.

This week, President Donald Trump delivered the longest State of the Union address in history. Near the top of his agenda, the devastating, deadly

flooding in Texas last year. A disaster so severe, the president said it was one of the worst things he'd ever seen. And yet, no mention of why the

nation is seeing more extreme weather events.

Now, a court will determine how much power the government really has over climate action. Several groups have filed a lawsuit against the

Environmental Protection Agency after the Trump administration moved to rescind the endangerment finding.

Now, the finding says that greenhouse gases are not just bad for the planet, but actually harm human health. That simple conclusion became the

foundation for nearly every rule limiting pollution for the last 17 years. Killing it could prevent future presidents from taking meaningful steps to

fight climate change.

Our first guest became known as America's greenest governor. Just last year, Jay Inslee said Trump can't stop the clean energy revolution. But

after months of major rollbacks, does he still feel the same way? The former Democratic governor of Washington State joined me from Portland,

Oregon.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

NEWTON: Governor Inslee, welcome to the program. Appreciate you being here.

JAY INSLEE, FORMER WASHINGTON GOVERNOR: Good morning.

NEWTON: I want to talk about this concept of endangerment, right? It can kind of seem a bit vague at times, but the stakes are quite high. What

dangers are we talking about here and what happens when these regulations are no longer in effect?

INSLEE: Well, this is a cataclysmic blow to Americans' health. We know that the government has an obligation to protect American citizens with the

air they breathe that won't give them asthma and cardiovascular problems. That won't have children choking on forest fire smoke. And unfortunately,

what President Trump has done is pull the rug out from under almost all of the ability of the federal government to protect Americans' air to breathe.

And I can't think of something as more personal injurious to Americans because we have been choking on pollution and this would eliminate the

federal government's action to reduce the pollution going into the air.

The endangerment finding is something that's been in place for decades. It is clear, absolute science. In fact, it's interesting, the administration

gave up an argument that climate change is a hoax. They've been saying that for 10 years, but they gave up that argument. Now, they've got this little

loophole they want to get through, but they're not going to succeed and there's going to be litigation on this. I believe it is likely the

endangerment finding will be restored. And the protections that Americans deserve against pollution is going to be restored. And I'm very hopeful

about that.

NEWTON: And we will talk about the legal claims here, but EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, they claim this is good for business, that ending

this finding would save auto manufacturers, I mean, their guesstimate over the next decade, $1.3 trillion.

[13:05:00]

I do wonder where you believe they're getting those numbers from, but also if they have looked to balance the other side of the equation, because of

course there are significant costs to ending this. So, where do you think they're making the argument here? Because you know as well as I do, they

have had businesses lobbying them for this.

INSLEE: Well, where they get these numbers is the same place Donald Trump gets numbers, which is out of thin air. You know, he said he was going to

reduce inflation by 1,000 percent, which of course is mathematically impossible. He says he's eliminated inflation, which he hasn't. In fact,

he's driven up our electrical prices 12 to 13 percent nationwide. He's cost us $92 billion of additional electricity prices. So, that's the truth.

And in fact, and this is pretty stunning, a couple of months ago, the administration said, we're not going to consider the health of Americans

when we decide whether or not to protect them or not. That is a stunning statement.

Now, look, I believe in economic growth. I was a three-term governor, we had some of the best economic growth in our state's history. So, I think

it's important. But you don't have a good economy if you have people who are sick and dying. You don't have a good economy in the forest products

industry if the forests are all burning up. You don't have a good economy in the fishing industry, which we have in the state of Washington, if the

fish are dying by the millions because the water is getting too hot because of climate change. You don't have a good economy if people can't afford

home insurance because of these fires.

We have vast swaths of Americans now, it's almost impossible to get insurance against fire because climate change is causing so much havoc in

these communities. So, this is bad for our health and bad for our economy. That's the reality.

And the most stunning thing about this endangerment finding is, they argued again that this was a hoax, but they gave up that argument and they knew

they could not make that argument that climate change was a hoax because they get laughed out of court. So, now they're trying to argue that some

ridiculous argument that the federal government can only protect us within 100 yards of a smokestack, which is just stupid.

You know, that's like saying that we couldn't protect ourselves against a terrorist who puts arsenic in the reservoir because it's miles away at the

end of the pipeline. It's a ridiculous argument, I believe it will fail. And we will again, restore America's leadership in clean energy and

defeating climate change.

NEWTON: I want to get to some of the legal basis here for this, because this is the next battleground for this. Many have criticized the basis of

the EPA's claims, as you just explained. So, we did have a first lawsuit launched against the agency. It was filed by environmental and health

groups.

Manish Bapna, he's president and CEO of the National Resources Defense Council. And I'm going to quote him here. He said, "We will see them in

court, and we will win. The science and the law are crystal clear and EPA is issuing a rushed sloppy and unscientific determination that has no legal

basis."

Governor Inslee, I ask you, you are an attorney, a former prosecutor. I do want your opinion on this because some argue that the determination, the

finding itself of endangerment, it needed more fundamental grounding in the law. And that this could actually be a failing, that even this kind of

challenge could fail in court. What's your opinion?

INSLEE: Look, these people have a losing hand and they know they have a losing hand, and I'll tell you why. So, the law is very clear. Since 2007,

there was a Supreme Court case out of Massachusetts. It made very clear that the federal government has an obligation, an unalterable, non-

amendable obligation to protect Americans' health and lungs against pollution that is harmful to health and welfare. This is a legal

obligation, it's well-founded, it's been through multiple Democratic and Republican administrations.

Now, here's the deal. Trump has argued for 10 years, you've heard him a thousand times saying that windmills cause cancer and that climate change

is a hoax. What happened is, is that when they actually came time to destroy the endangerment finding, they gave up that argument. They know

climate change is real. They know they cannot make an argument. They know this is bad for the general health and welfare of the United States. And in

a stunning retreat, they gave up this ridiculous argument.

Again, because the science is so profoundly overwhelming and we're experiencing it with our own eyes, seeing the floods and the forest fires

and the glacier retreat and the warming waters and everything else. The science is so overwhelming, it is impossible even for them to argue that

these gases are not dangerous to our health and welfare.

NEWTON: Governor Inslee --

[13:10:00]

INSLEE: Instead, they shift their arguments, said this law doesn't apply.

NEWTON: Governor Inslee, we're pretty clear, right, that this is likely going to end up in the Supreme Court. I don't have to remind you of the

conservative makeup of that court. Are you 100 percent confident that when they get to the end of the road, the Supreme Court, that this will be

struck down, that they won't be able to go through with this?

INSLEE: No, I've never been 100 percent confident of any lawsuit I've ever been involved in, but I have been willing through 20 years of trial

experience to tell my clients what's highly probable. I believe it is highly probable that Trump will lose this lawsuit.

And the reason is, is the science is so clear. Look, you cannot repeal the laws of gravity. You cannot repeal the laws of physics. And you cannot

repeal the law of climate change, which is the federal government has a legal binding, statutorily, congressionally approved obligation to protect

Americans against this pollution and simultaneously reduce their electrical bills. This is something we haven't talked about. This is going to cost

Americans a lot because Trump, because of this, is trying to deny Americans access to renewable energy. He wants to shove coal down our throats, which

is more expensive than solar wind.

So, the laws of physics are going to mean that you can't make an argument that this is not bad for human health. And as you've indicated, in a

stunning development, they actually gave up that argument. So, I think it is highly probable that he will lose as he does. Look, we sue Donald Trump

before breakfast almost every morning, and we've got about, I think, an 80 percent of success rate so far against him.

So, yes, we'll see him in court. I look forward to that.

NEWTON: Governor Inslee, look, you've been unfailingly optimistic about the environment in terms of what is to come and for you and others to be

able to fight this with the EPA and others. But I ask you, even in the interim, even if you don't believe that this will stand, what's the loss

here? I mean, we saw what happened with the tariffs. There've already been a lot of damage done despite the Supreme Court ruling against them. So,

what are your fears in the months to come?

INSLEE: Well, listen, this is clear. It does slow down our progress. It costs us money in utility rates because he's, again, making us choke on

coal-fired pollution at the same time we choke on our utility bills, which have gone up 13 percent. Remember, this is a guy who ran for office saying

he was going to reduce our electrical costs. He said he's going to cut them in half.

Well, they continue to go up because, again, he is in this kind of corrupt bargain with the oil and gas industry. Look, they went to Mar-a-Lago, these

executives, and he basically said, look, if you guys give me a billion dollars for my campaign, I'll come through with you and choke off your

competitors because they don't want to compete with solar and wind because it's cheaper. So, he's fulfilling that devil's bargain and is costing us a

lot of money.

Now, here's the good news, though, and I always want to say there's some good news. Our states have the ability to move forward to develop our clean

energy economy. There's 23 states. We represent over 60 percent of the United States. We're in the U.S. Climate Alliance. This is a group I

started years ago when Trump first showed up. And this alliance, all of these states are moving forward on clean energy, and Donald Trump cannot

stop our states doing a lot of great work here. We have a Climate Commitment Act that now is getting cleaner air and more help for

Washingtonians. This work is going to continue in our states.

NEWTON: For Washingtonians and also very large states like California, Governor Gavin Newsom has promised to sue against this action. And he says

that, look, they will continue fighting climate pollution. In terms of the strength of the states, right, do you believe this will completely

supersede whatever happens on the federal regulation, or does it kind of leave the states still at a disadvantage?

INSLEE: Well, we have the ability in our own jurisdictions, it is called the United States of America, and states have their own jurisdiction and

authority to control, to a large degree, our own destiny. I'll give you an example of that. So, in 2019, we adopted a thing called the Climate

Commitment Act in Washington state. It's a state law. It limits the amount of carbon pollution. It hurts our health. And it generates about $4 billion

that can help Washingtonians get access to heat pumps and electric school buses and EV chargers and the like. The conservatives have tried to repeal

this. They went to the ballot box to try to repeal it.

We had an initiative in 2024. We won 62 to 38, massive, massive support for this law. And Donald Trump cannot stop the state of Washington to moving

forward on that. He cannot stop these states in their march to a clean energy future. He can slow down some of the federal efforts, but our states

are still have four wheels on the road and we're moving forward and we're making dramatic progress.

[13:15:00]

So, hope is not lost. The federal government is going to be back when the Supreme Court, I believe, gets hold of this endangerment finding and slaps

down yet another Trump illegal activity like they did on tariffs the other day. This was a major decision that we're going to follow the law still.

And it was very heartening to many of us that the Supreme Court stood up to him. And I believe it's likely they'll do the same thing on the

endangerment finding.

In the interim, we all can do things in our states to move the needle forward. And I'm excited to say Washington's leading that effort.

NEWTON: Governor Inslee, you are true to type, you know, optimistic. What do you say to people that are not as optimistic as you and they see the

legal challenges here, but obviously see in their own communities so many of these environmental regulations being repealed because business says

they can't compete unless some of this regulation is repealed? I mean, what worries you about this? Because as I said, there is a lapse in the interim,

right? Even if your long-term optimism holds true.

INSLEE: Well, you just got to look around and look at other people who have had difficult things in their life. I always think of Nelson Mandela.

You know, when I think about, geez, Trump's doing another stupid illegal act. We're going to have to get the Supreme Court. It's a real pain. But

then you look like Nelson Mandela. He was in solitary confinement for 27 years and came out and built a new country.

You look at the civil rights movement that took decades and the suffrage movement. This is a long slog. We are building a clean energy economy. You

don't do that overnight. You're going to have some ups and downs in a long struggle. The suffragettes took decades. They had a lot of struggles.

So, I think taking inspiration for people who've gone before who have a righteous cause that's going to help their fellow citizens and you get up

in the morning and you can do what you can do. That's why I'm excited to report to you and the state of Washington that we're making big progress on

this subject. So, be of good heart, continue fighting, and we'll get to the sunlit uplands as Winston Churchill used to say.

NEWTON: As I said, you remain true to type. And there are a lot of communities right now wondering about the air that they're breathing, the

water that they're drinking, and they will be watching these cases quite closely because it is existential to them. Governor Inslee, we will leave

it there. Good to see you.

INSLEE: You bet. Be well. Cheerio.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

NEWTON: Stay with CNN. We'll be right back with more after a break.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

NEWTON: Now, from the Peruvian jungle to the Carpathian Mountains to Antarctica's ice caps, acclaimed German filmmaker Werner Herzog is known

for shooting in the world's most extreme corners. His latest project, "Ghost Elephants," took him to the eastern highlands of Angola to chronicle

one man's search for an elusive herd of elephants believed to exist only in legend. Here's part of the trailer.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

STEVE BOYES, CONSERVATION BIOLOGIST: Ghost elephants are giants living in these high altitude forests, like a temple. They're up there in the sky.

[13:20:00]

WERNER HERZOG, DIRECTOR, "GHOST ELEPHANTS": We accompanied Steve Boyes to the Angolan highlands to find the elusive ghost elephants.

BOYES: Helicopters, camera traps, hundreds of them. Still never seen one. They're the last trackers alive that can identify an elephant by its

footprints. And it's with them that we are going to see the giant elephant.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

NEWTON: Part adventure, part meditation on man's search for meaning. Conservation biologist Steve Boyes spent more than a decade looking for

answers. I speak with him alongside Werner Herzog about chasing their own white whale.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

NEWTON: Thank you both for being on the program. Really appreciate it. Especially as you try and parse the, is it the beginning or the end of this

project? We're not exactly sure. I mean, Steve, I do want to start with you. The theory of ghost elephants. This has been a lifetime search for

you. Explain how this begins with Henry and why you were so passionate about this. And I have to say, passionate doesn't even begin to describe

you and your search for the so-called ghost elephants.

BOYES: Well, it began in 2015. We crossed the entire Okavango Basin. This is across three countries, four months on the river. And it was after a

month in this remote part of Angola, West Africa, that I found a clearing where there was elephant dung, signs of a big bull elephant. And we never

imagined to find elephants there. And that was the beginning of the search. So, it's 11 years ago.

But six months later, I found out about Henry in the Smithsonian. The fact that this elephant was shot right in that area. And that we had a chance of

potentially finding Henry's descendants. Henry is the giant elephant standing in the main rotunda of the Smithsonian. This is the largest

elephant ever recorded, the largest living land animal ever recorded.

NEWTON: But why such an intense passion about Henry, his descendants, and trying to find what are determined to be ghost elephants? You didn't know

if they even existed.

BOYES: No. I mean, in 1900, there were 10 million elephants across Africa. There are now 400,000. So, in a sense, all of the populations are ghosts.

But these specifically, it took us seven years to get the first trail cam photograph. We had high-tech -- 180 high-tech cameras out there. They are

motion sensing, heat sensing. And it takes seven years to get one photograph in black and white of an elephant like that. That's the first

evidence we have that they exist.

I've been on fat tire mountain bikes, motorbikes, hiking, camping, living out in those valleys. You can smell and sense them. You just don't see

them. They're ghosts. They're described as ghosts by the local Luchazi hunters, the local people there, by the traditional leaders, the kings.

These are the ghost elephants of Lissima.

NEWTON: And Werner, I want you not to attempt to be modest here. You are a giant of film, both fiction and nonfiction. You meet Steve, Steve Boyes, an

intense man on this singular purpose. What attracted you to him and this project?

HERZOG: We met by a chain of coincidences. A common friend said to me, Oh, do we have a moment? Come down in the restaurant in Beverly Hills, of all

places. There's a friend or somebody whom I know, Steve Boyes. You must meet this man. So, I said, OK, I'm coming down. So, we met and within five

minutes flat, when I knew what he was after, I said, we have to do that together. It seemed it was so convincing, so easy. There was no persuasion.

NEWTON: In terms of the way you construct this, though, this is the narrative of this is really like a mystery and it is mesmerizing

throughout. And you do not know where it is going to land. What in your experience of filmmaking led you to this narrative in this film? Because it

really does unfold like a mystery.

HERZOG: Well, the narrative comes out of the footage. You cannot superimpose a preconceived idea in the structure and squeeze the footage

into it, because we would never know what they actually find the ghost elephants. If not, it would have been a different film. And my commentary

would have to address it in a different way. But it comes with ease. I'm a storyteller and I want to make a film that's never not for half a second

boring for everyone, for anyone.

[13:25:00]

NEWTON: And the linchpin of this for me was the visuals underwater of the elephants, almost like a ballet. How did that come to you in terms of

shooting it that way? And how do you believe it impacts the film?

HERZOG: You see, the film has a title, "Ghost Elephants," but it's not a wildlife film. It's more about the dream of elephants, the ghosts, the

spirits of elephants. And there was footage, we had footage of elephants underwater. But of course, the camera sometimes would go above the level of

water and show the elephant.

Actually, the elephants are waiting, almost chin deep for a cameraman in the water. The camera is just like on a broomstick under the water, films

the legs. Elephants feel comfortable in the water. They do not feel threatened. And you can approach them, you can see, sometimes the camera

almost touches the legs of the elephants and the light, the rays of the sun, and the quasi-slow motion underwater has such a beautiful effect. And

I've never seen footage of such beauty. And I said, this has to be in the film. If it's not in the film, we don't have a movie.

NEWTON: Part of the -- as I said, the mystery of this movie is whether or not you are going to find your ghost elephants. I thought it was

interesting, and it is riveting, this one piece in the film where Werner asks you, does it matter if this hunt turns out to be a dream? And you

respond, no, it doesn't matter. That's almost better. Then they'll always exist. What do you mean by that?

BOYES: Well, they are still a mystery to me. I've been back five or six times since we filmed. I go back all the time. I'll be going back very soon

in May to search for them, to get to know them. We can do that genetically, but much better in person, in their landscape, in their valleys, these

sacred, secret valleys of the Kangala people. So, it's -- these places, so remote, so unseen, are dreamscapes. I say in the film, it's like living in

a dream that you never had. It's just the fact that these places are so uncreated by man, only created by elephants.

NEWTON: And in fact, we have a clip now of you waiting. This is the uninhabited Angola Highlands. So, much of where you've been and where

you've traveled on this mission.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

HERZOG: We are following the tracks of Luchazi tribesmen who spent the dry season here hunting antelopes for meat and skins.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

NEWTON: You just described a little bit what it's like to be in this environment. And yet it really is a scarred landscape in so many ways. How

did you reconcile all of that?

BOYES: Well, 10 years ago, it took us six months in armored vehicles to get through active minefields to get there. There were no roads. We just

were following cut marks in trees that indicated hunters had been there. It's traumatized by 27 years of civil war. The rebel leader Jonas Savimbi

was born there and he was assassinated there.

But I found that that trauma brought people together in isolating them. They became closer to culture, language and tradition and in regard became

closer to the elephants as sacred beings, as people to them. That is why these elephants have been kept so secret for so many centuries, protected

by the people.

NEWTON: Werner, we had Kerllen Costa in terms of what Steve is speaking about. He is a man who even as a child saw atrocities that no one should

see in Angola. He says so poignantly in the middle of this, it really almost brought me to tears. He said, you discussed how not only was this a

ravage on humans, but it was a ravage on the landscape, on the animals.

And he says that when he witnessed humans, and this has gone on for decades, not just in Africa, humans really desecrating, decimating the

animals and the landscape. He says humans fighting against creation as he describes it. And he adds that as if man is on a mission to destroy what he

is part of. Werner, how is Steve's mission here and what you've done redemptive to that?

HERZOG: The gigantic elephant Henry, 1955, was shot dead by a Hungarian- born big game hunter, Fenykovi. It took him 19 bullets to bring this giant down, pursuing the elephant over 15 kilometers in a Land Rover, shooting,

shooting, shooting until it was down.

[13:30:00]

And remarkably so, of course the media took notice of this event, of this gigantic elephant, but it was Sports Illustrated, 1955, celebrating the

world record of the hunter, the sportsman. Thanks God, our attitude is changing and has changed. And I'm showing in the film right after Kerllen

Costa speaks about this terrifying slaughter, I show excerpts of a 1965 Italian film, "Africa Addio," a very repulsive film, racist and you just

name it. But they managed to shoot footage of unspeakable terror of helicopters pushing the elephants right in front of the hunter who is

waiting with his rifle. And then he shoots it down. So, hunting by helicopter, or the helicopter actually pushes the elephant in a good

position for the hunter. And today, we have a different attitude. Thanks God. But it's a long process and it is not over yet.

NEWTON: And when I talk about it perhaps being redemptive, how was it for you in terms of the people that guided you through this mission? And this

really is the master trackers. We want to have a look now.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

HERZOG: Because his arrows are poisoned, Cui's bow is small. He's one of the greatest trackers alive. He can read tracks in the sand as we would

read a newspaper. But he reads with all his senses. He hears a bird alarmed and this tells him a leopard might be nearby.

He sniffs the air for the scent of elephants. He senses the ground vibrating from the hooves of fleeing Rowan antelopes.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

NEWTON: Tell us more about these master trackers, what they meant to you and they really are the wise men of this entire mission in terms of me as a

viewer watching it.

BOYES: Well, they will show you the birthplace of religion, the birthplace of science, experiencing a trance dance with the healers, preparing us to

leave. It was a three-year process to live in the homesteads, gain their trust, become friends, become family before we went to Angola.

Angola is a place of horror to them. Curbus (ph) had run away as an eight- year-old child, as a refugee, away from the war. Tweedavid (ph), one of the master trackers, had been in the military and that's where he had learnt

Afrikaans. So, they knew that trauma. But these are people whose interaction with an elephant footprint is the same as ours with a human

face.

So, they've seen it once, they see it again, they'll recognize it and then they'll give it a name and they will come up with a narrative for what

happened over the last week with every single animal, whether it was hunting, whether it was sleeping, whether it was sad, whether it was happy.

It is an extraordinary connection to nature that they can show us, not just in their spiritual beliefs but in their activity of life.

Living in the homesteads, I feel inadequate as a parent, as a partner to my wife, because of the closeness of those families. The entire family is in

constant contact with each other throughout the day. Everything is leveled, everything is shared, everything is equal.

HERZOG: And great self-confidence as to who we are. The very first encounter in the film that I had was with the main tracker, Kui (ph). And I

asked him, in your language, you name yourselves the real people. What am I then? Am I still half an animal because I have hair on my chest? So, he

laughs. And within 10 seconds flat, you have a rapport. And with great self-confidence, I mean, how they encounter us, it's just wonderful.

NEWTON: And with generosity as well, right?

HERZOG: Yes, yes.

NEWTON: Yes. Just the way they took you in. Steve, I don't know if this is a rhetorical question for you now. Do you find your ghost elephants it is

poignant the way you put this mission together and what it means to you now, later, when you have a chance to reflect on?

[13:35:00]

BOYES: The search is never finished. I was there just a few months ago and I followed two breeding -- The search is never finished. I was there just a

few months ago and I followed two breeding herds and five bull elephants. We were taking genetic samples from their dung. I did not see them. Then

they came together.

And when I'd come back to camp and describe the story, it's like I was with them. So, my experience of the ghost elephants is as ghosts. I felt like I

was with that gathering. I was one hour behind them. It was 40 elephants greeting each other and, you know, having these stories told to me by Kui

(ph) and the master trackers. So, that experience continues. And ss I say in the film, for the rest of my life I will be going back to those valleys.

NEWTON: Steve, you're a very intense man and I do not pretend to understand, you know, really your passion and your mission here. I know so

much more after watching you. I am wondering, and the two of you, what did you learn from each other and how will it inform both of you going forward

in any work that you do?

HERZOG: For me, wonderful to be in a life that is primordial in an area that is pretty much unknown to all of us. And you see the highlands of

Angola unpopulated. There are no bridges, no roads, no villages, nothing. You have to cross rivers wading through and carrying the motorcycles on

your back.

And this area alone is the size of England. It's the size of England. And in some of these valleys you find the ghost elephants. That, by the way, is

a very good argument against why are we pointing out where we are. I mean, we are showing an area as wide as England. But do we give hints to future

poachers? No, we are not. We are dissuading them. You cannot land a helicopter. It's way too far out there. You cannot fly back. Your fuel will

not be enough.

It is protected by the local people and the local king who knows his people are related to elephants. So, it's more dissuading any hunters, illegal

poachers. So, that, in my mind, I had the feeling this was something I had to do, you see. Sometimes you have no choice and you have to do it.

BOYES: I've been spending a long time telling stories, translating science with narrative and characters and meaning and truth. And in meeting Werner,

I found someone that I could truly be myself, reflect on how I truly feel about my experiences in wild places. I'm a well-published scientist. I have

large scientific advisory boards and 54 scientists working on my program. But the reason I do this isn't that. And Werner allowed me to explore that.

It will be carried into the storytelling I do in the future, the confidence with which I am able to communicate this. I started writing two books after

meeting Werner and finding this freedom in storytelling.

NEWTON: And congratulations to both of you. Thanks for being on the program. Appreciate it.

HERZOG: Thank you.

BOYES: Thank you.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

NEWTON: "Ghost Elephants" premieres in select theaters today. It airs on National Geographic on March 7th and will be available to stream the next

day on Disney Plus and Hulu. Stay with CNN. We'll be right back with more after a break.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[13:40:00]

NEWTON: Now, after 22 years, columnist David Brooks is leaving the New York Times. His final column, "Time to Say Goodbye," is a reflection on how

much America has changed in those two decades, citing diminishing trust in institutions, technology, and even in one another. Brooks breaks down what

he describes as a collective loss of faith. He joins Hari Sreenivasan to discuss what it would take for the nation to come back together.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

HARI SREENIVASAN, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Paula, thanks. David Brooks, thanks for joining us again. You have worked at the New York Times

as a columnist for 22 years. That is a long time in any job. You recently wrote your last column for the Times, and we'll get to what you said in the

piece in a moment, but I guess, what's the message that you wanted to leave the readers with?

DAVID BROOKS, FORMER OPINION COLUMNIST, THE NEW YORK TIMES AND STAFF WRITER, THE ATLANTIC: Well, I was reflecting back on my time at the Times,

and of course, I came to be a moderate conservative, and I figure that moderate Republicans are now so dominant in American life that my work here

is done. So, no, I'm kidding. I've been an utter failure to persuade people around to my point of view.

But, you know, we're in a moment. You know, when I reflect back on the Times since I joined the Times in 2003, it's -- there's been just a

tremendous loss of faith. That Americans have lost faith. They've lost faith. The Iraq War caused us to lose faith in America's role abroad. The

financial crisis caused people to lose faith. The idea that unregulated capitalism would produce broad prosperity. The internet did not bring us

all together. It brought strife. We have declining levels of social trust.

And so, there's been a sense of disillusionment and a loss of faith. We've lost our humanistic core. All the things that make us more human, whether

it's literature or religion or history or good conversation, those all are in decline, and so I thought, you know, I've got one more 10-year chapter

in my career, probably, maybe my life. God knows I could die any moment, but I thought I'd want to use that last chapter to try something new, and

leaving the Times is both exhilarating and terrifying, but I thought I should try it. Thank God I can still stay at the NewsHour.

SREENIVASAN: You know, you wrote in your piece a little bit about your evolution. It said, I've switched from being solidly right to vaguely

centrist. I've moved left on the death penalty, rightward on abortion, and leftward on economic policy. In the 1980s, I thought stagnation was the

core social problem, so I sided with Republicans.

By the 2000s, I concluded that inequality was the core social problem, so I sided more with Democrats. Berlin once said, he was happy to be on the

rightward edge of the leftward tendency. That's where I'm happy to be today, a conservative Democrat, and I wonder, have your beliefs changed

since starting at the Times 22 years ago, or is this a case of, you know, I didn't leave the party, the party left me?

BROOKS: I would say foundationally, my beliefs have not changed too much. My two intellectual heroes are one, Edmund Burke, who was an Irish

philosopher in the 18th century, and Edmund Burke believed in epistemological modesty, that the world is just a really complicated place,

and we should be careful about how we think we should change it.

So, we should do change that's incremental, but constant. Burke said we should operate on society the way you would operate on your father,

surgically. So, just be gentle. And I still believe that. The world is really complicated and a lot of our plans go awry because we don't

understand how complex the world is.

My second hero is Alexander Hamilton. And Alexander Hamilton is a Puerto Rican hip-hop star from northern Manhattan. You know, he -- Alexander

Hamilton believed in creating a country where poor boys and girls like him could rise and succeed. He believed in social mobility. And so, those two

things are still the core of what I believe. The problem is the Republicans are conservative in no way. They're not Burkean gradualists and

incrementalists. They believe in radical revolution and dismantling. So, they've become not conservative, but reactionary.

And progressives I still don't totally agree with, but I can't be a Republican these days, so I'm happy to be a conservative Democrat if you've

got to put me somewhere. But my beliefs have partly on policy have changed, as I say, because, you know, the issues change. What's the crucial issue of

our time? I always think it's very important to ask, what year is it?

And when I was in college in the early '80s, we really did struggling from stagnation, if anybody remembers the Carter era. And so, I thought Reagan

and Thatcher were right to boost us out of that. And then inequality. And I thought Barack Obama and I think Joe Biden was right to redistribute money

to people without college degrees.

[13:45:00]

Now, I think the primary problem is social and relational and almost spiritual. We've just become sadder and meaner as a society. As I say, loss

of faith, loss of trust. And so, to me, the core arena, if you believe that our problems are primarily spiritual, moral and relational, it's not in the

realm of politics, it's in the realm of culture. And so, I want to be to play in that playground with a lot of other people who are working on the

same thing.

SREENIVASAN: It's interesting. I wonder, is this -- you know, if you look at a young person that's growing up today, depending on when they were

born, perhaps their earliest memories might be of, you know, their parents talking about the Iraq war. Perhaps it's about the impact the financial

crisis had on their home or their life, or certainly this is a generation or two that have grown up now with the internet front and center that is

altering their perceptions of reality. I mean, it's almost like, can you blame them for this lack of trust?

BROOKS: Yes, I spend my time around a lot of kids and a lot of young people, including my own kids. And they think you have left us a mess. Your

generation has destroyed a lot of things we believe in. And one of the most important statistics is interpersonal trust. People ask, do you trust your

neighbors? And people in my generation, boomer Gen X, 60 percent say, yes, I trust my neighbors. For millennial and Gen Z, it's 19 percent.

And I saw a survey where they asked millennial and Gen Z, do you think most people are selfish enough to get you? And 72 percent said yes. And so,

that's -- they've just seen a world that's become hostile and bitter and rejects them. Whether they're trying to get into school or get a job, it's

just become a lot harsher. And their social life has no rules.

I often ask my students, why are you guys so high in distrust? And they say, have you seen my social life? I had a young woman say, I've had four

relationships in my life and all the guys ghosted me at the end. They didn't have the decency to have a breakup conversation. So, she said, of

course I'm distrustful. That's my experience. People have been untrustworthy to me. And so, I don't blame the young people for reacting to

the world they see around them.

I would only say that America goes through a process of rupture and repair. When you ask people like, what made you the person you are? No one ever

says, I took this fantastic vacation in Hawaii. That made me the person I am. Nobody ever says that. People talk about a hard time. And that's true

in individual lives. It's true in our national lives that we go through periods of rupture and repair where we have to tear down the old culture

because it's no longer working for us. It happened in the 1830s with Andrew Jackson populism. It happened in the 1890s when we failed in

industrialization. It happened in the 1960s with riots and bombings and assassinations. And it's happening now.

And the good news, America's been here before. And through a process of rupture and repair, we're going to come out of it because we are creative.

And the best part about America, if you ever get despairing about this country, write all the problems of America on one side of the legal pad.

And then on the right side, write this sentence, America has more talent than ever before. And column B is more important than column A.

SREENIVASAN: You know, that -- you're making a good case. We're trying to be optimistic. Let me pose a counterpoint. I mean, I think there are a lot

of people that say, that's great, David, this history lesson. But the pace of change is so much more rapid now. Look at what these A.I. tools can do.

What am I going to come out of college? And what kind of job am I going to be able to do when entry-level work is going to be increasingly farmed out

to, you know, Claude and ChatGPT?

And the talent that you're talking about is because of some of our immigration policies and how welcoming we are as a nation. Some of that

talent is deciding to stay elsewhere on the planet.

BROOKS: Well, I'd say, first of all, think of somebody who was born in 1890 and died at age 80 in 1970. They were born into the era of the horse

and buggy, and they died at the moment of man on the moon. That is an immense amount of social change, and frankly, more social change than we

have had in our lifetime. Industrialization was massive, two world wars, a Great Depression. There was a lot going on, and they were able to adapt.

And so, I just think we've been here before so many times.

And then if you ask me, I don't know what the future of A.I. is, and neither does anybody else. But I do think it's going to create a new form

of intelligence, and that will make us more productive, and we'll have to figure out the dislocations. But think of how poorly America used this

talent until recently, recently, until, say, the mid-1960s, women, we were not using their talent to anything like their full capacity. Black people,

Jews, any ethnic group, basically. We were mining the talent of a few white WASP-y guys whose family came over on the Mayflower or the boat after that.

So, we were squandering massive amounts of talent, and now the situation, even despite what's happened over the last few years, just so much better,

despite the crackdown on immigration. You look at that, or you go in any college classroom these days, it looks totally different than it did 60

years ago, but the kids are eager, and frankly, as someone who came from an immigrant background, at least my grandfather, they've got that hustle.

They've got the same hustle.

[13:50:00]

It's weird for me to go to New York, where my family really grew up on the Lower East Side, and see people who look very different from me, but they

speak exactly the same as my grandfather spoke about, I'm going to make a difference in the world. I'm going to do something big, and go back to

Alexander Hamilton. He brought that spirit, and he brought that energy, and I think they do too today.

SREENIVASAN: A lot of this column you also dedicate, and a lot of your recent work, you've talked about character, you've talked about moral

decay. In the case of Trump, you said, you know, look, he's -- he was the effect, he's not the cause of it. Explain where that decay is coming from.

BROOKS: Yes, the main story I tell was, we all have to have something sacred as a society, and we all have to have a shared moral order. There's

a historian named George Marston, who wrote of Martin Luther King, I'm going to paraphrase, that what gave King's rhetoric such force was his

conviction that right and wrong were written into the fabric of the universe. That there was a natural order, and that in that order of right

and wrong, which King, being a pastor, would say was God-ordained, that segregation is not just wrong, and sometimes in some places, it's always

wrong. Racism is always wrong. Rape is always wrong. It's in the fabric of the universe.

And starting way back in the 1950s, I would say, we told people, come up with your own values, come up with your own truth, come up with your own

morality. We essentially privatized morality, and we said it's something you have to do for yourself as an individual, and that was part of the

individualistic move in American culture. The problem is, if you ask everybody to come up with their own morality, their own values, most of us

can't do it unless your name is Aristotle. And so, people are morally unformed.

And then there's no shared moral order. We don't agree on what's right and wrong, and if we don't agree on what's right and wrong, we can't trust each

other because we don't know what you're going to do, what you ought to do, and we can't settle argument because we have no shared standards.

SREENIVASAN: What should citizens be determined to try to chart a better path forward for themselves and the policies that they want to see in the

communities that they want to build?

BROOKS: Yes. I mean, I think part of it is just learning the skills to spread that moral ecology. I think we all touch the people around us, and

we can either look at people as objects and treat them as objects, or we can cast what the philosopher and novelist Irish Murdoch called a just and

loving attention. That power of attention is just tremendously important of how you gaze at someone, how you do treat someone with reverence and

respect, and when you do that, you create trust.

And then the second thing that anybody could do is -- I started this little non-profit years ago called Weave, a social fabric project, and we left up

people who just help people in their community. We try to give them some financial support, and we try to connect them with others, and we try to

lift them up in any way we can. And some of those people are -- they're very casual. They're like, we ran somebody who said, I practice aggressive

friendship, which means I'm the person on my block who invites people over for July 4th or the Super Bowl party. I practice aggressive friendship.

It's great to do that.

With other people who really sit with the poor, who sit with people suffering PTSD, they mentor kids, you know, we -- I ran into a guy years

ago named Pancho Aguiles (ph) who helps. He lives in Houston, used to help people who suffered paralyzed in construction accidents. He would give them

wheelchairs. He would give them the things they would need to lead a dignified life. They'd have some training in social work, so they could

help people in the neighborhoods in Houston. And I once said to Pancho (ph), you know, you radiate holiness, and he said to me, no, I just reflect

holiness, which is the right answer.

And so, these people -- I'm sure everybody's listening to us can think of people in the neighborhood. If I walked up to them and said, who's trusted

here? There are those people in the neighborhood, and they're leading beautiful lives.

I ran into a woman in Wilkes, North Carolina who counsels kids who are LGBTQ, and it's a rural part of Appalachia, and she is so well known in her

community. When she goes to the Walmart, if she needs to get out of there in less than an hour, before going down an aisle, she'll like peek in to

make sure there's nobody she knows, but she knows so many people in the town, a trip to the Walmart can be two hours, because she's (INAUDIBLE) her

friends. And we could all do that a little more.

And my theory of cultural change is that culture changes when a small group of people find a better way to live, and the rest of us copy. And that's --

you know, Christianity started with 12 guys, and now there are billions of them, because some people said, you know, that's an attractive way to live.

[13:55:00]

And the same thing with Weavers. If you know people in your life who are living lives of moral purpose, you're going to say, you know, maybe I can't

be as heroic to that person, but I'd like to do a little more, and that's part of cultural repair. I don't think our politics can repair before our

culture does, and that's something we all participate in.

SREENIVASAN: Former columnist at the New York Times, and soon-to-be podcaster, as well as writer, again, David Brooks, thanks so much for

joining us.

BROOKS: Great to be with you, Hari.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

NEWTON: And that's it for now. If you ever miss our show, you can find the latest episode shortly after it airs on our podcast, and remember, you can

always catch us online, on our website, and all-over social media. Thanks for watching, and goodbye from New York.

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[14:00:00]

END