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tv   Us and Them  Deutsche Welle  January 14, 2024 4:30am-5:01am CET

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people have to say, this is too much that's why we listen. because every weekend on d w the it's not my choice. when it comes to kind of just because i am not a kind of his person i smoke because i want to know we are not doing that. my mom sees drugs specifically in one hand and then hand cups in the other. the
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issues with the new young generation want to change our region. well, equalization should be the 1st step, doesn't tell you to spend square, will they be gross, which has a little benefit. and that's really who, while across the unlucky, older generation rejected legalization and lived excluded in poverty in the mountains the since 1956. you were a sleep and we're paying for it now. we were to sleep. gabby treat me. can i say the non stop? yes is why the instead of doing why we lose weight is what i'm trying to tell you. the kids, cannabis and parents. of course there's going to be conflict. young
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and old. are realities and dreams can be so different. seriously, it seems like there's a huge gap between the generations. sometimes we just don't catch each other. the question is, can we fix that the, the government is trying to prohibit the illegal use of legalize marijuana. under the new legislation, license holders will be required to submit a monthly kind of as reported to the agency audio video games on the list of like the state is officially starting its canvas legalize ation project. the thing that i have, it's difficult to implement. now the system is actually sends. people still don't
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understand why they legalize that. what are the objectives, its consequences are the fears that she need to know. that hasn't been easy to get here and i'm strong that we have to keep going, assess what don't forget, we were criticized in the beginning. people didn't accept the idea at all. okay, legalize ation is here, but we don't know how to be implemented. we don't understand it is that i can said i wasn't anything. my friend the people criticize us out of them is the next month . they still don't agree. can they see us as troublemakers, as, as the, like, we don't belong. what look, look and legalize ation have been proposed back then. the older generation wouldn't have even considered in thinking of it as for that generation, the plan to stay current and no kind of legalize agent is acceptable or what they should all remain illegal. burdett peasant headed to my father like the rest of his generation, so it was against legalization. this is the mistrustful generation. i am in the us,
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mom are really sort of the real estate itself supply the same uh with local far it's easier a lot only way or will they be gross hasn't been and hasn't mentioned who by all types and they do all, do we send them to the power train, the factory, the co, well, the regulatory agency, we knew we still don't know these things. rico and the theme of them. this is to catch up with a hand lecture about him. although i have discussed the issue with him several times to buy him for me, but sometimes i choose not to discuss it. still because we have different views. but it only makes things worse that get to genuine that pass the mile, walk at ocean's. why are people against legalization? because they are afraid this law will not guarantee them a dignified life or pay a livable wage. that's why they're scared. what went ahead. and so they'd rather stay illegal on a god hold on a sec. marijuana is being legalized in morocco. yes, but just for industrial cause magic and medicinal uses, at least at 1st,
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the moroccan interior ministry is expecting that by 2028 annual revenues from the european market alone will reach up to 613 $1000000.00. the law passed by the american government in may. 2021 is aiming to limit illegal trade and to help improve farm is incomes. farming communities are worried that they're being left behind and are afraid of competition from powerful investors. this has led to serious tension between mohammad and his father's generations. my name is monee schultz and 26 years old. my beautiful daughter, money. my name is anastasia jacobs. came to there and i loved her so much. i grew up in georgetown, diana, which is a beautiful country. i am a migraine and i lived in far rockaway cleans new york. i really loved living in
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fiber county. even though there were a few, there was state and things that happened if iraq we that it to a part of the leads the with this look inside of the side of the house. i left it there because that's me of myself. spoken to my children. one day i just looked at it and i was like, mom like so we take this down to. she was like, no, absolutely not. this is going to stay right here because this is what my rules are you all just breakdown. so i like to smoke on my balcony, but i just, you know, i stay out of the common areas and sometimes the smell does seed into her corners. and she does like, let's say her. com is oh, you're going to be lazy. you're going to be this a teen smoking here. she goes with this stuff again. and then she's make me have
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a heart attack. i'm going to fall down. she's been stressed me out and i'm just like, this is so dramatic when it comes to marvin a kind of kind of bass within your loved ones and your kids, and you want to keep them away from prison. that's number one. prison. yeah, marijuana still isn't legal in all of the us. around half of the 50 states have legalize recreational cannabis use. in march 2021. new york also joined the legalization club with the hopes of bringing justice and equality to african americans and other minorities. these communities were torn apart by the old system in just a couple of years. the yearly tax revenues of legalized marijuana are expected to be around 90. $5000000.00 us dollars. and in a few more years for the time being someone coming out of prison because of that, you'll be looking at differently. the offer is that the defense of mental illness.
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i was still worried. let me try to, to migrate to this country. and i always try to talk to my kids, have them understand the is and about i think coming from diane, it's in the united states and seeing the way historically, like the police has interacted with black communities. i think she saw cannabis has like one of those factors that would surely lead us into the hands of, you know, either the crack house or the jail system, you know, right. and to, to prison a sort on the table. i'm going out the city of to one is on the american spanish border. then the stereotype is that it's a smuggler city model from especially for food and drugs, even evaluation. you can even have the dogs. you have the heart of our region because it's where the young people from the 2nd study, so you can locate the sofa staple contests of it because i worked as a journalist. i then found that the journalism institute,
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that's where i also work as a lecture. so from the people, it's the only institute of its kind in the north, yet shimmer. my goal was to change the stereotype of northern towns being known as smuggler thomas luck some day is my baby. the m j stands for marijuana. justice and lux m j is in the silvery business, which deals with grinders and trains and holders, and they are also clipped with a know your rights fact sheets. so folks are not being re criminalized under the legalization of marijuana. and then the other piece is the equity and advocacy that comes through the collective thing about the effect of the war on drugs. you can not forget the impact on, on the families of those incarcerated particularly what happened with women in those household. not only were they also incarcerated,
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but they were also the ones less to pick up the pieces when the men in their family were targeted. specifically for candidates to use the after graduating high school, i studied law on campus. this task that you might hear, i meant other young students from my region, and we found our own group the nor did we discuss the local issue, lack of development, and marginalization me, i'm in that he continues. second meant a month and out of university, we created an association the association of youth 3 sagan's future and stuff for the sake of the
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my cousin used to so we'd in was smoke weed and they were like the wrapper environments. so i always thought it was like so cool, how people can come together and last and smoke and just like it felt very positive in those environments like it was not 10. so it was so relaxed i left him dearly and i literally fights with him every day about it. danny has always been affiliated and has always been very outwardly disapproving of wayne and cannabis and marijuana. when quincy was alive like that was, that was the only thing you could really say that was, you know what, they didn't like about him. yeah. because i think that's why um, quinton had um did not responded in the way because we did disapprove everybody. yeah. what about him? he was the only person exactly what it wasn't him. he that'd be very harsh and judgment was very hard. and there are times that, you know, i have to, you know, perform corporate punishment them him because i want him to continue doing the best he could not understand. your other cousins cannot to understand you. none of you
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for another one. is that why we were doing it just very hard and cancel. i was angry at my, you know, community for a little bit because, you know, of course, that's never had never just felt like you know, he didn't have to. he didn't have to go that way and it didn't have to be the way the way that it got. and it was, it was not right. when i got to the as part the night. so they were there and it told me you can go. i said, no, i will have to go and see my nephew. let me go. let me go. just for one time, just let me well then i also kind of felt connected to him. when
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i would smoke in like feedback in cannabis because like those are the memories that i had of him as being copying with his friends and listening to music and smoking. and you know, even though my family didn't really like that about him, that was where he found the most joy once. ok, still ok. because that's what i did that keeps me going. and every time i passed the area in the far away, i said this is my nephew's. this is where his last thoughts and that is part of the
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content before the trash be cheaper and you know, i spent my childhood in the mountains to keep it was beautiful. this up to some of the what's interesting here in a 2nd is that all the families in this part of that each month. now there are only cannabis of the cust uh can negotiate of the software and what this of the is it, how to keep it keeps man, we did the kind of has come from listening to the value. i don't know. the other one is i haven't known anything. no, it isn't. yeah. and my parents always grew kind of similar to what it said before the shift many notes. my father grew up in the seventy's and eighty's during the heavier come to india. the who were also plenty of tourists who came to discover cannabis, friends, house. the believe we could fish for the nash, but the key content you have to be in the wave of hippies had a big influence on my father's generation, most likely to change their lives. hey at home. and he didn't enjoy suspect any
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time. but there were lots of things related for that. who is not good, who is in the conditions now? it was actually owed to for my things are different. back then, then the product and the seeds were originally from the region to loss of the video . for now they've introduced the pakistani varieties got a lot more critical to, to em naija. and so many of the money is, yeah, i'm uh, is uh, you know, as an estimate of it cuz the introduction of genetically modified plants instead of 100 percent and negative effect on the regents. but causing environmental and economic crises. when you're taking the advocate smoking, this new variety is kind of like taking hung drugs and the kinds we used to feel like hair when wireless daily committed people. and at least they go crazy. you don't get too far today and it is of a lot of stuff like that was local cannabis ecology with why he didn't give me a high school. the reason because if you need to do something you do as you and if not kind of just sit there some calmly and wish you
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a little you want to the voicemail. busy hello, this is hello. how are you? good, are you going to be there in a moment? or are you the says? i'll be there in 5 minutes. let me look and see you then what was that? my husband, let me touch. mohammad is a low. can rise your family live to boot and he and his brother would come here in the summer. the so and i can and at that time when i was about 10 and they were 18 or 20 years old to know that from this area the, these one of us are the,
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the, the big events lawyers, i think when it comes to me being you know petite seemingly non threatening individual. busy and the revealing that i smoke for most people is like okay, but, but that's very cute. that's very dates. he, you know, she speaks well, she's smart, she's graduated. she has intelligence all these things. whereas for my brother and he's like 6 foot dark skin, male tattoos, so he fits the description for people to be afraid of him. he fits the description for the police. he has to have a different level of responsibility and heightened awareness when he's in that world versus myself. because, you know, i'm just like,
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i'm the quote to be you want to like, you want to smoke with me. you want to hang out with me. but for him, it can come off a lot more threatening. there's a huge mistress in government, in black and brown communities for very, very good reason for our community. it looks like you know, fear, fear, and mistrust. especially when we're talking about marijuana. even though studies show that white and black people in the us can see human approximately equal amounts, black people are 4 times as likely to be imprisoned for using marijuana. in 202196 percent of cannabis arrests by new york. police involves people of color because they are just so worried about all of the factors that are just already place. and then before they already, you know, open their mouth international. i had the you were in the concert in the state of virginia, who is your name is if you were a criminal,
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a good lives like you always said one foot in jail to the other. i can tell him whenever you lift the region, you and branches of timmy here in america is a drug dealer and a band. it gets a little of how to even little farm is had nothing to do with the reading that you got. uh no, that's a no vote samuels. we've been suffering since 1956. got an avenue vehicle. your generation was a sleep. and now we paid the price. no, no, to the contrary. we weren't to sleep and as you were to sleep and we're paying for it now, see, we couldn't do anything. so what could we have done? she took it in the papers back then. how do you bring your honest opinion in speaking the truth said, they'd have prosecuted you to and wrongfully thrown you in imprisonment, allowed one, as i'm one of them at midnight and justly spent 7 months in prison. i sold the hubs leg what we're doing p as in coded by just land at all. not for use of they burned
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to my forest, my trees for the burned it all the prevent them of not going to clean, never demand legal, ization like we have to go. that's why we ask for an alternative, the alternative for a solution and alternative and a solution and come to model the share with fierce resistance and in to the people who are against the legal ization. typically they say stops and they don't talk about until they are not allowed. there was fear that you should trust young people more and give them a chance that there's no one trusts or motivates the young people though exactly that way. and i do agree with you on that point to go to the finish of entity and then how to me freedom is basically some comparable. i'm looking to, i'm going to choose a way of life. that's the vision 0 and it has a minute and go to jail for as of another, had to go to all your life. and then we go being accused of being a criminal until when you just pharma,
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actually what was your name with the human wants done at even the center so much discussion and back and forth. the keys know about 60 to 70 percent in favor of legalization thought about the what i found out that my thoughts i, my son were using it as the recreation drug is that i did not know because i guess they didn't want to hurt my feelings. because didn't know that i'm very much against the at the end of 2018 the yeah. no. yes. that's how long i was so nice and stupid. and somebody's clearing the truth because i understand that it was the longer you know,
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she thought that i influence you to start smoking in college. i'm this one because i was 13, was on jesus christ. i started smoking at 16 though. jesus so . but now like regularly. mm hm. no, i don't know. it's just like it's a, it's, it is dar alone for the the most i can do is follow me. i fly over you guys. so and you, man, no, i'm really mad that just see feel. busy scale in a beach, right? you feel the tree. yeah. by the to feel that you guys have been there me from the age of a baby until now to know that that's something that i disagree with. non stop. let
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me tough. why would you all go behind my back knowing the app fight with everybody else as my own, bringing them up from baby to now i know i feel as though i was people create them . i never use that. i fight to stay in order and you guys go behind my back and that's something is not working. i wouldn't, i wouldn't, i wouldn't say go to my mine until i die because i'm going to tell you guys about it because y'all be treated me knowing that i did not. oh, i see. no, no, no, see the difference between being betrayed and feeling betrayed when exactly the act you know body betrays and the i'll know. so what do you you probably are then we would know something about with us. no, but you know, you remember, you know, that even though i work, you know, i still used to look and the mom know you didn't like you did it. no, you didn't. you know why? because you were busy and try and make sure that we survived, which we are very grateful. who are it was? yeah, that's why god should it was that the really don't instead of doing well how we
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flows, we does what i'm trying to tell you. we found healing from trauma, right, like real life trauma that comes with migrating to a new place at a certain age in the new environment. you know, in a different type of like familial environment where you're working not at home the way you were in guy in a. so it's a different world here. the part that really, really, really hurts is the 13 year. the 13. and the 16 reason why i started smoking, we, when i was 13, was because i was alone. i always felt alone. i was always the middle child and that's always what has been. so i years lead, so it helped me be and myself like it helped me be comfortable with being in my head because that's where i like most is way to go. we, we, they had the wrong. that's the problem is used to say that you, even if you were in my life, was to say i wouldn't, i would have still smoked. we'd like to go. i like maybe so. sorry. no. why would you think that that was right? cuz we liked it. yeah. it was in the notes that
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the, this, the price made a great laugh because i never knew that really, really it's, i saw a in my stomach tell me, what do you want to do when you grow up? since you have, i want to be a university professor and teach medicine and university professor, you'll have to study hard to keep on going until i finish my dissertation. the university's medical faculty is in charge of analyzing cannabis, so it can be used as medication. would you be interested in that kind of research? no, not really. why not? and that's kind of it isn't my thing. and the one cannabis to stay going to say again. it should stay until they find
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a permanent alternative would be by their side all the way to the yep. if i want people from our region to be able to show their ideas without fear, we've been say probably at a wind tunnel next to the cannabis can be a resurrecting or restoring factor for particularly communities that are in cities in the cities that are experiencing high levels of gun violence, i for your confident that i'm comfortable, that i'm getting better in life when it comes to kennedy,
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i want to use if they can see honest engagement in cannabis industry, i think that there is an opportunity to build back those communities that are productive, even my dream of such things like, oh, maybe the, the bad, you know, before there was no, maybe it stands for, but it was just strictly. this is how it feels. this is my position. there is nothing you can say about it. it's not my charts when it comes to the kind of dismissed because i am not academies person, but as time goes by, i develop the comfort and as the lowest change, my conference becomes more and i will support her as much as i can work towards that 1st thing is if me or my brother makes it onto like a large platform or take pains, then she will smoke with us. no,
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we live near person special just in their basement level. to use that no. the when the glasses, the only things that the memory is giving us. remember, if you think about it, you want me to repeat that again for get it the let's do that again. the the with the female starve to see
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t a k a down to darlene long her b m w c. no fear, no limit, no mercy. in 13 minutes on dw, the hot tips for your package, this romantic code is quotes affinities. check on some great cultural memorials to boot w travel regarding the
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this is the daily news life from breland, taiwan, president elect device to defend the island against threats from china. in his 1st speech sense of the election, victory lighting does so seal safe guard taiwan against what he called intimidation from beijing. we'll get the latest from our correspondent in taipei and report from a refugee camp and southern gossip where people are facing increasingly desperate conditions after 100 days of war. the i'm hot of him on that.

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