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tv   Ambulance  Al Jazeera  July 11, 2018 11:00pm-12:00am +03

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going to go sleep it is playing a little bit of information this is just minutes so everybody expects the crazy to be close but we don't live it appears very quiet this. case. i don't think i heard the phones oh usually when referring to live here made the decision which is good. in their own opinion good for a show that great show those are no the only good things when you stand react to the cheer leaders that you refer to getting the team but never the less the honest players the less you're a good thing they were cheering there over the weekend there should think so they took the racial week well it made me feel good and when does it matter but you want to be the record that jason had to make a list that would be croatia from cincinnati or like that thank you. a fee for his taken legal action against a saudi arabian company which he claims is pirate saying well cup matches and then
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to take cold to be out q has allegedly been using the twenty eighteen world cup broadcast signal if they sounded government in the countries where illegal broadcasts are taking place to support the fight against piracy more details on that in the coming hours you're watching al-jazeera a lot from london still to come on the program japan's prime minister visits the areas worst hit by deadly floods promising to return things to normal as quickly as possible. and dislike ugandans take to the streets over a new social media tax. still plenty of warm sunshine across western parts of europe at the moment largely clear skies once again little bit of cloud just spilling its way out into the lines and
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that will nudge as well little further east which as we go on through the next couple days with essentially it does look fine and dry so we are going to see plenty of sunshine here meanwhile some rather wet weather into parts of germany said across the eastern side of germany into were part of this little area cloud here will spin away bringing some where to where the coolest too for berlin just twenty degrees celsius. well twenty six celsius there for moscow in between the showers are russia showers there you notice down into the baltic states into poland pushing back down once again towards northern parts of roumania and also into the balkans for the west generally dry now just some wet weather just starting to push into the southwest approaches of england southern parts of wells and western england seeing a little more than where right as because through friday should be fine is right though for london temperatures hit twenty seven celsius the heat continuing to build twenty nine degrees there in paris but certainly good for the tennis at wimbledon all the parts of africa a lot of hot sunshine here once again for current touching thirty five degrees
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a high of forty eight sheen is the day and hotter still by friday afternoon. one of the really special things about working for al-jazeera is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much input and contribution to a story a feel we cover this region better than anyone else would be foolish is you know it's very challenging given the particulars because you have a lot of people that are deployed on political issues. we do people believe to tell the real story so i'll just mend it used to deliver in-depth journalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe.
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come back remind of the top story say on al-jazeera donald trump has launched an attack on germany at the nato summit in brussels he says bernie is totally controlled by moscow because it buys billions of dollars of russian oil and gas zimbabwe's main opposition party has marched to the country's electoral commission demanding reforms it says are vital for a credible vote later this month and english fans erupted in celebration as that went wrong though up against croatia in the opening minutes of the last world cup semifinal game. divers in thailand who helped bring twelve schoolboys and their football coach to safety from a flooded cave have called their rescue america the first pitches have emerged during the boys' recovering in hospital and belgium matic rescued from chiang rai step by some reports. they're looking surprisingly healthy considering their
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ordeal the rescued boys are being isolated from their parents to reduce the risk of infection in hospital. john gave his son a big thumbs up when he saw him he was one of the first to stop looking for his son long blue when he disappeared almost three weeks ago. i didn't feel confident that my boy can do this even though he knows how to swim but i'm not sure if he's a good swimmer he only got basic swimming lessons at school but i'm very happy and proud he came out safely he can't wait to hold his son but understands it might take a few more days. the first thing i want to do is hug him all parents have the same feeling i want to see the face of my child an embrace him and ask him how he feels and how he's doing the five hour long hazardous journey out of the narrow flood gates system has taken its toll on the children and their coach the commander of the time navy seal divers who played a vital role in the rescue says they were very called mast. the boys got special
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full face masks with oxygen circulating all the time the divers carried them out and they were wearing wet suits to keep them warm we made them relaxed and calm and slowly moved them out but they were very cold. the complexity of the rescue operation became clear when trucks full of equipment drove away hours after the last cave rescue was completed twenty tons of oxygen tanks ropes lights and food supplies have been ferried underground clean up has started after a rescue operation unprecedented for its scale and complexity has been called an extraordinary example of human frank and resilience family one cave and the rescue of the wild boars soccer team will now go down in history as the moment where the impossible was made possible. to him while their families school friends and everyone else in thailand celebrated their safe return
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to footballers will have to stay in hospital for at least a week to recover hoping that the first talk with their parents will be sooner than that that fasten al-jazeera john wright thailand. japan's prime minister has visited areas hit by the worst flooding in the country for three decades and promised to help the survivors while pledging four billion dollars towards recovery shinzo of a spoke to survive a sheltering in an evacuation center in the western city of courage she key more than forty of the one hundred seventy six people who died in the floods and landslides lived there dozens remain missing robert wright has moved to. visit comes as emergency teams continue to search through debris and destroyed houses looking for some of the people who are still missing thousands of people remain displaced meanwhile thousands more are gradually returning to their homes to assess the damage and figure out how to rebuild these government this is
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a chance to assess how it deals with extreme weather events such as this especially if people here believe these have now become the norm rather than freak occurrences japan is already well advanced in preparing for natural disasters it has to be given the prevalence of tsunamis and earthquakes it seems you can now add to that list extreme storms such as this this visit by a seems to be a recognition of the priority it's now giving to this. haiti's prime minister guy lafont has given no indication he will resign over widespread antigovernment protests have been four days of unrest over the government's plan to raise fuel prices in the impoverished nation stores have been looted and protesters have set up funny barricades in the streets several people have died. the syrian government is widening its offensive to recover southwestern territories pushing forward enter
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an enclave held by ice linked fighters russian warplanes are also helping government forces on yarmouk basin which borders the israeli occupied golan heights and jordan the syrian opposition says this fortune shows the aftermath of russian strikes in the area rebels from the free syrian army are also battling eisel fighters in the area the syrian government has recovered huge swathes of daraa province in the southwest from the f.s.a. rebels. well in the rest of the province more rebels have agreed to these so-called reconciliation deals that pave the way for government rule but with the advance of regime forces comes the fear of hundreds of journalists and opposition activists who are now surrounded the honda is following events from beirut. the syrian government says almost eighty percent of dead is under its control more towns and villages continue to surrender agreeing to so-called reconciliation deals that pave the way for
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a return to government rule tens of thousands of the displaced syrians have since returned home but the united nations says some two hundred thousand people continue to seek safety close to the border with the israeli occupied golan heights there are media activists and journalists who are considered by the government to be terrorists for their involvement in opposition activities are appealing for help. some two hundred seventy journalists are trapped in the borders are closed they face imminent danger and their lives are at risk they fear they will be killed or arrested we also be given safe exit we've lost contact with many of them some of those opposition media workers are under siege in the rebel controlled southern half of our city since sunday army soldiers and their allies encircled the opposition and clearly in the provincial capital government opponents are to be given safe passage to rebel controlled areas in the north that condition was among
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the terms of friday's ceasefire deal between the rebels and the russian military which was negotiating on behalf of the syrian government the opposition says the transfer to adlib will happen once the rest of the deal is implemented many syrians are afraid to live under president bashar assad's rule syrian human rights activists have documented twenty one cases of executions and dozens of arrests since government troops moved into opposition areas during their almost three week offensive and. we have seen this happen before in aleppo. even in the homes district of the regime executes people despite assurances that is no different we have the name. of the victims and eyewitness accounts they kill children and the elderly on the basis that their sons or relatives participated in the fight against the regime. the takeover of is another win for assad who now controls around sixty percent of the country but these victories are doing little
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to foster peace and security for all syrians russian commanders say military police are being sent to guarantee the syrian government won't exact retribution on civilians who lived in rebel areas it's a promise that has been made in the past and a promise the opposition doesn't trust. beirut. place in uganda have fired tear gas to disperse protesters demonstrating against new taxes including a levy on access to social media the move has provoked widespread outrage as malcolm white reports from uganda i. many people here in uganda's capital kampala on tapi about having to pay to use the internet's most popular services i hope the wine a pop star and then people that a demonstration against the new social media tax crowd quickly gathered we have a picture there for somebody at that because it is their president i doubt the they
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are people of uganda i said so maybe i could say that i forgot i think they don't think that if you could not. force a little back to just the the president i agree because they are doing stuff to find it telling steak to my face and such a media uses have to pay about six cents a day to be able to access whatsapp facebook and other services i president during a seventy said the tax will help to reduce costs in the activists here safely indiscriminate tax cuts the poor most left of the people right here in downtown i was the only one of the least wealthy internet users access to dates is kind of fun so now if they have a bit of money twenty cents fifty cents i buy some credit i would have done that they'd be off going again maybe for a couple of days i was thinking i should move i just think i.
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would have to just minutes of marching peace came to stop the protest i face had its own lawful demonstrations have been heavily restricted in uganda since anti-government protests seven years ago this time i think the no difference. meanwhile kiosks for mobile phone payment service is usually busy time quiet they're also subject to a new tax the recent years service is to transfer payments directly from one phone user to another to become a key part of the economy but the government says it needs the revenue our say on that but it. will fall under but not all by the one hundred but. i'm sure that. you'll want to get something more and we know we also feel that it's important. that those who think it is a burden weren't given long to be expressive police arrested protest leaders.
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probably wind supporters managed to drag him away the prime minister told parliament that the government would review the controversial taxes. it's pretty clear that this kind of opposition to them won't be tolerated. malcolm webb how does iraq come paula uganda. don't forget there's plenty more on our web site of news video and features just click on al-jazeera dot com. this is a reminder of the top stories on our read the u.s. president is calling on allies to increase their defense spending to four percent of that country's economic output as two percent higher than the group's original go or will trump also launched a public attack on germany saying it's totally controlled by moscow because it buys billions of dollars of russian oil and gas the outburst came during
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a breakfast meeting with nato secretary general younes stoltenberg. you know if you look at it germany is a captive of very rich they should work to get rid of their call to get rid of. the good so much of the world is there for a russian i think it's something they are still looking at i think it's very appropriate you're going to the program i don't know what you can do about it but it certainly doesn't seem to make sense that they pay billions of dollars to russia we have to defend them against russia zimbabwe's main opposition party and its supporters have marched to the country's electoral commission today when reforms it says are vital for a credible vote this month the movement for democratic change insists there needs to be a deal on how to design print and store ballot papers to ensure the system is fair the country will pick a new president and members of parliament on july the thirtieth in the first election since robert mugabe was forced to resign late last year the first pictures
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have been released of the twelve tied boys and their football coach being treated in hospital that follows a dramatic rescue mission to free them from a cave they were trapped in for more than two weeks then need to be monitored in hospital for at least seven days it is prime minister john guy laffan has given no indication he will resign despite widespread antigovernment protests that have been four days of unrest over the government's plan to raise fuel prices in the impoverished nation which left several people dead. english fans have erupted in cheers as the team went one nil up against croatia in the opening minutes of the last semifinal world cup game but in the last few minutes croatia has equalized in the second half front secured its place in sunday's final after beating belgium one now those are the top stories stay with us our analogies there
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at next stop is to stream. could. the resignations of two high profile officials from british prime minister cabinet on the government chaos floor the political fallout and what it could mean for the future.
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trooping into downing street a brand new minister and a brand new foreign minister surrounded by revamped cabinet to resume a survives as prime minister after a turbulent few days but in the current state of british politics there's no guarantee that living to fight another day means any more than just that recent days have seen two senior ministers resign in protest at what tourism a has chosen as her preferred approach to breaks it a business friendly strategy with close trade ties to the e.u. some of those who favored a clean break have called it a sellout among them now former foreign minister and titan of the pro breaks it campaign boris johnson and david davis the minister who has been in charge of negotiations with the e.u. there had been concerns inside downing street that johnson widely thought to cover the top job might be the prime minister but that would require the support of other
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senior breaks its supporters in cabinet and downside the reason may said she was looking forward to getting on with a busy week the prime minister trying to give the impression of a leader not in crisis. well the resignation letter surprised mr may have caused a stir on mine but there are just the latest twists in the breakfast story a tale told through a number of hashtags in recent weeks blue farit news hashtags stop breck's it to say officials resigned to save themselves from going down with the sinking ship tell doron however approves of a so-called hard breck said saying he'd vote for boris johnson to be the next conservative party leader but bracks accord mater and guy verhofstadt tweets walking out of the government won't make rex it go away and hopes for unity as a means to find an agreement that works for me thanks for make it so joining us now from london to help us understand a way breaks it is headed my take is the c.e.o.
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of my life my say that's a useful lead nonpartizan movement working to foster political dialogue and secure a better break state amanda chetwynd callison is the co-founder of future sake a youth organization advocating for people's vote on the terms of the brics deal and don't support is a professor of economics at king's college london he also researches for the think tank u.k. in a change in europe hello everybody i'm just thinking about that that turn that phrase shambles looking here amanda blacktop boris johnson i am proud to serve as foreign secretary it is with sadness that i stepped down here's my letter explaining why is this part of the brics that shambles as far as you're concerned and how would you describe the last few days i mean in shambles almost doesn't really go far enough where the absolute key thing to me or stepping down is it's about boris it's about his own career it's about his ego it's not about the country
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or even his party to a certain extent if he really really thought that him stepping down was a sign of what was to come of it and his letter would have included what he would have wanted to have seen would have options and different on the table but instead it just walked out on about him so. i was with boris. just doesn't just doesn't even go far enough to be what the last few days have been jonathan you're smiling. well i agree with that i mean i think you know boris is about forests and he's a letter as i've just said it's about him it was full of frankly of the law is actually a challenge for i don't give a very good fact experienced for what's actually came out and said. boris this letter is simply lied about you know so i think we can hardly dismissed that but i think the more substantive point is the point that job amanda made which applies
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not just the bar respect to the more serious pro breaks it forces who don't support teresa mayes current approach they don't really have that alternative strategy so the problem is really a problem for the country as a whole not just for the conservative party is mrs may strategy is generally the it's a lowest common denominator strategy nobody remainer is leaving her most of the conservative party the labor party no one really likes it but equally no one at the moment has a terribly coherent alternative and they certainly know will turn if in which commands a majority of the country there isn't a majority to reverse the referendum despite what amanda was like that's just not there at the moment there isn't a majority for that boris johnson aren't there isn't a majority for that theresa may rubbish break said how much and there is no majority for that labor party let's have our cake and eat it breaks it either so we're at something of a turning point and we don't really know which direction to go and we don't know
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drift this well go it and i think that explains why there are men so many differing opinions on line it's wow so a couple people weighing in on the resignations and the shambles this is rachel who says i voted to remain and i still would my daughter is looking for work in a dance company and european ones are not even on dishing u.k. dancers at the moment as regards resignations it's too little and too late i dread to think of what mr hunt will do ask. foreign secretary another person weighing in this is even who says boris johnson's resignation is stemming from his foresight the whole exodus is bound to blow up so he's press the eject button before it crushes haven't met him wondering what you think of this last tweet this is the way to get out of things before they all blow up. well yeah fortunately i think well our generation is really disappointed because i think so many young people across the country don't decide enough there's this whole big debate about breaks that across the country comes to the area and the media that many people still don't
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understand what exactly it means and we just want to get on with the i'm the one i think about how we could build a country a country that works with three generations unlike race after i agree with that and i don't think there is a not that type will i psec or referendum all. even the young people who are in the party to run off if you want to get on and i think yes i agree with i got graphs that i think we've got to lead remain kind of vote that evoke at this point it doesn't matter what we need to do is for you to start working to get out and come towards a common future of all of a future of our country and i think the most shocking thing to settle for many people don't understand what how is that possible is that conversation. well i mean you look at the most people question off the left the european union well which was what is the european union on google i'm not what stuff is all i like if you had a three month period or three four month period if it were up to that a referendum which you know when it's time to go i was an educated about what your
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opinion does that are for anything about the issue of it i'm not part of a problem that we had in the u.k. people don't even know what the local national government does we don't have political and civic education and you can't which is why it is sort of a little time out among young people because it's not that they don't care about the issues that make them was they do it's about legacy traditional forms of politics as a big which i guess those issues that they care about so at this moment you know we have this bubble in westminster which is constantly talking about brings it i don't think that for most of the country people are angry i mean for young people who are angry about something if you ask people whether they're not happy about it they'll probably say to you don't normally yeah we don't think breaks is going to be a good thing but i don't think it is up to people like i have we had so many focus groups and events with young people when you ask them what rights you can send about news in this numb. and push no say back to well i don't know what rights i have to lose because i want to be educated so until people stop the city to fix it that's when nobody start to be angry but so when unfortunately you know people
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don't know what's happening and they just want to go on that jonathan let me just share this with our audience it's a piece that you wrote on the eleventh king of a think tank called the u.k. and it changed to reason may seem. rex a to. explain cia pay back when well. that was a padma in that the government actually came out with a which said we should have a customs and regular alignment period. that are out of the way of solving some of the problems that arise from leaving the customs union and leaving the single market in particular is really as regards state of the border for northern ireland so it was a pond but it does actually describe i'm afraid rather what reason makes breaks it looks like it of course or a stone chip used pretty much the same language in describing that to reason may
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approach to breaks it during the famous cabinet meeting at checkers last weight i'm i'm not i think as i said the project that theresa may has come up with is a sort of lowest common denominator it keeps us have been and have out of the mechanisms of the european union in particular at the cost of single market. but. it doesn't give us any sort of poets in how those regulations are made in future so it really isn't going to satisfy anyone it won't satisfy the people who want us to be completely free of the a.t.m. it once has five people that want us to stay part of the single market to maintain freedom of movement and the other mechanisms that that that apply the moment but he . there's not really any coherent alternative on the table i'm certainly not coming from bruce johnston and david davis that's about it said they walked out so they were happy but they didn't give us any sort of alternative i had. an equally we
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don't really have a coherent clout that involves remaining in the either that i think is right in this there isn't an appetite as a moment to moment the public it's a how to reverse friend so we are stuck in this limbo. and it can last at some point something will have to get we will have to make some decisions but we don't seem to be ready for that yet you know it's interesting john the thing the reason we're in this limbo according to a few people online is because the prime minister herself wanted to remain in the air this is richard a tweet he sent her saying he will be in a far more stronger position now that those two ministers have resigned may is a remainer and she'll do anything to stay in the e.u. bubble as the old saying goes a leopard never changes its spots and one more person sent us a video comment this is steven waffen a former stream gas then a member of european parliament and he talks about that very same issue how to
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listen to reason maids come in a meeting in checkers effectively delivered a remaining two and the death of brit since no one now believes having read the communique that she truly believes in bringing back control of all animals from the european union not paying money in some form to the european union be controlled by the european court of justice and also controlling immigration it is very clear that she is delivering a remainer bret's it's not a true breakfast. and their audience come out of the couldn't see their well while she was talking you could see a man a kind of shaking your head from side to side something i do and i want to get in but i want to hear what was behind that for amanda i just and when they could remain i could like ending freedom of movement leaving the single market leaving the customs union like what leaving and still happens three times that like that is
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not anything to do with remaining the government of god in a massive charm offensive on this they're trying to sell it as a stock because they think a compromise is going to be the only way they can get people around it like the stuff leavers the soft remain is and that's what they need because currently three of my just doesn't have a parliamentary majority condor for anything but definitely for any form of that deal that's controversial so when you're leaving a single market and you're leaving the customs union and you're ending freedom of movement and you're ending the journey. that is that's not a stockbroker that has a heart but both david couldn't hack it they didn't they didn't whatever kind of say ok maybe that's ok but that's not and you know yeah we're leaving but we might have the same rules because it doesn't fit with that narrative so i just to me that . that can be a hard approach that if you try to pop in with the notice we just left like tomorrow. i'm well i slightly disagree with amanda i mean i do think that territory that made this proposal whether you call it harder soft is
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a much softer form or breaks that davis or jordan or steven both light. and i think steve and it's there are you know i've been on i think i may have been on this show with the fact that david is at least consistent his vision of perspex it makes sense it is we cut our ties with the e.u. completely or have completely we term were treated as a turd third country and we're treated by them as a third country and that's logical and deliverable and actually be said if we want to do that we can it's up to us the problem is that a. the vast majority of serious economists think it would give very serious damage to the u.k. economy and business grays. and b. it is not what a majority of the people voted for what a majority of people want there was never a majority in parliament in the country. certainly not in business.
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for the sort of break this even wants so the idea that oh it's all the fault of. backstabbing remainders like the reason they are it's all of fault of cannot i think brussels bureaucrats or someone and so forth which is the sort of narrative you get from stephen and people like john said just doesn't make sense if this is not the sort of break that he wants is perfectly possible but it is not what the british public want to know what the british parliament wants and it would be absolute disaster for the u.k. economy so it can't happen the question is what will well it can have if it does happen it will happen by accident the question is how do we get through this in a way which does somehow command some sort of majority support i also agree with them and i think that you know get it treated base after a compromise. that's majority support either and that's what a lot of you don't have demonstrated that i want to spin this to you i'm going to
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do. something i found it on amanda's twitter page ok so this is what i found on her twitter page people to the u.k. it's the a brand secretary jeremy hunt and just listen to what he says towards the end met a very interesting but what i'm saying is that when we have negotiated the terms of our departure this is a huge decision this will have an impact not just for the next five years but the next seventy five years the terms of our trade with are the countries on our doorstep is unbelievably important times of the jobs the opportunities for young people for many generations and i do think that people should have a chance to have their say on those terms and people should be able to have their say on those terms more stones and has left this is the new foreign secretary would he just say. what does that mean he just he just looked like he was not which is what. you. know what i want to bring in one thing that is they go back
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to i don't any sort. on on breaks it won't be helpful at all because if you get one of the reasons why we have breaks in the first place is because people. just aren't through election system we live in a country where.

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