tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera November 8, 2018 1:00pm-2:00pm +03
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that was by far like the longest runway i've ever done in my life. and one side of my brand like ok powerful want to lose back but then also it's very important to know exactly where to want to lead one wrong turning blue and one is about robot. but it's also about ok i have this incredible opportunity to represent my movie to like show people this is the new face i feel like i would be doing
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a huge disservice to myself and to all the little girls are looking up to me if i didn't make this the most that i can. good morning. welcome everyone my name is denise wall of hype camp and i'm your state director i promise not to teach you any choreography. now that i've got it going on but i won't be into. oh the honesty i appreciate. and for those people when they feel a little bit of a senior they let serialize but you did. on the other hand. to be here least one student. on the scene a stronger and better version of your authentic self and you can.
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see here. was. i don't. know. what's going to. be free so i'm going to find a lot of those so-called eight so my girls to see are. a lot of people never thought to do a pageant and with the job but obviously like you know now they see it nothing's stopping them and it's great. because i was. just my all your moment. are you excited. marcy. as far as i know i know i saw you while everyone was coming
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i mean you don't think that's what it's like it's quite insane to think that exactly one year ago the pageant was little. i know but. i doubt it right last year it was really difficult for. my mom to understand it and it was a big no from my community. and then they saw that i didn't change last minute on that see their off my future act. so now i see parents like supporting their daughters to. into pageants. but my mom she doesn't agree with. the way i'm never going to say i don't understand where she's coming from because i get it. i've always told my mom like you want me to stop i'll stop. but she's allowed to make this choice for myself.
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i just can't believe like how much my mom has changed how accepting she's become. she's actually like very supportive she's so happy for the other girls. i know it's not easy for her but the fact that she's sitting here with me like it just goes to show like how much she really cares we would like to have especially on li prison this next word she stood on this very stage is the contestant last year she is an example of how tragedy provides a cult usually struck powerful stage. thanks. very. much to fund.
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comment that. i am sorry and i was like i was born here and was. such an honor to be here i like you here kid he's so excited to walk me and see while on the scene i am so also. if i was back in the refugee camp. i know i would have appreciated someone coming back and just telling me. ok i was a kid here but now i'm doing this. it hasn't been an easy path there are
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star a lot of unknowns and i think that's what that's what all uniform. jog a stone drive with tensions between islamic separatists and pro russian national. culture in the crossfire one man has a vision for the next generation empowering. to seek a special way. with these dogs sounds peaceful warnings on al-jazeera. the latest news as it breaks the saudi's narrative contradicts the information that's out of his official has been giving for the past two weeks with detailed coverage this whole flat feria of mud was filth and houses and it was completely
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washed away along with the people who were inside from around the world the government doesn't call this a detention center but it's surrounded by barbed wire fences and it's exits are manned by armed guards. story is of life. and spring. oh. a series of short documentaries from around the wound that celebrate the human spirit against the oh it's. your close. your. al-jazeera selects express yourself.
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al-jazeera with every. i know them or colander all these the top stories on. u.s. president. attorney general jeff sessions came a day off the trunks republican party lost control of the house of representatives and choose days mid-term elections although it increased his majority in the senate committee reports were nothing that's enough it was supposed to be a news conference about the outcome of the midterm election sit down but it quickly turned into a testy exchange with reporters which included questions about the future of president donald trump's cabinet and the fate of his have battled attorney general jeff sessions and i'm very happy with most of my cabinet we're looking at different
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people for different positions shortly after the president tweeted that his attorney general was out sessions writing in a letter to the president at your request i am submitting my resignation trucker's muse publicly about getting rid of sessions ever since the attorney general recused himself from the investigation into alleged ties between the truck campaign and the kremlin during the twenty sixteen presidential campaign sessions is replaced by matthew whitaker who will serve as acting attorney general whitaker is viewed as a trump loyalist and penned an op ed last year arguing the moeller probe was going too far he is now officially overseeing that same investigation over any attorney general whether this one or another one. should not be able to interfere with the mall or investigation in any way they should not be able to end it they should not be able to limit it right one of you know that i mean on monday trump said he
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wanted to take a softer tone but his post mid term news conference was his longest and arguably the most contentious in his press duration at times boiled over as he railed yet again at the media after he was asked repeatedly about the muller probe c.n.n. should be ashamed of itself having you working for them you are a rude terrible person. are you at once without a white house aide tried to take a microphone for a reporter another reporter asked about concerns over the rise of white nationalism that such a racist question the sessions firing in the fall of from the u.s. midterms comes as donald trump prepares to head to paris where he'll attend an event along with russian president vladimir putin on wednesday trump once again declined to directly criticize putin for his twenty fourteen addicks ation of crimea instead blaming it on former president barack obama can really help get
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al-jazeera the white house foreign sessions was just off the president talked up as republican bodies gains in the senate from tuesday's midterm elections but have to contend with democrats who will trap powerful committees in the house of representatives and the opposition parties secured a majority in the chamber president trump says he'll have a much stronger opinion on the case. next week journalist was murdered in saudi arabia's bull last month. on that matter with more than a month since the death of mr show good journalist. very terrible thing do you think saudi arabia is guilty of of having a murder and if so. you know on that subject over the next week and i'm working very closely with congress we're working together some very talented people and we're working with congress we're working with turkey and we're working with saudi arabia and i'm forming a very strong opinion. fourteen. killed and eight. taliban fighters
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attacked an afghan army base it happened and the co-op districts of. the aid group save the children says one of its health facilities in yemen has been damaged by an as strike a pharmacy providing lifesaving supplies was hit in the port city of data where the saudi. military offensive against the rebels in the last three days attacks on a christian woman of course is a blasphemy has been released from prison. to death row nationwide protests by hardliners convicted in two thousand and ten on charges of insulting the prophet mohammad. the headlines and more news on al-jazeera correspondent.
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in some ways alaska is nothing less than a promises. in the summer the constant sun might suppose so beautiful it seems a crime to look away. from a distance the tundra looks like a muted patchwork. only when you bend towards the ground to check if the berries have ripened or if the mushrooms have come up after rain can you see the spongy cosmos it contains. in the rivers salmon move powerful leaf like together. and in the times between night and day when even the salmon seem to still we were taken by the raw force of a landscape stripped of its summer an astrologer. my name is america.
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i've got tired after america and. and my mom's side of the family is made of boston . i'm an online journalist for al-jazeera and. my mom's village has one of the last subsistence salmon cultures in world but their way of life could disappear. for an hour persists and i feel really grateful to be a part of it. if people ask i usually same from qatar or the middle east. my dad says that when he was growing up the lifestyle in qatar was very simple and sometimes i wish i could have seen what that world looked like. the peace of life
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a slow everybody knew everybody. and there's just one place to get your vegetables and fish down at the coastline. oil and gas completely transformed the country. and even my lifetime the city has dramatically changed. there's this glittering skyline that developed almost overnight and so we have all this wealth now. people are usually shocked when i tell them my mom is from alaska my dad is from qatar and they always always ask how they met but the story is pretty boring really they just met in the university and at the time they still had to see if they can make things worse this is not fun. coming to town half and the first time i was excited to come and see the country because. you know it's just someplace new and different fuels come to. if someone isn't something i want to adopt the
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situation where you think this is going to be home for you know i'm i think i'm almost the thought of wants to learn. about different cultures and religions to combat that all new adult away from moscow all the way through the fault of the war there never been here and just lived on promises here taking the woman both of them . what did you promise the parents of the fairness to bring her back of you know this. picking back to it of the first well i think i was probably. pretty nervous about what he would think those are going to experience see them go there or you know what can gravel on the way you can see this huge like cross shaped runway and then you're looking all around the country to be like what what's here or where is it because i mean he was like from
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a urban situation and stuff and i just thought man he's probably going to think that he's coming to absolutely nowhere you know but. it all worked out in the end he adapted to village life easily. but you need to survive you have to do it yourself you have to go catch your own food you have to build your own children and i think the all the tools around them isn't for me i know what parts so it's coulter. cults are called turn to do you want your kids to know their cultural houses you're doing a good positive things and of course as parents we want the best of both we just wanted you to be able to experience everything things that you didn't have a chance to experience here i mean formal education obviously you girls went to school here and then through the family you learned all the traditions you know even ramadan and all the you know all the family celebrations whereas yes in alaska you have got like twenty one hours of daylight you were free to roam around and do
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things that you wanted to do you. feel more american here and that more air in the us. i think that's just. the nature of being half of one thing half of the others yes or no outside of things. since i was born we've tried to fly back each year to help my grandma with the summoner and i just remember being so excited to go to the discovery zone where as
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an adult i forget how much i miss it until i'm there the only way to get to the villages on a ninety day or plane flying forty five minutes out from includes which is the nearest city. i mean good family. the community that my grandmother lives in is actually two villages one is called early on and one is called the hill and healing is up the mouth of the river that feeds into lake. lake is part of this broader water system that produces forty six percent of the world sockeye salmon. salmon return to the place that they're hot so they're hatched they go out into the ocean and stay there for a few years and then fight their way back to lay their own eggs.
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we probably should come to the back door can we just walk through oh yes because they want to feed. my gramma around about a breakfast here for at least twenty years pretty much the same as you remember and you remember when you kids planted all those trees they got so big you couldn't see them make hardly disappear so scared of this of like run. this in with the room where we found the tooth. yes. miss america here down here the memories here are so wonderful. going to sustain here in this place was so formative for me even though i only came here during the summer it's a sense where i sort of envision a lot of my childhood. you get to explore and you get to make mistakes you get independence. i come back here in the summer right this
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is a summer home for me. but when this is a home home for people there's just such a fundamental attachment to the land. for many including my family fishing and hunting is vital to survival here. i think it's hard for people to envision places that do do this out of necessity so it's not just a cultural thing or a traditional thing people need to do this because finding out. groceries their supplies is so expensive. people need salmon and other wild foods to have enough protein for that yeah. there are people out. so in smokehouse that's going. and i help with anything and i think you've got a very good thing i don't want you to get off me he would have another. as
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a kid i really love the heart of the salmon on the heart comes out it's often still beating so i would take the higher end run around to nearby fishermen and show them the persistence of the sun it's incredible the current is going against them there's a trying to get fishermen props nuts and then you find. it on the fish table it's wriggling you kill it and his heart is still beating. so how has processing this change versus when you're growing up or before you even have. to walk in the lake city where we just saw the first before. the put them in like us or yeah we. only ever used of us luke you're going to regret the same thing i know but i think
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. where the car is going to. go you've got there's a sort of this companionship around the fish stable. men aren't typically around because they commercial fish serve work other seasonal jobs in the summer it's mainly women who it's the i really love talking or gossiping joking making fun of each other. you know i've never done it because. it's just really fun you feel really supported. you know you do it i think we say doing this because there are so many things that you do to the fish. to god. as a kid i would hope empty the got bucket and hang fish up to dry and canned salmon but now i work at the fish table. even when the weather's bad and your hands are
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freezing and your back is tired there's nothing more satisfying than doing fish. it's been really cool going to all the different fish tables. and everyone's quite particular and maybe a little sneaky about the way they do that it's because i think everyone thinks they do it their fish the right way. when you have a camera full of water and these heavy chairs it's illegal and they move and then they start they don't see the custard crooked. that they did better or even fishline if you leave it on here it won't see them.
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remember that remember you used to do this i remember your mom always taking pancho we travel with cans back home yeah just because it's. there is no matter where you come from. i mean it's just a different life for me for six eight ten twelve fourteen sixteen eighteen ok. time to pay and just the knowledge you need to have takes a lifetime to acquire so when you're talking to an elder it's just like opening up an encyclopedia but the only good so don't get caught or what are these are these are just small prints not i use birth to smoke. kind of early in the spring and let it so don't be so strong for my having rocks on me want to hear how do you start it so that smoking and not a fire i still haven't learned this art i was teaching you how to play. which was
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rough for the movie you know. you just feel like such a so they so good. i would die very short about a. son asked me answer. this is blowflies see the eggs too only got a knife to take yeah. so i just smash them yeah and smash i think just a couple more hours. of the songs of official the other day and they kept the fins on because they said that the weight of the top official of the eskimos in the indians do things differently. and chorus as indians think we know better but. it's just. the way things are. still
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it is also about the interface of two different tribes one is you play people in the other the you know. where police standing you know. what percentage of knew him and is native i gotta say at least nineteen i guess is maybe ninety yeah but at least there is just you know maybe ten people here that might not be and what is the population of. about one hundred eighty and right now. we're just kind of having some problems with jobs but we have a lot of our people here in new healing working and they're working peple right now . is this proposed copper gold and molybdenum mine that would if approved be located less than twenty miles away from million not. it's really valuable it could
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generate between three hundred and five hundred billion u.s. dollars over its lifetime and provide jobs for the community. but it could also pose serious threats to the ecosystem. if it's pollutants got into the surrounding area they could possibly ruin the salmon run in a way of life that has been around for millennia. to try if we have a contract with pavel they're doing the studies here this summer it's providing jobs for our people at shark term it might end next week might end in august so it's just like everybody wants to work because this is the only place to make the money right now when they're not here it's pretty bleak they want them to be around want right now that pride is fish is important to our culture fish it's important for us to you know provide for our family but we still have to work what other way are we going to survive. you know we can't pick up our families and move
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to h.r. or wherever the jobs are and we don't want to. give up people. to support sufficiently. so you think coming up for fifteen years of a fifteen year idea keep coming up. it's so beautiful work around it's so many places to go and different style of fish and every place. we've got it was. already. there. we laughed so funny how fishing can be so important to so many people but the way that it's important and so radically different. there might be people who come up here every single summer for twenty five years not really knowing the can name. of the place
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a huge part of their life. your story i guess thanks very green to talk to me oh you're welcome how long have you been in the sports fishing and hunting industry new yonah i started in the mid eighties and i've been doing that pretty much sense for years that was the best kept secret there was only a handful of lodges in the area while the word finally got out couldn't be kept secret lodges have gotten so exclusive with the flying. very personalized high end foods and everything a fishing trip at a premier a lodge in the syria today the nine thousand dollars for a week might have been you know of three or four thousand dollars in the mid eighty's they want the big money people and they get it what's the relationship
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