tv [untitled] July 5, 2021 9:30am-10:01am +03
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can be over the humanoid. robots like me, will be everywhere else. 0 documentaries, next, laid on the weird and wonderful world of robot that learn. think for you and even trust. i feel like i'm alive, but i know i am a machine origins of this species. phone out there. oh, ah. hello, i'm darn zone in doha. with a quick reminder, the headlines here on our to 0. what remained a partially collapsed apartment building in miami, in the us state of florida has been demolished the plans abroad for what does the region braces for tropical storm elsa, which is expected to reach the florida coast on tuesday. authority say the
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demolition will help search and recovery efforts. 24 people have been confirmed dead and 121 still missing. kareem had done more from miami beach. they spent the greater part of sunday drilling holes into the bottom of the building where they would then put these explosive charges and brought the building down with a process known as energetic leveling. so these little explosions basically target the structural integrity of the building, which then down with the force of gravity, might be hearing some explosions here. these are just fireworks because it's, it's the 4th of july here. but right now we do have crews on seen on the side of the of the demolition, just to make sure that everything is fine, that all the, all the explosions that were supposed to go off did in fact go off and they are due to resumed their search and rescue operation as soon as possible. tropical storm else has making its way towards florida and as may landfall in eastern cuba. it
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brought strong wings of nearly 95 kilometers an hour and heavy rain. storms already patted several caribbean islands, killing at least 3 people. emergency teams and thailand are battling to contain a fire at a factory near bangkok sample what the place started of a manufacturing plant following an explosion. these 11 people have been injured and others have been ordered to evacuate the fears of more explosions from leaking chemicals. the philippine military says all passengers on board, a plane that crashed on sunday had been accounted for. 47 soldiers died when the c 130 crop went down in pseudo province 49. others survived. former south african president, jacob zoom has defied a deadline set by the nation's top court to surrender to police. he was guilty of contempt last week, offending to appear before a corruption inquiry finding an assembly elected after months of protests in chile as begun, meeting to drop the new constitution, an indigenous woman and lead the process. those were the headlines and he's
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continues here now to 0 after a portal station. thanks for watching. this lights may look like a city from the sky, but their fishing vessels just outside origin. tina's exclusive economic zone, the united states launched operations southern cross to combat, illegal and unregulated fishing in the southern atlantic. argentina's coast guard say, the main task is to control their movements, so they do not cross into argentine territory. from this home arjun time authorities can monitor for what's happening in economic exclusive films. but what a 40 here are saying is that what's important is to regulate what's happening in international waters the hi, i'm sandra gartman. welcome to portal your gateway to some of our da 0 is best online content. this week we're focused on women and their power to bring about change.
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we'll hear how women betrayed by their own governments. religions and cultures are fighting to make a difference. not just for themselves, but all over the people around them or meet them, others facing down the mexican drug dealers to find out here about the painful legacy of ireland, another and baby holes. i think it's one of the most outrageous human rights abuses that most of the outside world doesn't know anything about how does it. and we meet an american woman who took an old way of fighting racism and brought it right up to date. imagine one day your son doesn't go home, it happened to mirror none of them. she lives in the scene, a low mexico's drug trafficking heartland went over to disappear me enough as the police ignored her. so she started looking for on her own or online documentary series, close up profiles,
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home and was wondering, i know it's hard to get almost default to the photos for the how much i to let you know can we move them in and the rest of them were good on. yeah, you got me? yes ma'am. so i mean other than women currently selling muscles because i'm with us in the summer, just some of the things that i hope will the this when the, when the machine in the mantle was wondering enough for some the, for the simple danica. but i wonder, is what we are,
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they assume little foreman get really aggressive for us. if they're my medical movie, then in terms of the mental menu on, my poco met them, her fatty lonely muscle, according to her demon, see, let me get you, let the rattle my rattle. those are the most that you can read. this isn't going to get the military commitments with the purpose of this. is that ok? no, no. i don't know there will be no 2nd lawyer. but other than that, i really didn't want to, but i was just, i don't be will be because i'm going to say that because i got to be honest
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with me. i'm going to go now. i'm one of the one on the other. yes, i will not lambert. i was in a political system about when i log in on a log in and i was very and they did multiple me who am i going to go? molly? was that i? yes, the thing of a doorway. oh, dear mobile, really mostly wondering you don't know why they're getting ready to go to dinner,
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but if you say, oh yes, the fellow in one of them put in a little nicer area. you almost get admiral in the corner. let me hope that it the us, any way it is for your mom. i will gladly you put the one i'm going to this will kind of get better for you know, that once i guess what i'm, what i was, i can fix this. i mean, citizen report ruler, the guess i must get somewhere. i guess i was case dana was better number one. who was, he is from the law,
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but in i are going to take you to ireland now and a disturbing chapter in its history when lawrence lee and out of their journalists started investigating allegations about the fate of thousands of babies born to unmarried mothers and ireland. he didn't know the extent of the abuse he was about to uncover. he takes us on his journey of discovery in this episode of between us and online series in which aren't the correspondence. tell the story behind their story. the how could $800.00 children die in the place where they're supposed to be looked self that by a religious institution one facilitates looking into it's it became clear that
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there was this enormous can of worms to do with the way in which the catholic church was effectively abusing mothers babies and not just in chiu, but right across ireland as well. i'm lawrence lee and i've been covering stories about what i call institutional violence against women in ireland. and between us. i think it's one of the most outrageous human rights abuses. but most of the outside world doesn't know anything about i never even heard of chew. it's a completely anonymous little place right in the middle of ireland, which nobody had ever heard of at all until in 2014. this historian discovered this underneath there and in the grounds of what used to be a great big mother and baby homes were the remains of 800 babies, whose bodies had been dumped by the nuns who ran this home in sewage type of confidence. so how could this have happened?
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go back to the foundation of the irish state, just on to the end of the 1st world war catholic dogma and hard line cafe thinking really were a massive pause of what it meant for them to regard themselves as an independent country becoming pregnant outside marriage in these times was regarded as a sin and effectively as a crime. even if you were sexually abused or rates it was demanded. if you went with your unborn baby, into the care of the religious orders. and they then were in charge of everything to do with your faith. from 922 new mother and baby homes sprung up across the country, presented to young women as a solution for their shameful fin. in the near 7 decades of their existence. once 30000 women would pass through their doors, and so when the baby was born, which was without pain killers, without any source of medical treatments,
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we used the suffering. we'd been told the nuns would whisper in the women's ears, was it worth this for your 2 minutes of pleasure? and as soon as the baby was born, it was taken away from the mother who was then forced to work for free in either the mother of all of the associates and macklin laundries for a year. and then the baby was in the care of the nuns. if it died, it seems to have been simply disposed. but it's broadly held that's at least $6000.00 babies. died of things like starvation, if it lives up to the age of possibly 3 or 4. it was then usually adopted out very often to american families who was checked for the suitability to be a parents. and usually the woman who gave birth in the mother and baby home never saw her child again. it just seems like really, really cruel forms of punishment to people who may have done absolutely nothing
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wrong. i've taught aside my name is j, decided to take my culture of me, my family with me. they took my money and i started thinking this is absolute, the enormous and the state benefited from this as well as the church. the church became very rich and had enormous amounts of power. the states effectually benefits it, because the people became very passive. all these things seem to run so counter to your perception of what island is. very open, liberal, young, vibrant source place underneath full lapse. you find this real dauntless. most people who don't know about all this. certainly the older generations that the grandparents of people now might not be able to believe that this actually happened . but everybody somehow had some sort of role to play it. and my suspicion is that there is a whole load of national residual kilten embarrassments about the role
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that society actively plays in this institutional violence against women throughout much of the 20th century and on. and that has been the justice so far a really hope more than anything else. the people in the outside world try to understand a bit better about all these things that happened in island. me it's been just over a year since the murder of george floyd by minneapolis police officer, the murder shop, to many americans and to taking action against racism. and for one pastry chef paula less, that meant updating a style of activism that goes back to the bus boy and now a bama during the 1950s. ag plus reporter yara l. m. joy joined paula to learn about the anti racism movement. she founded from her kitchen the way we were thinking again, soon,
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the scene to fight against racism. that probable celebrated african american pastry chef based in washing. hi, paula. hi, earl of protest grew over the killing of george boy by police. he started the fundraiser that had a global impact baker's against racism, pallet and fellowship asked folks across the country to host them and donate the proceeds to organizations fighting systemic re what happened next was incredible power says the reason, nearly $2000000.00 with big filled it over 200 us cities and across 5 continents, all the bakers against races. and during these strange times, i was looking to learn about bakers against racism, street from the store, with a math teacher the to the to help speaking has actually been a big part of the historical fight for racial justice in america. so i got together
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with paula lack of sexual in washington dc. together. this is the most distant i've ever been for an interview. the alright. there is ventilation. this is an initiative that grew to something even beyond. i assume your expectation originally i just wanted 80 baker department plate. once i started we had maybe like a 1000 participants worldwide because against racism, perez, kansas city, chicago, and certainly form ranches and people on their own, their own. and so if i wanted to participate, you would email us and we would send you this google folder. it had all of the graphics mission statement out a participant, and then i would sell it myself and then they'll come pick it up. they'll bend. miami donated whatever the action and life matter, so amazing what i've learned is that you can take 0 dollars and make a worldwide movement with a little bit of elbow grease. so in the spirit of bakers against racism, hello. and i decided to base something together. so what are we making today?
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today we're going to be making our peach cobbler. we're going to engage in socially distant baking that looks like right now. it's just kind of all your a different take everything and then whatever you're going to touch, we will hand it off to each other. i'll put it here. this will be the international space station of peach cobbler. so i'm going to pray my high dish. just give it a little spray just like i did even quoting. so here we have some golden peaches. i'm going to chop this into. i love this night. oh my god. the why is it that we're making peach cobbler today? i wanted to kind of play like this to like the american south and georgia gilmore, she was the original bakers against racism, georgia gilmore, she was a hugely important figure in the civil rights movement that isn't really talked about in history class. at least not mine. she was a cook in alabama who lost her job after testifying against segregation. so she opened up her own restaurant, organized, big sale of the civil rights activist,
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specifically during the montgomery bus boycott. let's rewind in december 1955 rosa parks refuses to vacate receipt for a white man on a bus, montgomery, alabama, and the police arrest her. because back then buses are segregated, meaning there are separate sections for white people and black people per rest mobilizes the black community and sparks the montgomery bus boycott led by doctor martin luther king junior. for 381, the black people in montgomery refused to take public transit. instead, they set up an alternative carpool system that they run by themselves. but that of course, cost money to georgia. gilmore finds a way to raise a ton of cash to keep the boy kept going. she rallied black women in montgomery to cook meals or baked dessert like peach parts, and seldom to fund the carpet. but the cooking and baking with all the covert operation, ga gilmore, had to keep the identity of her fellow cook secret. because there was a chance there, white employers might fire them. and when people asked where the money came from,
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they would just say nowhere. so they came to be known as well, the club for nowhere. now here's what's ironic, sometimes white alabama who supported segregation would actually be the ones buying the pies. and so in a sense they were unknowingly supporting the civil rights. nobody wouldn't really understand that she was baking for cause delicious law. anyway, the boy leads to the supreme court ruling. the segregation on buses is unconstitutional. a pivotal step in the civil rights movement. as for georgia, gilmore, she continued feeling fellow accident until she died in 1990. she was like the o g. right. because she funded the civil rights movement to allow us to even be here making these pies you guys are carrying on her legacy. exactly. so what we're going to do now is we're going to take some of that brown sugar, and we're going to sprinkle it on and do what feels right over here in the middle of the table. you have some nutmeg close for us, close and not meg. our big staples of our z dominican, christina,
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i didn't know that lemons. salt flour water saw she was he just mix everything together. yeah. yeah. and he's going to start getting in for like this, like kind of like a hot mess. so we're making a cookie crumbles. and i'm a little bit crazy, like a cookie. i have my sugar, i have my butter and my baking powder. i have my flower. so i'm going to actually just eyeball how much choppy fees you kind of give it that like yummy, crunchy texture. i love this touch. so now what i'm doing is i'm just kind of like mixing it all together. you don't need a mixer to do this. you just need a little bit of patience a little bit last. now what i'm going to do is i'm going on top. i got beautiful. oh, it looks so. so attractive. oven is creating 2356 feet away and the high,
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also 6 feet away. baker's against racism. it was that one for the restaurant industry. the 2 and 3 now again with the ownership of the bakers themselves on how they're going to keep treating black bodies and brown bodies and how they're going to dismantle a very systemic racial system within the restaurant industry. as a woman of color, it was hard to even bring into this industry. you be other people that like you? absolutely not. i will sometimes one of one in kitchen, one of how many one i hope that the industry actually does change for the better and realize that maybe if i'm a little rough on the edges, maybe if my hair pearl is a certain way, there's nothing i can do about that, but what i know how to do is
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if they get far away from each other on a heightened my sense of a so i'm canceling my vision, me. oh, i can sense the front of the property and you are so naturally, art that comes from the in the pictures are super soft and fluffy. and like the crumble is just enough for the cookie without it being like super we i think it did . ok. you did my racism bite raising one time and you can catch more of your adventures at 80 plus dot net and more of close up between us and other digital theories that out there a dot com. so that's almost it from us. but in honor of the women featured in this episode, we're going to let gyptian feminist, who shall we have the final word? she was born in 1879 into the country's harm system and was profiled an audit 0 donkey drama podcast. hindsight. she took
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a bold step of lifting her veil to reveal her face on a crowded railway platform. it was an act that cemented her legacy in egypt, women's movement see you. next time, i refused to see the fight for redemption liberation as more important than the fight for the rights of women. so, i formed the addiction feminist union with the same women who marched with me in the streets, re establish clinics, school, scholarship and literacy program. we advocated for women's suffrage, education, employment, and changes in personal status and family laws. we did all of this and for the, for addiction independent. ah ah,
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hello there, it's been very hot across the levant and middle east over days. and there's more heat to come. we're expecting temperatures for climb, particularly in to wait in iran and in iraq we could see a challenge to an old time high set in baghdad. last week temperatures, edging up to the 50s by the time we get into wednesday. so some relentless heat on the way for the south things are looking slightly cooler. we've got a southwesterly wind keeping temperatures down in yemen and in oman and it is going to browned on tuesday. we'll see temperatures coming down in the cross areas in the u. a and cook tom, there is any what, whether it's to the west of yemen, the mountain seeing some showers there. and as we move across to central africa, it is a very wicked wet picture across that central band. we've got tons of storms rolling across, particularly west and areas of central africa. nigeria is expected to see some of the really wet weather as we go into tuesday. it'll be uganda and south sedan that
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see some of those heavy showers. we could see some flash flooding here, but for the south, it's a pretty dry picture. temperatures where we expect them to be for botswana and south africa. there'll be plenty of sunshine in johannesburg. ah, ah . a tie factory explosion shake sang call. for some people flee from leaking chemical ah other, can fidel this is eleanor there from also coming up the
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