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tv   [untitled]    August 27, 2021 10:30pm-11:01pm AST

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frank's gun laws and he's since issued a series of decrees, making it easier to buy and carry firearms gone. ownership has reportedly risen 65 percent in the 2 years since he took office all the wonderful ruffles. everybody has to buy a rifle. now, armed people will never be enslaved. i know it costs a lot. it's who say, oh, you have to buy bean man. if you don't want to buy rifle, don't upset anyone who wants to buy one. ah, i'll main story this. our foreign forces in afghanistan are pushing ahead with them . monumental evacuation efforts it day after suicide bomb and targeted desperate people trying to flee crowds of return to campbell airport. despite warnings that another attack is likely and the next few days will be the most dangerous to date. at least 175 people. the last majority of the afghan civilians and now confirmed to
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have died in those days, attacks and ask and off shoot of the group. iso says it was behind the bombing. the threat is ongoing and it is active. it is, our troops are still in danger that continues to be the case every day that they are there most. this is the most dangerous part of the mission. this is the retrograde period of the mission. and what that means is that this is the period of time when the military commanders on the ground and forces begin to move, not just troops home, but also equipment home. and that is often a very dangerous part of any mission. but in this case, they're also doing that well, there is a, an ongoing and acute threat from isis. k. we know development the authorities in pakistan's capital as lama bod, have ordered all hotels. not to accept gas for the next 3 weeks to make space for thousands of people expected from afghanistan. huge numbers of afghans have been crossing into pockets. dawn with many saying they've given up waiting to be flown
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out of the country. the u. s. refugee agency is also saying that up to half a 1000000 people could see the crisis before the end of the year. and his appeal to all neighboring countries to keep that boarders open. quick. but of all the news and coven related deaths in the united states have risen 11 percent in the past week. the cdc released the latest figures day after the number of corona virus, patients in hospitals past 800000. that level hasn't been seen since january and police and nor the nigeria is saying a group of 15 abducted school children have been freed, follows the release of another 90 students earlier on friday. children were taken by government from an islamic school in the northwest and time to gina 3 months ago . during official say, one child died in captivity for others on our ceiling. medical treatment stream is coming up next, but i'll have more news for you off to that in about half an hour time. i'll see
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you then news news news, news. hi us, i me okay. that from holiday to bring you the bonus edition of the stream. this show is what happens when you keep the get off the line constant. take the filter off, coming up on packing haiti's, terrible history of natural and man made dissolve this as 3 parallel, and what it's like to compete as a lead athletes with disabilities. but 1st, a warning in the next few minutes she may crack a model or even low. laugh out loud. i love this network,
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but it is not known for comedy. are you ready to go on this journey with me? you are about to experience tre crowder, who calls himself the liberal redneck. he's a comedian from tennessee who relo. she's making fun of his fellow selfishness. here he is talking about the corona virus pandemic. i try how you doing. while the confederacy have done, it may continue to hold the same people in this country hosp age. as the delta vary, rage is out of control because they like a poorly trained dog will not take their medicine. i don't understand these people have, i don't believe the viruses rail by fully into that water into wine. no evidence, but then say multiple elderly neighbors dines, i get some kind of government calls, gun conspiracy or whatever. and then the ones that do believe in and have somehow wrapped the conclusion that the most appropriate response of the delta barrier would be to send all the mexican back to their country. what is going on was not going to a little confession. mike, i'm a dad and will liberal been and pay for instance at least $3.00 and an early 2020.
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i was skeptical. coven, i thought, be another star, or swam blue situation. but here's the thing. i'm virus down. so shortly after that, whenever smart person on earth started saying something different, i realized maybe i was being an idiot. nope, no, an idiot. the liberal redneck is a very clever way to deliver comedy. and what i takes, i caught up with trey recently on instagram to talk about his distinctive style. i want to do stand up comedy since i was a kid. i was 12 years old because i watched chris bigger and blacker with my dad. on h b i, when i or whatever. and my dad was just losing his mind that the whole like daddy don't get nothing with a big piece of chicken all. but my dad was a single father and everything's my dad is just love and all this. and i'm going to watch it as the 1st time i wanted to, to do it. so i spent all this time thinking about it before i ever actually said that foot on stage. and i used to always think i got really understand and watches
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and up and everything. and i remember being pretty aware immediately that there wasn't really anybody that were read net comedians, you know, who were all ultra popular. and i mean, honestly, i love, i love them too, but they weren't, they weren't. yeah, yeah. right. and even as a kid, i was like, there are people that sound like me, but not people that side of the things that i think. and then there are people inside things that i think, but they don't all sound like me. and i remember like noticing that even way back then. so i kind of knew that it would be different. yeah. right. and so i just stared right into that because it's all, it all comes from very organic. you know, like i was the smart kid in my store, which also meant like the weird, you know, got my phone out. the books, books are guy that whole fine, that was always fun. like to re, which is weird. yeah. but not, you know, at the same time they wanted to cheat off my math homework. so wasn't too bad us, you know it's, it's a violence but i'm saying i was always like,
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i never really fit. and because of the way that i come for a very authentic place, you know, it wasn't anything i had to conjure up in a lab anywhere. and i said you do a lot of yelling and you think of yelling. yeah. louder is funnier. everybody knows that it's just you know, right now try really like doing your heading. i mean, it's, you know, just all these republican governors are saying, hell, bent on getting the maximum out other people killed for no reason. just the delta variant never really thought wants to. vaccines came out and some restriction started lifted and things like that. again, we got some tour dates on the books and whatnot. i was, i thought that like we could start going back to a symbol. it's normal, but then the delta where it comes there like a mantra or you think you are. this is 2021. we don't play that game around here,
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but just there it kills me. it makes me very upset because of how unnecessary it seems to me like it is like it doesn't. yeah, i know that everything's terrible when just take for granted the things you're tired now, but like this thing in particular doesn't have to be as bad as this. there's plenty of things that could be done and a lot of places to just aren't in the name of freedom or whatever puts i have 2 sons that are $89.00, and they go to school in southern california. so it's not like as bad, but i watch and stuff of these like school board meetings and people scream and doctors because they want to put a mass on there to protect their child and they're threatening the doctors lives and stuff that is in my home state of tennessee, and i watch that and it makes me want to just pull my hair out and because there's just no excuse for that type of thing as far as i'm concerned. and so, i mean, you know, that's been the same thing that's making a lot of people mad, i guess right now is been saying that's but upsetting me the most, i just know what is it about the south. do you think that encourages people to view something that's in a certain way?
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you've got the inside skinny on this, what do you think it is? i mean, probably all that we do all the time and our general actions in question and yeah, you know, just the sum total of our history probably i would say a lot. it's because in sincerity. yeah. i think a big part of it. i don't know, some of it, i don't really understand why, but just for example, like when people think of a southerner, they think of the sign saying, all wise men like, you know, somebody like, you know, oh boy, it looks at me. but without the glasses and sounds like me, but holding up an anti abortion sign or whatever outside of the, you know, a clinic just just screaming about freedom with an eagle chart. that's what i picture. but like there is all, there's a bike that i feel like people don't think of like out tasks or whatever when they think of the main like the yeah there's,
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there's more black people live in the south than any other region in the country. but like they don't get thought about when people take their bike, what the south is like, and also the white people like me who are like that get discounted to when people take into consideration what the south is like. and for us, i think a part of it a large part of it is because people who don't want to be viewed as being that way, usually lose the accent and stuff and sorta met and differently. oh yeah, very much people. yeah. because it's like, i don't want people think that i'm a racist or whatever i don't want to think that either, but my thing was always, yeah, but i'm not in the fact that i found this like does it make it so? so i just didn't buy into that, but i'm saying, you know, people that talk sense from the south usually oftentimes, not always, obviously i'm accepting the role. they don't sound like you know. and then anytime you sounds like again me and
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a few others. yeah. they're always saying the same regression book over and over, you know what i mean. so like, you can understand how people get that get that idea. seals on a stereotype for sure. ash find nice. have you experience any backlash from? is typically something that's because of your views in 6th grade student i haven't i haven't i haven't had anybody tried to like give me what for and i'm family dollar parking lot. when i'm back home or anything like that, like no physical altercations. i don't know if it's because i'm bigger than i look on the internet or whatever, but or if i don't recognize me with sleeves on my shirt. i don't know what the reason is. but anyway, i haven't had anyone like tried to start that with me and my face in public like back in the style. but if you talking about i very much existed. i internet comment
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level of hatred. you know very much i have enough to sit on the comment section and you know, call my guy or whatever from their basement, but not enough to like leave the house and come find me and call me, you know, like they don't, i don't quite yet. i guess it's mostly. yeah, yeah. one of these days. but i mean, yeah, i get, i mean, not from the very beginning 5 years ago, and still now i am very regularly, we'll get messages from people you know, and just call my blood trader bucks if you're selling this all out or saying that i'm making you know you're not a real southern because you can't buy it because what you are never buy like that happens. i get stuff like that all the time. it really doesn't fit well. a lot of people and there's some people i know personally who like, you know, i would have thought we were coal and we are no longer cool people that i grew up with and stuff but not most, most of my buddies i grew up with. we fail, you know,
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we've kept it together but i'm trying some guys wash their hands and they immediately as soon as all the feet of south in your comedy and in some yeah. yeah . and they're not wrong either. but i'm there with a particular dumb oh boy voice with the dumb. oh boy opinion to go with it. i'm trying yeah. right. people say that and make some inferences about the inspiration of it. you know they might be correct. so hard to mine won't prevent an upset. do you think you've change hearts and minds too? ok. yeah. but probably not in the way you're asking, although maybe maybe it's what you have in mind. but i mean, you tell me how you feel. you've changed people. ok. more classic read next. now for stereotypical redneck. yeah. how many of i heard from dale my like you know what i don't mess with the flag the better flag anymore or whatever like that type
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of thing. has that happened? yes. how many times? a handful, not that many like i've not, that is not happen to me that out. but sometimes i hear 2nd hand storage paper. my child's, my father in law 30 very own kind of whatever. i've heard things like that. but how many times have i been told by people from elsewhere from outside the south, that black my videos wherever like, changed the way they looked at the south in general and made them realize that i thought you're like santa unicorn. i know people like you existed i thought the south is just one thing and i realize it wasn't. i've been told that a 1000000 times and that means a whole lot to me to try crowd as a new pro redneck. you could see movies comedy on instagram at official tre crowder . the tokyo 2020 paralympic games on the way. on the opening day, the stream was joined by 3 power plants after the life will come from the super
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candid about the challenges of competing impacts. carlos real espinosa from human rights watch, got that conversation started. the paralympics are starting today, but not all those parents who should be in the event are there. unfortunately, many paralympic national committees are not providing reasonable accommodation and accessible conditions for everyone to go to the games. and these needs to change if there needs to be transparent procedures to determine when apparently the pin is eligible to have the personal supporter. so i'm looking at this headline, this made this make needs a little while ago this, that line power limping was told to navigate health care alone because she quit team the u. s. a. this seems like some huge dissonance going on here. little you
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start? yes. so i think what we need to start looking at is the law talks about and i'm talking about u. s. law talks about reasonable accommodations for people with disabilities. but i think what we're really talking about here is tools to facilitate performance, right? and that's a different question, and she simply needed a tool to facilitate her performance, which was personal support to navigate the flight and you know, getting around tokyo. and so i think we need to reframe this question. and instead of looking at what the athletes need to perform as special, reasonable, different, whatever. we need to look at it as a tool that facilitates elite sport performance and figure out how we can provide that. and it's making notes. it's going to take while i'm finishing the notes. yeah. what, what happened was, what happened? it's like it's like asking dad to step onto the field without without his helmet.
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if it's exactly the same thing. it's like lauren: yeah. okay, cool. but you know, how many times you got to take on the rush at the naked it's disgusting. i can't even imagine. it's like a pair of bikes to it's. it's bad. it's a piece of assistive equipment. it's a central form. and i've heard where you struggle to understand how those come, how those come from the i p c or, or in or an n p c. that sort of thing really, really should all be happening. you've got no comment from me other than just outrageous what. but this is apparently the committee who agreed to this and this is because of they want to juice the footprint of people in tokyo because as covert 19. and when you hear that, you know, you know that what is your response, you know, i read that story and then, you know, i was find him. because how do you send a builder?
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and you know, to, to construct a building and take away his or her was that is just one question that kept bringing in my mind. how would you expect someone to not to, to prepare in a certain way. then get to this to the start line. and take away all those things. well, you know, i support you know, to, in their bar to, to perform. you know, it's really, it's just sad and to be honest, you know, i'm always so front. i think the people who are involved the people would in to look into these. they should be ashamed of themselves. they should be totally yes of themselves. and unfortunately, it's only, it's only a very, very small drop in the ocean of what happened every single day. there's no end of tweaks i see from friends wanting to get on to trains and went to the trains or anything that we're friends and they get stuff on us right? because because people say i don't want to get the power again,
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the person in the wheelchair is attitudes like that very, very commonplace. frankly, it doesn't, it doesn't surprise me. it's a shame. and that's right, i think that's. it's where again, when we look at things through this lens of special are different instead of facilitating equity, equality equal access, right? than that one. you know, you become this other and it's, you know, it costs too much money. it takes too much time. it's very special way, instead of saying, you know, we're all on this planet, we all have a right to be here. let's facilitate making that as comfortable and safe for everyone as we can. and, you know, i don't have the answer. how to make that happen. but i think again, i think it's, we have to shift the way that we think about it and recognize that, you know, we, the 15 are part of global society. we're not separate and apart. we are part of humanity and need to be need to be part of humanity. and maybe it takes
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a different resource than somebody who doesn't have a disability for me, or sam or an to be included. but let's provide that. yeah, you know, you know, what frustrates me is the fact that, you know, people in disabilities constantly have to keep begging and validating the existence . and then, you know, you will sort of never find an in unknown pick village, for example, where somebody has been taught and don't bring the so don't bring your spikes or you don't know, why is it happening to the disabled person or the december docket? it is because disability is always an after thought and will feel a strike. sam roddic and linda mass, andrea, bringing that parent picks for it to the stream. thank case. finally, to haiti, where haitians are recovering from a major earthquake this months, followed by
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a tropical storm and the assassination of president last month will have you ever catch a break in a punk show discussion, guess john home and that session, the job and built in a bad pierre tackled a question that people in haiti often talk about like every haitian. yes, i wonder about that, and i think it probably has read many reasons. but one of the main reasons, bye leadership, as you pointed out, and the bad leadership has the ability of this country and our ability to match war disasters, for example, or hurricane. sometimes, you know, the whole retains not, not really strong fading, but because of our population and
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also we've seen major upgrades happening elsewhere, but not causing that much patients. but i think it's because by leadership and some are related issue like, or russian as made their country much more or not about to to not sure does not very journalistic, but i mean, it is a, a real conversation that was having, have you ever thought about hold on a minute. have news again. o an s fascination. waited all the money go for the. what is a billions of dollars go for rebuilding hazy. how can you misplace? billions has done it. what is your analysis? does have really difficult. well no. i think there's even the books written about especially yeah, i think in 2012 to use the. busy gray can 2010. there was
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a big investigation, know that the other guests on the panel is going to allow a lot more about than i am. and it was concluded that a lot of money went missing and i think i didn't touch it at the start. so, you know, saying that a lot of engineers that came it's hard to say, you know, if it was a law or a few below you, some money response for the response play and it went missing the regional. so i think real difficult and i think you were touching on this as well. and the dish as well, like there's a lot of positive stuff that we just seen on the ground, the injuries are doing or just agencies from around the world, especially right in the aftermath, the disaster they've really trying the best. they've got so many dedicate people that have come in, i think. so it's difficult for them in trying to link up with the government either local or top level because i think that was also one of the problems with the earthquake a that came in the 1st place. ok, so you should partner with local authorities. you can't just, you know, you know,
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because i one day and then you will succeed with a country quite a high level of corruption sundays authority. and there's money that goes missing there. and i mentioned that being pretty frustrated when you're trying to do the right thing. you just seeing it disappear and you know, then you're going to get flamed to that. you know, that does something that i think the best and in a bag and i know a lot more about than i am of the sleep, you know, the haitian and berry from we're still in incredible people in the context of all this things be complex. there is the situation in haiti, 3rd come the haitian culture is a beautiful culture, but it's also a very complex culture with incredible history. so it's going all the way back to
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its revolutions. think about bad. they cannot mix them up the time, slavery and, and some of that. so it's following katie, the central station of efficiency in the country. a lot of the persons i'm made up the central level, which is so often times the voice of the people. it's not part of those, you know, haiti as a country, very friends. you can talk about the people in the north in similar to those in the south, culturally, socially, economically, politically. very frank, this area so efficient, often times when the intervention comes and from the international community. whoa, good in town. and there's no question about that. what the brand that it's not what
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i'm a question and it can be a cookie cutter approach, lack of better word. we really, i want to go back. we need to start working with those on the grounds to reinforce their capacity to be ready for the next. but what happened says, i said, was explained before the funds or would be 8 or the part or the food or whatever goes to those organizations that don't have a real press then on the ground. but have the big proceed capacity to be able to manage large, you know, a, a large pockets of money cetera. but then you're leaving those are on the ground and bone airable as you've found them to respond to the next. i have to say the 1st responders to any, the faster are those of us that are on the ground experiencing the
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earthquake, hurricane civil unrest, whatever. whether a man made aware of a natural disaster, ready to respond. so i know, you know, the people in kind, the doctors and nurses, all the volunteers old and people over there was the 1st responders to the needs of the people, the same thing in jeremy, the same thing and all the little area people helping people. but yeah, i read this stuff that i will tell you this in jeremy. we still have homeless people from the 1st place. 2010 from hurricane matthew 2016 and now. and that's the most recent earthquake. so that shows you where the process of recovery, what happens with all of that. so i want to go back to be accountability. that has to be a lot of accountability of those that are coming into the country,
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claiming that they are doing something for the people in the country. our coverage of haiti and all of its complexity continues on al jazeera, be sure to follow john holmes reports for the latest from the caribbean nation. thanks for watching today. the next. ah ah, ah. ah i think of some of the biggest companies in the world today, olsen speak take with algorithms that they're called the move that we use them. the more data we pritchard, we're in the midst of a great race. the data and big companies around the empires are rising on a wealth of information and we need other commodity. in the 2nd of
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a 5 part series 90 re examined whether corporations colonizing the internet like meet the popularity and power of the big tech on a jazzy september. and did the rough as morocco record would be impacted with 19 the country votes and parliamentary elections that will shape the future life listening to the media, how they operate, the stories they cover. and the reason why the 911 attack over the world, 20 years on the war that followed, finally ended, and i've done it. but that's what caught, this didn't real obvious a unique perspective on african happy in history, through the eyes of the fearless and vision we to make it. germany, go to the polls and elections the, the angular merkle, replace up to 15 years of power. what will the results mean for germany and european union? september on al jazeera, from the world's most populated region,
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in depth stories from across asia and the good type us coaches. and conflicting politics, went on out there from the surveillance of correct. so the battle fields around most of our job is to get to the truth and empower people through knowledge . the news. ready hello and marianna manzona under now the main story this our foreign forces in afghanistan and pushing ahead with like ation efforts a day after a suicide bomber targeted desperate people trying to flee at least a 175 people. the vast majority of them afghan civilians, unknown to have died in those days attack. but crowds have returned to cobble app or despite warnings or another attack is likely the next few days will be the most dangerous to date.

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