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tv   [untitled]    October 3, 2021 12:30pm-1:01pm AST

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and we would know we need to know what, what it is made of how did it develop, whether it has a verification of treatment or not, and all of the scientific things. so we understand something about the rest of this, or is it every mission we use something new from the scientific point of view on all of the, the technology that we're using. so that technology we use and the science that we use in all of the mission helps us greatly. like for use of the fact that i'm talking to you and you are cash, actually see me here in to where you are. and then people are in door or can see that means you think a huge amount of how did it come about or the from space mission because we needed to do this or the router service. so the developments that we can figure out for these missions would help us greatly in our lives. no question about ah,
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this is our desire, these, your top stories sit on is being worn, that failure to progress towards civilian leadership. could you as economic and political support at risk? the political tension is also putting pressure on last year's p stale with rebel grapes at, morgan has the latest from cartoon. when this agreement, digital peace agreement was negotiated, it was divided into tracks, which means every region in sudan had its own track. so you had the western track that represented dar for you had the eastern track. then there's the 2 regions, or 2 areas track which were present at software defined, employ nile, and then business center, and the north track, each one with its own demands and its own needs of for this peace agreement, its own visions. now when the agreement was signed, it was hailed as something historic and that it would and conflicts in the country . but some of the major groups are yet to join the peace agreement and to sign on it that
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a non long troubled public water system is close to collapse. 8 agencies say taps could run dry to 3 quarters of the population. a child has been killed in oman as tropical psycho and shaheen hits the golf state authorities, urging thousands of people to flee coastal areas and had to emergency shelters. all flights to and from the cap to muskets have been postponed or canceled. official results from georgia's election, so that the governing party, georgia, dream well ahead of the main opposition. the vote took place a day off to former president, macau chicago billy was arrested. he returned from exile to support the opposition in the municipal vote, because really was convicted in 2018 for beast of power, but insist the case was politically motivated. emergency response teams in the canary islands. say the volcano on la palmer is becoming much more aggressive. you streams of lava happen flowing from 2 cracks,
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which broke open on friday. okay. you up to date, stay with us. ah, how many nukes is too many new to america has in many ways driven your arms race for parties are much more like the british pointed out to the. there are fewer regulations to own a tiger than there are to own a dog. how can this be happening? you'll weakly take on us politics and society, and that's the bottom line. ah, the climate change is an existential threats to life on are. the world health organization predicts that in 30 years, it will be directly responsible for the death of over $250000.00 people each year.
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many feel governments of failing to respond. and it's unlikely that the paris agreement targets of keeping the global temperature rise below 2 degrees centigrade will be met with determined pressure groups, believe change is possible. thus seeking to push urgent environmental action to the top, the political agenda, and these movements a gathering momentum. i'm the router in the us where a group of dung activists is pushing for a radical shift in government policy in order to avert a climate crisis. and i make them the carbon in the u. k. and i've come to learn. c about movement known as extinction. rebellion, whose members believe that the only route to environmental change is for a peep, who is rising fearful for the planet, they'll inherit young people around the world are standing up and demanding a better future. in the u. s. a growing and passionate group of youth is
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campaigning for urgent environmental actions. and the forcing the adults to listen we're talking about pace is happening now. with this is the sunrise movement in space of just 2 years. this group of activists, most of whom are under 30, has grown 210-0000 members. all parties, not for the one percent of their strategy is clear to halt climate change by working within the system and lobbying politicians into pushing through legislative and economic reform. had come to boston to find out how the sunrise movement has become a force to be reckoned with in us. politics. leading the charge is 26 year olds, varsity for cash. while studying in massachusetts, she joined the university's fossil fuel divestment campaign before co founding
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sunrise. in 2015. so you've been with the sunrise movement from the very beginning . what made you started? a number of us young people. all under the age of 30, we're seeing that the hurricanes were getting bigger, the fires seasons were getting longer, the floods were getting bigger. but there wasn't a movement big enough for young people to ensure that we had a habitable planet for our future generations to talk about why you feel you need to act right now. so scientists are telling us right now that we have just 12 years to make unprecedented changes to transform every part of our economy. and so our society to de carbonized, to get our fossil fuels to invest in renewables and to protect life and human civilization on this planet as we know it. and yet our politicians have not done what's necessary. they have not built and garner the political will. that we need and people are dying as a result,
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the heart of the sunrise strategy is the green new deal. a radical environmental change policy. the idea of her, which was conceived in the u. s. in the 1960 s. the deals goal is to completely transform the u. s. economy by ending as dependency on fossil fuels investing as jed and renewable energy and creating jobs in the process. the premium deal is a massive economic mobilization at a scale that we have not seen in this country since world war 2. that is an effort to stop climate change and create millions of good jobs. i'm curious to find out whether a real political change is possible with people power alone, particularly by those so young. i've come to the sunrise, boston hub. there are $204.00 hubs like to spread across the nation. here every month, 60 sunrise members gather to share experiences,
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get behind the cause. welcome to our 2nd home, you know? oh, i didn't do it every time i to hubs get people of all backgrounds, an opportunity to come together and voice, their concerns. every single person who decided to come to this meeting today is a part of this movement is a part of this greater moment in history. these are young people need to be heard. it's free for people to talk to you. but i have and they want to take positive steps to fix the world. we live in a little direction. what kind of trust
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the hub, listen to break out groups where they plan their next action. what do we think will actually make high schoolers enlist? we just post like a green background with the words like brand new deal and put a link in our bio or something. i don't interrupt. so feel free to ignore my dear friends in high school care about climate change. a lie of people i know know that climate change is an issue there that's not to debate. the debate is how willingly are to get involved. i think a lot of young people don't feel like they have the power at all to make any change . it actually comes together to totally van geem so many things i thought it was coming into a meeting, and it's really a lot more than that. there is energy they're engaged, you feel the sense of urgency is not a reality for them. this is their future. and you can feel that there but for all their passion, how effective
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a summer is actually been marsh these invited me to her home to show the impact sunrise is had in the top tiers of power. so this was from our 1st action acts. nancy policies office in washington dc. and as you can see, there's literally hundreds of young people lining up the halls and they're carrying science that they, what is your plan? our ultimate goal was to share our vision of what the greeny deal is all about. look at this, there seems to be a sort of plan of action, right? there's a, there's a style that sunrise is using to achieve your goals. we're really trying to embody the fact that we are young people fighting for our future. and we want it to be joyous, and we want it to be raucous, and we want it to be serious and we want it to be determined and resolved. nunnery say that older generations,
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chronic and activity on environmental issues is inexcusable. the united states will cease all implementation of the nog by being paris accord. the current republic government refuses to even acknowledge there is a problem. so sunrise, believe they must act to make change happen and is alive or that are good talking right now. and they are being her degree and generation has risen on a growing number of democrats. senators now support the green new deal, and sunrise have found influential political allies in socially conscious representatives like alexandro castillo cortez. this is bright before representative of jose cortez unprecedentedly joined us on her 1st day of orientation as a new congresswoman. to say that we have nancy pelosi in the democratic parties back in pushing for the most progressive and ambitious energy agenda of this country has ever seen a better picture
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with kathy. but firm opposition to the green new deal remains on the 26th of march, 2019 a draft of the deal was unanimously rejected by the republican controlled senate. how did you feel when the lucian got loaded down in the senate? the goal of the resolution is for it to be a statement of values, add to chart a blueprint to lay out the projects of what would be included with in the green new deal. we need an attitude shifts, we need to put into gear and into momentum. these big ideas so that we can write the policy over the next year and get these things to pass. sunrise aim to create momentum for their cars by directly lobbying political leaders. do it, harry dead, sean and his team planned to doorstep andrea campbell,
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the president of boston city council, got it. the goal today is to get her to simon know possibly when she got it, i later down the road were working with her and i several other counselors to grab the resolution burglary. new deal that's going to pass the city council chalet, missouri. the 1st step for the group is to encourage politicians to sign a pledge, promising that they will refuse money from fossil fuel companies who want them to act in their interest. over $1400.00 politicians have signed so far. as we approached the council president's office, i'm struck by this group's confidence. they walk straight in jail to meet you and your son on nice to me, you were palmed. we're here to ask you if you could side the know fossil fuel money plus sh. absolutely. i mean, i will say before, even, you know, sign this. thank you for your advocacy in your work. the stuff doesn't happen by accident. if people aren't showing up so happy to participate,
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happy to do this. i just want to say thank you. so it's not just her movement, whether confronting a lot of hostility, they're actually getting support and encouragement and warmth, really. from politicians. i think we lead by example, and i know i do. and so by saying, let's do this. signing on and committing. we hope that other will follow our lead. it's impressive to see these young people having genuine success in the halls of power. having meetings like this is really refreshing because it shows up, we do allies out there that we can be working with in the system to, to promote change that we wanted to work well. job. he had the sunrise movement is clearly influential and it's getting results where it matters most. their ultimate goal is to convince the majority of congressmen and women to sponsor in the green new deal. so when the next government is elected in 2020, the bill has the weight of support to make it policy. the sunrise of event is
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asking for a lot and they're asking for it quickly. critic say they're too idealistic before problem as massive as climate change. we do need ambitious radical solutions now. ah, today's environmental site risings of the post, as proof that incredible social change really is possible. in $1000.00 or 3 in britain, the suffragettes campaigned for women to have the rights to vote with a rallying cry of deeds not words they often resorted to extreme acts at at some race course. emily davidson even gave her life for the course. these tactics worked in 1928 women, one equal voting rights in britain 35 years later in america, the civil rights movement. so to end racial segregation,
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martin luther king led the peaceful protest. no problem is the most horrible, horrible available, super mid morning, early february for freedom in human business by 968. after a decade of campaigning, african americans to secure legal rights to equal employment voting and housing. by analyzing passive resistance, me political scientist, era could shine away, identified a threshold for success. if 3 and a half percent of the population mobilized against the establishment social change will happen with pause. many of us need to change the way we treat. that is one group which is taking things to the next level. in october 2018, a group of act, i'm good by political inaction on climate change declared themselves to be an open
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defiance of the u. k. government. they called themselves extinction. rebellion or x are for sure i'm doing the right amount isn't pretty company they, they what, outside the system, engaging in bold, non violent acts of civil disobedience. their strategy is to create headline grabbing protest designed to maximize public exposure. they believe this will gain them a mass following and force real change. in just 6 months, they have already expanded into 15 countries to spread across full continents. i'm at the london headquarters on the day of one of their most extreme actions. yet in a protest day, a cooling blood of our children exile plant, still 500 liters of fake blood on downing street office and residents of the british prime minister hiker. and i live in history,
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nice me one of x i was co founders is clare tiro, when the idea of the blood of our children were already suffering a genocide because of the impacts of pollution. so we're trying of this action to get people to understand that it's that it kills people and that it kills people. now it's already killing people. it's not like something has in the future. a, as we make our way to downing street, i want to know why that compelled to confront the political establishment in such a drastic way. we think it's important to our actions to direct to that government because this, o, ne, i think a state lead a thought internationally that's going to make a meaningful change to the situation that we're in. so we're trying to represent the kind of visceral reality of death and suffering which climate change has
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already started to close around the world in which it will cause in the future. the procession is designed to feel like a funeral match. it comes to a stop and the crowd flew silent with the part of my children, my children and young people here, boy x r a, making a profound statement. just a stone's theory from the prime minister's office. ah, we need to take action. we don't have much time left. please don't let this be the reality. i'm struck by the wrong emotion on the display. but what is the political change the extinction rebellion? want to see? what do you want to achieve by olympus? we do have 3 main demands. the 1st one is for the government to tell the truth is
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helped to communicate the crisis to the public. the 2nd demand is to reduce carbon emissions to net 0 by 25. and then the 3rd demand, which i think is the main prizes to achieve structural political change in the form of the citizens assembly, ordinary people who are educated on the facts and then come together to talk about what might the best rate forward. do you think, is it cheaper? well, i think it's necessary x, i want to become impossible to ignore. so its members are planning the biggest protest yet. they hope to bring london to a standstill with a 2 week human blockade of the city streets. at x i was h key, i'm missing one of the chief coordinators of the shut down larch. maxine, what we're doing for the rebellion is having a go are causing the level of disruption that could bring about you know,
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the government to me are demands. do you think that you're at risk of almost alienating yourself by crossing over into the legal category? look, there's a common crisis. there's an ecological crisis. we're here to stop that. he exist central threat. we face, we nonviolent who maintaining respect, but putting ourselves on the lines, we're risking our liberty. the plan is to block the streets of the you, case capitol with walls of people. they'll chain lock and even glue themselves to structures and to one another. these actions are deliberately planned to create maximum disruption and caused arrests. just lichtenstein trains members on how to deal with the police in a non violent way, can only have a activist who is willing to be arrested and carried off the lease. ma'am, in the middle, you're willing to guarantee that they're not making easy for them. members are trained to go live as soon as they are touched, or i will go,
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we're going to rest. no. so it will take as many as 5 police officers to remove a single activist by maximizing the number of arise x. i believe they can create publicity and a groundswell of support or extension 1000000000, see only way floor. this is the only way they believe that things are going to improve the sort of civil disobedience and these kinds of actions. 15th of april, 2019 and it's the morning of the london shut down. the organizes are expecting thousands of protesters. they plan to block london to main street and bridges for 2 weeks, bringing the city to a grinding hope. i'm meeting clare as she prepares, what could be the biggest demonstration in exxon history and come in. thank a feeling hopeful. i'm feeling hopeful that we're gonna have more impact, graham, half, and more people can understand the message and the,
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and the seriousness of it. the reason why we have to do this is because it is this bad. we do feel this afraid of our future. don't know what else to do with extinction rebellions target is the government. but the people who will be hit hardest to day or the every day commuters as a tried to get to work. there's potential then that all of this can be disrupted and people might be able to get to where they go. and because of the actions that say, hey, how is that justified? we're really sorry. we don't really want to do this, but we also don't want to pass on a livable planet. the next generation we arrive at oxford. zach has an 8 30 am and only a handful of activists are here. we quickly get a taste of where public favour might lie. i'm not
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quite sure how the group succeed in blocking the very heart of london was the plan here because at the moment, right, isn't all spies. there's nothing on it. so what's gonna happen? groups of people are going to close roads and then something should be arriving. there's no way out of the blue reinforcements arrive. oh, it's something i didn't expect. a hundreds of activists crowd around the bite on the london shut down has become a, in a matter of hours, 10000 supporters descend upon 5 sites. of course,
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the capital oxford circus parliament square marble arch, piccadilly, circus, and worsley bridge manned by locked in his team. they have blocked the entire stretch of rage with trees, a music stage, camps and a human with. i've managed to find locked status, notice police activity, correct? i'm just watching them go. boy. what's been happening, or we're just going to monitor into place as numbers of increase slightly at some point that gonna be under pressure to clear the bridge on me. and what we've got to try and do is get them to build. question is, how much disruption will the government wants us to create until they do the right thing and meet the demands and start to try and keep us safe, and you're willing to lose your liberty for it and get arrested if people are willing to sacrifice the liberty, it sends a message to the public, to the media and to the guilt, the politicians that this is a serious issue. elsewhere, demonstrations are escalating, as protested target,
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the largest oil and gas company in europe. shout, just run down to a site where rebel was, have to forget themselves and not from self up outside, shall h p. i had forgotten our doctor. i meet linden at woodson. one of the lead demonstrate is here. tell me a little bit about why your hair showers known about the problem of climate change for over 30 years. and they all, one of the biggest, uh, bits is all caught in the water to like these acts of criminal damage or the catalyst for the police to make that 1st arrest. oh, need to hunt shell accountable with the atrocities to human kind, as well natural, well, who does seem to extinction? rebellion rebel has been taken away by police. i know some extra value into getting exactly what they're off to. 8 hours after the shut down began. please take action. citing section 14 at the public order act,
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which forbids obstruction the highway ah. more than 1000 arrests and 30000 new recruits later with during school to course 33 countries. the u. k. government finally agrees to meet exxon. on the 1st of may, 2019 the house of commons makes history the coming the 1st national parliament in the world to declare a climate and ecological emergency. climate change. activism stretches back 50 years. april the 22nd 1917. so the launch of birth day 20000000 americans took to the streets on a modern environmental movement was born. in the eighty's, greenpeace took matters into their own hands. heading to the seas to battle the commercial dumping of toxic waste nuclear testing and whale hunting. to day,
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the movement has a new fick ahead and teenager gretta turned back. the older generation has failed tightly. the biggest christ is humanity, as a say. by going on school strike, she inspired 1400000 students, and 112 countries to join her in a global woke house. the message has been clear for 50 years, but to day the voice is a louder and more insistence than ever. ha, that cry change must happen now. ah. every war leaks of devastating and try killing me, environment. earth rise, explore some of the efforts to recover what was lost from the syrian sanchez safeguarding. one of our most valuable results is these are important samples. we
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have to make sure they are surviving to the refugees. striving to co exist with nature. okay, so what's going on there is the assimilating. what happens when the elephant commerce life off to conflict on al jazeera? there's a wave of sentiment around the world. if you will actually want accountability from the people who are running their countries, and i think often people's voice is not heard because it's not part of the mainstream use narrative. obviously we cover the big stories and report on the big events going on. but we'll say, tell a story to people generally don't have a voice. remember another child that's never be afraid to put your hand up and ask a question. and i think that's what obviously we're really does. we ask the questions to people who should be accountable and also we get people to give their view of what's going on. oh, alex is the real world reveals dramatic pictures from garza in may 2021. i've lived there for a number of years and it, there's nowhere safe and god account done to his really missile attacks on for tyra books. why retires from the families,
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businesses and media organizations? simply blown up. goes a 60 minute warning. oh no. j 0. 0, you want to help save the world, sneeze into your elbow. ah, this is al jazeera ah, hello a from though hi, i'm hello. hidden with the al jazeera news are coming up for you in the next 60 minutes. supporters of tennessee as president case i you rally in the capitol. multi prominent critics have reportedly been arrested.

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