tv [untitled] December 20, 2021 1:30am-2:00am AST
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1st day ah, out of the roman catholic church time, 85 years old on friday. and he's now been presented with a special cake by children at his party in the vatican. city for francis is now the oldest pope in more than a century. be showing no signs of slowing down with plans for an official visit to east timor early next year. ah. the main stories now. conservative politician jose antonio cast has conceded chillies. presidential run off vote to his left wing rival gabrielle burridge. forage is leading with 54 percent of the vote with half of the ballots counter so far. a former student protested a campaign to overall an economic model. he says is created sharp divides and inequality in the country. and he is also pledged to make the changes to lanes
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demanded in the mass movement of 2019 and are the headlines. hundreds of thousands of protests of march to the presidential palace in the sudanese capital, hart toombs. they are demanding the military stay out of politics. security forces via tear gas and after attempting to block bridges, health ministry says more than a $120.00 people were injured. demonstrate is a mocking 3 years since the start of the revolution that ended former president, a model bush years, 30 years in power. was them countries of place to set up a humanitarian trust fund for afghanistan, as millions of people face hunger installed. ation, bach. hassan has been hosting an emergency meeting of the organization of islamic corporation. the un is warning that 98 percent of afghans are not eating enough with 23000000 people on the brink of starvation. the point is the world does not act. this will be the biggest man,
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mid crisis which is unfolding in front of us. we of the oil. see it's a big responsibility on us. because not only is it the situated situation and one is thought as it on form. but it's a religious duty to help them or in all the headlines, governments across europe is stepping out measures to control in front of the only con corona virus variant. there's also anger of the new rules just before christmas . protest is been marching in several cities to call for an end to cultivate pauses and social restrictions and netherlands has already imposed a strict lock down from sundown. woods studio be unscripted as the program coming up next. se, without his era on counting the cost m r. n a full that is changing the well, the vaccines, not as the coven 9 think, big business,
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and play that plus thousands of pixels. millions of dollars and non refundable token weed. demystify the world of crypto ot helping to call on al jazeera nuclear. gonna make sure that the secure this planet for future generations. we need to learn to love the people who voted for things that we might disagree with. everything as a toxic mouse, what we want as a transition out. but you know, what we have is an addicted society and the fossil fuel industry continues to push those addictions. this is a moment for us not to adjust to things that are so fundamentally unjust. oh, it has a co, 19 pandemic made you. we think your lifestyle with this is a dress rehearsal for the climate breakdown. how to make it
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since fleeing south africa. apartheid qu, me has scaled oil rigs and protested from the arctic ocean to the alberta. tar sands. i wanted to pay bo go with, you know, nice stood in opposition against coal and uranium mines damn projects and oil pipelines. now like i'm standing here, is a matter of choice. i'm sitting here, it's a matter of necessity. but ah, this is an opportunity cost system be designed. what lessons can we learn from indigenous not. ah, i want to see what a new economy will look like,
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and how people can take power over their future. i'm eager to speak about this and more with winona. wants to do be unscripted. ah, you know, it's a great opportunity and a privilege to be here with you. we are are in a very colonial city and there were a couple of anti colonialists. so we both come from a long histories of, of british colonization, i would say, and i, here we are to talk about the future in, in some times times have tremendous chains. and i think that we just had the, had the big conference in glasgow so wonderful to be with you. no, not a think that what the cop 26 as just shown us recently,
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is that we are still stuck in fundamentally a colonial mindset. and in terms of colonial power dynamics, because what we had out of cop 26 was basically a sentiment that says the lives of people in the pacific and other small island states don't matter. in the least developed countries don't matter. and the difficulty it seems, is that those with the large amounts of power in the conversation are not willing to recognize that the mistake the made after the global financial crisis, which was the approach was system recovery system detection and system maintenance . but what should have been done then and what is even more urgently needed now? is system innovation? systems design and system transformation? i should just say, none of us should be too surprised though, by what happens in the negotiations in glasgow because the shocking truth is,
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do you know which was the largest allegation that attended? no harm, neither. it was the fossil food industry. oh wow. and they looked that $503.00 lobbyists. no, you should always have the dealer at the table. well, i feel like what we're talking about as late stage addiction behavior. exactly. frankly. i mean, you know, i mean, i lived as you have of the fossil fuel era my entire life and i'm looking for a graceful transition out of it. i don't want to crash my way out where i can't drink the water and i can't read the air and everything is a toxic mouse. what we want as a transition out. but you know, what we have is an addicted society and, you know, and the fossil fuel industry continues to push those addictions. you know, i heard someone talk about the colonial imagination versus the indigenous imagination. and the colonial imagination can only figure out like within this box . and it can't get to the place where we need to get to where it's more than just the rights of corporations. you know, and it's more than just the rights of,
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of 1st world people. but it's also like what about the rest of the world and what about the relatives, whether they have wings or fins, or roots or pause? you know, that's how you survived. may be jeff bezos and elan must think they can make it without the rest of us. but the rest of us know that we are part of this world and that opportunity is here to make a change no time like the present. a flood, i figure like an absolutely, and it appears that glasgow did not bring the change. imagine the alcoholics anonymous of a global conference and the biggest litigation to the conference was alcohol and destroy all in the past. a big anti slavery conference, and the biggest delegation was slave owners. by the way, that's what it was. that's why slave owners got compensation. and those were slaves with no compensation. and this is how the climate negotiations are going. and now, you know, people like myself,
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when we look at where we get inspiration from. and i think that the inspiration right now is coming from young people, but it's also when you're looking at bodies and knowledge. indigenous wisdom teaches us the way out of this miss, because unless you manatee can learn to coexist with nature in a mutually interdependent relationship, you know, we're not going to be around for that much longer than i'll stick to tell. people. don't worry about saving the planet, but because actually for continue on the suicidal path, we on lou destroyed soil destroy water, warm up the planet. and results is we will be gone as a species now and, and one plants will be battery and, and then and once we become extinct though, sions lou cover the photos will grow back and so on. and the struggle therefore, has to be understood as a saving our children and the children's futures. you know, every living being had some original instructions. we would say men over modesty
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when take only what you need, leave the rest. be mindful all your relatives, you know, understand the craters law is higher than the laws of nation states or municipalities and even the participants in cops. you know, you can say whatever you want, but in the end we all got to drink the water. we all got to breathe the air. we all had those instructions. indigenous people, you know, we are 4 percent of the world's population. and we're 75 percent of the world's biodiversity list. what we need is to return to some instructions that, that say, this is how you live. you live being mindful, you live being conscious and you protect, you know, mother earth and not the rights of corporations. i mean, this is why i need things like the rights of nature, you know, versus over the rights of corporations. my observation are no few see, but i see like catastrophes of biblical proportions. yeah, i mean, right? yeah, there's, you know, fires and hurricanes and tornadoes and the oceans are rising. and then, you know, a pandemic and, you know, in the history the world pandemic,
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so voice for societies to change. this one is no different. you know what aaron deandre roy says as it's a, it's a, it's a portal between one world and the next. and inasmuch as the financial crisis of 2008 was a pretty clear opportunity to acknowledge that the economic systems are, you know, made up and are failing. this moment is certainly a time when we, when we can and, and in many ways many of us have reset. i think we facing her a worse disease than covert 19. and that disease is a disease we could call affluenza. and this is this industry where people have been led to believe that a good meaningful, decent, happy life comes from more and more and more material acquisitions. and i think that unless we look at bodies of wisdom including, i think again, this is something we learned from indigenous culture. is that a good, meaningful,
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decent life comes from? how we engage with nature? are we engage with our families, the quality of our relationships, love, friends, and neighbors, all of which aggressive casino capitalism as actually decimated? right. or does this is a need to load with you in entirely. i mean our teachings as a nation are bay, people are meant commodity one then up amount as you in, which means the good life. it doesn't mean how much stuff you have. yeah. you know, but there's this constant barrage that you need more, you need more, you need more and you'll feel better. and the fact is, is that people don't feel better be, you know, americans are pretty unhappy overall and getting more stuff just means you have to pay money to store it from what i could figure. so know people who don't necessarily think like you and i do will will, will listen to us speaking and say, well, oh, this vision is so far from what the mainstream vision of society is. right. okay.
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you and i have been around for more than 4 decades in the struggle for justice. and sometimes i feel, given how much of effort to i'm put in that term when we should have made much, much more progress. but the forces of resistance to change are so powerful. but the something i feel in this moment that i've never felt before bad as things are now and things actually are looking much worse in terms of extreme where the events deepening inequality rise of fascism and so on and feeling of democracy. but there's something very optimistic for me in this moment, and i want to see how you feel about it. and that is, i don't remember any time in my history of trying to work for justice is that the is so many people will believe that there's a possibility, the stay brown for major structural and systemic change. but simply what our
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governments do all the time, which is rearranging the dick chairs and the titanic world. humanity sings and baby steps in the right direction. when what is needed is big change does f, isn't it with what's you getting with people in your circles? yeah, i mean, the fact is, is that the systems are failing. i mean, if you look around the united states, which, you know, is the country which levied itself upon me. you know, you're looking over there and you have political crisis of pretty big proportions. i mean, you had an insurrection in january, right? and you, and then you have, you know, economic systems that fail. you have judicial and legal systems that failed us. you know, have failed us consistently. and you have food systems and energy systems that fail in climate change. i mean, what is clear is that if you want to survive, you need local energy. you know, if you're expecting the grid is going to protect you, ah, the big disasters of climate change related disasters are going to take down your grid so, so that, that's the message of the poa. yeah. in planning, moving forward,
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we need to go to a more decentralized approach and we put capability in control with local communities because that's only way we can get into. i mean, i must say, said then to you that you know which is empire is overrated. yeah, i got, i'm saying the bigger yeah. get, that's great. but you know, what is that is that at the local level is where you got to eat, you know, at the local level is where you're going to need your soul or garden that is own collectively at the local level. as we're going to need some essential manufacturing with justin fair trade relations, you know, between that because, you know, in indigenous model is a model of biodiversity. is a model of agro biodiversity is a model because indigenous peoples, 5000 languages are not about building empire thereabout reaffirming relationship in place. and that is what is missing, you know,
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with this industrial society as there is no relationship and, and reciprocity with, with the world that would create us, you know, the, the problem we have is the information environment with which we are operating, right? because i would put it to that, probably they're more people that are more comfortable to the imagining, the end of the world as we know it, and all of us disappearing of this planet than to imagine that the end of capitalism. that because that's how the power of the narratives we've been fed, you know, like, that's only system that works when clearly it's unquote, right, for the overwhelming majority. so for me, activism is, is primary an act of love and courage. right? that the activism is about saying we look at the world and re, to fuse to accept that this is the best that humanity concrete for. it's a who and one of the anxieties i have about activism to day is that far too often
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we, our energies are going towards just surviving because the depression is becoming so heavy against us and so on. and consolidating the people that order the support, the need for decency and the need for sustainability and respecting human rights. but i think that we don't have a choice study if we're going to make sure that we secure this planet for future generations. to also say we need to learn to, for example, of the people voted for trump or love the people who voted for bricks or love, the people who voted for things that are we might disagree with because i think that we need to also recognize that they are also victims that they have been victims of lies, deceit, mis information and so on. and we have to build a bridge. so in case it show, shall we wrap it up there and go and take some questions from the audience. hi, call me and i, we know anna and jenny, new from fiji in the pacific. ah,
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my question is pacific indigenous b laws are bearing that brand of the impacts of climate change. we are experiencing displacement of our homes and our livelihoods, and our knowledge in support systems. how can she ties to the land and ocean and a threat? but because this goes on climate change in bank doesn't give voice to our cultural identity and the relationship we have with nature that has been threatened by this climate. imagine, see, how can we center this within the global climate change this course that seems to be dominated by financial and corporate posturing. i had the opportunity to be in kitty birth, fiji and van o r 2 in 2015 and differently salt. what you said in a very deep puzzle, where stayed with me since, and i want to be blunt about it. the way we center this is 1st about naming the
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problem that we f claim at a buffet. right? that because those parts of the world that contributed great us to the problem or not those parts of the world like the pacific that is suffering the 1st and the most brutal impacts of climate change. and we need to recognize, therefore, that the conversation around what happened at cop $26.00 or we understand it. we have to understand that in fact, it's been a complete betrayal of small island states for the folks in the pacific 4 or people in coastal legions. these developed countries and so on. and our, your question was how do we sent it? right. and i think that we know now referred to that implied that actually we cannot. soley rely on the current systems that exist which are broken in multiple ways. we can actually now start building new systems from below and start creating
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a ways of doing agriculture, protecting a water sources or with a lead to each other and so on, in a much more decentralized bottom up way. and i think because those in power know that the systems that they're defending, i indefensible, that if we can organize better amongst ourselves and generate examples of how we can do things better. i think that if eventually, or that message is going to permeate in a context where the dominant leaders in political formations and in the dominant business or community actually know that what they are speaking is completely bankrupt. i, i, i would agree, i think that they know, and i also say, and i decided can my heart arter pacific islanders and you know that you are entirely reliant upon your mother, earth and yours and your ocean for your life. you know, a lot of what we do is in recognizing the situation that you are in is the same
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situation. we are in and, and, you know, the, the, the better we can do to stop a tar sands pipelines. the better for you, you know, i mean that, that is my goal. you know, i've, i spent 8 years fighting a pipeline that they just put in, you know, it's a crime against mother earth. it's a crime. you can't bring more oil out and pretend that it's going to work out. you bring it out in, in, in canada, you burn it in the united states. ah, it's going to show up in the pacific. you know, so all we do is, is, you know, knowing that our community is related to your community and, you know, good, good prayers for you and your community. i am suggest i am actually from by the standards to being in the united states who are saying that to inequality, consumerism, new liberalism, and i'll dissimilar to the crime climate crisis. so like, how did he imagine a different future without are these are asked? so our daily lives in, or just remember that,
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like the world we live in now is not the world that we had all this time. this is like the past, i think of 200 years of very bad decisions past a 100 years. very bad. you know, i mean the advent of fossil fuels, acceleration, the rise of the fossil fuels, agriculture system, and the toxic militarization. it's kind of like being on steroids. you know, fossil fuels puts you on. steroids makes it a lot bigger and a lot faster if you can get rid of some of the amnesia that you get from a basset fossil fuels injection. and remember that there's a way to live, that is a little bit more simple that has more relations with your, your, with your relatives that are close, you know, then, then you've got a better shot. because the fact is, is that a globalized economy is predicated on a lot of fossil fuels. you know, i can get a shrimp that was raised in scotland, d veined in china, and arrives at a wal mart near me. you know, what i'm saying is, is like that's too far 1st room to travel. she, you know, maybe we,
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we rebuild things that are a little more local. there's many tools, you know, a hat, a no q me might have a better answer for this. but i, you know, i just think shrimp sion travel, well, i think the issue of r o, par, food travels is part of the kind of change that we need to made. also, not only because of carbon, but because of quality route because of freshness, because of health. and i am impressed that there are many young people and some older people in the global north who are beginning to recognize that actually the 200 years of so called civilization that was pushed on us. actually, it turns out to be pretty uncivilized. right. and the changes that we are seeking to make that i don't think they're sacrifice us sacrifice the fact that people are working 20 hour days, sacrifice the idea that people are working to the jobs just to put the food on the table. but what you are seeing is that all over the world today,
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people are actually co creating from bottom up solutions. beal solutions to real problems from providing energy to lead thinking, agriculture and so on. and the challenge for us right now is how do we pick up those examples? because the problem we have is we've got a, a do logical state apparatus almost. that is against us, you know, by, by that a meaning famous for education, fame for religion, social norms and custom are we found the arts and culture, but most critically, the framework for communications and media. so to day that you know, even being able to project new models and new ways of doing things is a challenge because we don't have enough capability to do that. so we have our next kristin already over to you. hello. i'm based in the bronx. new york and, and the heritage wise and part of the full any shadow best africa. and i really
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want to know i received in the planet are receiving the economy. what, what is meant by this in relation to putting countries and would i new primary asks and policies allow for girls, you know, i call this economy the wind to go economy the economy of a cannibal. it's a cannibal economy because it consumes its life force. it consumes everything which is around and turns it into products that are then sold for some profit. you know, i heard someone say that colonialism has the same route as the word colon, which is to digest. and i like, believe it is flipped the digestion of the entire world. you know, so now we're planet stuff. that's what someone said. we got more stuff that's human in the world, then all of the biosphere, like all the elephants and all the trees and the coral reefs. you know, you just gotta change your alliance from what you shopped for in a bottle to what you're gonna, you know, how you rebuild a place to, to, to read, localize on a world wide scale. there is, there is this resurgence. and that,
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and, and continuation of local farming of, of local health of local energy. and, you know, in this moment we see that that's better to survive. if you are counting on something coming in from china. probably have better shot. that's the real economy, you know, and that's the one that we actually all rely on because you know, as much as jeff bezos wants to shop in space. there's no food or water, you know, so best to at best, just make things good here. jeff. when i think that's a good point to wrap up this conversation or by bringing and martin luther king, another king speaking when i think it was a 4 month old baby. said my friends as a conclude most people want to note that in the feel of modern child psychology does a very dominant term called maladjusted. now all of us want to be well adjusted and not suffer from it's a few other mental illnesses. but my friends, i say to you,
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there are certain things in this world that are so unjust and immoral, that good decent people should refuse to adjuster. it goes on to then say, i never intend to adjust myself to religious bigotry, racial discrimination, mindless expenditure on military weapons. when people don't have food to eat. what are the economy says? i never intend to adjust myself to economic conditions or to take necessities from the many to give luxuries to the few. but millions of god's children are smothering in an air type cage of poverty in an affluent society. and if that was relevant in the mid sixties in the us, it's a 1000 times more relevant there and sadly relevant across the world. but in a inspiration, node e call in the world to set up a movement that never was set up. is that i call upon decent men and women around the world to set up a new international organization to be known as the international association for the advancement of creative mellow judgment. so to those folks over to those folks,
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that big may be some of the things that we know now and i are saying are 2 of the day. this is what this moment cost for. this is a moment for us not to adjust to things that are so fundamentally unjust, right? valid and, and, and i think this is a moment for fresh thinking, creative ideas and so on. and we should make no apologies for putting forward ideas . that sounds different. transformative and so on, when in fact the current systems failing in every possible way, ah, i was charged with a 1000 other people. i spent 3 days in jail fighting the canadian multinational and marched biden turn his back on us. do you think we deal with the challenge of winning people over who have been led to believe that the current system soaps
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ah al jazeera sets, the stage are lots of women carrying very young children. this one, for example, is only a month and a half global lex bugs and discussion. telephone thing about the impact from the climate change is having on the fall as that you work with voices from different corners. when the wells are empty, people fight for programs that open your eyes to an alternative view. i don't have collage for, i have my voice on al jazeera african narratives from african perspectives now, but now we're about his big daily. why she quoted short documentary, by african filmmakers from the democratic republic of congo, and one that there was never going to be letting an obstacle just stand in front of
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you. you ladies, what made intimate connection between myself and rhonda diggers and merchants and certainly africa direct on al jazeera ah. to then conservative jose antonio cast concedes to gabrielle borage. paving the way for the student protest, leader to become the country's youngest president. ah, militant revolver. when i'm come all santa maria with the world news from al jazeera, i hope.
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