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tv   The War In June  Al Jazeera  June 4, 2023 4:00am-5:01am AST

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listening to the people behind the news and to the journalists reporting their stories except intimacy that makes every international story local at heart. i'm only can be the host of the take. a daily news podcast powered by the global reporting of al jazeera, find us where ever you get your pod cast. the carry don't spend the top stories now on the i'll just hear which app tap as one has been sworn in the 1st the time is tough. he's president. he's on build a new cabinets. the former deputy prime minister next met sim sec has been appointed as finance minister, former intelligence chief count deductible serve as foreign minister. as one says, he's king to unite the nation. the site.
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this is a day to protect the prize future of our children. i mean, they let us put aside the resentments and angles during the election period. nissan of elk grove. let's find a way to reconcile resentments if hearts have been price on the shoulder of the construction of the century. a techie, young realize the $100000.00 of us 3 of our public together. 2 and let a celebration as a whole, with all a to 5000000 people that some events are there that has more now for my career. the biggest challenge being finance. as you see, i remember jim chuck is somebody who's trusted and well respected vote, but then took in outside has been who has been to possibly try and take the economy away from fixed interest rates, trying to deflate the a rising inflation. try and move towards a, an economy which is more invested friendly and then as you move outwards, there is the issues the turkey has with the kurdish population. unexplored is with
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the rock and syria. it has had issues with grease on the other flank of its board. and as you move outwards, obviously turkeys role in the ukranian config, but it has a brokerage and help broker the reindeer, which is the help the work of work, a green crisis. and then in divided every now of things, as i mentioned about john stilton, but on how turkey is going to try and figured out how sweet and it can be part of nato and its relations with the united states. and the balancing act of with russia has been so is going to be a, not an easy presidency. but ultimately, resident of the one has the laid out the foundations of this calling. this is sensitive to key of where he's going to change the fundamental way, where it took it, not just functions as an economy, but as a but as a country in the global order rescue operations have ended at the sides of india, is west trends as austin decades, 288 people died in more than
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a 1000. people were injured. 3 trains collided and official inquiries on the way report suggest signal it was to blame can be used or not tempting them be that this incident is very serious for the government. orders for carrying out a thorough investigation have been given, and whoever is found guilty will get the strictest punishment. that person will not be sped up to protest and set a goal. have continued for us the day it follows the fiction of opposition, the those months sancho. he was sentenced to 2 years from a charge of corrupting the youth. 15 people have been killed. israel and egypt have opened the joints investigation off to a rare exchange of gunfire at the shed. border 3 is ready soldiers and want to gyptian office. i've been killed. israel said the stand off last for several hours and you get, does it,
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is it in these army has deployed reinforcements to fight the power minute true, rapid support forces fighting, intensified in the capital call to him on saturday. us and saudi arabia have suspended the ceasefire. towards russian era tax. so targeting ukraine's capital in the early hours of sunday early a at least 20 people were injured in the, in the pro, an apartment block was hit tens of thousands of people have joined. and now the anti government protest and savvy is capital bel grade. the demonstrations become a weekly event. it follows the training of 18 people to mass shootings last month and took his troops. so heading for costs of a joint, nato forces. thousands of nato soldiers were injured, edit this week, finance broke out of put in the election of ethnic albanian mass. there's all the headlines. the news continues here and i'll just say are off to the bottom line to stay with us.
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the hi, i'm steve clements and i have a question. what happens when americans lose faith in all their democratic institutions, including the supreme court? let's get to the bottom line. the, it didn't just happen overnight for more than 10 years. americans have been saying that they are losing faith in the people they're supposed to trust and that includes the people they elected to represent them. the heads of major government agencies like the f, b, i the media, the police, you name it. one of the bigger stories of this year was about supreme court justice clarence thomas, who's facing revelations now of huge gifts from a billionaire donor to the republican party. not small gaps like a box of chocolate or tickets to
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a football game. we're talking about real estate deals and lavish vacations that would cost normal people half a $1000000.00. americans also watched as a junior congressman from new york. george santos was charged with deception to win the election last year and enrich himself in the process. of course, everyone is innocent until proven guilty, but it hasn't been a good year for public trust. so is this leading to a dangerous situation where americans are losing core confidence in their core government? today we're talking with a us senator from rhode island who has been following the trail of dark money and it's corrupting. influence on government center, a sheldon white house basically wrote the book on this one. it's called the scheme . how the right when use dark money to capture the supreme court sen. thank you so much for joining us today. let me just start out with the biggest bottom line question. can americans trust their supreme court is not corrupt? i don't think so. unfortunately, i think that the record of their decisions,
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which almost inevitably move in the direction of the big right wing donors to well, i get this new majority on the course and make it a very challenge, spotty right now. and i think particularly if you're using corrupt in the sense of the word that the founding fathers used to. um, it's a very unfortunate answer when you had been out very visibly on the floor of the united states senate with, with pictures of senator clair, i'm sorry, just this clarence thomas. up finance. you're harlan, crow, and others that had been looking at this relationship and the cozy relationship between big interest and certain court members. and then looking at cases that were being brought. can you share with us the case that you're making about these relationships? well, i think there is going on at 2 levels. first you have what? everybody's looking at with somebody where you are right now,
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which is the extent to which this right wing billionaire group is funding the household of justice thomas his mother's brands. here the young man for whom these guardians tuition payment is directed by a lender leo, the right wing operatives to his wives. and of course, these rather unbelievable family vacations. and that's one immediate set of concerns, but it connects to the larger concern about the extent to which this group of right wing billionaires has basically packed the court with people in their own. choosing everywhere, chosen specifically to rule in their direction and who are doing so is almost perfect. statistical conformity and some of the really big decisions of the court like citizens united and shelby county and about right guys i think are very much tied to it. what's that influence?
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so i think what you're saying and i want to explain the public is harland crow leads, one of the sets of billionaires that have had a close relationships with members of the court. but particularly clarence thomas. some of these folks have actually paid money. i know of one case of $25000.00. that was paid to jenny thomas, the wife of clarence thomas. the circumstances of that are highly suspect. and then on top of that, you're arguing that this has been a campaign, a concerted campaign to get certain individuals on the court to take certain positions. and they are the same people who might and my getting that wrong. no, you're getting it. exactly right. and indeed you can go back to i think the sort of key kick off for the campaign was backed under president bush when he nominated his white house council, his personal friend, his fellow, but texas conservative a harry admirers, a woman to fill the seat on the supreme 4th and have been vacated by sandra day
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o'connor. and there was a little crude, a shot from the far right. and they obliged this republican president to withdraw his own nominee in favor of a more reliable vote for their interests. and that was sam olibo. and the individual who orchestrated that one over was leonard leo. and when the billionaires saw what he could, paul, i think the operation then went to the hind year and we got the federalist society list. so we got the 3 trump drug drugs, and we got the blocking of garland and we got the rest of the show. and one of the interesting data points out there, senator, is that in 2021. public confidence in the supreme court. was it 36 percent? it's not a great number. it happened to be bigger in public confidence in the congress for the presidency, but it is collapsed in 2022 to 25 percent of down 11. and this is all before the revelations that we've seen now, and i'm just interested in,
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can you blame the american people of saying, we're looking at our institutions and saying, we don't trust them anymore. certainly as to the courts. and frankly, this influence of dark monies and citizens united, you know, based special interest. you can write $5000000000.00 objects into politics and create this or, or of influence around the course. that's something for americans to be legitimately concerned about. they are concerned about it, they're actually angry about it. and our failure to clean it up, i think, is a really challenge failure. one that will have lasting impacts. we've got to fix that. so what are the, you know, the offer comes to this problem because, you know, i find that various and you and i both travel around the world. we see a lot of american leaders kind of preaching constantly about democracy. what it takes to build democracy, the summit, and for them about democracy, the president biden does what standing does, the united states have its own institutions and like i've been drill democracy is
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not voting. democracy are the institutions. but if we don't have institutions that are on corrupt, that are objective and that can, uh, you know, be governed by the rule of law, not by the rule of billionaires or money mean where, i mean, i, i hate to just get at it, but it mean i just find is a very bleak moment, right? i mean, if we send a traditional delegation to another country and that other country was choosing a supreme court justices in the back room of a private organization that was highly part of the center was receiving massive anonymous contributions. we'd be justifiably horrified, but that is how a lot of these justices got on to our supreme board. i think the solution, the best solution is that i think the other federal judges who know perfectly well that the supreme court is misbehaving, are getting really sick of it. and i think there is going to be a lot of counter pressure from the other federal judges to get the supreme court to
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fix this when that would be a good outcome. but what is the counter pressure mean? how do they a, i mean they call up and say justice roberts, that you know, chief justice united states, we don't like what's going on where, what is their um, tools of pressure that they can bring to this? well, they have 3, they can obviously call up the chief justice and say, hey, what's going on? this is ridiculous. they could be more complex. there's sort of a traditional marriage, either you keep your claims within the judicial branch, but that might break. and then most importantly, there's the judicial conference, which is the administrative body of a senior judges administers the court that overseas the initial rash in its administrative roles. and that body, i think he has just made a very big step to clean out some of the supreme court's self serving mess just and i think they can do a lot more the the mechanism is in place. senator, why are democrats so bad at this game?
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on their side, when you kind of look at this broad question of organizing, i've been on this show, talked a lot about the republican focus on the courts for decades were focused on roe v wade and abortion issue for decades. and understanding that supreme court seats really matter. i have never seen that kind of vigilance in focus from the democratic side either financially or even politically. and i'm just interested at some point, did the republicans not only through money, but just out maneuver the democrats and focus and why weren't the democrats more of your colleagues more alert to this project pro problem years ago? well, i think if you look at the democratic political environment that we usually engage with a lot of different groups with whom we have an affinity of one kind or another civil rights groups, labor unions, environmental organizations, and so forth. and they all have their own separate uh ideas or have their own
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separate plans. they have their own key issues. i think if you look over in the republican side, along with that big right wing billionaire money, there is a lot of organizations and planning and preparation and scripting based. thank you . in the way, i'm not a big corporation does years ahead and they plan for future retro holidays. a laser foundation to be able a decade later to begin to take over the course. and we just all thinking those terms were much more momentary and a half a sonic, and they have a plan and they got the dollars to back it up. we saw revelations in the john durham special council pro, but the russia trump connection and it's a pretty scaling treatment of the f b i. and i know the f, b, i is not the supreme court, but it raises again the questions if there's validity to john durham's findings, that in fact the f b,
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i used faulty information was put aside here in there. i mean, i'm just wondering, as americans look at those who do not follow this like addicts every day, you know, it seems like the core of our legal system, our law enforcement system is rotten. what are your own views on the john durham finding? and do you think that we've got to somehow have a national reset of some of these big institutions? well, i think that the convictions that a special counselor molar obtained based on his investigation and the following report of the inspector general of the department of justice are more reliable than the findings of mister durham who was appointed by trauma in all the heat of this effort to discredit bestbuy investigation into a trunk rusher connection that is routine, i believe improve though. so i would put that kind of on grain of salt, and i look at barre chords more generally and say,
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but the woman who had been assaulted into famed by a former president, got her day in court and won $5000000.00. a company that made the election machines was the famed by the biggest uh, network in the country and went to court and got a massive judgement against a settlement ultimately. and the family of the children who were murder and understand new york were treated just abominably by this creepy director behind info wars. pretending that this was just a scheme that had been caught up by the parents. so, but guess have not actually been murdered. and that also went to an honest court run and a mass of judgment was obtained. so i think what we're seeing through all of the monstrous behavior in our current politics is that the honest court room has to the chase and guess people justice and brings out the truth. that's
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a very important piece of our infrastructure. let me ask you, you know, about, about the way in which debate is managed in this country. i mean, you've been very critical of when you called dark money, particularly oil and fossil fuel money lurking behind the system, influence in various people affecting climate change related policies. and you know, in a, in a time where you have russia invading ukraine, we see how energy is become weaponized in this situation. what is, why can't americans or people around the world have honest, above board debates about the need and reality of fossil fuels? the need and reality of climate change, the need and reality is kind of focused on an equilibrium point in these, what is inhibiting a healthy discussion of the equities that the public has in a balance of these tradeoffs. and, and i'm just really interested in these questions of who stopping that debate and how. yeah. well,
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i think the fossil fuel industry spends an enormous amount of dark money in politics. and when you're writing checks for 10 or 15 or $20000000.00, you get less than 2. and when you start got a lot of those checks, then you can have a whole party kind of come to c o at your command on. i believe that's what they have done. and when at the same time, you're also running this armada phone. you find groups based scientists calling or climate change of folks. you're running a whole propaganda operation at the same time. it does have a very significant effect and we saw that effect pro. now, sadly, after this is united decision before, lots of bipartisanship on climate stuff immediately upon the citizens united decision of the unlimited special interest money bo, bipartisanship dead on climate. let me ask you about going back to the supreme court for a moment, it just occurs to me that what we have been seeing and what you've been reviewing
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on the senate floor. about clarence thomas has relationships and you know, gift flow, we'll call it. um, are there other justices that have exhibited the same behavior? you and i were discussing recently anthony and scully, a the late justice scalia. but i'm just interested in his case, but also interested in whether other justices you, you believe have the same issues that clarence thomas stuff. yeah, i think we know we're going to continue to look into this some of the we know because some of the justices disclose that. so you see it. but i 1st got interested in this. when i learned about how many hunting vacations justice scalia had taken, obviously we knew to the one where he was under chinese air force to mount or fast . and the one where he died. there are about 6 dozen or more others. and they were not disclosed. and the only reason you cannot disclose is if it's personal hospitality. and what they were doing was setting up a little bit of
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a track where somebody went and asked the owner of the state or resort at to invite scully with a personal invitation. and then they would treat the personal invitation is personal hospitality, even if he never met the owner of the resort before even it was a commercial establishment. so that went on for years and the supreme court put up with that. and that was my kind of opener into this question of how boston books in large us to supreme court justices. and in the case of going a lot of political friends around him when he should france political contacts around him on these trips, people from the gun advocacy groups, people from fossil fuel, industry, republican official. so it really doesn't work. my flight, personalized fatality is you or i might understand it. i'm just sort of interested in this moment and whether you're the alone voice is gonna remain alone voice, or you're creating a movement among your colleagues, both republican and democrat, that are actually going to do something about this. it's really the hallway and
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it's appalling to people across the country. you can't house, you know, a municipal official who can have lunch at the diner across the street, picked up by somebody who's doing business with the municipality. you know, the team dollar launch. and then that person finds out that a supreme court justice is taking multi $100000.00 vacations at the secret the house of a literally active right wing billionaire and having his portrait painted with the manipulator of the supreme for him by the right wing billionaire crew. you know, that just doesn't ring through with anybody. i don't care if you're accomplishing or democrat. uh, that's just the database of your and it needs to be called out and it needs to stop . do you engage in any way with chief justice john roberts and do you discuss this with him? yes. yeah. oh yeah. in a variety of ways. first of all, i go over and speak at the traditional conference meeting every year,
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and i've taken to discussing this, i sit right in their store themselves, so tiny bit awkward, but i think it's important that i'm respectful in the, in my tone and manner of delivery and we've done a lot of correspondence as way we usually get answers from either the clerk of the court or you know, the towards the counselor or somebody else. um, but yes, we are at my office and i are regularly engaged trying to focus his and the court's attention on these problems. you know, one of the other transits out there right now, senator, is that college students are not being drawn to the government jobs. they want to, you know, conservative ones are going into private sector liberal ones, you know, in this study that we're looking at are going to non profit multi lateral institutions, etc. but, you know, the idea of going into government service, whether it's in the legal side of things, whether it's and, you know, serving the foreign service. many, many other roles is an area where people are just saying, you know, i'm, i'm going to, i'm going to take a pass. do you sense a problem that, that,
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that we have now in the human capital side of government because trust and government has collapse. so dramatically not yet, perhaps because secure in congress there still so many idealistic young people who want to come and work. but i'm reading about it particularly in the election enforcement area that the elections areas become so toxic with people attacking people and the media trolling mimics threatening them. that election officials are stepping back and people are increasingly reluctant to become election monitors and get involved in the craziness. and the problem with that, of course, is that when the craziness drives normal people out of one area of government service, it makes it easier for the crazy to take over in that area. we'll look at just one person among 435. but i've got to ask you about the george santos case because this
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is a case, a guy who allegedly lied, fabricated a story. rand twice actually for congress. not a lot of people caught it or paid attention and now he's been charged, you know, in federal, federal prosecution with various crimes related to the stories that he fabricated and also deceiving his donors. but when we get into these kind of semi, you know, odd cases does this, you have to put it this way, but this is a fuel, the conspiracy theory crowd and you have worries about that. i don't know. i see a representative. santos is cases one really about the disintegration of local media and a big gap that can exist between the, you know, very immediate, very local media and the national media outlets. because my understanding is that he was actually covered quite well by
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a very small local media outlets that figured that there was a lot that was not true. and what he was saying and was digging hard. but there was not the larger newspaper or media outlet, they could dive in and throw the resources out there so that ultimately, you know, the new york times or the washington post or cbs or somebody else could pick it up . so i see that as a signal of alarm in what local media is capable of doing an environment where the big platforms get to basically take all their work and show it to everybody for free. so they can't afford to keep reporters on the be let me just ask you finally, you know, we've got a couple of more cases pending against donald trump that are very serious. one. you about potential meddling in the 2020 election in georgia, another with with special council, you know, jack smith looking at management of classified documents and president trump's role in january 6. again, these are going to be issues where we're looking at, you know, the f
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b. i are looking at federal prosecutors and you're looking at the courts. do you have any worry that you're revelations about the corruption of this system is going to undermine the potential for those findings to go into direction they should, you know, we've seen again these 3 areas in which an honest court room made a big difference against the you know, bullying bullhorn and actually brought justice and truth. and i think those cases are going to depend very, very much on the evidence and the presentation of that evidence. by the prosecutors . there may be a lot of skepticism going in. but if jack smith makes a very compelling case about tomorrow, i'll go documents. if the department of justice is able to pull together the threads of the false electors and the phone calls to georgia and the guy in the department of justice, writing the letter about georgia and make a compelling case there beyond a reasonable doubt, i think the public is going to be willing to listen and will accept the evidence that is brought forward. well, these are important issues,
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senator and i really appreciate your time this morning and helping our on our audience understand them because they are complex and they are serious and they're not fun. so democratic senator from rhode island, sheldon whitehouse. thank you so much for your candor in for joining us today. thanks, dave. so what's the bottom line? correction is as old as politics. that's just nothing new. they've always been scandals at all levels of government, but until recently the u. s. supreme court was sort of an escape, it was looked upon as the purest of the pure. but the error of judges being the best of us is now probably over and like so many other pillars of the us government these days. americans trust in the courts. objectivity and credibility is really collapsing and fast. the courts are openly seen as political tools. my guest sen sheldon white house is right to blow the whistle. the creeping corruption of american institutions is undermining the democratic equation in america. bit by bit and making it very hard for us leaders to talk about promoting democracy when their
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own is in such disarray. and that's the bottom line. the the latest news as it breaks, a lot of some authorities are looking into declaring last generation of criminal organization. they are receiving some support from society, with detailed coverage. these read the ministry has, should demolition orders for the home, some of which are funded by the european union from around the world. it's a realty here. it has to be in my, in the tyra as people try to find the way out on the
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carry johnston and dialogue at the top stories on out there which i have had one has been a sworn in for a 3rd time. it's touch his presence. he's on bales and you cabinets. the former deputy prime minister mcmahon seems to it has been appointed as finance minister, former intentions, chief confidant, will serve as foreign minister. as one says, he's king to unite the nation. the hey, we all started was the side. so this is
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a day to protect the price future of our children. i mean, they let us put aside the resentments and, and go during the election period. nissan of elk grove. that's find a way to reconcile resentments. if hots have been pressure cause that will show the construction of the century a tech you realize the 100 that of us 3 of our republic together. 2 and that a celebration as a whole, with all 85000000 people go to rescue operations have ended. the science of india is, was trained as austin, decades 298 people died and more than a 1000 people were injured. 3 trains collided, but officially inquiry is on the way that it can be used or not that i'm the, that this incident is very serious with the government orders for carrying out a thorough investigation have been given and whoever is found guilty will get the strictest punishment was cool, that person will not be sped, protest and center goal have continued for us the day but it follows the
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conviction of all physician data. it was months ok. he was sentenced to 2 years and a charge of corrupting the youth. 15 people have been killed. israel and egypt has opened a joint investigation officer where exchange of gunfire the shed. border 3 is rarely soldiers and one a gyptian officer had been killed as well. so the stand of last is for several hours and they have does it from the air attack. so targeting ukraine's capital in the early hours of sunday, or at least 20 people were entered into the pro apartment block was hit, the 10s of thousands of people have joined another anti government protest in soviet as capital bel grades. the demonstrations have become a weekly event. it follows the canning of 18 people into mass shootings last month . there's all the headlines is, continues here and i'll just, they're off to the bottom line.
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the, the conditions for existence on us, sustained by complex web of klein, magic processes, annual reins, predictable seasons and consistent temperatures, o allow life to flourish. overline, sun. fossil fuels is causing the delicate finance of all plants to shift. instances of extreme weather used to be wrapped, but now deadly heat waves was 5 powerful floods. power can send drugs
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at the coming to know the question is no longer will they happen. but when and how we can cope with them the i'm the only can you let in kenya to explore a high tech solution that is helping heard? is the vibe, ongoing drought? and i'm going to bid in myanmar with drones and helping to protect coastal communities against extreme weather event. the through us has been in the grip of a devastating drought amongst those worst effect kenya's over 5000000 test storage . to whom finding fresh water and less pa students is critical for the survival of manhood. but something has been develop something like this whole, the key to getting hurt is around the country. these difficult times today and i've
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called every scouts is being launched in the town of catchy. i probably heard of some, one of the region who's come to learn more about the app and take that information back to the villages. i'm interested to see what they make as a new technology. after you, scouts is the brainchild, the project concerned international. pci and n g o committed to helping side is cooper. probably nearly 4000 people around africa. use it some fun today. it's be especially rolled down to continue the pci hoops to revolutionize how heard is find hotel by using something. 87 percent of kenyans really have and they have pocket smartphone to the excess of satellite maps, which detailed the water conditions throughout tenure,
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updating every 10 days. you can also define surface water. so you can see this is a great using it. it is. can see, do we to target migration and avoid using dry area which need time to come? great. the to find out more about who the app can help. that is i'm of to 7, kenya. with some of this, i have lots of their capital, the joshua invest. everyone has been using after scouts for 3 months. joshua yes. hi. i'm doing the thank you so much for allowing us to come to a home and join you today. yeah. these are animals. yeah. these are my arguments. okay. is my follow because it to me to love the yeah. is my brother. hello. yeah.
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to me to. yeah. is a little brother of mine. hello is on my is on my oh boy, it's a pleasure to meet you. oh yeah. so we're going to get started and we're going to walk now. uh theres uh making process looking at houses. yep. mm hm. okay. yeah. after our meeting, we will see if my mom's hello. yeah. i'm making a loud. yeah. maybe that's how it will be a bit delayed when a big while. yeah. when you go near to this, does that mean it can possibly take for them aside capital, a highly prized a large cock and such as much of $500.00 at market. but it's even move valuable as assumed the family and the thing that seems so simple, but it's really not as easy is a do not need to apply to good rhythms. yeah. and enough strength to make it yeah.
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when you took this is very so it's very nice. so when you have a drought like kenya is having now, how does that affect your cattle less to go to where they might give it to me up to 1000. yeah, i last. yeah. actually 15 big deal. so yeah, yeah. it is a big game, but the most i said it, it is very much, but when it comes to a glass dish on that, i cannot control it. i have to there. hm. yeah. i mean, i know today we're going to take a try and i'm hoping that you can show me the tool that you've been using. now that makes it easier. you just, you just download the app and then you, you would see, well, be able to submit it with us like you like to know when you see this is melissa. yeah, this is the model. oh, this is where we are in that order. yeah. okay. and you can see now in the district when he so they may be coming right back to when you printed this with the
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automatic. so you can see that is in getting the process. yeah. okay. so that is the journey that we will be making. yeah, we, we, we look about the for the full, full kilometers. yeah. wow. yeah, that's a long way to go. yeah. back up. yes. go. okay, let me check the, the sign like joshua our custom to walking as far as it takes to find good, posted to stay away from their families for months at a time the, like i said, we'll spend and then come back to we have to because it came up to yesterday because even by the joshua didn't have that asked yes, when the conditions were also in the street the,
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this is what all the call that i i love it when i was moving, this one, if i don't hear we've tried to help it's back to me, it's essentially to that some kind of be so yeah. so you had gone to try and look for water and past just for the cows. but the cow just couldn't make the journey. and because just collapsed to yeah, it was because it was supposed to be uh, 560 this will be in the morning suit for me, the and david. so it was a real loss for you. yeah, i just thought of it just it brings back home just the thought that it's such a difficult way of life because you have to keep on the move to find the water and to find the grazing line. but in order to move these animals, you so much energy to go from one place to another. so if you don't know where you're going and you're just trying your luck wherever you can,
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it's incredibly hard for these products. yeah. with almost 50 percent of your live stuck and really last drought, it's even more pricing for joshua to keep the surviving cattle in good condition, which means finding ample water during the trip long. we have the, the, an ad blinking point that it says the lot got somebody here. and we need to go to take water left according to the app. it's 30 kilometers from where they started. is a really popular place to come in, drink. i see someone else has brought that goes yeah. can we find a place under the tree? maybe have a bit of a rest? yeah. i tie it is. oh yeah. so can we see this watering hole on the map is the model we came from this plus the oven or so now we, i guess somewhere here you can see some somewhere here knowing the location of
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a temporary water source like this could means life or death for a hood, we'll get that a little less than we have for e ups. nice because of the end of the spectrum app can make all this much simpler. there's still enough with you for a place to 90. got the agenda for this don't. are you teaching them how to yeah, yeah. okay. because at the moment when you need to look for to for your capital for pastors, what do you do? you just go blank. yeah. so you think you might use it? yeah. and does it sound interesting? does it sound like something you would, you'd have to give it back. it's been 10 hours and we into what should be good past and then the lives up for you i in the morning tomorrow. and we have proven went away from the matter to some of those. okay. we made it. yeah. not so bad. a
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maybe i'm in underway. room is by maybe. yeah, yeah. but you can see the difference is so much better. yeah. yeah, yeah, yeah, it's so much better. let's just do something a little bit. so the causes will be able to stay here. they'll have enough food to eat and they will stay here for most one month. and then left on there, we shall see a getting them up where they shouldn't be in. good. that's the good news and most i've had a wonderful day. thank you so much. i'm tired. i've had a wonderful day. sorry. and i most thank you. yeah, no, we can move to the homestead because now this sunny said things and kind of a couple of days then you'd be fine. yeah, thank yeah. yeah, i could do is one of the heard is with access to my maps live stuff. mortality has many hot since joshua has relied on actually scouts, he hasn't lost any counts to go to him. the app has the new veal success.
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the, the, the extreme weather was and now a regular occurrence around the world. the scientists have found that human close to climate change is that the root of the 2 sides within the results is often human suffering. in 2017 hundreds, we left that many thousands homeless, well, unusual weather conditions. the hurricane season in the caribbean cruise, unprecedented levels of destruction. devastating floods swept across the southeast . asia. tornadoes hits the south of the us, and california was roasted by heat waves. since 2009, one person,
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every 2nd being displaced by disaster is predicted that by 2050, they'll be 200000000 environmental microns. the would be turnkey episode is that people, mike rates temporarily and the resort distance internally if it's in their countries. if there's a child, certain environmental stress, you move, you temporarily move, but then there's projects dictation and an incentive. and the reality that people come 5 would be might see in the future is permanent migration. and along with this, this migration, you might see whole communities having to relocate because their likelihood, so no longer as sustainable. it might be an entire nation. states that have the
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goals are among the most via diverse habitats. and the punish me play a vital role in the lives of coastal communities. but these forest is facing deforestation. 35 percent of the world's mind groups of already been lost. and here in the area where the delta, 16 percent original cover is less. i mean, man where local innovative project is combining grass from conservation, stacy, or drone technology, take mangrove, the generation to new heights. the m a is vulnerable to psych wounds which strike every few years. in 2008 the worst ever. psycho nuggets claimed more than a $130000.00 lights. the experts know believes that mind grooves hold a key to saving thousands of lives when the next big storm hits.
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to find out how i've come to the local coconut farmer who agreed to show me is my little forest. oh wow. these profit trees the toilet mangroves you reach 25 meters and its 3040 cents meters in diameter. the forest was planted after a cycle. 1975. the these t c. did you find them? what i thought it was fabulous. seem be the mark i've gotten, it seemed solid. for me. i'm a co op. whereas out, you can imagine these incredibly violent storms that blew in here. and you start to understand how these mature for, essentially have the capacity to break that, that wind and stop some of that storm surge,
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making his way into these settlements and farms and help us maybe some of the other funds where there is no mand groups do you know, of any farms the m suffers because of this one's a happy apple vision. yeah. you that the dead line. i looked at. yeah. oh my my sure. yeah. yeah. they bought you a car michigan. yeah. maybe that means you got to go so i did, i did a bit. so is it a projection? yeah. or so it's mind groups, a suspect is protecting against storms. wave 1000000 hectares being cut down since 1978. leading the population to unprotected a meeting with an ecologist with 30 years experience and forestry to find a way hello. are you?
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thanks for me. yeah, thank you so much. the wind hits the world view international foundations, mangrove lead generation project here. okay . at the moment is this the main girlfriend? all of this and visual condition is to see the degree get right in the close to the
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60 percent of the villages. they don't have the funding in jump. they tried to find out the money from the mangrove, and that they can come in good faith within the one that was they can get the day money for the livelihood. no, i understand. so you're talking about really a negative feedback. yeah. cycle. yeah. it says concerns of the environmental stresses and the economic stresses that has driving people into the mangrove job. yeah. right. yeah, i understand shrimp and grace farming as well as chuckle production. i've stripped more of my groups leaving it critically exposed. if action isn't taken suit in the communities you live here in danger of being decimated for the next big storm the there are still trees. yeah. yeah, yeah. this the, this is the, is this entry,
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okay. that this is her, our rented okay. to turn the 2015 when and a 100 locals have systematically planted 400000 seedlings by hand here and the last 3 years. yeah. it goes right to that. that's all the way through. doesn't it? yes. yes. but the job is far from complete. okay. so we've come right into the thick of it here, all that work that we can hear in the background. that's a lot of jumping and preparing of the ground before beyond that those and see things are more going to go into this month. so, sounds like there's a lot of hardwood going on, so she may be going try and linda and hi, i'm russel i. so can you tell me, are you, are you from this area or, you know, on all of the say those are a lot all the other model utterly. it's literally not even about the whole devil and nobody's at all. literally on my own, on the phone, i'd be, you know, samuels at all, all the movie that you, me,
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i see why you got to cindy that leave my bowl my way with you feel some way you're giving something back or, you know, i lose. i got out all total movie that dream. i lose all good. you know on, do you got a cold water? she didn't do y'all. even do i do. he was on an anomaly. he got on my tv reading at t v i t rock while i was a not gonna be able to see that i got all the auto pop. yeah. hold on. my mom of the same of you know what my the yeah i understand. did you show me how to do it? i'm, i am a complaint know of it, but just backend. i'm getting, getting the hang of it. i do. it's all about the angle. is it just like that? or the team is $35000.00 hacked. is coastline to plant
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the in the racing to do it before the next billing cycle. the complex was restoration, the windows 10 to the latest technology we've been working today. this is the one thing to do today. the oaks would base team of scientists will be testing whether the double propeller, quarterly cup to drones, toys, $7000.00 seats in and out. so cutting edge of the nest is done by
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the reading of figuring who heads up the project. so and as this haven't been done before, anything like this to your knowledge of no, to the 2. yeah, definitely. the 1st one in the, it's going to be our largest experiment is there just, we could have a look at one of the puts just to kind of get a sense of what you're, what we're dealing with here. so what is what is inside this? there may from, by the grade level, plastic and all natural material and inside to use. so while you have local seats and you have local materials and natural materials, looks like really there just so green light is the okay, strongest part of the the test to be successful if once you're into the ground, all pods embedded and so deep enough for growth to occur, if it works,
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the team returned in a few months time to plant 20000000 more that is i have never seen anything like that before. the drone has a pre programmed flight path seats penetrate the soil. the chance of each of these codes becoming a treat is greater than is planted by nature or hand. because the depth with the water system, the 2 of those down and the team a happy caesar in the ground. and it's time for me to take his course. i was just thinking inside this thing. i mean it's, there's so much more than just seats. it's, it's the future. it's the potential to save life because mine gross, it's the living shield. they protect people from the ocean. they protect people from son, i move from here, right canes. and we have to do it now. and these have to do with that. the must
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have scale because from today to maybe 6, not months from now maybe one year from now is maximum. we will have a growing shield already. so if the cycling keeps next year, people here will be protected. and when you, when you put it like that, you know, all of a sudden something so small can seem base and if can indeed. so i'm actually going to put that back in the ground where we found. okay, good luck, little when i stick you right now or the scientist test is finished for when it is to just the beginning the one or 2, the seeds progress carefully. if all goes to plan many more trees will be planted by drone here, the new future helping to safeguard the coast. from the street, the
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over the world, people are having to adapt to unpredictable climate and weather patterns. and kind of the west sea ice has become dangerous to be a scheme is providing real time measurements of ice thickness to local communities . the states reveals which routes the states to travel and which i know the main well in los angeles, where extreme drought has become the norm. 96000000 shaped schools have been pushed into the l. a reservoir to help reduce if operation rate the these projects show the level of innovation the communities are using to protect themselves against, increasingly for the tell whether. but the question remains of these long term solutions. or are they just mosque in the real problem?
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the the weather brought to you by visit cutoff. let's go with your headlines for the americans and right off the bat, an update on tropical storm. arlene is a disappeared coming into western and central cuba. it's going to dump a bit of rain there. will keep tabs on that, but also a lot of rain coming in to southern mexico. not impacting mexico city up to 31. that is well above average. in fact, closing in on a record for the month of june,
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us call states, we're seeing the storms bubble up through text is one ingredient we have here to fuel those storms. high temperature is look a little rock arkansas up to $35.00, but it's the complete opposite for the us. ne, cool, they're sinking in here. boston just 15 degrees. but welcome rain coming into play for canada's nova scotia province, to help with the unprecedented wildfire burning. there to the west, we go and the heat is on in canada is prayer province is alberta, saskatchewan manitoba. when to pick up 32, but with the humidity it's feeling closer to 40 in time we see those storms roll off the rockies in colorado. that's bubbling up some of those storms that we've seen in texas and for the top end of south america, weather alerts in play for how much rain we'll see in ecuador, and it looks like showers, maybe some storms rolling across the river, place onto the day of 17 for you on sunday. of the weather brought to you by visit castle. there is no channel that covers the world news like we do. the
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scale of this camp is like nothing ever. but we want to know how these things affect people. we revisit please state even when there are no international headline. houses are really invested in that, and that's a privilege. as a journalist, the database of a new beginning to key is present. midship tests as one on fail says cabinets as the beginnings of the time in office, the cherry johnston. this is out here. well i from what else that coming up. israel and egypt say they will jointly investigates a board, a skirmish which killed street is rarely solved and one exemption officer.

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