tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera November 2, 2024 10:00am-11:01am AST
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a are we have to be brave, otherwise we're not gonna have a country left. how will the choice of one nation affect us? the us 2024 elections on out to 0. the . ready the hello, i my name. sorry, this is a nice uh line from joe hall coming up in the next 16 minutes 24 hours. if it's really a time scale, dozens of palestinians across calls, i've been un ones of apocalyptic conditions. at least 19 people in central israel on engine by walk. it's 5 from 11 on well is where the attacks kill at least
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50 to an east and 11 on the final push, but on decided voters. both combat harris on donald trump focus on the swing state of wisconsin in spain is still in shock of to last week's flush floods. more troops sent in to help pulling chairs with the clean up the welcome to the program. we begin in central garza where a residential buildings packed with civilians, all again being targeted. this is the ultimates of early morning attacks. may garza's island is there it's camp where at least 5 palestinians were killed. as far as a wave of is riley assaults with non stop on tele refund and as strikes since friday and leaving thousands of people that the meanwhile and the noise of the guns and strip the united nations as warning of apocalyptic conditions. at least 84 policy
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needs, including move and 50 children have been killed and recent strikes. as ro is deliberately blocking the entry of 8, including food. i'm was to you and chief say that the entire population in the north is now risk of dying from disease funding and finance by them and most of the month we left over the account to the western guys that yeah, yeah, there is no safe place. we left on the bottom on the place here is on livable. there is no age, food, or drink. the situation is very difficult and tragic. now, people are exhausted. people have died of hunger. there is no food, no shelter, and no water since yesterday night. we have been coordinating to try and get a, what a truck for the people, the situation is very bad and that's what she might. and i mean, i lot of, we have nothing my little daughters a month old. we did not take any of things, not to even the coffin of miller. she was lying on the floor all night. the water
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came and we had no buckets to fill up. we are unable to rush on drink. let's go to tara cowboy. assume for the ladies as he joins us live from darrow by the in central garza so tarik. another nights more devastating. strikes all across the strip. what more can you tell us of the yeah it's, it's a very, it's a growing career. let's say of course the central to the, you know, part part of cause a due to the continuation of these when they attack. so these are the areas out of the morning. a residential house has been targeted in and was around a refuge account, at least according to the initial figures. quite palestinians have been confirmed, killed and rescued. operations are still under way in that area for line. imagine see what his us to looking for. survive is underneath that house and where it's getting reports from going to the city that 3 civilians have been killed off to an
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attribute attacked lives in a soft hallway neighborhood, which is one of the neighborhoods that splits between the north dollars of 16. we know also from eye witnesses, the workbooks we looked from costs and the government media office that to residential houses, the full but full which civilians and devalue refugee come. what? so that 10 to the ground, at least $84.00 people have been some sense killed sofa including 50 children. this is a very dangerous and serious and step being taken by these very minute treat to target areas. so quite close that with the civilian steps as far as we know that even to now civil defense workers are unable to reach the site of this. so i can simply, people are living in the area alongside with the help of civilians and passes by a trying to dig through the russell in order to find anyone who can be alive and at the same time try to rescue who's who were injured or right now suffering terrible injuries underneath these areas and situation of the newest has been described to
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be a disaster. so as, as well, has been slots and incomplete areas that a housing civilians will refuse to flee from devalue as and from big law here as well. well, also medical sources and come on that one hospital saying that the hospital is, is still struggling to provide medical services and lights of the ongoing attacks on bailout here. and the lack of homeless central medical supplies for their crews, the author race and a very limited amount of as they use. but um is to binding medical supplies to flew to the hospital as a positive, ongoing operation that is still ongoing for at least 28 days. so far as how i got on a tiny speck of good news in the region. pony of vaccinations, i believe are all continuing again. the 3rd phase, i believe. what more can you tell us about that? well,
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the 3rd phase is supposed to start today according to the world health organization which is cooperating with its key pots, and is including noticed different kinds of health administrators to start the vaccination campaign, but expected to vaccinate at least a $119000.00. i was thinking of children across garza city. it means that children who are under the age of 10 into balliot and big la jolla, an invite tunnel in town, will not be able to be vaccinated due to the continuation of the military operation . that as far as we know, that at this time has been posted probably due to the lack of security conditions um to you to the batteries best that evacuation motors have taken place in jamalia and by law here for civilian steps. and we know from a, from notice of that, at least $216.00 teams will be deployed, deluxe and 8 children in a, at least a $106.00 fix sites, whilst $209.00. so she book license would be deployed to engage communities and
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drains awareness about the vaccination efforts. but this is a very contradictory meant, as well as missing the vaccination campaign to take place and an overnight attack that killed 50 children in that strike in devalue, which shows the peak realities that you by day is getting much more west of course than other parts of concept. okay, thank you for that update topic about doing that for us and durable on central gaza and join. now by telling me to come booth and associate professor of public policy at the doha institute for graduate studies. tell me there you are originally from garza, i'm just wondering, are you still in touch with some of your family that and if so, what are you hearing about people's daily struggle is particularly in the north of causa, where we've seen this devastating siege for weeks now. it sort of thing many, and i mean the know in a forced to describe what's happening and the most, i mean it's a, it's, it's some, it's cigna is the beginning of a new stage of
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a demographic, andrew graphic engineering of those to buy displacing people. and think certain area, especially the notes and then you've got guys in too many get those. no, it's not about one. get to it. i mean, we used to talk a lot about the policy if a new and us, you know, a lot of the patient cab now we're talking about island small. get those from the north to the south. i think uh, is it a it has uh, obviously uh, i don't somebody's ation or a green light from the us to get into stage 2 of the which is the day after the plans. i think this thing was the beginning of the plan where we were yearly, then we hit on a on easley media that they want to visit people, the empty some geographic areas make it like buffering zones. probably at some point supplements we get back as so he really believe that's what the intention is here. of course, i mean, i mean what's, i mean, why would you empty that that north of look as a slip on this?
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there is some crazy idea in days of a mindset that we need to buffer zone, or we need to experiment something new or even empty people and then allow them to get back on the 2nd conditions, the bidding process. we'd want to see on how much meant the population. it's just crazy, but it's just, it's crazy. insane. i think i think i think these ladies have lost the mind and, and really what seemed a shameful elizabeth. again, i mean the commercial community is again watching and watching and watching wouldn't done with phase one, but with the mass of destruction. now face to, for 10 years with this. so the engineering be demographic, me could be geographic and then and then slow this slow death of the population. yes, we would give them vaccination from one hand and then we come from on the other hand it's it's, it's just, it's sort of fine thoughts and it's happening under the international community. and, and this, this, the inability of anyone to stop this madness instead. what, what seems to be constantly getting is the mixed messaging,
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particularly from the united states. i mean, we had then recently issue this automation as well that they will withhold weapons from israel if they don't step up into goals. and then again, yesterday we heard that they are deploying even more ministry assets to the regions . a ton of money in the us is, is nothing. but the answer to this conflict by no means it is an actual apartment for days. and i think the medical ladies are experimenting this new project in the middle east with some of the mindset and also because of the complicity of many out of governments and the weakness of our governments. also that the, this is, i'm a put a 24 days that i have to create or to create a new order for them with the least expensive. the 1st thing is, meaning that on the big picture the, we want to to cost the philistines. and at the same time, to, to expand despite normalization deals. but this wouldn't happen at the expense of the, but the thing is, i mean, the policy is, i'm coming
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a noise for us. they say it is the colonial mindset. and this, we got up the genes or a rushing for normalization. also the deluxe within percent as a headache, let's get done with this. whatever comes off of this war will accept that. but the big objective as the normalization and we work together as partners in peace and etc, etc. and that's, i think that's what they're doing now it's, it's a, the old little of the region that experimenting good. now, it doesn't mean it's one and succeeds. i'm not sure how to succeed because as long as the people are good and they have legit demands believe as a human beings to be treated equally to have. but i'd like to have a state independent the fight for continue the british and fight will continue with it. it's how much, how much is only one thing that of the but assume people there would be more other senior political parties move. it's whatever to fight for, right. so i mean, as long as the commission to continue and again, as you asked me at the beginning,
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i mean i'm, yes i'm from does i'm from, don't know, i've never imagined in my life. i mean, i left it goes up for professional reasons, but i always trip. i have a home to go back to. now because i'm from the north, so i'm paying from does i feel i must be cheap? i am not a few cheap. and for me, it's sort of saying that i kind of get back to, to, to, to, to, to, to this home that the small and precious piece of home that i have no access to it anymore. and it's, it's, it's a or it's, it sets it sets. okay. tell me who thank you. it's american motor associate professor of public policy. i think doug wants cheats for quite just at least 19 people in central israel have been injured by real kits. 5 from 11 on medical officials say for if those have moderate injuries, building and tara was directly hits. and these really ami says sirens have sounded as a number of suspicious aerial targets crossed over from lebanon into israel. the incident is ongoing. drones have been seen of a hey sub day. is there any media se,
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several explosions have been observed in different locations, as casual human val, he's in the jordanian capital, he's coming this from a mom because these are the governors found out dessert from reporting from inside the pod westbank as well as from inside israel. so what are you hearing from israel about what's going on? yes, it's already on the radio and also channeled 15. all talking about at least for 3 or 43 to 4. drones the top to be able to infiltrate into. it's highly tennessee, 3 of them, some in different areas in open areas. and one was intercepted, but also before that there was talk about these 19 injuries in is i am overnights a dawn when a salvo of the hezbollah drones a heat to some areas in design, including david started including got shot on area in the middle of the country and
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also the town of to utah, dot lies a 25 kilometers uh, north east, outside of the, of, uh, of tennessee. so that tone is very interesting. the last time is an out of town and the odds of easily about 1948 say about the ion don't isn't well talk to them on the they don't top bunk cuz so we noticed recently that most of the entities happened in our areas because those areas i'm not protected. his belie, uh, has issued a number of states been saying that they have a talk with the quality, drones and a number of places. and these are these not because this will say, say i to cetera and saw it to the bombs that got the base of the military and kind of just suited 2800 in the south of tennessee. they also talked about an attack on the settlement of chicago. they also mentioned that that dropped on
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and you saw it at home. i'll. so here's the law is a penalty talking to places that the know very much on the map. so this is not, in some cases the most of the cases when you, when you listen to his beloved statements, this is not about key optic or blind attacks. anyway, these are you, they have these places on the map, they named them. and we still have to have confirmation from the side to side whether those places what really hit is a it has its own policy about the feeling or not the feeling, whatever they want to say with regards to the results, the impacts of the drones coming from his beloved. okay, thank you for that. and the valve that for us in, i'm on the phone, the top for a public a know may can this cheney has slammed a republican candidate. donald trump, for saying she should have guns, trained on half of foreign policy stones as rival,
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coming to harris says trump is increasing his bonnet and resurrect. comes as days before the presidential election with both candidates. focusing campaigning and critical swing stays on fishes move from milwaukee in wisconsin. the 2 candidates, 10 kilometers apart. one important swing states. donald trump, to cues campaign to milwaukee. in wisconsin. the place where he secured the republican presidential nomination in the summer were not going to take it any more . kamala yo fired, i do, repeated the message he believes is breaking to with motives. i will end inflation . i will stop the criminal invasion of our country. the biggest problem we have right now from the republicans, matthew, in the summer, they were practically getting. the candidate was the head and the polls. he just survived an assassination attempt, and they were convinced he was going to lead them to victory. again, still biting with just days to the election. the race is very different than
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trump's team is defending comments. he made about a political opponent having guns trained on our face. she's a radical war hawk. let's put her weather rifles standing there with 9 barrows shooting at him. he was making you not to bore point b. c. dangerous language in the come climate insist his critics he was met by protest isn't milwaukee, from a wide range of groups who oppose his policies on him. personally, i don't believe the damn thing that man says. i don't believe that he means anything that you set on his campaign, especially about pre owns of the american people, went through then just a short distance away tumble of how to try it again to push the idea. she's the change kind of, despite having spent almost 4 years in the white house, it is time for a new generation of leadership in america, which includes this item on the guns comment. he has increase his violent rhetoric
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. donald trump has about political opponents. and in great detail in great detail, suggested rifles should be trained on former representative blaze painting. this must be this qualified was going to this important part of the so called blue will democratic meaning states. how does most when was that will open the door to a trump pick today? i was so sure. i'll just either, milwaukee. the michigan is very much in play as a competitive swing states, a couple of harris. i'm don't from both of crossing the states. lodge arab and muslim american population, but higher spot in administration, support as well as genocide in gauze, a weighs heavily on their minds and that could affect how they vote is several bunny for months when american state that has regularly featured in our coverage of israel's war on gaza has been michigan the swing states with 15 electrical votes.
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for decades, michigan has been part of the democrats so called blue wall voting for the party in election after election until 2016. in 2016 trump won the state by a razor thin margin. just under 12000 votes, out of more than 4000000 cost in 2020 byte and one michigan back. but a lot has changed since then. israel's war on gaza seen an outpouring of anger among arab americans, a group which normally skews heavily democratic. and michigan is the swing state with the largest share of arab american voters. does the war affect how the vote? absolutely. earlier this year, more than a $100000.00 democrats, punished to joe biden for his handling of the conflict voting against him during michigan's primary. instead of supporting his re nomination as candidates, they chose uncommitted, and less than 2 months before election day, the uncommitted national movement declared that it would not endorse calmly harris or donald trump to that. now,
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the most closely watched part of the state will be here at the wayne county home to americas auto, capital, detroit, the state's largest city, also home to dearborn, the country's 1st arab american majority city. nearly a 140000 people who trace their heritage to the middle east and north africa live in wayne county, vitamin one more than 68 percent of the vote here in 2020, but anger over his administration's middle east policy could change that and lower the turn out to harris us. now if we step back and look at michigan as a whole, arab americans represent just 3 percent of the population. most of the americans make up around 2 and a half percent, not a big number. so wouldn't really matter. arab american support is flowing to minor party candidates. that's bad news for harris, but there is a long history of them doing well in the polls, but it getting few actual votes on election day. and as just as possible, that voters unhappy with both trump and harris will stay home and not vote at all.
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well, donald trump has been campaigning in dearborn michigan. theresa byron, what's not a last minute visit by donald trump to the city that has the largest number of arab and muslim americans in the country. he visited a head like a feign, dearborn michigan, vowing to bring peace to the middle east without offering specifics. you're going to have peace in the movies and they should have peace in the middle east, but not with the cloud. you have a literally trumps 2 questions from reporters, but did not see how he would end the war in gaza or living on the outside. the restaurant i makes reaction, some members of the community was critical of the former president, others showing support kamala harris. and i drove by and we loved arrows, the people back
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to terms like everybody to watch all the kids you guys wanna keep playing. oh boy. everybody to let me see. so i'm a list of the problems the mainland and so you know, we, i respect a powerful respect for leader, you know, the mayor of the are born abdulla how mode tweeted, trump is not his precedent and reminded the community of the band on muslims when he was president, historically, people here have voted for the democratic party, but that has started to change in the past few years as anger and frustration, as the bite in administration has been unable to stop the war. this is the 1st time our republican candidate cons to the city of dearborn, even though the arab population in the united states is only one percent. they're an important voting block because they're located at swing states like michigan. this is how that in my city is palestinian. he owns a suite shopping dearborn. he says that even though trump is happening to many among the community,
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he wants to believe cabinet harris will be able to help bring some sort of solution to the war. even canada, 1st time i use somebody talking about the states unless and until this and whether it will fly or not, i have no idea of it. that's the 1st time. and how many, 10 for that it was proposed was under david, but it never flew. i hope this time it was i just, this is our piece is for many people here, the main priority right now. the question is which can be data will be able to end the war and at what cost to be. so i will, i'll just see that dearborn michigan, the u. s. supreme court has rejected a bit by republicans to block those in pennsylvania from some missing and balance in person. if that was a mistake on the mainland vote, this means thousands of ballots are still eligible to be counted. and this could
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impact the result in pennsylvania, which has the most electoral college votes among the 7 swing states and the seas election. and $34.00 states americans will also be voting for senators to represent them in washington dc. both democrats and republicans account painting houghton spending heavily even in states they once took for granted christmas leave me before it's now from maryland with just days to go before the election. democrat angela also brooks is campaigning nonstop. she's a relatively unknown county executive in maryland running against a popular former republican governor the races in the national spotlight because it could decide which party would be in the majority in the us senate. this election is about the future. it's about not only reproductive freedom, but the ability to freedom, to live free of gun violence to have economic opportunity for our children. and it
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is also about preserving our freedoms and democracy. mary hogan, her opponent is pitching himself as a bridge builder. someone who can work across the island, the senate, just like you did as governor in a state long seen as a democratic strong hold. even in a closing pitch to voters. his campaign released an ad featuring a democrats, this isn't complicated. i'm splitting fine, 2nd terrace, and hard politics say it's completely broken. washington is dysfunctional and you're not going to fix it by just uh, you know, sending more ballast parts and politicians there. and we're going to try something different. the senate consists of 100 members and democrats currently have a very slim majority with just 51 seats, but the race between hogan and also brooks isn't the only one to watch. 34 seats are up for grabs, and many of them are very tight races, including in the state of michigan, ohio, and montana. back in maryland, the democrats are bringing out party leaders from harris or selves we need. angela
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also brought us in the united states to form a house majority leader study where we caught up with him as he was campaigning for also brooks to raise the control center is a state that manage the control of the agenda and whether we're going to go forward or to go backwards. what voters decide could have a major impact on the next president and their ability to pass legislation of both parties have spent millions of dollars hoping to sway voters making maryland senate race the costliest in state history. kristen salumi, algebra, maryland, or forcing 1000000 gen z versus will be taking part in this election. 8000000 of them. nice thing for the 1st time on. took them off to get us to james space spoke to pedal of guests and i'll shoot you in washington. dc about the potential importance if and younger versus this is an incredibly talked election. how important do you think these are new voters?
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we don't exactly know what we're going to do. how important could they be in determining the outcome? you know, they're incredibly important at our america. we work along with college students, a lot of young people and i was recently at clark, atlanta university, which is an h bcu. it's a historically black college. and i met with this young gentleman who told me that, you know, i asked them, how do you feel about the election, you know, like what, what are some of the, your thoughts on this? and he told me, you know, what, i hate talking about this, but i can tell you this. i was last broke 4 years ago than i am today. and i think one of the things that a lot of people are seeing nowadays is the fact that they care. a lot of young people are worried about what they're going to do after the graduate, or they're going to be able to get a job or that you're going to be able to like, own a house, find a family. these are some of the central issues that a lot of young americans care about it. unfortunately, one of the things we've seen is that over the last 4 years, it's become harder and harder for them to make it ends meet as a, as a young person in america pay, we hear a lot about putting arise ation in the selection. i hit talk of the radicalization
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of young voters. is that a real thing? there's certainly radicalization happening in america and around these elections. we're living in a 2 party system which are already right for polarization. on top of that, we're seeing a ton of this information circulating sometimes, even by far an actors which can really drum up some of that polar ization within this country. far up a foreign policy. no normally is a big issue for americans. you switch on the television here, you don't hear a lot about foreign policy. but i've also been watching these huge protests on campuses un. okay, no, not old young youngsters go to college. but how important do you think the issue of israel's war on cause a liberal then of to 13 months is going to be do you think it's going to sway some young boat has? so i definitely think it's going to sway some young folders, but i'm unsure of like the overall result that it will have on the election. i think that at least when it comes to people from my demographic,
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i'm younger women. this is an important election. you know, when it has to do with reproductive freedoms, why at the same time, it's difficult for us to believe what some of our candidates are saying when we see the reality is on the ground in us when we see women who are pregnant and being fond please, the children dying and incubators, i'm due to bombs as well that are directly funded by the biden harris administration. it's difficult for us to hear these things into a vote in the same way that we did seriously and in the past. so pete, going back to you on poto as ation. i mean, the issue of this, i mean we, as i say, we think campus protests, we see protests and counter process. i mean, tell me the levels of, of, of, of a power to rise ation with regard to this conflict. yeah, well, i can't really speak to that. it's not outside of my area of expertise, but i can say over the last couple of years we've seen increases in polar ization within youth and adults as well. and i think that's often what drives a lot of the anxiety that people feel around these elections. and one way that we
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can start to address some of that is instituting public health programs that address things like radicalization and political violence in our public spaces including on college campuses. so my hands on out is there the i'm barnaby low income begin island in the southern philippines were divers, are taking photos of the titans underwater at night using a filipino pioneered methodology known as one fires. diving the color, there is still more right in the full cost of parts of space, not just as heavy as it has been, but still some live. you show us just around that. that is the side of the country, the what the weather will push a little further north was the reason for the still improvements in the weather is because it's heavy of light pressure is now in the process of just not doing
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a little further west was just pulling heavy samples away. so as we go through sunday, it is lousy. try for good parts of the country. a few showers still just pushing up towards bounced by the schools at northeastern corner. but notice that we do have another little area of rain which will make his way into a portico, and then it's a west composite span as we go to the early part of next week. that's something to keep or not i think the flight to areas not seeing too much more in the way of any further. right. but still plenty of long term flooding issues to come here because it will take a while for the waters to subside. further, north high pressure dominates across mounts of europe. it as, as the lead on the atmosphere. so long as you try and clear that the morning mr. fall, guess as we go into wednesday, you can see some dry weather costs a good pos of year. then we do still have some showers just around the valley. eric's some went to weather spots to create the way into pots. so something basically an easy for the east. the
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unique perspective. we don't want to head to well, but we no longer have any private spaces on the incidence. that's a scary well on heard voices a year into this genocide, it still remains large. one section connect with our community and tap into conversation if you don't mind elsewhere, but humanity, the number of people who want to stop sending weapons has gone up and up despite what they hear in the mainstream media in the united states. the stream on out to 0 is real, is duty as an in judaism is as well. many american cheese are raised with a one sided view of israel. this is our land. that's what was conveyed to us found in the depths of my family's house. but the tide is shifting as younger jewish americans learn the reality about these rails treatments of the palestinians. i was never in the palestinian house to live barge into one in the middle of the night.
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it's a military occupation is right. it is a episode to analysis era. the welcome back. you watching out, is there a line that's on top stories based our early morning attacks on central goals that have killed at least 5 palestinians? is there any forces have launched ongoing attacks on residential areas near island? is there as come as known, installed on to the refund as strikes since friday survive is a trapped by constant compartments. at least 19 people in central israel have been engine by rock. it's fine from 11 on medical, official a say for size have moderate injuries. a building in 0 suffered
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a direct hit on coming on harris and donald trump. and looking to look in critical lights in several swing states just in the us to stairs, away from the presidential election. one of the 7 key swing states is arizona. it's where trump looks to have a motional lead. and the latest polls a teen a very to is a, one of the fastest growing demographics in not state making up a 3rd of the population. rob reynolds has more on why they could decide the election. and this altar is part of an important cultural tradition for latino arizonans. it honors recently, deceased loved ones. now latino is in this state are an important part of the electorate. they make up about 30 percent of the population over all, and they supported joe biden very strongly, 4 years ago against donald trump, polls earlier this year. so some slippage and that support for the democrats. but
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a very recent poll conducted by florida international university shows that commer harris has made up some of that ground that polls shows her support among latinos at 50 percent, 7 percent, to donald trump's. 33 percent. we asked young latino voters about the issues for young people like myself there is it is harder when you know, rent prices are going up. the rest of the prices are going up and we want to see relief on those things. as a latina voter, i definitely think that abortion rights would be something that i care about and that my daughter and friends and family would care about. i feel like is a problem because like we're already he has latino community and like bringing all those people like getting all those help from all those people who are coming over here is like not fair for us because you know, we be here longer in any event, both campaigns are spending a lot of time and effort here in arizona in these final days before the election.
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both trump and harris were in phoenix on thursday. and on saturday, tim walls harris is running, mate will be here in tucson and rob reynolds, l. g 0 in tucson, arizona. its clean operations are continuing and the eastern spain following devastating floods that killed more than 200 people. so near gaga reports now from chiva, one of the west, hip parts of philadelphia, one by one. they line up emptying buckets of death was a sweeping away, much shoveling away daybreak farm was the taxes using their equipment to clear the streets. the town of chiva is one of the worst hits in the region of valencia. more than a year's worth of rain fell here in just one day, flooding the streets, destroying homes with his deadly force louder cuz one of his business is one of many here that was inundated without have friends and neighbors running around. she
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said she would never been able to clear up the remains of high school. i am so proud of my town really supporting one another, but in other places as well. everyone is helping each other. in the absence of any rescue services or is the community together to do the clear operations on this child. young and older like everyone is getting involved and it's not just neighbors. people from other towns came to lend to hunt boys. and what, when you were sorted like i'm not from here, but we've come here to help. it's necessary to help in every way we copy in and do the regional capital. but in caea, hundreds of volunteers march to the worst hit areas of the rooms, buckets, shovels, and supplies a show of solidarity. but there's also frustration with a slow pace of the official response. not everyone in chiva is able to salvage the
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homes, the livelihoods that is the result. mazda account, go back to her slot. that was above some of these business, the building destroyed by the rising horses cause i guess there may be the water washed away the foundations of all who we can't ever go back to living there again, i think the effective is also willing barone. but in spite of the anguish exhaustion community persist in the face of tragedy under the jago algebra. cuba, valencia as a spring in david's revival, he's assistant professor valencia polytechnic university. joins us now live from valencia. thank you so much for your time. i believe you as well as all the volunteers have been involved in the clean up operations. what are you finding of the biggest challenges at this point? yes. hello, good morning. eh, we are actually, there's actually tens of thousands of people going from all the villages
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surrounding also from valencia to all the, all the different areas there. so it'd be community effort to help all those. and all of that has a theory asked me the giving like providing them some help in as you were mentioning before on the people on the area where eventually or taking out the water from now safe cleaning. taking out the storage furniture inside the house is trying to like farm trucks where and taking out the cars from the street that they are blocking the entrance to houses and people are also getting lots of ad for 13 walter. jenny material to face just brush cleaning elements at the just that's where i 14 the houses and also stood here giving david many people i believe it's still missing is such a rescue still ongoing with the hope that some of these people can be found alive.
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so yesterday memo was licks where they said that almost 2000 people are missing. so we are 1900 people missing still in the area. and the problem was that until yesterday, almost 72 hours later. and there are some abilities that no help provides yet there's lots of infrastructure problems, but also feel that there's a lack of response. and what about aid is there enough food? shelter, other basic necessities in general said that the community has been giving a lot of health. there's a lot of material, there's a lot of food and lots of water they are keeping on providing them. the problem is that not all the people in the affected areas are being able to r 5 their, i guess, all that also they're starting to be needs of specific needs, kind of like some medical aid as some special medicines,
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cetera. and they are being some trouble, so i'm not writing all those more. a critical but less big stuff like david, you touched on that yourself. i mean that's been a lot of criticism off the government. people saying they went given enough warning about the flooding, and we'll say the response. once the crisis happened has not been adequate. do you think these affect criticisms? why do you think uh, the government has really come through? so i think there was obviously a problem for him and or videos where people are receiving the alarm, what they're being displaced by reverse of balter. so the alarm arrival past 8 pm. there was a huge rainfall seems 9, 10 am. so there was a sign of almost 12 hours since the spanish mentor, a mentor, electrical agency gave a warning, and they were already worn instead of like climate scientists that this could
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happen because like major reading and as he attempted to records over the summer. and there is the parts of the criticism about organizing the responds and after the event now, and there's being $72.00 over 90 hours. now under light place is that it helps the stream of happening and there are still almost 2000 people missing. and yesterday, there people leaving with bodies like that bodies on their houses. so obviously there's assuming that the communities helping more than the local um state or their spanish government. yes. right. and that, i mean, picking up on that point, i mean, the lack of organization. some people are saying that's because there is conflicts between the regional government and the central government is not something you think is, is the case. i mean, what lessons needs to be learned from what has happened here. so i hope it's not because the situation is quite dramatic for having these kind of conflicts,
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to be honest. but of course, like in an erupt, climate change where all the student that's and all these events are going to happen more and more. and we need better coordination. we've need better america to services and we need faster and quicker protocols to try to tackle what's going to be happening and that they don't have to ask about you, your family and your friends. so obviously it's been for days now and it's a devastating disaster. how, how are you and your family coping? so we, luckily we are all fine. and obviously we have friends and colleagues that they are leaving on this 1000 parts of valencia and they have the most active. but i don't know personally, anyone that eh, how site and i have to say that it's quite this stuff because there's like, this love has another bicycle and you ball like 80 age limits or some you are in the middle of eh, trots at the where we philosophy for structural problems. uh,
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no. drinking water, all sort of my onboarding. yeah. seems like a normal we can and it's a really strange meeting that sense. okay. i appreciate your time at david rainbow . thank you so much. profess a public sector university in valencia. thank you. thank you. now, a federal jury in the us states of kentucky has convicted a full met police detective over the killing of brianna taylor. back in 2020 brett hang. consent was found guilty of using excessive force during a police raid which led to the death of a 26 year old black woman. the jury deliberated for moving 20 hours of a 3 days the conviction carries a maximum sentence of life in prison. we are on a tight as death along with the kenning of george floyd in minneapolis treated nationwide black life matches protest in 2020
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the full bolivian president. even morales is asking for international health to set up talks with a government of new weeks out to the very best morales suppose is doomed. an army barracks on friday, taking a group of soldiers hostage demonstrations have been looking thousands of birds in the city of culture by the name of the 3 weeks to prevent the arrest of morales on rate giantess visa is the allegations are politically, most invasive. police are fond take us and protested, and the rest of the dozens of people morales has announced he's starting a hunger strike until the governor agrees to meet with him. so subbing to better, but obviously to make dialogue possible installed. so hunger strike can telecom and create to dialogue tables 1st, to discuss economic issues. second, to discuss the political issues on sally,
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detained jail and process lead as well. it's one that has phone and a new president following a show election result, which so as ruling policy ousted from power off to 58 years. the all position umbrella for democratic change policy, one of the general election basing. the votes while i'm at democratic policy, through my bo, succeeds president, requested massage, see who was seeking a 2nd time in office. look around on progressive policies, including a promise to double the minimum wage. so head on the al jazeera, the united nations biodiversity conference overruns as negotiate to struggle to agree on funding the northwest frontier province. at the time when british colonial rules purchase over an entire closet appears to leisure, much of fun needs
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a peaceful local movements and the wider struggle for indian independence, which is 0 world. so the remarkable story of a man who changed the lives of millions to non violent protests. peebles hutto for gotcha han, defined an empire without a 0 shilling the doc chapter in the cause of the war. they just took our id cards, mailed them. they asked him about his name, the killed, the prison, the scene of unspeakable horrors. so i saw a pile of bodies. we had a lot of questions about how these men come to be dead. echo as of the do, bravo, i must have shut. those are coming soon on that because the, you know, the,
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[000:00:00;00] the back window as president daniel know bow a has announced power counts will be reduced to 8 hours a day. the south american nation has been hit hawes by the west round in 60 years. the dry conditions, i'm taking a major toll on the countries hydro electric power production which supplies nearly 3 courses. if it's an extra c, c, and even reports it to durance or angry and with good reason. 2 months of power cuts of up to 14 hours a day, at any time of day or night, they say has made their lives unbearable with the stuff inside. like make it out. many people are thinking of migrating, but for those of us who con,
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only option is to take the streets and fight for solution. because this isn't told her pool. we weren't stand for these demonstrators. blaine, their president, daniel, a little boy whose popularity has plummeted. they've burned live sized cardboard cut outs of his image that were initially distributed to supporters when he 1st took office a year ago. the power cut to begin last november and had intensified because of an unprecedented drought. ecuador relies almost exclusively on hydro, electric energy. soldiers have been sent to increase security as his power plants. a successive governments have failed to repair the plants or find alternative sources of power, forcing those who can to buy generators. but like most people shop, although she meant it, i can't afford one. send me another list for the both my produce his boiled because
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i can't keep it refrigerated and we have to close early because without pallet dock and we're afraid of being robbed. a customer asks if she has any candles which are now as scarce as electricity is the near your space used to be full of candles. but now there are none, and will ecuador, and struggle to make, do the president says he's doing all he can. and so that we can begin, and he, i don't know, i'd have been investing in renewable energy. we have invested in more than $700000000.00 and generators. today we've been talking to the french government about the possibility of nuclear energy alternatives. but this will resolve the immediate problem. the government says power cuts will now be reduced to 8 hours a day. but it's an offer. it's had to back track on several times already. and that's because the only short term solution is rain. and that's something no one can promise to see and human out to 0. environmental is say that
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it's crucial that representatives that the united nations biodiversity conference reach an agreement on funding. on the final day of the 2 weeks summit, the comp 16 meeting is being held in the city of county in columbia. again, trying to work out how to raise enough money to hold of us the loss of because systems hoping to meet the setting by says he talking adopted in 2022 to protect at least 30 percent of land and marine areas of the year 2030 so far progress has been limited with negotiations stuck on how to fund it. we have to change your call and me. we have to change the whole system of, of, of, of accessing natural resources. we can not over extract, we have to stop extractive vision. we have to not only have a new economy viewing, but a new economy where different budgets, impatient of the indigenous people or other people that have all the views of how
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the economy should be. we have to that management, recognize indigenous territories and protect other territories. so this is a big job to be done. we a lot of with power to change. we're in time if we have enough. we have power. how does under run patch a has moved from comp 16 in kylie this difficult negotiations are expected to continue until the early hours of saturday here in columbus 3rd city, kylie, at the end of 2 weeks of this very important the united nations convention on bio diversity a number of agreements have been reached throughout these 2 weeks, but the core of the issue, how to file from the many action planes that works at the site in a frame bar can agree the font 2 years ago by the countries are still being ironed out. and actually at this point that there are only $400000000.00 that have been a pledge, the us for biodiversity when billions of dollars are needed,
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between now and 2000 attorneys. so this is a quick, over here. we'll continue to be negotiated in the next few hours. we don't know how long we really urge potties coming together. find the solutions because to deliver a plumbing on the part of montreal power, there's global batteries. we work with only 5 years left. the crisis out there, but to talk of teaching, we need action. we need action now. but despite these difficulties, there have been a number of important announcements, especially when it comes to the protection of the ocean of the great the marine systems and also regional new approach in the fence of the amazon forest. and on the recognition of the role of indigenous communities in the protection of the biodiversity. however, what was expected to be an important new body for indigenous communities to
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participate in the decision making. if fail in the balance, the agreement has not being rich there. however, the expectation is that by the end of these negotiations, there will be a number of new agreements and hopefully ways to unlock new funds to address this critical issues that, that keeps the worst sitting and put the risk of the well being of the entire world . i listened that i'm get the address, the colleague a video has been held for the victims of a roof collapse of the entrance to a train station in northern serbia. these 14 people have been killed and more often buried on the russell in the city of know, besides, the train station has been renovated twice. and recently as railway officials say that the concrete roof wasn't touched during that building. but now the philippines is hoping to offer a unique on the walls experience of a tourist at school, on fire,
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diving because it is plunged into the shallow waters at night to take sides of glowing plankton. the government is banking on this innovation and a growing global trend of experiential travel to boost, just sliding to him tourism industry. on the level ports, it was quiet and almost pitch black. when we got into a boat hosting a team of stivers, we were told they were already underwater preparing for an underwater photo competition. as the crew setup small lights to attract the subjects, tiny sea creatures. when the driver surfaced, they described as a real experience. think of the nice guy and then it's, it's that overwhelming. and then you'll see if you're lucky, what was that like i, there was like the orange feature of the blue creatures. like, what is fortunately, we can visualize what they are,
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things to these photos and the filipino pioneer technique of on fire diving. it's made them possible. it's one the government things can make the country the world's premier diving destination. the beauty of bonfire diving is how it's possible even for open water divers with just level to training. so officials here say it makes sense to offer it to the tourist right now we're about 200 meters from the shore. so we didn't have to travel far. that's one. and the waters around here are shallow sol. participles. just have to go down to a depth of about 5 or 6 meters to take amazing photos. that's in contrast with so called blackwater. diabetes which entails sailing out to the deep ocean at night and was the only way to take these other will the style photos until 9 years ago. that's when the creator of bonfire diving round bureau discovered it could be done without the logistical for those. there any day, so a lot. well, i think the philippines, it was so hard to get the boat for even
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a diag by the to book with you in jumping to me. those those on at nights. so coming from my understanding of the science behind, attracting some cutting in black water, i tried to devise another method. but the basic principle, the corner of it is you use like mates to attract them from climbing mountains to skiing, as surface experiential travel for a tourist is booming around the world. a 2023 survey by flight wire. a $402.00 operators found that nearly 90 percent of seen demand increase. philippines is hoping to ride this wave to boost its tourism industry. one fire diving, give us a diver, a new and unique experience because you normally don't see blank. so in the, when ever you died it was driving can be quite each you're looking at official say is just one of many experiences. the country cannot find it below algebra to begin
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island southern philippines a day. that's the name of the inside of this things. i'll be back there in just a moment. for me is the the latest news, as it breaks, respect was ones that were loyal with the democrats on this time around the bo show tumbler hours on the net connect with detail coverage over the past 2 decades. more than 7000 people have been killed. any insurgency here and evans thailand, from around the world. the reason is electrons have left many, all physicians to both his face and the police, the electoral commission, and the government in fact interrogate the narrative is the u. s. has continued support for israel affecting its global standing. there's no question about it. the united states has effectively complicit the genocide challenge, the rhetoric. yes. say lisa,
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correct. but so in the international community. can we also say that dell's, the cornerstone of democracy, is having a free and open democratic pro upfront without the just after midnight on march 10th, 1945 as devastating us a rage on tokyo, unleashed firestone on a densely populated area of wooden and paper houses by sunrise, more than a 100000 people, but that 70 years later, those who survived seek recognition and compensation for the event that defines their lights only to find themselves still cost aside. witness paper sitting on a just either sears for miles is here on the go and meet tonight out is there is only mobile app. is that the,
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this is where we dissect allies from out is there is a mobile app available in your favorites apps to just set for it and typed on a new app from alpha 0 new at using. is it the, the 24 hours that is running a tax, killed thousands of palestinians across, gone to you and one sec apocalyptic conditions. the money and this is all and is there a line from to what's the coming up at least 19 people in central israel uh, engine by work its fine from 11 on well,
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