Skip to main content

tv   [untitled]    February 23, 2025 1:30am-2:00am AST

1:30 am
domestic, i'm following policies would be significant interest in a city and former east germany. the a of the says that once less interfere with, from the u. v. you wants to dictate the country. so there are conflicts and we have no common foreign policy that we want to change, that is with its anti immigration campaign, d a s d has managed to take away photos from mainstream part is like the social democrats, one's a good, our money just disappears. my pension is so small after a long walk in life, it's sad that total money is being spent for all this fish. i don't like them and they all sound good, but what they really want, and i just say it is very similar to what happened in 1933. they have published a message, but it is the same thing. with a quarter of nearly 60000000, illegible photo still on the side is campaign and continues until the following stations open. whoever wins the election would have to lead a divided country during that term, it in time for europe. stuff,
1:31 am
ice and al jazeera, dressed and divided in the says the head of the roman catholic church. both frances, in a critical condition after suffering a long spastic of a spit of trade crisis, 1882, a pontiff is undergoing a blood transfusion due to a low site that's kind of what the process is being treated for pneumonia in both loans. my uncle politi is a boat biographer of the pope, and he says the pontiff, some medical condition, has drawn messages of support from religious leaders across the globe. in this moment, the situation is very alarming. but what is interesting is that the, the situation is followed the way the preoccupation not only by casserly expect on . so people of different and christian confessions and of different religions. he's lamb julie sure, the asian relations are following the situation because the pope has been the all these years. a very important personality on their word stage. now we have to
1:32 am
wait the next 24 hours to understand the, the situation where our sense already is going better. but if they pope a survives these deep crises, of course is a problem. we'd be willing to continue to be the acting pope. or we decide to resign. this will be the issue. and the question mark in the following amounts. and i'm going to be back in about half an hour with more knowledge helps stories including israel, delaying the release of $620.00 palestinian prisoners and detainees. as part of the 7th exchange of the cities far, they'll stay with us on august. the shake model was full translation and international understanding is inviting
1:33 am
nominations for its 11th edition, starting january the fast and ending march the 31st 2025. for more information, please visit the awards official website at w w w dot h t, a dot q a the supreme court as long hill that little boy cards or form of expression protected by the 1st amendment.
1:34 am
my name is margaret hester from arkansas, and i'm a state senator and the majority leader here in arkansas. so 1st of all, i'm very open about my face and i was very open about that in my campaign. and i hope that my face effects everything that i do hope it affects the way that i'm speaking to you. i hope that affects the way that have treat all my colleagues. and i certainly hope that text, every vote that i take majority later set or bart has servers recognize as positive anti boycott bill because, you know, i think it's just the right thing to do. jewish people are gods chosen people and i
1:35 am
feel like an obligation to do anything within my control or power to support them or protect the members of that'll says what this does. this is an act driven public and these from contracting with and investing in companies the boycott. israel. it's good pro israel bill by a sen. hester, appreciate again that the state is not protected from the church, but the church is protected from the state. i would say if there's 35 members of the arkansas center, i would say 35 members would say that they are believers in biology, scratch. preston for the house is passive. just send a bill. 513, prepare the machine. mr. clerk, i would say probably have would identifies evangelicals. they understand how important is to support his real 69 days, 3 days,
1:36 am
0 present. the bill is past the the . so this is where a lot of the providers are coming from. now. our family has been here for generations. my grandfather, he was
1:37 am
a farmer. all my uncles for farmers, as you know were scotch irish. i mean we're just white trash farmers. i'd be of assistance, but that has square ricoh from the left college. the 1974 to started magazine called the arkansas times more than the
1:38 am
door a bunch of 20, some things before we were the 1st people to have ever discovered arkansas. we were incredibly excited about the music, the history of the mythology, the beauty we wanted to discover arkansas or when to tell others about it. we want to write about it. this was a great story, the arkansas written next. what was it love or fight, or country boy was a sort of a love letter to read next the, the times is free. so we can be here without advertising and the state governments, a big source of our income, the schools, the colleges, the health center is the hospitals. all those agencies advertise because you sign a contract with the state to provide them advertising and they provide your money. now in order to get our money, we have to pledge not to boycott is real. i mean, when we got our 1st notice,
1:39 am
i didn't think anyone waiting for the or can we were able to to ignore it for a long time. and finally, there was this purchasing guy with one of the colleges and he was just not going to let go. they said, i'm going to keep you from getting business from us until you sign this as required by the law. the, you know, when we 1st read about this law, we would, we did a story on it. so, looks this and people, most people i talked to the go. what does that have to do with the price of to you in china? i mean, you know, you have to take a, you know, it's just, it has no relevance or bearing on arkansas have the right, the boy con, anyone i want to, and the state has no business getting involved in that period. so there is
1:40 am
so we said no the chair calls here. i'm always to state your name who you are present in a position on the bill. my name is virginia marie. i'm. i'm presenting myself and i'm against this bill happening today. a muslim group plans to issue a legal challenge to a texas law and it's all about israel. it was actually the 1st bill of the 85th legislature, governor gray guided sign into law, which says, israel is one of the texas largest reading partners to daycare or the council on american islamic relations. will announce
1:41 am
a major 1st amendment legal challenge to the law. what you're really hoping to stay will do is completely repeal and reveal the antibiotic statute repeal anything that has to violate my, my right to freedom of speech, my right to boycott and to choose a political view of my own palestinian american teacher in austin, texas has filed a federal lawsuit for losing her job as a speech pathologist, after refusing to sign a pro israel old and i sent an email to my son's coordinator. i'm telling her, listen, i cannot sign this is against my principals against my constitutional rights and, and it's also, i guess, my moral and ethical values considering that i am a palestinian american and i have family to actually live in occupied territories or faxed to me personally as well, so it affects me in both ways as american citizens and as of how soon american to the
1:42 am
me one and have us not to have a snack 1st. she likes the pantry. blackbar. huh. okay. i have a lot of family members are still reside in the occupied territory. news . i know what i've seen 1st and justice and equality that goes on there. they close off me roads only permitting its ways to drive on those roads. basically, the whole idea is to make it as hard as possible for them to function and to have a livelihood anyhow, school closures resting young children the
1:43 am
and i could not, you know, stay quiet and just go on with my life. well, i know that this law is going to make it ok to continue this kind of oppression against the palestinians. the in recent years about 2 dozen states, republican and democrat has passed laws or executive orders to stymie the media movement, arizona as long sale through the legislature with broad support that put, make sure it all in a difficult situation. his parents lived in the west bank during the seventy's and
1:44 am
ever since college he's advocated for palestinian rights. short all never expected . his views on the is really palestinian conflict to come up in his day job. after all, he gave his legal advice to inmates in arizona. the was just opening my annual contract from the state of arizona. and i was rather shocked to see this the i had promised my son ever since his the bar mitzvah many years ago. his mom is jewish, so i am not that's a bad promised him, a trip to the middle east. and so as low as some 12 years later, we finally went and we had an incredible trip there. i saw
1:45 am
a lot of things that were very disturbing that we saw in terms of civil rights, civil liberties discrimination my mom's parents are definitely more on the conservative side of things. they would absolutely call themselves sinus. so it was interesting being exposed to that also understand easily having all of this exposure to the injustices that are happening in israel and palestine. the thing after that trip for him, it was really clear that he wants to boycott any companies that are contributing to the yes, this is happening in the west bank. i am boycotting hewlett packard because they are involved in the bio metrics for the checkpoints. every palestinian has an id card that they must have and they delay palestinians for many, many hours at a time. and so that's part and parcel of the occupation
1:46 am
the after my a trip to the west bank and seeing what i've seen. i was incensed enough that i said i couldn't sign this and i had to file suit i was committed to continuing on providing the services but not getting paid a substantial chunk of change for me. but that was i was just unwilling to sign that certification and i didn't want to leave the jail in the lurch either. so i wanted to provide the services, the decision to the state. that was not one that he made lightly. we definitely worried about people smearing his reputation, calling him in this and that he was very fearful that he was this. it took us by the head,
1:47 am
the extremely proud of him and making the choice. they did the i 1st during the sale you as an intern at the so you southern california believe that within the summer of 2009 it was after my 1st year of law school. it was definitely something i was seeking out since high school. i had been kind of obsessed with the sale you to be honest. so this was at the beginning of the rack war. and i remember that there was this kind of rush to consensus that we shouldn't beta rack because saddam had weapons of mass destruction. and that anybody who
1:48 am
spoke out against it was a terrorist supervisor or a communist or are fundamentally into american. and i remember that the still you campaign at that time was that the sentence patriotic. and that's something that really resonated with me. i always like to tell people that we have the best clients in this case. i think that's absolutely true. all manner of people have been forced to sign these anti for certification forms. many of them are reluctant to throw themselves into the middle of a major public controversy. but we've got a few brave individuals to step forward and say, hey, this is the right thing to do. what i'm going to do it. that's the kind of moral courage that makes me so happy to work at these all you have us. i just wanna check in briefly about the total case and where we are in the briefing as concert basically all the levels of approval and that it needs to go through and we're gonna get it out hopefully today. and what about the other cases?
1:49 am
the arkansas one, i think it's going to be filed in the next couple days. and then the texas case, i hope will get in the next week or 2 on on many fronts. yes. one of the things that we hope to do with these cases is when a couple of them very quickly on the states that passed these kinds of laws to kind of deter others from doing the same thing. if all the courts are unanimous that these laws are unconstitutional, then my guess is that these bills will just die. and i think the states, they don't want the public to really be aware of what's going on. they don't want to have an open debate about it. they recognize that when people actually understand what the state is doing here, they wouldn't be. i absolutely horrified and appalled that legislatures would be trading away. americans 1st amendment right so easily the problem where did that idea now? you know, i can't nail down exactly where it came from, but really so much just talking with my colleagues reading and then
1:50 am
a chance meeting with another legislator from another state helped me really start to try to wrap in what was important. i was at a hotel and there was an hour meeting going on. a coastal resort, protected by our guard. this is in the state capital. it's a resort hotel where lawmakers are winding dying as members of the american legislative exchange council or alec. this is a very, very important group across the country. we've been more than 1300 people here. organization represents 25 percent of all state legislators in the country. look closely at many conservative was passed by state legislatures and you're likely to find the hand of alex alex is the perfect petri dish for what ends up being a very, very destructive legislative scheme in our country. they bring together corporate leaders, evangelical leaders, and right wing legislators. they meet twice
1:51 am
a year behind closed doors. almost in very of the laws they seek to pass and move out into the world, restrict the ability of people to be able to effectively operate in their democracy . from stand your ground self defense laws, district photo id laws, which critics say make it harder for minorities and the poor to vote. the group says it's motto, bills are templates for as many as $200.00 state laws passed a year. they're thinking about creating what's called model legislation. i like bills come complete with blanks where legislators need only fill in their state name. you start out with one idea and i met test the sizes into something that c, a radically could be applicable every place in the united states. it's pretty safe to say that there wouldn't be an type boy bills popping up in different states around the country without out
1:52 am
the so we have the tribune. obviously we have k, u t, cbs and the office. number 250 the high you made it easy as one of my days, the wind round rock speech
1:53 am
pathologist, but here we filed suit against lucre bill i as the and the state of texas. she says she didn't do it for as railing or palestinian values, but for american values is our responsibility to fight, to protect and preserve free speech for children. similar to exactly that, our founding fathers having fissions this law house bill 89, was nothing but a censorship long. meant to silence texans and punish them for expressing the practical view. text and government should not be putting the interest of a foreign country over its own people. thank you. a speech pathologist and fuller real says the state is trying to silence her right to free speech. when this story, the here story started getting a lot of attention, the governor of texas simply tweeted out, texas stands with israel period. any anti israel policy?
1:54 am
there's an anti texas part of the the as far as i knew, i mentally speed. so i missed the call just as the service and the founding austin and then losing an important service that's not available. otherwise
1:55 am
i feel like i am putting down my community the there's no boycotted activism at arkansas. probably this law is about the only thing people the way people go about course we're just, we're not boycotting anyone. we're just saying you have no right to tell us what our speech should be. and if we, what if we want to boycott we can and oh, it's none of your business it's, it's a, it's a political act. and it's that one that i choose to take. i just object to government, say we got a big a whole lot of money over here, but we're not, it will give it to you. will that we'll advertise with you. but here's,
1:56 am
here's some, here's some conditions that you need to meet 1st, such as, here's the political position you need to take regarding foreign policy for god's sake and we're in arkansas. well, as i think alan's case demonstrates, you don't have to be participating in a board kind of israel to find these. and t boycott was fundamentally on american. alan, i hate to ask you this, but let's say that the paper uh action is unsuccessful in cory. do you plan on signing that pledge or what does that mean for the future of your newspaper? should you lose? i haven't gone there yet to, but that that's something that will be a very, very difficult uh, very, very difficult decision for me. so we close this wednesday, march issued for about and 51000 and we need to get to 65 is what we got. hang it out there. started the time. so $200.00. so i wanted to go through the advertise last year. we dodge so many bullets are
1:57 am
less 45 years and and the newspaper businesses got tougher and tougher. the accurate clinic room for about 35 people here to people who has families and mortgages the year for that state advertising. we can be on the the, when we launched the lawsuit, i was very confident mean, any country that bases its, found the mythology around the boston tea party and the boy todd of tea. you would
1:58 am
think that today you, 100 years later, we would still see boy cods as a political, a former political speech and therefore protected by the 1st amendment. today i'm going to sign an executive order that says if you boy tide against israel, knew your whole board tied you, we in america must stand strong with israel through stick. and one of the highest duties of elected legislators is to defend our constitution. but here they are just giving away for our 1st amendment rights to a foreign country. the latest news, the recommendations made by ab 0 need is one now has to be implemented. the that takes along with the concept in easton, biase will drag on with detailed coverage. there's a sense of urgency in us. a realization of the customer can no longer rely on the
1:59 am
united states rates. security from the hoss of the story. many german industries are struggling to remain competitive with millions of people unemployed and millions more worrying about the futures. nature of mine made catastrophes. any rate was by severe weather events or resulting in other words, think devastation. the variety of human factors means their intensity and impact is purely natural. and the politics behind normalizing climate changes was affect if i was supposed to be seen as normal. but you said something that should have to happen to any one. is it really a natural disaster? oh, hell. the permits on al jazeera, the,
2:00 am
there's no limit to how far a dream contains sta in your own adventure, now counter, and wayne the an anxious wait for families. israel delays the release of $600.00 and printing kind of thing and presents the mass says it's a flagrant breach of a ceasefire agreement. the i'm carry johnston. this is i'll just hear a lot from the also in the program and emotional homecoming and as well.

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on