tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle September 16, 2018 11:00am-11:16am CEST
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it will be the same as in germany you have to get used to the local conditions and you have to be familiar with them i would recommend it to anyone who intends to invest here to do so but only with the appropriate advice the speed at which economic development in vietnam is progressing is just right for the very young population there everywhere people are building and modernizing and many are looking for prosperity. jose manuel abed is back in spain and he doesn't care what kind of work he gets the main thing is that it's in his hometown in southern spain his job as a waiter is only temporary at the end of the holiday season he could be unemployed again. i just came back from germany in october and i could get unemployment benefits and sit at home calmly but i think it's important to take advantage of opportunities it's always good to have a job nearer home so you can afford the long winter we have in cheap yana it's difficult to find jobs here. jose lost his job as
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a salesman when the financial crisis hit so he packed his things said goodbye to his wife and children like thousands of other spaniards using his last two hundred fifty euros jose flew to munich but i was simply alone in a country in which i tried to overcome the obstacles and finally managed to work for almost six years at different companies that month and i worked in different sectors. but it's. when the situation in spain began to improve he decided to return the car to me experts project economic growth of two point five percent this year the unemployment rate went down from twenty seven percent in twenty thirteen to only fifteen percent this year even if many jobs are temporary like jose's. i've worked my whole life as a salesman in many sectors in many service companies i've worked in all sorts of jobs from being a salesman to a general manager. the company right now i'm working as a waiter and i don't have
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a problem with it because i think any job is respectable maybe it will help me in the future. jose has a seventeen hour working day but he can take breaks to go home and see his loved ones he says the future looks bright for him and his family and the best part is they're all back together again. and that was your business week in review. this is something tyson and i asked him to resign or didn't have anything at all they killed many civilians. coming committing my father said i was a student i wanted to build a life for myself. but suddenly life became mellish kind of.
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providing insights for global news that matters d. w. made for mines. major sportif the smarter with the d w force not. what you want when you want it up to date extraordinary in depth you decide what's on find out more. dot com smart t.v. . this is a fifteen year old girl. being gang raped. his teacher is beating a boy for talking back in class. and the rest of the class watches. and hearing toddlers been killed by his mother. breaking at last. just child sleeps in the streets because her family through her. to hear.
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that. if you. read. this one right outside writers. the times they are a change in may nineteenth sixty eight a wave crest over the planet. the way for then she began to swell early in one hundred sixty five and then receive until a few years later not in seventy five. the worlds youth rose up against the life that was being offered to the. society politics culture refuted all the world that had been recreated after world war two was moving too slowly or did they want a new society when they wanted now
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a departure as competent amid new affection and knowing this is just a most. leg . length. in a knot in sixty eight i was a student in the film school paris students of the occupy the school equipment was being taken out on the streets day and night to soup of the french recalling the events my view of that period is somewhat fragmented by some does families i didn't realize that i'd cross through the battle of waterloo unawares all the barricades on that we get a second. fifty years later and still have lots of questions between combat veterans memories and politically biased propaganda how should we
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know and the ones that turning point in history what is its legacy. this much unofficial the phenomenon was a global one. purse berlin london sao paulo tokyo and elsewhere. there were so many uprising swarming the streets of big cities and it's impossible to cite them all but i would like to understand is the tipping point so here are some images and sounds the few pieces of the puzzle of a world changing in the mix of exhilaration and violence. if there were a single string connecting all those protest movements it would have to be the immoral war the world's leading power was waging against the poverty stricken country a war that would stretch over the entire decade. the us into going to war in vietnam to protect its own capital is interests and to protect the imperialist interests of the french for example. and at the same time the united states was
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riven by its own contradictions around race that it professed to be a country that was democratic and that was going to southeast asia to defend a moderately and yet inside the united states the rights of african-americans and many other minorities were people suppress. i remember june one thousand nine hundred sixty four three civil rights activists my first hundred men and james chaney i mean found dead their bodies riddled with bullets in the small town of philadelphia mississippi. the state refused to prosecute the alleged murderer was who just klan members or the federal authorities have to intervene before they get ten yes sentences. i mean obviously the value on black lives is something that we have to constantly be fighting for but we've come a long way i think in that space i do you know.
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i think about my parents you know my parents married it was against the law for them to marry my father was why my mother's back was against the law my father was a civil rights attorney they were trippin out of town by the klan by the police constantly. i remember the question threatening to burn our house down. just because my father was working to desegregate schools to bring you know sanitation to black communities so there was a kind of. you know there was no safe space.
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my family is from alabama from the south my father's from tennessee my mother's from virginia in the south black people were. accommodating the concept of nonviolence for political purposes but not an every day life everyone knows the violence that's a potential in the races southern state every family in those communities has weapons people know they have to defend their lives at the least i'm going to come and help on the sheriff not going to come help them if the klan comes to you you're on your own.
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i was a college student at the time in new york and this notion of black culture black pride black beauty has is exploding the black power was very distinctive because it came from the mississippi civil rights struggle which was very very. courageous and the kind of activists who were engaged in that were to me and to many of my generation they were heroic because they were facing the most vicious racist state in the united states and a nonviolent struggle and he made
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a call for black power and so it was riveting it was extraordinary the whole country responded. to. pay. that's in my folder. in the mid sixty's california simplex and this dream of some movies and music. from. u.c. berkeley is one of the most prestigious universities new usa. is also where many of the protest movements of the sixty's got their start. at the end of the summer students came back from mississippi who were in mississippi students who had been
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active in the civil rights movement and are thought was that the civil rights movement was going to continue to grow and build and we came back the university administration issued a decree saying yes it was a violation of the university you walls to engage in any kind of social or political activity on the campus and the origin of that almost certainly was conservative business groups in the bay area. were telling of university we don't want the berkeley campus to become a base for mobilizing attacks on us you have to control the students they are the order of our side so that was where the free speech movement came from. it was a movement that said to establish the space of the university as one in which open discourse and critical discourse would be sheltered protected.
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accepted and affirmed. so. and that included. points of view that were critical of the administration that included points of view that were perhaps communist or socialist but there were many points of view that was very hard not just for the university administration to take the fourth or the state of california so it raised questions what's the role of state power in the state decide what's taught alex. we're a small minority of the people next radicalism for the speech advocates have brought shame on a great university campus has become a rallying point for the communists in a center for sexual misconduct the absolutes are so bad so contrary to your standards of human behavior that i couldn't possibly be so i can tell you here this platform in detail sexual misconduct was bleak and the smell of marijuana was prevalent all over the entire building it began a year ago when the so-called free speech advocates who in truth have no
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appreciation for freedom were allowed to a so presumably the symbol of law under the policeman on the campus and that was the moment when the ringleaders of them taking the scruff of the neck and thrown out of the university. ronald reagan emerged as the new leader of the republican right in california the very place where all the protests were going on became the basis of reagan's ascendancy because he ran against all of that he ran against the student protesters against the rioters in watford against those who wanted to have open housing laws that would end discrimination and in neighborhoods rankin opposed to all of that and became the leader of the new right in america. and then. when the weight of the regime.
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