tv The Day Deutsche Welle October 25, 2019 2:02am-2:30am CEST
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reported a profit for a profit decrease a lot to digest there thank you very much for the perspective from wall street. and staying on earnings twitter shares fell almost 20 percent on thursday after the company posted disappointing quarterly results revenue came in at $824000000.00 far less than what analysts had expected and the social network blamed the mr earnings on a bug discovered in the 3rd quarter the technical issue prevented twitter from accurately targeting advertisements and used its ability to help marketers measure their effectiveness of their campaigns on the platform critical revenue from advertising dropped as a result. and now time for some other business stories that we're following for you cuba's state airline is canceling routes to 7 international destinations it blames trump administration sanctions on companies that lease planes to the national carrier its routes to mexico and guyana where especially important for
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cubans applying for visas to the u.s. . as oil giant exxon mobil tries to defend itself in a new york court a massachusetts judge gave the green light for another lawsuit it also alleges exxon mobil concealed from investors and consumers its knowledge of the role fossil fuels play in climate change exxon had sought to delay the massachusetts ruling until after the new york trial. and a major trial has begun in munich against a truck making cartel m a n d a f volvo renault and even are accused of colluding for years to fix prices the european commission has already find them a total of $4000000000.00 euros but now truck operators want compensation to thousands of freight for workers are demanding $867000000.00 euros. as argentina heads to the polls this sunday many are looking to the future with
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skepticism primaries in august indicated the incumbent business friendly president now this year markey could soon be facing defeat at the hands of his opponent a bit of an on this and that could mean trouble for the country's already shaky economy. has to raises prices again and last week a loaf of bread cost $65.00 pesos that is grocery store in buenos aires now he's charging 80 he doesn't want to but says prices for utilities are going up to. i have to charge more to protect myself from inflation otherwise i won't make any profit at all and. we end up passing it all on to our customers. and. this year inflation has driven up prices by around 55 percent in argentina and employment is also rising and the economic outlook is bleak welfare organizations have sounded the alarm that led the government to announce
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a food crisis and begin granting more assistance to those most in need i mean. there is so many soup kitchens here and children are being fed at home and there's no work. monica secure and her fellow protesters blame the president. took over from the left wing populist questionnaire back in 2015 when things already looked dire for argentina's economy merkley promise to cut inflation and banish poverty both pledges have proven pipe dreams. will leave behind 40 percent poverty and an inflation rate twice what he inherited. industry and trade consumptions been falling for 15 months. what is growing is the need for social welfare centers a bowl of stool like this is oh many of these people will eat today the soup kitchen in one of the city's poor districts provides food to around 200 of them every day and more come all the time. it's terrible when people have to ask for
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food. it feels demeaning. analysts say national debt has risen dramatically under mclean he borrowed a record sum from the international monetary fund $57000000000.00 and as the peso falls in value it's growing more and more difficult to repay. his loss could be her again in the late october elections former president wants to return to the political stage as vice president and a center left coalition store owner or day says things can't get any worse than they are now to see what they mean though both have hope and faith in people with good ideas but it will be tough to get out of this crisis with that with this idea and that will be the task facing whoever does become argentina's next president.
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and before we go a little health bulletins south korea's biggest convenience store chain has stopped selling flavored liquid east cigarettes denouncement comes after the country's health minister said that some recent cases of lung damage in the country may be linked to the products the g s 25 chain says it might extend the suspension to all liquid baby products depending on the results of that investigation recent health problems suffered by e. cigarettes users in the west were mostly caused by illegal black market but it's. and that's all for this edition of v.w. business thank you very much for watching we'll see you next time or whenever you want on our web site that's the dot com slash business bigger.
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tourists come to the next generation to teach actually. using all channels available in school people tend to show and most determined to build something here for the next generation the idea is the environment series of global 3000 on t.w. and online. you may write to me down in history but you know that's a twisted. you made of me in the very dirt but still not down. to demand to see my broken. shoulders falling down to me in the back and so. this is an issue you. think. i'm from a past. a blank ocean. in
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. greetings from berlin and welcome to our news from the world of arts and culture i'm karen health and here's what's coming up on today's show. it's national library day here in germany and we look at the way at the ways libraries around europe are evolving into places of knowledge and exchange and community as well as good old analog books. and violin virtuoso genuine reason
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burst onto the scene in 1970 and has managed to stay true to herself despite the demands of life on tour. but we start off in istanbul with the 16th edition of the city's by o'neill which features more than $220.00 works by $56.00 artists a turkey has one of the oldest and proudest artistic traditions in the world and yet today with scores of journalists and intellectuals in prisons as a result of government crackdowns on freedom of expression the country can be a hostile place for contemporary art all the more kudos then for a show that continues to find ways to push the envelope. of the. continent echoing current concerns it's about plastic climate catastrophe and visions of the future. infused with the
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paintings of spaniards and 1960 s. depicts a man trapped in a surveillance state under the. franco power dials to remain in turkey may not be entirely coincidental i work here exactly as i would have been working in your building or paris i didn't care about any possible censorship. so just how free is the scene in istanbul and turkey when you auto museum is privately financed and organized it has cleverly retreated into various individual exhibitions. our time germany and the critical works of the exiled i share. the central piece by hala tang of the house of turkey behind barbed wire for.
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me really hope that. in your functioning. there just was. seen. one of the stumbles the most courageous artists we have to take the ferry and the whole strong carriage here in the garden of an abandoned villa contribution to the by any old a sound installation a poem exploring the exploitation of nature. to weather binds a fruit tree increases its shield in the short term but squeezes the sun and kills it so it's a metaphor for many things. i do what i want to do but. the pressure is immense for everywhere in every corner in daily life social life when i'm active on twitter.
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because of my twits something can happen to me it happens to a lot of people with no reason like just like putting on one sentence your idea just as a citizen and people are punished for it put in prison they said it can happen you know i never know but i'm that's the way i decided i want to live i'm not gonna. leave the country that's my decision. the government has banned around $200.00 journalists dismissed over $6000.00 university workers and arrested about half a. 1000000 people including many who work in the sector. following recent setbacks for one and his passing is the hope for a move towards democracy. i will see what happens and i will do my
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best to. make sure my position stays the same and i don't give up. until november 10th. which brings us to national library day here in germany and that was our chew to look at how in the age of tablet screens and hyper digitalisation libraries are having to up their game to stay in vogue which is why many of them are extrapolating from their original reason for being i.e. the books and offering education entertainment and a living room atmosphere for public exchange. this vast locomotive maintenance haul from the 1930 s. has been converted into a library the lock is located in tears bog in the netherlands about 100 kilometers south of amsterdam here industrial charm meets urban flair in
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a lively environment you won't find any dusty bookshelves is this a successful concept for the future visitors to la cause seem to think so. such a great atmosphere and so much more. yeah lending books it's him it's a meeting place it's a place where you can go for work bringing your laptop a little juice almost any place you want i like the heights it's everybody who can come together and there and you see everybody around it's a nice place to be a kind of a garden of the city it. was the brainchild of architect. one of her chief aims is to promote community. between visitors. also has to do with the openness and. the physics or come meet new ideas new people meet new visions meet new new knowledge. the playing with openness
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and accessibility. that's a huge part of the architectural concepts. this is will find different labs where they can learn new things and then apply their knowledge directly to. the so called g.g. lab for example is equipped with a 3 d. printer. and children and youngsters can experiment with film. and you can even put on a headset and delve into unknown worlds. you want people to think about what can we do to. make this world a better place maybe it's a big big deal but we think it's important that as a library you try to connect to the people you try to connect people to each other communities so together we can face all the problems we are looking at these days. stuck cards city library and southern germany is also experimenting with open
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structures and communicative exchange. in addition to the actual library korean architect has introduced to sound studio a roof terrace and a cafe. offering numerous events workshops and concerts the library forms a new cultural focal point in the center of the city. the escudo central cultural center in bilbao spain is also based on the principle of openness its library is the work of french star designer philip stark. in one part of the building you can see people see.
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