tv Auf den Punkt Deutsche Welle November 27, 2020 1:00pm-1:46pm CET
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this is the w. news, live from berlin, a grim new milestone in germany. the number of corona virus infections, subprocess, 1000000, but the number of new cases also remaining high. we asked how bad the situation is now in the country. that used to be a poster child for containing and also coming up on the run ethiopians fleeing for their lives as the government orders the army to stop the final phase of an offensive in the northern region of tikrit and using chemical weapons to attack civilians in syria was among the worst crimes to take place in that conflict. now,
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human rights organization. organizations are hoping that a course in germany will deliver justice for the victims and argentina's football legend. dollars laid to rest at a private ceremony. and when cyrus tens of thousands of fans lined up to pay their final respects at argentina's presidential palace and you have our 1st welcome to the program. and we start here in germany, which has hit unfortunate milestone in the coronavirus pandemic. the country has again recorded more than 22000, new daily cases, pushing its total to beyond the 1000000 mark that's according to figures from the overcall institute for disease control. here in germany, the country largely contained the virus spread during the 1st wave in the spring,
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but it's been hit hard by the 2nd wave. a little earlier i spoke to dr over young since he's a president of the german association of critical care and emergency medicine. and i asked him what the higher numbers of covert cases mean for doctors working on the front line right now? is a very serious counts at the moment. for the last few days, he will have a new infection rates above 20000. that means one, we will have 40000 new infections if we stay at 20000 and then it will mean 10 to 14 days later, we will encounter 1400 nearly 2800 new cases, qubit 19 cases, in terms of it's all of the we have a lot of number of parents in germany and germany is on the top of the top with the count of intensive care units. at the moment we are getting in a very, very strict and intensive care units. and we hope that the slope will go down and
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will not stay steadily on this high number. and speaking of that, and we also asked people here in berlin whether they think the measures currently in place are enough to keep the virus from spreading out of control. i wish you something, the impala, the measures are good. they don't seem to be working properly because the numbers aren't really going down. but i think the measures are the right ones. i may be making myself from popular, but i think we shouldn't allow too many people together over christmas here in berlin by the virus doesn't make any exceptions for christmas of india. and i think that if we just follow these simple measures, wear masks, keep our distance, don't travel when it's not really necessary. you know, they've improved since then we'll get the situation under control.
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i think and measures should be stricter. because it's absurd, that 400 people die every day. just for moscow, i think it's good that we have these measures. the incidence rates are worrying. so i think that what we are doing goes in the right direction is ridiculous. just ask congress prime minister, viktor orban, says his country's health system is quote, under enormous pressure because of the coronavirus, the government introduced restrictions to curb the spread of the virus 2 weeks ago . but they have failed to stop the number of infections and deaths from going up or phenomenal reports. another problem in hungary is a lack of information yanno. she says, happy to be back at home. the writer has just recovered from cover to 20 at times his symptoms were so bad that he had to be hospitalized for almost 3 weeks. the
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medical staff were very helpful, but terribly overworked, even though the number of people hospitalized then was 7 times lower than it is now . i knew there was no point in calling the nurse. there are only 2 nurses for more than 40 patients here. and it wasn't the only problem. yanno shasta shows us photos he took at the hospital. this is the bad he slept on. and this is the rundown hospital home of some of the sometimes specious are even asked to bring their own self. human rights watch has documented the poor conditions from hunger in hospitals, evidence of the government's failure to invest in the health system. the group says, we need with july conciousness, the president of the hungry and chamber of doctors, not to many doctors are willing to talk about the situation. a suit get estimates there, mr. current buckle. that is part of the wider picture that we lack, specialist doctors and nurses as the us the problem. that's what we need. you can't
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just go online and buy an anesthetist from china that met them. that shadow, any honest, as you will, boost your in the 1st wave after pandemic. how we reacted quickly by closing borders, shops and schools. now the country has tightened restrictions once again, wearing masks in public is mandatory, and a curfew is in place to fight the coronavirus. the government is considering using a russian vaccine. the author, it is hearsay hungry. it's one of the better for tech to eat. you can treat against the corona virus, but critics are doubtful about the official data and decry elect of transparency, long existing problems in hungary. it covered in 1000 has now brought into sharp focus. the writer janish. haas believes it's crucial for ordinary people to know how bad the situation with the its people don't have the information. without it, it's easy to get fooled by the nonsense spread by covert deniers and refuses
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without information. you cannot make responsible decisions for them. and that's what the government has to heat the on our staff says only fix to help hungry. get the pandemic back under control. earlier this month, denmark ordered a couple of minks after a mutated form for the virus was fond of been transmitted to the animals and humans in order to protest. small farmers and the government has now apologized for acting too quickly. these pictures are of a mass grave on military land in denmark. thousands of the country's famed mink were buried here after the government declared a mass carl. now hundreds of them have begun to resurface as gases build up. as the minks decompose, the government ordered the car laughter about a dozen people were north and denmark were infected by a mutated version of corona virus. one found on minks, the cull order,
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outraged farmers, and sparked huge protests. many accuse the government of acting unlawfully and to quickly to get rid of what's seen as an undesirable industry. they decided to go after the make farmers and they did it overnight without permission, without having the law to back them up. and they have to be punished for that. the rest of us are not allowed to go through a red light. the move is already having global economic consequences. denmark is the world's largest exporter of make fur. and the culling of its mink population is being felt as far away as china. this sudden link price increase in europe has put great pressure on both production and marketing of make for clothing here. china's fur clothing industry has seen its exports, plummet sharply. feels like a roller coaster ride, nobody imagined this could happen. the price of mink fur accounts for about 80
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percent of the cost of fur clothing. the sudden increase has put a lot of pressure on us. now even more pressure is being put on the danish government with about 9000000 of denmark, 17000000 minks, already culled. some local authorities are now calling for the animals' remains to be exuberant and cremated, saying in a current location, they pose a threat to nearby water supplies. it seems the government's hasty actions could be coming back to haunt it. have a look at some of the other headlines this hour. hundreds of time pro-democracy protesters have turned up in the capital, bangkok to press demands for changes to the government constitution. and monarchy protesters dubbed the rally a rehearsal to oppose a coup. months of near daily protests, few rumors of another military takeover. thousands of farmers in northern india are marching on the capital delhi to protest new farm law as demonstrators faced
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charges from police as they broke through barricades. pharma say the reforms will come and benefit only large corporations. the government insists changes are needed to boost incomes and productivity. chaotic scenes have erupted inside taiwan's parliament over the government's decision to ease restrictions on u.s. imports. opposition lawmakers dumped buckets of awful on the before before hurling the intestines of their governing party rivals and trading functions. sun over the safety often additives in u.s. . pork products sparked protests in taipei last week and russian opposition leader alexander valliant, has addressed a virtual conference of the european parliament's foreign affairs committee. together with other activists in a volley, brief lawmakers on the situation in russia ahead of parliamentary elections next
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year. a volley was about us to berlin in august after his near fatal poisoning with a soviet era new nerve agent, french president. because said he's quote, very shocked by footage of police officers beating up a black music producer. and the victim's lawyer said he was lucky to have c.c.t.v. evidence. as a result, concerns are growing over a new proposed legislation that would restrict the filming of police on duty. the ethiopian army is reported to have blocked one of the main roads leading to sadar, preventing people fleeing the conflict from crossing the border. the view when asked on firm that the numbers of people arriving in neighboring saddam has dropped significantly since the weekend. w.'s mother is on the border and spoke to some of the refugee refugees who managed to leave. we are only 80 kilometers away from the border into the region of ticket. i where heavy fighting still continues this year
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and camp called camp once housed refugees who fled if you're to spam and in the 1980 s. . now the camp is expected to house several 1000 refugees. as the u.n. refugee agency told us many more than the original capacity of 6000 people here are desperate. they tell us water, food and shelter scares. some of them have to sleep on the ground, struggling to get enough food and medical aid. the new refugees crossing the border to sudan, worry aid groups, a representative told us, we are able to respond to a growing influx. once housed refugees who fled its european stammen in the 980 s. . now some 9000 people have saved themselves once again. but this time it's because of war. in this hospital, people wait for hours before receiving treatment like a god or she, her baby and her father. the war in their to cry, in town of matter. i was afraid because the
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bombs kept falling for 3 days. we just left without money, without clothes. it took 10 days to come here. and now we here in sudan. we've been in the scam for 3 days. we don't have any shelter. i feel me as though her father has terminal cancer since they got out he hasn't received his medication. the u.n. refugee agency is bracing for more refugees. crossing the border from ethiopia. people need everything from water, food, and shelter. so at the moment we are catering for over 9000 people and the whole me that's not enough. and it's children who are suffering the most. it's estimated that hard of the best fiji's are children. many of them need medical treatment like
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5 month old. he's been coughing and has had diarrhea since days. i can't breast feed him and here they don't have milk powder and the food the baby needs. outside the hospital we meet whose house was bombed in who made up the side of reportedly some of the heaviest fighting between its european forces and the to grain. army, he got shot in the leg. i am alone. my mom and my dad were killed by the bombing. these clothes are my only ones. i wear them for days. nobody helps me. i don't have enough water or food here. nobody takes care of me. if more refugees arrive, i am fears that the situation could get even worse. human rights activists are trying to use the courts here in germany to prosecute the perpetrators of 2
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chemical weapons attacks against civilians in syria. in 20132070, the activists want of members of syrian president bashar assad's regime to be called to account for the atrocities he denies involvement. but opponents say there is enough evidence to bring an indictment. they also say they have evidence that the syrian regime has carried out more than 200 gas attacks over the last 7 years, despite agreeing to destroy all their chemical weapons back in 2030 in human rights groups of filed a criminal complaint with germany's federal prosecutor and the hope now is that germany can deliver justice for the victims, reporters from the w. and the german news magazine. despina been given exclusive access to some of the evidence provide the screams of freedoms who died in the center in gas attack in ghouta to this day. still echo in the ears of syrian news simone.
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she wants nothing more than syrian president bashar assad and the perpetrators of the attack to be charged. she and her husband one met our witnesses of a criminal complaint filed in germany by human rights groups. they wish to remain anonymous because they fear for their family's safety. no one. so i fear for my mother and my sisters who are still living in syria and the whole because the regime is my rule and unjust and it has no mercy. if it had a conscience, it wouldn't have done these things. on august 21st, 2013, at least 4 rockets loaded with sarin gas warheads struck rebel held parts of eastern kentucky. i was more than a 1000 people were killed, many of them children. among them was eman and mohammad, eldest son, they too were exposed to serin and were unconscious for days to this day,
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the syrian regime denies any response ability for the attack. if i hope that one day i can stand before a judge and tell them what these chemical attack did to us on the everything came out that it was an arab scene that i cannot describe to you. give people more lying on the ground like being killed by bug spray. these images never leave my mind was convinced that the syrian regime was behind the attack. for years, his organization, the syrian archives, along with 2 other human rights groups, have meticulously analyzed the attack from the suspected launch sites to the rockets used, therefore, also documented undisclosed chemical weapons facilities, including west air and was hidden after 2013. when you think from your investigation that most probably 450 a
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network of different entities that are responsible for the coordination execution of these attacks. the w.'s investigative team, along with german news magazine, der spiegel was given exclusive access to parts of the criminal complaint. it includes testimonies from 50 defectors, with firsthand knowledge of the chemical weapons program, and names suspected perpetrators, such as bashar assad and his younger brother, my hair. we have one witness who described the request for the use of sarin gas comes and is communicated to the presidential powers where it is approved. we believe it is approved or ordered by the criminal complaint was filed in october with the chief federal prosecutor and council, where wall crimes unit has been investigating atrocities in syria for years.
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federal prosecutors here in germany confirm to us that a criminal complaint was fired, but they would not comment on its contents. instead, they said they would independently probe the evidence before deciding whether to open a case against individual suspects. but that can take weeks or even months. a man was traumatized by the events she suffers from depression and needs medication to make it through the day. but the investigation in germany has given her strength and hope that the people responsible for all the suffering will finally be helped to account. you're watching t w news still to come. the teenagers who changed the conversation around climate change careers are talking back and all the young activist star in a new documentary but german photographer, gemma kids. the 1st argentine over football icon, diego maradona has been buried alongside his parents at
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a private cemetery in buenos aires after maradona's death. on wednesday, the government had planned for him to lie in state for 3 days, but they ended the way scuffles broke out among more us tens of thousands turned out to pay their final respects. to the football legend. was a passionate stairwell was massive, cries gathered to cheer their hero one last time as marathoners funeral harness left the presidential palace in plan. as there is, despite concerns that corona virus infections may spike tens of thousands queued up to pay tribute to the fit both great at the palace. and we're going to feel today the football has died. i have no words for me. he's the greatest and all carry him in my heart forever. good as you and me got us on,
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but you know not we can't believe it. he's a guy who made a nation happy with a ball on the specially the poor. he made us happy in a way that politicians can't leave to go. no, no. when i said he made all of us happy, there would ever be anybody like marriage donna. i've been crying since yesterday morning to see, diego cried saying, thank god, because scuffles broke out when police moved to disperse, unruly fans trying to catch a final glimpse of maradona at his burial. here they're now emotions ran high as his casket arrives at bella, vista cemetery with a fit bowling legend was laid to rest next to his parents. the
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german women's national football team take another step towards the european championships against greece in a few hours' time. the 8 time european champions are one of 6 sides, already secured a place in the 2022. draw the visiting side need an upset against germany as they try to secure one of the 10 remaining places in the tournament, which will be hosted by england. remember, climate change, the issue we were all talking about before. covert 19 happened. well, the problem has gone away. it's just all the spotlights. a new film aims to change that the documentary now follows young climate activists fighting for their future . they're young and they're angry. they want change now was
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their passion made a huge impression on german photographer, jim known for his black and white celebrity portraits. now he's focusing his lens on today's youth. for a year he followed young climate activists in the fridays for future movement, including later tonight, this film is called now i think this was the last chance to make this film and to snuff. i don't think we have much time left for films that explain the way out of this climate catastrophe. time is running out. you could set them and it was young people who changed his perspective, the activists taking the older generations to task. smart, eloquent, strategic like german fridays for future organizer who features in the film the
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david against goldie a thing. yeah. we just think of resources that are unique and this is for us, it's young voices. it's young minds of young people who have a right to have a future. no one can take us away from them with a stronger argument to have money going to. it will only affect my generation career for really, but you can't just shout it out if you know that you're living on a planet, maybe a few more decades. and the whole future will be determined by the solo. it's insane from the sun for the gov. it's also in lists. director of inventors and singer patti smith has crossed generational voices cheering on young activists efforts. the film now documents german protesters occupying a coal mine, demonstrators from the civil disobedience movement extinction rebellion and the youth climate lawsuit against the united states government. this is about our lives
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. this is about our future. we're seeing the executive branch of the federal government for causing climate change and try living our constitutional rights. different movements with the same goal, get in the world's leaders to act. now, the teacher doesn't hide. his admiration is an elusive vision if they're all very polished in their delivery. well hurst and in the case of fridays for future, exceptionally polite fridays for future of about us name to flourish. he said, and his team were in new york when collator turned bad, addressed world leaders at the united nations general assembly after sailing across the atlantic. the bodies of all future generations are upon you. and if you choose to fail us, i say we will never give you the documentary strength lies in the hope of the young people. it features 3 or so days of emily destruction. people
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on the front lines. fuck that. will it happen? and will we do it? no idea, it's a gripping question. it's this, we're starting to see some signs that it's possible. we're getting close. does it does this that we've nothing, by this constitution? you're watching the news. here's a reminder of the top stories we're following for you. germany's tally of come from corona virus. traces of past 1000000 according to data compiled by the company's public health agency. thursday that the virus could be extended into next year. at a small ceremony, tens of thousands of fans lined up to pay their final respects tomorrow. presidential power and that's it from me on the news team for
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the finding against the coronavirus pandemic has the rate of infection been developing. measures are being taken. what does the latest research say? information and context. the coronavirus of data. the coded special monday to friday on t.w. . what's the secret behind this classic visit to south? as soon as you hear beethoven lose your mind, or the story behind the music,
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was it before the ages. british was last. beethoven's 9th symphony for the world starts to simmer down on teen w. hello, and welcome to in good shape. if someone wrongs you in a really bad mood, this can be almost always somebody totally love sick. and in the grip of that all modes or do you have an adolescent son who is flaking out and getting weird. this is puberty and it's all about hormones. so hormones have
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a bad chip messing everything up, but is the only, let's find out all monks messages, substances that console a lot of lead of all the pathway. and there are plenty of hormones. so let's focus on the tiniest sample. and what they could do for you, slip and you're on the brink of life and death. but we can often count on adrenaline. the hormone is released by the adrenal gland in response to stressful situations. it spreads rapidly through the body via the plunge stream. for a few short moments that it's just bearable superpowers. but soon after the effect wears off, other hormones have a much longer impact. so much helps to grow.
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in estrogen and testosterone influenced sexual development, as well as our physique and melatonin affect our sleep cycles. apart from the adrenal gland hormones are released from the pancreas and the kidneys, the testicles or ovaries that imus the guy right, and the gland. the pituitary gland is found at the base of the brain and is responsible for hormonal regulation. hormones are an important means of communication between mind. just think about what happens to us when we fall in love. just thinking about our beloved can give us butterflies cause us to lose our appetite or sattar pulse racing. and give us sleepless nights. hormones such as dopamine and fennel ethyl, i mean are responsible for such feelings. a solid relationship makes us calm
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and relaxed thanks to higher levels of serotonin. physical contact releases, oxytocin, which fosters a sense of trust between partners suffering, a broken heart has the opposite effect. oxytocin levels drop as just don't mean as we can actually lose heart and become a foreign chick. hormones play a central role in our lives. they help us to attain our goals and reward us with positive feelings. even if it's not always clear whether we control our hormones or if they're in charge of us, almost nearly everything in our life. if we're cheerful, if we're tired, if we're hungry, if our hair falls out already, we feel like having sex. our hormones are constantly on the move, they're going up,
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they're going down. they're going up again. not only in the cause of the day, but in the cause of a lifetime. this is especially evident in puberty when boys and girls are having difficulties coming out of bed in the morning. but for us adults, instead of getting annoyed by this, we should watch the next report. it's 8 o'clock in the morning for germany's high school this that's when the day gets started. who are at least it used to be was costa is still at home. yes, i don't go in until a bit later when i'm more awake, then i can actually take part. if i went in for 1st period, i'd be useless. not the new approach at this school, allowing students to work by themselves in the 1st 4 periods means he only needs to go in when he's in a fit state to learn. there's a teacher to help and to supervise. but the students decide the schedule themselves
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. and can stay home for the 1st few hours if they want to be 5 in a pack is a chronic biologist and believes the system can be a huge help to teenagers of us begin now with we know that from puberty, young people start going to bed and waking up later until they're 20 or 22, when they sleep pattern changes again. in the course of our lifetime, we go back to a pattern of going to bed and waking up early or full of young people usually have to get up early, even though they're going to bed late and state. and so they end up with a seriously deficiency. and when they're in math class at school, it's basically their biological night time. and the teenage cicada rhythm means that even if they try getting to bed earlier, they can't fall asleep. that body clock keeps them up. when the alarm goes off in
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the morning, it interrupts their rapid eye movement sleep. the rem phase plays an important role in processing information and emotions. we know that sleep deprivation is closely linked to alcohol dependency extreme fatigue and concentration difficulties . it's also a factor in high risk behavior. teenagers are more vulnerable to traffic accidents . they have more difficulty learning and their depression rates are high and their school grades sufferer. but kasten has avoided this fate. his high school doesn't want teenagers, acadia rhythms to impede that performance and has taken the pioneering step of only scheduling tests and exams later in the day. and for a number of studies have shown that people who are late chrono types,
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in other words, people whose internal clock tells them to go to bed late. i had a disadvantage in school and especially when it comes to exams, it makes a difference. what time the exams take place and if the exams are early, it's bad for late chrono types, but not teenage bodies release hormones that affect that biological clocks. pushing them to stay up. all my work best if i go to sleep around 100 half past 10 and then don't go to school until 2nd period and something makes the whole day much easier. and that's what matters. it's about how the day starts. it's really great that we decide for ourselves when we start. it puts you in a better mood. it's been for an unfinished, it's like i'm off. my grades have really improved. got him. i was actually surprised by how much of a difference it makes. just as i don't want to eat,
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definitely prefer this system best of a student's ability to absorb information and concentrate depends on the time of day if they want teenagers to learn officially, schools need to factor in this acadian rhythms. you know, we're not talking about elementary school children or 10 or 11 year olds. this is a problem affecting teenagers. they should only have to go to school later in the day. scientists have been saying that for decades, but so far, few schools here in germany have taken note of, is there such a thing as hormonal, self-determination, this is the topic of onyx talk. and i will send our medical report out to frank, a paragon of how medical peter. here my questions are meeting dr. frank, our partner on the new scientist and wrote a book about hello,
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how are you feeling fine? i mean, that's fine. if anyone can feel these days, but it's a beautiful day and that humor to surgery or your hormones, well, they're certainly influential. when you look at the sun, for example, that will raise my serotonin levels, which will help me, for example, to suppress the because sort of tone is really good at suppression. so of course, halmos play an important role in how we feel. for instance, i like to think about them like music problems, have a very bad reputation for trouble america bricks and with an op make our life difficult for us. are you right when things no it. luckily, not the idea that halmos somehow like a disturbance in alice system comes from this very good idea that we are these rational beings who make rational decisions all the time. and i'll wrestle the since our great decisions. even though,
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i mean have you seen people also of other systems aren't that great? even the most rational ones. we can lie to ourselves. we can over excedrin chances we can get the wrong idea or just not think far enough. so basically, already our idea of all brain is slightly overrated. let's talk about the rich or is the bar to be reduced? luckily, not in the end. you can say that they are in the sense that the homeless on the sets of the but there are not enough to make the decision. so basically they will push you in a certain direction. for example, if you think about sex, they will make you feel last or maybe feel your impulses strong and weak of it. the path that tells you not to dance too much or to take back and keep back. but
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in the end, if you act on your impulses, that's your own decision. that's your brain making these decisions. and so we can't hide behind our homes. same as the tip of the iceberg can hide off the rest of the iceberg. we all want because all part of us there are thousands of forms, but 2 of them everybody knows a surgeon and toaster store and friends with the woman 1st are thrown from a suit, sir? no, of course not. and it's shocking, frankly, how often we still fine, let him you tube videos telling man how to suppress a estrogen help the blue said to stop stone and so on and so on. so 1st of all sex hormones on this binary, as we think, and neither sex is, frankly, basically testosterone and estrogen asked was tributed across all that and doesn't sex us. we can't even say that if we meet a woman, she necessarily has
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a high estrogen levels on everest. yes. but the same goes for testosterone levels. these change was all lifestyle and they change also from the morning to the evening . so there is not this one being influenced by the stall stall and another one by estrogen. another interesting homeowners looks at the cutter to get home. it is so relieved you have circular and recorder someone and it makes a speech for it and cozy. on the other hand, it makes you how does it fit together? yeah, that's another of these examples where we have an idea of how the world should feel . and that we should i go stuff, the homeowner into that very narrow idea. our idea of love, the spot. ok, this must be cuddly and romantic at the same time. even though, if you look at love on the homeowner level, it's very different thing that these very exciting times that are more revolt
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actually are on stress hormones and also serotonin. and there is this cult of the pot to which oxytocin also belongs to the pod, where we feel restful without patna. and while we enjoy being together, i'm just letting go of regenerating. but as everyone knows who, for example has a dog. when dogs have puppies, you don't go so close by because you're going to get bitten probably. and that's an important part of love that we're protecting the ones we love. so i'm not sure why we're so surprised that a homo that's involved in love would also be involved sometimes in aggression and sensitivity to threats. you have wrote a very interesting book about told once about the mysterious miracles, the substances in our brain, the blot. why would you do that? what should read know about our home it's i think the most important take home message for the book was for me to be less worried of all the things that our homes do with us. and think more of all the things that we do with our day we
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schedule was all fills was all the stuff we're doing it never really thinking about the question shouldn't be, how do we eliminate these home will affect how do we eliminate all the question? should be, where is this point? when does it harm us and how do we find this point? and then we can also help people or help ourselves well reach trip. but for that, we really need to drop the idea that homeowners in general, scientists like your thank you for this interesting thing. as long as everything is working properly with our hormones on balance, we don't even notice them. but if they fall out of balance, life can be a living, hell, exhaustion, mood swings, headaches, hot flashes, concentration and sleep disorders, weight gain or weight loss. so watch out. there can always be a dysfunctional home system behind those symptoms. ever seen, you feel like you're missing something part of what it means to be a woman?
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for a long time, kate wondered what was wrong with her period only came every 3 to 6 months. and you do worry and your thoughts can spiral when you wonder why you haven't had your period for so long. at the age of 21, she went to see her gynecologist. she did an ultrasound and noticed that there were changes in my ovary and she then made a diagnosis based on that kate was diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome associated with an excessive level of male hormones. the doctors didn't break the news with much sensitivity. and just said this means you probably won't be able to have children or it will be really hard to conceive for such a young one.
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