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tv   ZDF Bauhaus  Deutsche Welle  December 13, 2020 6:00am-7:01am CET

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i like. playing. place. to. play. this is do w. news live from berlin the us hits 16000000 coronavirus cases as the country gets it to roll out because at 19 vaccine a massive logistical operation is underway after regulators give the green light to the drug will this be a turning point in the fight against a disease that's killed nearly 300000 americans we'll hear from an emergency doctor in just a moment also coming up with covert 19 cases fucking top level crisis talks are being held in germany on sunday
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a tough long down could be encouraged within days. and a scandinavian comedy featuring teachers who take today drinking sweets to european film awards to get the latest from our film and culture correspondent. thank you for joining me the united states is about to begin an extraordinary vaccination rollout as it struggles with skyrocketing cases of covert 19 the country has now reported 16000000 infections the increase comes as millions of doses of the covert 19 vaccine is it to be distributed across the country on monday the buy on take 5 is a jab receive the green light from regulators on friday the u.s. leads the world in confirmed cases and deaths which stand at nearly $300000.00.
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the name of the plan says a toll operation works speed planes trains and automobiles are all set to carry the new vaccine to over 600 locations across the u.s. and with a military precision i expect the 1st shipments to arrive monday morning extensive coordination. ensure that this a curse we work with pfizer mckesson u.p.s. . federal and local law enforcement agencies to ensure safety and security of the vaccine. imported touches from europe are bolstering home produced doses which are ruling off the production line at pfizer's facility in michigan. further south new yorkers have seen their city suffer as the nationwide death toll spirals in the world worst hit country. yet the reaction here to the impending rule has been mixed
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it's a really positive thing as we've obviously been waiting for some time t. get a vaccine and now that they're finally gotten it it means they can die they can get back to normal high play i hope it works i know a lot of people need it. for someone such as myself i would prefer not to get it. usually 1st run of vaccines is still kind of a testing phase. but a great many in a nation weary of locked own and loss of life are hoping that operation warp speed can provide light at the end of 20 twenties long dark tunnel. let's speak now to dr always to ronnie he's an emergency medicine resident physician in san antonio texas dr dirani it's great to have you on with us today the u.s. is in an exceptionally tough position right now soaring infection numbers and deaths health care systems are at their limit what is this like for you and your
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colleagues on the front lines in emergency rooms what are you experiencing. thanks for having me yeah you essentially nailed it on the head hospitals are at capacity i.c.u. start city and hospitals are so full essentially that we aren't even able to move the patients that we admit to the i.c.u. is up to the to the rooms that they need to be and so for example i'm an emergency providers and we get sick sick patients see how patients that have symptoms from coated strokes heart attacks and whatnot and they need to be stabilized which we do and then move them up to critical care areas the hospitals are so full that they end up staying in the emergency department for extended periods of time and that is you know not good for them we take care of them while they're down there but studies of souring that they truly need that intensive kind of close monitoring up in the ice use and that's happening nationwide right now and so unless we really change how we are interacting with coded 1000 here in the united states and how we
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are going about our day to day needs trends are going to continue and we still have a long ways to go the 1st vaccine has been approved for emergency use in the united states on health care workers like you'll sylph going to be able to be vaccinated soon yes i just found out today that i have a date on next wednesday to get vaccinated so that super exciting at sight you know jaimie some good news after these long last 9 or 10 months it's you know good news also for all of society it's a big scientific achievement and you know most most of the most americans are going to get access to a vaccine that the next couple months next 6 months at least and so right now it's more important than ever that we truly focus on the basic public health measures like avoiding social gatherings are quite a mask because each infection and each life lost now is that much more painful because we are so so close and so i really you know urge all the patients that i see on a day to day basis that right now is the time to hunker down and we're going to get there we just need a few more months. i'm sure you've had to deal with patients in their families who
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might have who might have thought covert 19 wasn't real or wasn't serious is this a common perception still or is the message starting to sink in now you know it's not as bad as it was back in march and april in the summer but there are still people that don't believe it's real but then that i run into a lot is a bunch of young people who you know they think it's real but they think they're going to do fine with it and you know 1st of all that's not a guarantee we can give you her all heard of young people are getting sick from this but 2nd of all we all have older relatives and friends that can get really really sick from this and so as we head into the christmas season we really need to focus on making sure that we are staying within our circle of staying within our immediate households and not spreading those fires there's still a lot of misinformation and we need to kind of continue to do our jobs to spread that messaging and that really starts at the top at the federal leadership that comes down to local level and then you know comes down to that patient interaction
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i have when a patient visits me in convergence a department doctor always to ronnie in san antonio texas thank you very much for your time thanks for having me we'll germany is seeing an alarming surging cove of 19 deaths which are likely to lead to a strict a lockdown over the christmas holidays health officials have reported more than 300 deaths and more than 21000 infections in the last day now weeks of a partial lockdown in germany haven't been sufficient to slow the spread of covert 19 chancellor angela merkel and regional leaders juta holder mentions the talks on sunday to consider strict images of the yuletide season in germany usually a festival for coma with parties blue vine and crowded markets. but not this year a full blown down is coming when shops closed and civic life reduced to
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a minimum christmas in 2020 is set to be a quiet one. because. we would not forgive ourselves if this christmas turned into a celebration for the virus and quite honestly the virus does not care whether or not we have been christmas shopping. across germany it has become clear the lighter restrictions imposed 6 weeks ago and not sufficient to control the pandemic instead december has seen record infection numbers more and more people are dying with the virus and hospitals are approaching the limits of their intensive care capacity so will people accept that it's time for a full lockdown. i hope it doesn't come until after christmas because it would be nice for people to spend it with their families. i think we need a tougher and longer period not to keep having these ops and downs but
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a real chance of better times in the spring. if. there has to be a hard break period and if you ask me to curfew you can't always compare different countries but in some places that has really worked in some places less so that we just have to go that route. misnomer. closing shops in the run up to christmas will be costly businesses will need compensation but most german states now see the need for common action look the lockdown must come as soon as possible comment. as the politicians work out the details germans are bracing for a christmas without much chia. here's some of the other stories we're following for you today british prime minister boris johnson and e.u. commission president of underlying and g. to hold another crisis call on sunday on the fate of a post brics trade deal recently the e.u.
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single market in under 3 weeks and agreement on the future trading relationship hangs in the balance. thousands of taken to the streets across france for a 3rd strike we can to demonstrate a security bill to demonstrate against a security bill that would restrict publication of images of police offices police in paris arista dozens and used water cannon after scuffles broke out. change and u.n. secretary general antonio good terrace has called on world leaders to declare a climate to midget c.n.a. countries and slash carbon pollution during a virtual summit on the environment could terrorists said pandemic recovery packages offer an opportunity to shape a low carbon future. well a scandinavian drama has been crowned the best movie of 2020 at the european film awards which due to the pandemic have been held online this year the danish swedish
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company called another round features a group of high school teachers who take to day drinking as a social experiment to see how it affects their lives alongside the prize for best film there were european director and screenwriting a role awards for its director thomas vinterberg and the film also won best active for denmark's mads mikkelsen. let's go to cologne now and speak to our film expert scott rocks for a firm d.-w. is culture department hi scott who doesn't love a bit of day drinking particularly in 2020 this film another round was the big winner here was this expected. actually very much so i mean directly from my side this is my favorite film of the year i was really rooting for it but it's not a big surprise that it won it's a phenomenal movie and as you said it's the story of high school teachers who are sort of in a midlife crisis lucite if they really get they're just doing some serious drinking
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all the time maybe that'll help sort things out it's really a whole areas calmly but it's not just a comedy it's not not really superficial but with all it's it's it's in the end a real deep look into also philosophy of life and it's about increasing life both the dark and the life and as you said it's incredibly appropriate film for this coded ear because it really is a light. and i think a really valid and deserve it whether europeans the ones you know that's not as didn't any of the films catch your eye this year. yeah i mean the ground was my favorite movie but i look in shadow to the polish film corpus christi which sadly didn't win but. it's a really powerful movie it's up a drama about an ex convict who impersonate a priest and sort of infiltrate the spiritual communion of a small town and it's awful movie that by surprise because what starts off as sort
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of a maybe conventional genre movie almost turns becomes a really deep along the true meaning of faith and spirituality and there's also a budget movie that really blew me away and i hope people really get a chance maybe check it out even though again sadly didn't win anything tonight let's talk about the european film awards themselves what does winning one mean to filmmaker. yeah i mean you're going towards don't obviously have the profile of the oscars say they want to shine a light on the smaller our house movie set of europe that maybe don't get the attention that they deserve and i think this year we're so many theaters have been closed because of colbert lockdowns most of these nominees the films this year didn't get a chance to be shown in theaters so i think it's incredibly important for the ones that were nominated and won tonight because they get me a bit more attention i mean there's so much you know the german film star holiday out won for best actress and so one beautiful is a very sort of mysterious stranger
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a love story the sort of never really seen before and it didn't really get much of a chance in theaters but maybe with this award people stick it out you know either online or in theaters when theaters eventually open again and that whole idea of just shining a light on on sort of over the last gems in european cinema is what the europeans the war it's early on scott rocks for a firm date of a news culture department nice to talk she's got thanks. you're watching d.w. news from berlin with me now before we leave you there's been some sad news from the world of into time and charlie pride who was country music's 1st african-american superstar has died from complications from cove at 19 he was 86 years old will leave you now with the rich baritone of charlie pride have a great day. the.
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man could break. but he sure has many. doctors scientists. would they be disappointed if we let amoroso my. family back. daughters. in the height of climate change. africa is missing. what's in store for a few months to come for their future. c w comforting megacities to the multimedia inside clinics the times are. how the virus spread. why do we panic and when we'll all miss an answer just 3 of the topics covered in the weekly radio show is called spectrum if you
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would like and more information on the program maurice or any other science topic you should really check out our podcast you can get it wherever you get your podcast you can also find us at d.f.w. dot com slash science when. it comes the book is because because plan of our having going to school members on . september 2020 history was made. to call this. 2 gates i. see.
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a similar concern is leading the feral ones i'm likely rise from footballing obscurity. the tiny island nation in the north atlantic the faroe islands is part of the danish kingdom just 52000 people live here and they share one big passion. football is fuchsia and everybody is crazy about football and how little english like you can behave. because there is not so much to do. but bill means everything because in a small village you don't have that many options the 1st football club was established here in $892.00 but the national team only gained fee for membership almost a century later in 1908 they've caused major upsets beating teams like austria and greece but have never qualified for a world cup or euros and often lose to major footballing nations by
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a wide margin but that hasn't dampened their spirit we are in our national stage young. now after the construction i think there will be about i don't know around $5000.00 but of course for a nation like for a while and sister kate because it's 10 to 30 percent of the population what you're watching our team in one single game and actually that's probably a world record and fantastic. the nation now boasts 168 to a 4 licensed coaches that's around one post 300 inhabitants in england for example there's one coach for every 165000 people bill mcleod jakobsen is one of the most experienced coaches here almost everybody i play if you go couple of years ago 100 percent or 99 percent of all the kids in school they played football. last couple of years maybe not so much but we're up to 7080 percent of all. all the
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people stay and they are playing and playing in some kind of a club environment. there are more sheep than people living on the islands and it rains $300.00 days a year still out pitches are the norm so why is the sport so popular probably because of the national team there are many pictures here that we have around $15.00 to $18.00 club started playing. the football and the wire ments they are they are filling a lot and in the landscape it's quite easy here to play football there are 26 stadiums and many more all weather pitches across the 18 islands even edmonson grew up here in the tiny town of tufted right by the former national stadium i mean adjoining artificial pitch i mean the school he played here all the time. all the time especially at the summertime because. there's so much time that it's.
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never getting dark so they didn't fight to come home. and over and out all the time and it's have to come. out of state and they're given bread. so something good to eat. and if that's hard to. get the children home in the evening across they want to play a laid off the better off. is different around from i lived like 100 meters from the football pitch professional football or. something that happens there so it's been great that's when sure plying his trade for bundesliga side armenia bealefeld edmonson is the only member of the national team set up signed for a normal day club his success. it's not a surprise to those who've known him longest like his former coach. spent at the
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picture also off to training he was doing many of the right things and he was always there on the pitch working working on his on the skills and actually you can see right away that if one goes that would probably. be in. his childhood friend and neighbor olsen is now an assistant coach for capital club the 36 tall shopping and saw the dedication 1st time his life back in the early days was dedicated to football and when he became a teenager you can see right away that he lived as a footballer he is probably the best player that has played for us. even by far always standards edmonson came from a small club and finding coaches and teammates was by no means an easy task. force coach was my father he was the coach of the team and yeah when you come from
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a village with 1200 people or shall we had like maybe 8 or 9 maybe 10 guys in my class and we need 7 at least. for the youth team so we were almost forcing each other with a good team training to be good if this necessary pirates club sometimes. you want me to do mark and the other boys and. i think sometimes. within the other vice. than that path it must good for him to have a mother. a mother who helped him control him aggressive streak that could have to rail to his ambitions early on. my father and different cultures they had in my career they had a big task because i really had a bad temper when i was younger and i couldn't handle to lose one game nearby here
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out of the. coach from the other team he showed so esteemed and overcame loose and he was so angry that the red overtook the order teams coach. kick him in the ass and. the author coach got angry and you know one rung there and then the other cars come after him and they go on the run from him down to over i was so close to the door. that. seaman needed plenty of patience as the pass to the big leagues from the farrows is anything but easy even for someone with his apparent talent and drive his 1st taste of football abroad came early on and helped confirm his own bishan he went to denmark to a spirit when the of us 15 or 16 my my brought there lived so it was easy to go to
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a spirit and then they find out it was as good like their danish voice and. i think they want to be a professional and he decided that i should malta with him and it all out of place so we moved to s.b.s. . and got an apartment that. but he got injured so we go home again then they come to play with that they want and i guess he was all the 18 and then he scored against russia and the coach from newcastle contacted him after the game and it ended with that he got the new cast. but soon after a coaching change at newcastle united saw him quickly fall out of favor of the english premier league side he once again returned home when you're here in farrell
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we grew up you were the best player. when you come to england. come player from europe and. play with the national. competition it is not like. i think the set but when he came back to thailand and he has become stronger and because when he then moved again abroad he had tried to experience it with a setback in it he said i was better able to tackle after stints in norway and back in the faroes edmonson established himself in denmark's top division in 2018 he signed for armenia bealefeld promotion in his 3rd season means he's playing in the biggest league a fair always player has featured him. i'm the 1st in the german football league and the course i'm proud of because we don't have that many professional footballer
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from the from the fire island. the often derided european nations league has given small nations a platform to build on the faroes top their group ceiling promotion to league seat on a level with nations like turkey bulgaria and greece the last 5 to 6 years we have gone from beating greece 2 to now playing competitive matches against the baltic countries and many of the middle nations we are competing against now also so we are. not satisfied but but but we are satisfied with the development we have been going through. in 2020 k. i collect speak with 90 minutes away from becoming the country's 1st team to qualify for the europa league while under a olson's b 36 told made it to the 3rd qualifying round talk clubs are benefiting from the continental cash injections but the national team is still the main source of inspiration for families football. than the german kid just watching germany play
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when an english kid. it's watching them play you all this get this this feeling i and you support them it's massive it's so important that we have our own how many of the famous players will be playing for the danish a national team it's quite this this is the told me another story and with football we have gone from the idea from the from being a small tiny nation and in the atlantic to to be a nation that everybody. have a relationship relation to the that everybody could know off and speak off because everybody know the islands play football and we get some remarkable results once. the national team breaks their previous points record in the 2018 world cup qualifying campaign while coaching and facilities continue to become more professional you want seaman success may even see more players make the move to top
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sides i would also loath to get other younger players from the faroe islands to to also come to professional football because i think we have a lot of talent there and i just want to would like to the german clubs also to look in the faroe islands when they try to scout for talent for to a young player to know their 1st one playing on this league. and see that it's possible it will reach that level where you are if you are small. the pharaoh's are certainly small but also passionate and dedicated.
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healthy eating. is it making the environment ill. superfood think global hype about eating. but what happens where super foods are grown. since the exploding demand for them threatening and tire ecosystems. on d w. christmas is canceled so fast. we heat up the oven and bake some cookies. to bloggers with a sweet to invite us into their bakery they share their favorite recipes. and some valuable tips for making traditional christmas cookies. your moments. in 60 minutes d w. i'm not laughing at the germans because sometimes i am but most end up in with
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the taliban and i think they've been to the german culture. new don't seem to take that as grandma there you go it's all that they know hi rachel join me for me to get on the telly holes. they hit and healthy and move in just a costume trained superfoods. that's it for me super food means what does you good because super foods are super for my body. berries and cheese seeds just 3 of the countless super foods in big demand due to the nutritional credentials is going to be the point is what a person needs done there is complete confusion on that issue and now you see these
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products where we're told you need this if you will. this you'll get well or you won't get sick of it but it's not really true it's them so much. how does super food hype impact on local people in countries where the products are actually grown . does the continued increase in demand have the potential to even destroy entire ecosystems. bedsit we're on the road to disaster here if something doesn't change and the region will turn into a desert about. this soup of food craze started as is so often the case in the us and now seafood restaurants are at home and see she's around the world face it dishes with exotic ingredients such as avocado chia and kenya which come with the promise of making
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new slim healthy and happy. customers in this restaurant and bottom gemini like it . primes and hours and looks healthy and you know you're doing something good for your body just what i like to be a lot but i like to eat healthy too this is a perfect mechanism with this lots of healthy stuff here and it's good to have a change from cafeterias other places and tell a. story in class recognized a nation opened his business about a year ago. he came up with the recipes himself. he's saying is to offer a healthy alternative to fresh fast food. just this another one of the reasons why we're here is because it's much easier to eat stuff that's bad for you than eating a healthy way we want to change that and what the terms super food you attract more customers than if you call yourself for healthy food and. the food here is served
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in special bowls malling green sea combined with cold months most of the rule the food is supposed to look tasty and have an excel sheet such. as sure the nice thing about a bowl like this is that there are a lot of individual foods in it a that makes it nice and colorful and being it's good for your body because each individual ingredient contains minerals and vitamins i phone but it's now stuff spectrum that makes it a perfect meal effect months and some of these are our kidney bean balls. chickpeas. yum and in fine here we have keen one in ancient inca grain from south america does it on the other it's it's a grain that is cooked with water and contains loads of healthy proteins in the nest oftentimes about food because in the part that you know that i was super foods really like cracked up to be approaching content of can last for example is
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comparable to if each i mean it's. a house small fine about. 15 it has more than twice as much ion. know you have you seen gradients at the balkan wholesale market which boasts local products and farm products like sweet potatoes to as always quality flesh inside the freshness of the products is important. florian when he's shopping. i need to herbs like the ghosts. you have come to the right place. the mix is key to florence menu he combines local fruits and veggies with foods from faraway lands. to the skin every for investable has its own nutritional composition that's why it's so nice to combine the local with
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the exotic because many diverse nutrients vitamins and minerals come together and they form a very complex meal. and that's great for the body but in couples who puts. thought healthy doesn't necessarily mean sustainable this is super food served up in germany come from countries thousands of kilometers away. king why it's a good example among the major produces is believe via the variety that sells best in germany came out right out of its harvested on salt flats. to. be indigenous peoples of the south american and his highlands were already farming cane was 6000 years ago when you treat rich grain has always been a staple food here. york in the us is a sustainable farming consultant for years he's been watching how kamal cultivation has developed in the region. after using
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so i can put on these relatively sailing and poor soils with little rainfall we find a crop that can deliver fantastic eels. doesn't fit in with the llamas it's an ingenious or ideal form of production and it's good for the region's economy. for these are your. tax changing tribes used to provide food for the llamas and protect the soil for them. roshan after the harvest the animals came to graze lama down provided fresh nutrients since the king one of them started families have been pushing for maximum yields while the scrap land has been cleaned up. i was shocked by the fact that 152200000 hectares of llama grazing land has been ploughed up for king one. or 2 but. there are now kenya fields as far as the eye can see rising
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to man has led to massive expansion in the plants cultivation teaming the fields has left the soil without the vegetation that it protected from wind of russian. dust and when you walk along here you only see annual wage growing now they're completely unprotected. alternately what we're doing is promoting the development of high land desert. or in the farmers won't have the conditions they need to produce here so people have to go elsewhere. that change is already making itself felt with crop yields declining some farmers have already given up and gone to the cities to make a living as unskilled labor is and bolivia is just one place where a super food monoculture has left the land scott. was just.
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you know was in this is the problem we see here with keen what is basically going on everywhere around the world to do it's own in the moment. take the avocado for example as a super food it's grown as a monoculture on large farmers and. indeed profits become the priority short term economic interests override everything else it's just in. but hardly anyone really thinks about what will become of these ecosystems. people also live. with massive demand for avocados has led to problems in countries that grow the fruit just as it has with king what he did in bolivia within a decade the area of land used to grow avocados increased by 30 percent with 1500 liters supported now needed per kilo vegetables in germany such as lettuce and
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tomatoes require far less. enormous single crop farms especially in dry regions only ensure short term high yields raising cain while the traditional way is based on a different principle using less land yielding better quality. be a colony found a small plot of land it takes a 2 weeks to harvest the fields by hand since tractors are now used to grow clean well more easily everywhere in the flatlands there are a few people left you want to toil away on hill farms yet this is the final cultivation. i mean marsters i would roseanne i am plant on this is the way sisters work the fields back then. our grandparents towards our parents and our parents taught us. that we
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have to plough this up every year are these key members. yes exactly the old roots and you leave these twigs here. and yes we rake them using tools like this. i think that's a way of working the soil they don't care for. and survive it. it's a traditional system that's been practiced for centuries. why now here for even here there is room for improvement in terms of sustainability. but compared to a mechanized farming town in the lower than plains this is more environmentally friendly. underpass. the soil has time to regenerate between the 2 harvests he on the hillsides the plants a large the individual kernels plump. years at the end in march and in your 3rd see this plant here it's yielding really well you know
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look at the seed heads the kernels are nice and ripe but our standards these are the best grains we store them and use them as seeds to make. your community has brought along some key more from a german supermarket. he wants to show the farmers how the grain they grow here is sold in consumed in europe. combers over posters q how do you feel about germany and europe suddenly discovering keane was a super food it was really meant to suppress of. their national product again not is that ok product didn't used to be well known. in the world haven't got around yet about how much protein it has. if used to cost less than rice and pastor. like you know or not this year they said king well wasn't worth that much
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rush back in our. product line as i was farming is we're a little proud that kin was now known all over the world these are new they're more in the air. they have to be from the farmers compare they can laugh from the german supermarket with what they've just harvested from their own field although it's the premier of the box as class one but even our class 2 is bigger than their subject of there's a 4 month. i'd say it's class 3. in june and these little ones here they're nothing that's a chicken feed as there is in this the. poppea is done with this field for today further up the hillside she has another project fronting one that needs harvesting.
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when the superfood bloom started in 24 change the price fixing what went through the roof back then even small villages like sierra grounded profited from this trend. it's time to just 7 families. that were able to buy new equipment such as the small grain sorting machine. that made work easier in 2015 just a year later the market price collapsed again. how much would you have to earn from keene what grows on the hillside for it to pay off. they'd have to pay us a lot more for our production costs to be covered. plus we need to feed our families because you know other things in the country. the development of the price fixing and bolivia looks like a roller coaster ride in 2014 it peaked at just over $3000.00
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a tonne but only 3 years later it plummeted to a lower value than before the game began. the critic you see. the expansion of kenya farming on the plains also lead to major fluctuations in its price. and the whole farmer suffer because they can't compete and don't get paid more despite the additional effort involved in working on the hillsides. the farming is sustainable with high quality yields but this way of working the land is at risk of dying out european consumers are relatively unaware of the farmers' problems while the super food selections in the supermarkets keeps on growing between 20142016 the turnover generated by super foods in germany rose from 1400000 to 42600000 euros
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the best seller is chia which accounts for 62 percent of sales but what's best to buy from such a large selection. consuming as a massive consumers are completely confused so they're vulnerable to advertising based on faith often it's like religion. if i show up promising a miracle and people in need of orientation are ready to believe it that's the concept behind super foods from super fast. doctor and new traditions specialist mathias riedel inspects the super foods on. of the hamburg supermarkets ginger tried berries shiah customers find a wide variety of supposedly healthy products. the list of ingredients shows what's really inside. and. you can think this is the natural food section. but here we have cranberries. you don't see it right away but they have
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an extra 40 percent sugar. and sunflower oil which isn't the best oil. so this bag of cranberries has more sugar in it than a bar of chocolate almost 70 percent of the. so they're anything but healthy as the. chia seeds do contain the very best nutrients but they usually consumed in very small quantities is a. super foods are just a diversion from the real problem. the german diet isn't healthy enough and adding 15 grams of chia seeds daily won't change it but that's exactly what happens chia seeds are something of an alibi food to make up for an otherwise unhealthy diet. 15 grams provide even less omega 3 fatty acids than for example
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a generous portion of walnuts. binders. flax seeds could be another alternative to chia it has more protein and about the same proportion of polyunsaturated fatty acids when it comes to count flax seed can't compete. big industry is eager to join this super food trend even long term staples such as cereals and now being supplemented with exotic grains and berries that isn't why here are 2 examples of what's going wrong. if they've got far too much sugar and just a smidgen of cranberry to let the consumer know look it's got fruit and forked ish the percentage of cranberries is well below 5 percent or so negligible. the key here is the high level of sugar it's unhealthy and neutralizes anything beneficial
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the dried cranberries contribute cranberry for. berries arnold to try and bridge the growth in europe for example the sugar content in cranberries bad juju in a relatively sour taste. to the true. version. him superfood isn't a registered trademark but it does suggest a positive effect on can she may help that's not always the case. here is a nice example 100 percent natural doesn't mean 100 percent healthy this small portion for 2 euro's gives you 47 grams of sugar or 100 grams of product for the thighs this isn't so eating this little bag phone means nearly 25 grams of sugar is that's the world health organizations maximum daily intake recommendation organiser so that's pretty much it for the day if you look at some cons of. trish an expert
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advises people in germany to eat local fruit and vegetables even if their lives trying. to help them are produce has an image problem and we need to inform people about how good these food colors are for us and the benefits of our local products to different climates in public now that alli always have a natural antiinflammatory a fact whether it's chives garlic or leak. there are local alternatives in germany for many of the c's foods and they don't have to be shipped thousands of kilometers to get to supermarket shelves and there is sound choice on the nutrients front. barry has 7 times more calories than the humble black cart. primarily because of the fullness high sugar content. and when it comes to vitamin c. the black convert easily outstrips the goji. some
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so-called super foods come from countries with farming regulations are not as strict as in germany sample measurements have shown some may contain pesticides and heavy metals this lab in braman specializes in detecting hazardous substances in food not the product. and has tested the lungs of goji berries. and in person since during pesticide screening we checked for the presence of about $200.00 different pesticides these include insecticides fungus sides and herbicides we also screen for for heavy metals cadmium arsenic and mercury in cricklewood often we primarily found insecticides and higher concentrations of them in the office. and not just in goat you berries samples from other institutes of indicated the presence of pesticides and mineral oil in rule
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cocoa she is c. and the ring a powder. the pesticide issue isn't a problem with keen one many producers have organic certification but that doesn't make the farming sustainable tractors churn up the dry soil and with demand growing the land being farms now stretches from the hills to the flat lands with no end inside. iraq emails is concerned that if things go on like this there won't be any mark growing here one day the farmers are already telling him that the yields a shrinking from year to year. consequently the conclusions that could be drawn from this aren't being made that people need to ask above all what can we actually do differently instead of saying ok stop plowing all that up the message should be how can we produce without destroying the whole region here
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when you're so sure. you work in mills is headed for the community of true day where they were also quite keen why in the flatlands using make the most farming. they came up with revived the severely many locals returned from the big cities because they could make a living here again houses will rebuild and a modest level of affluence developed in the form of facets like tractors and other machines. and the villages went back to fostering local customs such as traditional trance music and rituals. and the other big demand for keen one has had a really positive effect on our community as a bit with the man that our standard of living and our quality of life have improved enormously must only be the most likely that it be that you know in the way they grow king whatever daily needs to change fundamentally if they are to maintain that the clock is farmed according to organic standards that natural
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vegetation is still being largely cleared that we consume quality. but where you. can have a look at this total of plant and the way its root system is formed. the roots are still firmly anchored in the soil i go several metres down into the ground even board an extreme cold never take your own this is one of the most important species to maintain fertility in this extremely dry region. it stops when the roshan. and helps keep water in the soil so hard. if the decline in soil quality continues soon it will no longer be worth the pharmacy if it. talks to the pharmacy about ways to ensure decent harvests in the long term. the soil is beautifully fertile here because of these here. we must produce the
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keen while with this it's like fertilizer. this is the same time it's food for llamas right. that's the best thing for the cane walk we just have to take all these woody bits and sprinkle them on the field when we sow we should try to. need to produce everything biomass fertilizer on the piece of land itself then it's sustainable and at the same time we also have to reforest. these people are quite skeptical but that's always the case or something new. but people are listening. to this just a place like this makes me optimistic that something can be done with one of the most modern cars. in the small town of salinas preparations are underway for a market finish with
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a regional kima farmers will be able to present it when it's all the towns in the surrounding area of represented in the showcase of the food that is so vital for the region. in mills wants to speak to the exhibit says many export their crops to europe and most produce according to a look at an extended. the ad going on this is hoping that german consumers will soon not chinese want chemo that is found organically but sustainably is well. worth it. if they are his own. own needs over those that are going to be good if this demand could be used to change farming practices. we have to make it clear that the organic requirements are not nearly enough to produce a keen watch sustainably you know what the potency of. sustainability has to become a key more farming stand it if the ecosystems in bolivia is highlands to remain intact and offer the human and animal inhabitants a viable long term future. good
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food.
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good. christmas is cancelled not so fast. we heat up the oven and bake some cookies. to bloggers with a sweet tooth why does into their bakery they share their favorite recipes with the . man some valuable tips for making traditional christmas cookies. your moments. 30 minutes on d w. 250 year
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old mobile music star plato found in his anniversary year he remains a powerful name on everyone's lips a. guy. who inspires currently projects to this day last arc's 21. 90 minutes long t.w. . i'm sure all such to go beyond the obvious places that will move. as we take on the world. we're all about the stories that matter to you. something might seem good to see what ever
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it takes people are running. the show come up with some exchange clues but nothing w. made for mines. in the far north. it's lonely. and breathtakingly beautiful. the arctic and the but take a journey around the north pole meet profiteers and talk with people experiencing a changing environment through the ice disappears earlier and it keeps retreating our future depends on what happens here. northern lights within the arctic circle starts december 21st t.w.
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. this is g.w. news live from berlin the u.s. registered 16000000 coronavirus cases as the country gets set to roll out the code had 19 ducks. massive logistical operation is underway after regulators gave the green light to the drug will be a speed the turning point in the fight against a disease that killed nearly $300000.00 americans also coming off another surge in new code 19 cases in germany pops the pressure for tougher lockdown measures chancellor angela merkel as.

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