tv Quarks Deutsche Welle December 30, 2021 6:00am-6:46am CET
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learning like global i will show you how climate change ended or mental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing. you download it now for free. in ah ah, this is dw line from berlin, justice at last for the victims of jeffrey epstein. a new york jury finds delane maxwell guilty of helping the late millionaire, sexually abuse young girls for
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a decade. the survivors are calling it a win against anyone. dragging children into illegal sex acts also coming up with record numbers of coven 19 cases around the globe. alma crohn is quickly becoming the dominant variant. while delta is still hitting heart, the w h o is calling on wealthy nations to keep their promises on vaccine equity plus will fly rod soon be off the menu in the u. k. a master chef and london is embracing a beacon version and calling on colleagues to do the say, ah, i'm nicole relish welcome to the show. a jury in the us has found british socialized julaine maxwell guilty of helping the sex offender geoffrey epstein,
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abuse under age girls 4 years after $55.00 days of deliberations. the new york jury found maxwell guilty on 5 of 6 counts, including recruiting and grooming abstains teenage victims, and the most serious offense trafficking, a minor for sex. the verdict could see the 60 year old spend the rest of her life in prison. here's what the attorney's for both sides said after the verdict was announced. the road to justice has been far too long. but today, justice has been done. i want to commend the bravery of the girls now grown women who stepped out of the shadows and into the court room their courage and willingness to face their abuser, made today's result. and this case possible, we firmly believe in glens, innocence. obviously we are very disappointed with the verdict. we have already started working on the appeal and we are confident that she will be vindicated.
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everyone be healthy, have a happy new year. a lot to unwrap. so let's bring in our washington correspondent stuff and simon's stephan. what more can you tell us about the verdict and maxwell's role in geoffrey epstein, systematic abuse of underage girls not maxwell's role in all of this is lisa, that's how it stands. the less was a significant, she was a close associate, a confidant of jeffrey epstein and the s for women who testified in this case. and the result of this case is largely based on what those women testified. she not only was a bystander when jeffrey epstein abused or sexually abused his victims, but also sometimes participated. so that can tell you something about the relationship between a miss maxwell and the lead jeffrey epstein. however, so this trial was groundbreaking. why?
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because as you mentioned, there was actually not much hope that after the suicide of jeffrey have seen the victim see a day of justice. but here it was 40 hours of deliberation, and of deliberations for the jury. 16 questions were asked to clarify evidence in this and that, and that you have it. the verdict. 5 count guilty in 5 counts out of 6 are and miss maxwell is looking at potentially 65 years in prison. this case is being watched very closely in the us and around the globe. how has the breeding been received where you are well, from the you heard from the attorney how significant this trial was. there is no, not yet a lot of reaction out there. of course, all the networks in the united states are tackling this now and, and reporting that the verdict is in and do a little bit of a deep dive into this relationship, maxwell and epstein and so on. but of course,
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this was the most important thing is we should forget, this is for the victims they had really their day of justice. he and they were not for long, long, long, long time. there were absolutely unsure that this is ever going to see the daylight and that they will have their day in court and that justice is served. they are absolutely happy and delighted that this was the verdict and that this trial actually even happened. so what happens next? you said that gillian maxwell might face life in prison. when will we find out that there is a sentencing a date to be sets and this is when the judge comes out and announces what he sent it to. but you hurt already the attorney for mr. actual saying that they are working on the appeal. so this will definitely go into an appeal in an appeals court will be and then have the the job of sorting this out if this appeal is,
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is legitimate. and if there is, are grounds actually, if there are grounds for an appeal. now the prosecution, that's what many experts say made really, really sure that they're, that they give because they were actually expecting an appeal, no matter what. when, if it makes mist maxwell or would have been found guilty, but they made sure that this is somewhat of an air tight prosecution they delivered with the testimony of those 4 victims, for example, is at rest. so this is going to be a hard time from his maxwell in the appeals court, i would think and again 65 years in prison, this is the rest of her life that miss maxwell is 60 years old, so that in time it's in washington. thank you. very much the arm across the very end of the corona virus is causing skyrocketing infection rates around the world. in a new european record, french authorities reported more than 200000 infections in a single day. italy, ireland, and portugal have also all announced record numbers of new cases,
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and poland authorities recorded nearly 800 deaths in a single day. that is the highest number so far there are 3 quarters of the dead were unvaccinated. germany's official rates have dropped, but health minister kalauia about his skeptical we're seeing the true numbers, which he says could be 2 or even 3 times higher. the director general of the world health organization has expressed concern about the massive spike in cases and is urging wealthy nations to make good on their promises of vaccine equity. i call for leaders of government and industry. talk the talk on boxy and equity bows by ensuring consistent supply and helping to get bucks in ations actually into people . this virus will continue to evolve and threaten our health system if we don't improve the collective response. and in the united states,
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health officials are predicting more than 44000 new covert related deaths over the next 4 weeks. is comes as the us to post record highs of new confirmed infection. new cases per day have more than doubled over the past 2 weeks. eclipse thing, the previous record mark of 250000, said in mid january of this year. peter chan hung as an infectious disease expert and a professor of medicine at the university of california, and he joined us now from san francisco. doctor, welcome. we're seeing record infection numbers in the us. how worried are you? well, nicole, i'm very, very worried and i'm not just worried from the raw numbers, which as you pointed out, is record breaking. but i'm worried about the rate of increase, which has been really dizzying and what happened as a result of that is that we had very little time to prepare. if you think about testing, not enough. certainly not enough vaccine uptake and certainly not booster uptake by
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many. ah, we're not just seen deaths like one year ago, but we're seeing lack of possible capacity not to because not because we had taken care of to many patients. but because health care workers have becoming ill themselves, and that's taking away from our ability to take care of patients, there is growing concern about amr crime threatening crucial infrastructure and not only hospitals around the globe. how well is the u. s. prepared for such a scenario? i think we're not very well prepared at all. um we may be prepared in some regions, but because there's so many different ecosystems of healthcare in the united states, again, we don't have a national healthcare system. they a lot of people who fall between the cracks. i worried about that group vulnerable populations, but also i'm also worried about the non cubic illnesses that have been neglected. health care screening cancer screening, and what we're seeing with
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a record breaking as kid admissions. so kids under 5 children being hospitalized is not so much only over crime, but old. so all of the diseases and healthy maintenance that has been neglected over the last 21 months. what can be done to keep on the chron at bay at this stage? well it's, it's very, very complex. if you look at what happened in the 1918 flu pandemic, it ended after all, pandemic stone glass forever. we just don't know what will happen with cov it and sorry, covey to it could be that armor cron will devour on delta, which it seems to be doing and lead to a milder illness. we do have evidence from south africa within the last day that if you get delta, you're not protect against omicron. but interestingly, if you get home recross, you are protected against delta. i think you know that to be a scenario. many people don't think it will last forever because we will certainly
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get another variance until we vaccinate the entire world and a vaccine as the only way we can prep protect ourselves against the future. and not just of presence. we do have initial findings. they'll pointing to a milder course of the disease with amazon. could this very rapid spread that we're seeing now potentially bring us closer to turning coven into a manageable threat? it is possible at some point cove. it is going to be endemic, meaning, like influenza. we'll accept a certain amount of cases in the world where we are comfortable with that our health systems can absorb our right now. i think the numbers are way too high. ah, you know, even if people get infected all around the world with on their chron, it's still going to lead to disproportionate. that's like you reported in countries where there isn't enough vaccinations. so again, at the risk of sounding like
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a broken record, we can't really even think about and amiss city until the whole world is vaccinated . pena chin. hong, always great speaking to you. thanks so much, nico is considered a delicacy, but law has long been. the object of controversy is produced by force feeding, ducks, and geese, and animal rights activists want the core may food off the menu. now the british government may ban imports of foreground and is calling on shafts to come up with alternatives. one of london's talk french restaurants has gotten to work and invented the vegan foe. gra. it looks just like for growth, the french delicacy made of duck or goose lipper, but in fact, no birds were harmed in the making of this patty. it doesn't taste of torture, which is a which full of the, the cooling region of the rear for gra. and not in this one, ah, deliver,
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used for making really for growth is considered the luxury ingredient. but it's fattened by force feeding the birds. the substitute for growth is made with mushrooms, lentils, and spices. beetroot has been added so that the patio looks like the real thing. if you put the right amount becomes just like it's almost unheard of for a french celebrity chef like alexis could t to turn his back on for gra. the dish was one of the top sellers in his restaurant, but he became a target for animal rights activists. eventually, they convinced him to change. and so from then i decided that i need to still be a french if a still, you know, do gasoline food. but i need to remove all the ingredients, so we started, fresh food writer, joe worried, is also in favor of eating less meat. still,
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he's not sure about the imitation patty. it definitely doesn't resemble progress in a supposed maybe in terms of the texture a little bit, but but not, not the not the flavor on it, not the finish on it hasn't go about fighting as, as, and go that richness. restaurateur, alexis, good. he is undeterred. he's now become an influential campaigner, ministers in the u. k. are considering bending the input of genuine for graph from france. some critics see doubled standards get rid of in a late, you know, french foreign, luxury product and say that, that you're making a point about animal welfare. but if you really wanted to make a point about animal welfare, what you would do is address, you know, the white chickens are being formed intensely formed the way pork spin intensely formed. all the same. jeff alexis, good to use, change of heart is paying offering. he's fully booked for the next monday,
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or hopefully he's going to inspire or the restaurant to do the same. and most importantly, although chef who are going to go and put their creative juice into this and come up weaver with a plan base creation that we cannot live without. ah, that's good news for ducks and geese. and it's fine by this food writer too. as long as chefs don't start passing off substitutes as the real thing. why not just call it mushroom patty? and that's her time. i'm the cough really for me and the entire team here. maryland . thank you so much for a company with us. we got some hot tips for your bucket list. romantic corner tread hotspot for food
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chair and some great cultural memorials to boot w travel off. we go. oh, the fight against the corona virus pandemic now has the rate of infection developing what measures are being taken? what does the latest research say? information and context with the corona virus updated the coded machine special. monday to friday on d. w in ah, europe's 1st home grown battery facility begins production will look at what sweden's north full could mean for european car makers. and just how charged up wall street investors are over all things. electric cars also on the show,
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germany near the end of its decades long relationship with nuclear power. some of its neighbors say they plan, however, to build more reactors and turkeys. economic woes are turning books into a luxury. publishers and customer say they can barely keep up with rising prices. hello and welcome to the show. i'm seeing busy in berlin. what's being held as a milestone for europe, the swedish battery cell maker, north vault has officially begun production at its facility in the countries north . that makes it the confidence 1st homegrown battery cell production line for customers like volkswagen, volvo, and b, m, w. that's good news for their plans for the coming years. just 200 kilometers south of the arctic circle this factory. and while, if they all produced its 1st battery cell, this week, the location was chosen because it's near important sights of renewable energy production in northern sweden, including hydro electric power,
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intended to compete with the u. s. electric car giant, tesla and asian producers of lithium ion batteries. the site is expected to produce enough batteries to power $1000000.00 electric vehicles every year. north vault expects to make its 1st deliveries to commercial customers. in early 2022. the company has already secured $30000000000.00 worth of orders from european carmakers, including germany's b, m, w, and folks wagon and sweden's volvo with which it plants. a 2nd european factory test lays due to launch its 1st factory in europe soon. and asian rivals have significant operations in poland and hungary. but no european firm had opened a major facility until now. well, 2021 was a big year for electric vehicles and electric infrastructure companies like ford and g m. announce ambitious e v production goals. investors,
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meanwhile search for the next tesla, while elevating firms with a focus on electric infrastructure. among the biggest winters was electric, vehicle maker riven automotive. now it raised over $12000000000.00 in its market debuted in november, a munich base sono motors, a small developer of solar powered electric vehicles, had a bit more of a humble i. p. o, but still beat expectations. raising $150000000.00 in its to view a charge point, a company that manages electric charging networks went public in march and raised around $615000000.00 in cash. though it stock has fallen lately. and we should mentioned that none of these companies, however, is actually profitable thus far. right for more, let's go to james sweeney in new york. james, good to see you. this has been a big year for electric vehicles. so far, all things, electric on wall street, a lot of appetite from investors. what we expect for the next year. let me put it this way. 2021 is the year e. b startups made their name on wall street that we all heard of them. 2022 looks
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to be the years that dominate the headlines on the street. and we're not just talking about startups here. we're talking about all around electric vehicle production, especially from the big companies. while she was enamored or you were tesla caribbean, even lucid, recently. and you look at living river that the man is there, the 1st day, the 1st 5 days went public, the company's market cap surpass volkswagen. and don't forget like you said earlier, $150000000000.00 as evaluation in november with 0 revenue at all. then it's been one and a half months now and that excitement, it's not cold down, test lu, front and center, and the man isla must tweets, grabbing the headlines. we also have the big boys about getting with forward releasing its f 150 lightening electric vehicle pick ups. where say the, the a m g e q, s tesla cyber truck is on the way. we can put it to rest electric vehicles. enthusiasm is only just begun that's going to be big in 2022 or so one of the things that could, however, slow down the automotive industry in that next year, even as that excitement for electric ramps up is the supply of chips. we've seen
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that the real problem of the past year is going to get any better in this next year . well, the funny thing about the chip shortages is that before this, investors were worried more about the man than ships. but now that's not even a concern, because the demand is there. so regarding computer chip supply, we can see some relief in 2022. but we need cove it in oma kron to ease. because that's what's key to ensure that these producers and ship plants can get back to work healthy. that's why reopens voters allows shipments of products, research and development for improve computer hardware. and we also need some more effort on behalf of global political leaders to reach trade agreements. that won't keep our computer chips and general cargo sitting on ships off the coast for a month at a time at different prices. so can we see a trip shortage relief next year? yeah, we can definitely, but there's a lot of pieces to that puzzle to put it all together. all right, james sweeney in new york. talk about the car industry and the i'll look for next year. thank you. thank you. and out of some of the other global business stores making headlines, trouble,
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chinese property developer ever grant appears to have missed another bond payment deadline. the due date on $2.00 bond coupons went unpaid, potentially complicating evergreen's ongoing efforts to restructure offshore debt and complete housing projects. every grant has a 30 day grace period before the debt is declared. in default, more details have emerged of chinese ride hailing giant dds plans to de las from new york and re list on the hong kong stock exchange. reuters, according to sources saying the company plans to use a mechanism that will allow it to list without raising capital or issuing new stock listing by introduction, as it's known would allow holders of its u. s. shares to gradually transfer them. apple has placed an indian fox con i phone factory on probation over work conditions. the plant which employ 17000 people was closed on december 18th. after more than $250.00 women who worked there had to be treated for food. food poisoning an investigation by apple and fox con,
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concluded that dining rooms as well as dormitories did not meet required standards . free forwarding company, flex port, says is dispatching 3747 aircraft loaded with potatoes to help ease a french fry shortage at mcdonald's restaurants in japan. now, the scarcity had led the restaurants to limiting orders to only small fry orders. supply chain problems have been blamed for the scarcity. well, less than 2 days now, germany will say good bye to its 7 decade relationship with commercial nuclear power reactors representing almost half the country's remaining nuclear capacity, will be shut down before the new year. was the final step in a plan began 10 years ago to assure germany out of a power source that has long been controversial. in the meantime, neighboring countries have taken a different approach to the power source. take a look. ah, these protestors are making their voices heard and have been doing so for decades
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outside a nuclear power plant in northern germany for over 35 years now. activists have been meeting up once a month to call for the reactor to be shut down. today is the 425th meeting and the final time that they'll be here breathing the elements. that's because the blocked off nuclear power plant. one of the most controversial in germany will be decommissioned at the end of the year for a pastor and protest co founder hans cont vanna. it's a day of mixed feelings. su ivy, she does mean the a sense of relieve that the nuclear power plant is, find the history to we never imagined back then that we'd have to hold out for. so long's, that's about the 2011 fukushima nuclear disaster prompted germany to declare a nuclear phase out by the end of 2022. but many countries continue to rely on nuclear power. how long this promotional film made by the french nuclear industry
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depicts it as clean and above all climate friendly. a line of argument also favored by the countries president, yet dondo the subject to achieve our objectives in particular carbon neutrality by 2050. and we will, for the 1st time in decades relaunched the construction of nuclear reactors in our country and on the copy. that's why the greenhouse gas emissions are lower than those from fossil fuels, but compared to wind or solar power, nuclear energy production is far more expensive. it's really clear those countries around the world that are most intensely committed to civil nuclear power. ah, either countries with nuclear weapons or countries really demonstrably cain on nuclear weapons. the reactor will be shut down, but the radioactive waste will remain in storage there for decades to come. there's still no permanent disposal site anywhere in the world, which is why the activists plan to continue their fight over to turkey,
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where the economy remains in crisis. rising inflation and a plummeting layer have undercut wages and made staples like food increasingly more expensive. well, books have not escaped the pain. rising prices are posing a problem for customers. and the publishing industry alike. turkey is debilitating and raging economic crisis is increasing prices across the board. and the latest victim seems to be the publishing industry where some books have increased in price by over 50 percent is i just asked about the cost, and i was told that the book i want to buy now costs 38 lira today. i had bought it before for 24 lira. i used to buy books in several copies because i like to give them to my friends is presence, but the prices have become too expensive. they say that this is due to the lack of paper on the market, which doesn't surprise me. in turkey, everything is imported now and i see the imported paper is
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a big part of the problem. global supply chain issues had already made the raw materials for book paper more expensive. but turkey's unique inflation problems aren't helping when the value of the lira falls, so does the purchasing power of turkish buyers for foreign goods. as a result, each book becomes more expensive to produce. meanwhile, sphere pick you print the 1st run and let's say your book is doing well. you've calculated all your costs and decided it would cost $30.00 lira the book sells. well, you do a 2nd printing in the same week, the price goes up to $35.00 lira. then for the 3rd or 4th printing, only god knows how much it will cost not to go left to publishers said they're already planning to put out your books in the next year. it's an effort to minimize risk as the turkish economy teeters on the edge. and finally, 2021 has been
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a year of supply train problems while a cold spell in the sea of japan has caused a different kind of back up with merchandise check this out. dozens of cars have been caked in ice, up to half a meter thick on their way to the russian port of lot of our stock. the japanese ship experience high winds with minus 19 centigrade temperatures, waves flash over the cars, which were on the deck and froze in that cracked wind screens and caused other damage. it's going to take more than an ice scraper. all right, that's it for me and the, the, the business team here be lead will be back shortly with little bit more. in the meantime, check on our website g, w dot com slash business. i'm seeing beardsley watcher in finally learning to read at 60 for her entire life osley emory has invested everything into
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education for her 10 children. she herself is a literate, like men, older women in turkey. but honestly, anybody knows that learning always pays off. the focus on europe next on d w. their importance to the economy is huge. but getting hold of them is often a dirty business. critical commodities make us mo bile make our smartphones smart. how can today's global hunger for lithium cobalt and more the satisfied made in germany in 60 minutes on d, w. o. o
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does a war and eternity time . it can be measured precisely. and yet everyone experiences it differently as if there are different forms of time. time ah, the phenomenon a dimension, if we know we won't live forever, an illusion. about time presenting futures past starts december 31st on d. w with hello in a very warm welcome indeed to focus on europe and in this edition of the show,
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we look back on some exciting a surprising and moving stories from the past year. above all, we want to revisit some of the people who made a special impression in 2021, such as young roma, women singing against child marriage and for equal rights, and animal rights activist who gives elderly cows a place to chew away their old age. and a mother of 10 who is only now learning to read and bright, and a policeman who literally conducts traffic as if it were a piece of music. but let's begin with a giant sea monster. and to do so, we'll take you on a journey to the caspian sea to a remote area near the city of dare bent. and here we find a huge metal construction that is quite literally beached and her elegant j abdullah lim off the remembers how during the cold war it was used in theory at least to scare off enemies of the soviet union. ah, colossal,
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quick and dangerous. this monstrous vehicle, hardship, part airplane is on the beach by the caspian sea in the republic of douglas done. the atlanta plan or screen later was designed for military use, presumably against the west. alika g, up to gleam off served as flight engineer on test flights for the wing ship or grown effect vehicle as their generically known. colloquially, this one is called the caspian sea monster. what very good to go. i operated the propulsion units from here. it's a great machine. just incredible. at the stopper, the 1st wing ship was designed in the 1960s. it was meant to guard rushes, coast lanes and fight enemy ships, boasting undetected by radar thanks to its lu flight. this uses the ground affect aerodynamic interaction with the surface beneath the wings. crete,
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just enough lit to carry the 380 ton giant a few meters above the water. ah, but it never saw genuine service. 14 years after the caspian sea monsters launch, the soviet union collapsed and test flights were ended. the nuclear though i'm out. oh, you good. those are hardly words thus thorough. northstar, ducky, we were so proud of our country at the time for developing such, let's call them products unlike what any other country in the world hunt? new formula. what did susan at the natural? it wasn't a monster. those are part of the walls of the decoy thought elephant plans to used a crown of plan to carry passengers in the room because it didn't need long runways or airports policy or the roman abdul gleam of devoted 14 years of his life to the a chronic plan, he logged
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a bit more than 500 hours of flight time, which he says is not much for a professional test pilot. but the flights were anything but easy. something always went wrong. the prototype had only been built for test flights. bri was nick though in june we had various fire fighting protocols and the event of an accident. a georgia in hotel is not just meant to be honest. we never once had to use them. heroes will get the nuclear jobs to d. the caspian sea monster stands near bent a 2 hour drive from abdul gleam ubs home. no retired flight engineer is proud to be the only dagger stanny on the team of soviet researchers. hardly any photos remain from his time with them. after all, it was a top secret soviet military project near wil, purely, but thought it was the only non party member they took on miss burton and she would have gone the other coworkers were communists. williams, virginia,
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when the head of her test pilots division found out about that. so he was shocked to blow on that. how could a non party member have become a crew members? i'll get the miss but generally, but well, we keep us today. party membership means nothing. the country eleger g a took him off was so proud of the soviet union is history. and the colossal wing ship is destined to serve as an attraction in patriot park. a to recite planned on the caspian sea coast. the will remove the much everything is ruined. good nor you the work of so many designers and engineers neural awfully were of us, but at least that still standing here the most that we were rather that i'm with all of the was talk about dismantling it for scrap the news module for emerald. i hope it will help young people understand what fantastic technology we had and what a great country of what the law if there were new naga,
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and i hope that will help him feel proud of this country and it's people not on us . the old coil and so the caspian sea monster thesis, a very different mission, entities, russia, to be your witness to the one time power and greatness of the former soviet union. well what a story now on a very different know these young women are currently enjoying a lot of success with their band called pretty loud, including being invited to play in london. but that success hasn't necessarily come easily after all. they come from the roemer people, europe's largest ethnic minority. the group is actually based in serbia, a country where many women and especially roma, women say their voices aren't properly heard. all the members are pretty loud, are certainly speaking up and speaking out.
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oh, i was lucky summons a members of the girl been pretty loud or young, proud and determined to take their futures into their own hands. they sing and rob about education, equal rights and the practice of course marriages, they're all too familiar with at all. mom is thing is well known that roman lead, very traditional lives, say not to talk with bill other than on at women, aren't supposed to work or go to school and all that because they marry would stay at home for their clean and raise the children father that's a talk with no job, me and what a lot, no education, that our daily da so but as a squalor ciocca seeks
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a different life. she's 19, anna law student. she and her sisters are inseparable when they experienced hardship early on and learned to support each other. their father lives in germany with his new family and their mother abandoned the girls. so they grew up with their grandparents who gave them the freedom to make their own life choices in the manosalvas. my grandparents mean everything to me. i loved them so much and i'm glad we live with them both he's missing. i call you good bye. and with pretty loud began and 2014 and serbia. as a social project it's aim was to give young roma women the same rights and freedoms as roman men have the women sing in 3 languages, romani, serbian,
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and english. their biggest success so far was their appearance at the women of the world festival in london. i took with me singing in the band has helped the young women build up their confidence and they found role models online . the roma people are europe's largest ethnic minority. their culture is being changed by social media. you know, even so nothing is more important to jessica than family. almost every day she takes her nieces and nephews out for walks. they to our growing up without to mother. this is a poor district a quarter, but she also says she likes it. the community is tightly net and people help one another on the old school bugle group on this with their quarter. mahala plays a big role in this video. it's easy for young people to lose their way here. roma
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communities tend to live on the fringes of society and are at a big disadvantage. drug use is also rampant or is the recall of the problem what i wish for most, for my quarter way out of the finance, or at least what i would change is to get rid of the drugs here. they're all gone. one evidence of sun summer. there are lots of kids here. they and just like their parents, i'm worried that they'll come in contact with the drug audit. they flush and say and ruin their lives. and, and the joke on the fun you my, the ornish the sway. sheila, sheila, jessica has done volunteer work for years for the same social project that launched pretty loud. she helps children with their homework to help them succeed and school the group has, there were her so space one floor up there working on a new song. anyone who wants to can join in it's about having fun. but g o g as best friends, sylvia says, now there is also more at stake. there's even more wilma girls in this quarter look
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up to us. that's a major responsibility and we have to take it on because we live here together. and we're a major role model that the large responsibility i'm avoiding was that i'm, we are fighting for a quality and against discrimination. nazi and we want the same rights as men novice. so it's a big challenge and i've got 2 jobs and i'm raising a child at the aqua. that's not easy. but if you really want something than any things possible, watch for someone. look at the flight. i did it, that's the energy that pretty loud passes on to their fans. and who knows, maybe one day they will, we were to say something very special happening there. now why you wonder, did you know that her care was, can live to the ripe old age of 25. but in farming, as it is largely practice these days, that simply doesn't happen. milk cows lead a tough old life and they often end up emaciated, exhausted,
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and down at the slow to house. no one, heart warming exception is carrying books. farm on the german north coast here, animals, old and frail, can enjoy a place of peace or in fact, share a place of peace. oh, it's early morning down at the firm. oh, read me. time to eat. look is not a farmer. she runs a retirement home for animals. frederick escaped from a livestock trailer. and rosa is from a fattening facility where she languished gravely ill. karen on her partner, young goodess mainly tend to cows who would normally have ended up at the slaughter house after years as agricultural livestock
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at home put in, learned the animals can spend their toilets years in peace there. hm. yeah, mm hm. for but we prepared father for the old folks been in the nursing ward so to speak, to i know they are suffering from arthritis, says and can no longer keep up with a herd. had to admit to love him. some local farmers think the retirement home for animals is a crazy idea. but the project now has so many supporters that it can take good care of the 38 cuddle from the donations. maria needs a lot of love and care. she stood in the stable for 12 years. the technical term is tethering. during that time, she produced over 100000 liters of milk cart and says that this crew that the dairy industry often treats animals like machines. she thinks consumers don't know enough
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is give ins of feel emit. there are so many fairy tales with nick for example, that house always produce mill garcia as mine can you people know their cows need to give birth version m and in industrial farming. they are artificially inseminated his am to correct us. and then after they give birth, the catherine taken away so that we can drink her milk via mich thing and cohen, young goddess, had taken over his parents farm 1st. he carried out organic farming. but eventually he decided to abandon farming for good. some farmers have criticized his move, saying while they are hard at work, he is out collecting donations. but he disagrees only who are gossiping so on, but very few farmers could manage without you agricultural subsidies and mine dogs . and just to me, subsidies are also donations made by the state and our moustache. in fact, the taxpayers have to foot the bill gate,
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whereas the donations we receive are all made voluntarily causing her absence. however. every day the cattle, tuttle over hay at feeding time. karen anon say the animals can express a wide range of emotions. they formed family units argue and create friendships. ah, there are 20 hector's of pasture, where the animals can roam freely, carmen and young hope the project can help change people's minds. that unless our i'll say we're not pointing a finger at others, phoenix are going to dispose of i do doesn't, but you're not saying you are evil because you are doing this and that order does he ability get it else? and so that we don't go around showing pictures taken at slaughter houses or does instead thus we're taking a more.
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