tv Her Deutsche Welle December 30, 2022 1:15am-1:31am CET
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health to brazil when 3 world cups and is seen as one a full poles, greatest players pellets and chanted fans and dazzled about. and don't forget, you can always get dw news on the go. just download our app from google play or from the apple app store that will give you access to all the latest news ram the world, as well as push notifications for any breaking news. and that's all for me for now . don't forget, there is more news on our website. you don't you feel com. i'll be back again at the top of the next. take care. with what do you, what do you get for $0.50 or 50? said a lot with
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thinking come bills, month to month or so. did you know it costs $0.50 to feed one hungry child for one full day? a dog? with the share the meal. you can share your meal with children and me with just $0.50 and a tap on your smartphone. together we can end global hunger. please download the app . with when i started off, i did experienced a lot of resistance because i'm a young woman and i don't think y'all out by need lake. i came, there was a my back to not on the diamond one the enough for me to see hello ah
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. when i filled, i feel like them to step up and say the truth. ah ah, i'm a young woman. i don't exactly looked part of a farmer and a lot of elders would not want to listen to a young woman because they've had so much experience it's a male dominated industry. there's not many young women who are actually interested in agriculture. edlio. and i wanted to kind of look closer at our food systems in our agricultural systems because i knew that
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there was ample opportunity for innovation and for change. i come from a family of farmers on my dad's side. he took pride and growing his own ingredients and produce and those were the traits that i was raised with. ah, i'm louisa buelo and the founder of the cow project. and i live in carina stewart in the philippines. the philippines is one of the most at risk countries to hazards brought about by climate change. and we are at the front lines of the climate crisis to typhoons and droughts and natural disasters. farmers are one of the most vulnerable populations of that, which is why i realized that as i was building this venture, it was inevitable that we had to bring in environmentalism stewardship and our climate education into this kind of work.
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hey, i love merrill over finally. yeah, me, uncle doing that. let me take i will lock while on me, so i see i will have it put on download and i'm never coupon man, i got me. hi. hi. hi them our yep. live in call. i nichol. i called tom mini my alley. unique mark, why then i will i live. i wire to pamela campbell over here. oh my god, i t p m on call. ready? you know, when i look at the f, i haven't a good map. why? the gang of how like they like them through the like in mark weiler for the car to and the thing holla, anavia, chill entered by you had a thong caught me to a given a how, how more like i'm going. i didn't pay a cash with her com or hung around me, but i love i'd have been how because the way i've been stopping what they can buy and hello to me. don't game
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a me peak. mm. need your tea, lovins you at g mail like that you didn't thank you for that to you. after i graduated from university, i came straight to my family business. they have a conventional traditional store, which is, you know, they're sell everything including shoes, or my parents have this huge experience. whereas i had practically nothing to everything. i said they just say, oh, that's not right, that's wrong. so it wasn't really a big goal. when i started missouri, i was just want to do something on my own. make myself independent. do something that i really like ah,
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everyone is sort of selling online. so i thought why not? i start something online. my name is omar. i am the founder of a shoe local brand name, a missouri, and from indonesia. and i'm also writing a book called in my own shoes. mm. straight after i get married and started business. about a year later, i have a baby, her name is hammons out. by the way, after 7 years, i had a divorce, which came and play huge part of my life. because at the moment i was really in the dark and you know what happened to entrepreneurs when they have personal struggle, everything crumbles. and that's why i'm in 2019. we decided that we have to close amazon. i had filed for bankruptcy.
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alan fontanello my boy to come to ain't got tom and gunner wondering. no tom how can we more who hardly defy last time i get on again i went in what a co female hour and he laughed padilla. hello. hi. give me more about mat on a get home again with one and he may tom a while. oh mean? oh tommy 19, api topical. only let alone if only and you with on alaina that on and coming me. i my toiler. not a lot on the lawn dental, and i love the can. gumby could double mind when the letter i ha, ha ha my been say are because a lot of it back in my, the past. the deadening ever my probably my little over ah
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. when the bankruptcy happen the company was, i not very good decision at the moment. financially on we waiting to price war, we offer too much discount and months after months we didn't make profitably so hot brokenly. we had to close down the business from that moment and i realized that it is crucial for entrepreneurs to be able to rec numbers of their own business so that they can make analyses according to facts and data. ah, because as you may plays a huge part of my life, i had nothing to lose. i already missed the business. so i thought,
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why not just post it and, and it was very grateful because i touch many other hearts out there who felt also that, oh my god, i'm not alone. i also thought the same way. ah . in december of 2016, our town was hit by super typhoon not 10. and it destroyed about 80 percent of agricultural livelihoods and agricultural land in my town alone and displaced over a 1000 families. so we knew that after that type, when we needed a way to rebuild and create better type when resiliency ball it started as a typhoon, relief after our we gave away ceilings and vegetables, these to rebuild their, their agriculture livelihoods. but then we realized that it was just kind of
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a bandied response and we needed to actually position them better for the long term . so that was when we realized that coca cola was a pretty good crop because it was already better suited to our ecosystems. ah, i, as we were going along with that, i realized that there are a lot of things that i can integrate into regenerative agriculture from sustainable farming practices that came from our elders. so it became more of a collaborative effort to move forward and rethink our food systems in ah, i created this community omeka, muddy meaning timing bag. surprisingly, i found so many of other entrepreneurs who are not able to read their own final financial statement, let alone having financials to my publisher. call me to wrote
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a book about starting a business and growing it and being successful after um, you know, experiencing failures. i felt strongly that having the courage to leave it as yourself, as i call it, in your own shoes, is very important because that is the only way that you can be the best question of yourself. not. you know what other people expect you to be or to do, and that is the only way that you can give meaningful impact for other people. are gonna have a body either ballasa collected on the whole item, toiler you up with, talk about the titles. oh, the lots are hard boiler in either parts of hampton while only whiting dina. i think while may wine. i do me. why don't i allow you yet?
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why do dealer by that buying a new south? i'm kind of in your life. i need my kilowatt or die. let them my back to not on the diamond one me and i that to me to see had to call looked up my kid why my dad my dad y loda down with nicholas wiley. he my mother kinda come, we'll come back by me. they call you that. my god. i mean i was to, well over me gonna die in my, my toner. oh, here in the philippines, there's a stigma against farming where people perceive it to be associated to poverty. on sustainability and failure, which is quite terrible it's really
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important to change the stigma so that more young people can get into farming because our average age of farmers is that around 57 years old. there's a lot of reset isn't strictly what people perceive as the stereotype of just pointing out in the sun. there's always a lot more aspects to it that can be integrated from just sticks from science to mathematics. young people can actually make a change and innovate and positively impact communities along the way. and i think that you just have to start small and start now and start local. mm. who's with
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imagine in every building, a green house, in every cellar, an energy plan, and an every ruin housing. what has been designed to day in the metropolis as of tomorrow? of living pro active climate protection? our future city on d. w. our games on the melting ice a reporter and tracks down the arctics major player element. russia is quite economic impact theoretically. if you see something that looked
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