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tv   Global Us  Deutsche Welle  July 14, 2023 10:30am-11:01am CEST

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because of her character, because of her courage and how she thinks most rain. so today wise mother annoying for nearly 4 decades, she's for the piece for me, for brace of freedoms in your home, then they run in spite of love buried prizes. children should not inherit science from us the an income if you look into the nice thoughts, july 29th on t w, the senior citizen on the take. so showing the grandparents adjusting the internet, the sterilization on the, in the usa more or more man taking responsibility for contraception, the tanks but no. so which is why
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japan is running out? so for chris, the dra reporting for duty and his real name is meiza will come by se, but, but you are for special with his online persona, weekly ads, video blogs, the savings, i don't know, the, especially one year old previously served in the japanese armed forces all the self defense forces. as a note in here, he still feels a connection with the military and is voluntarily seeking to recruit more young people. his sign reads, would you go to the self defense forces? and i know no one got to come all knowing that
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there was a little deal in on this. what have you heard about what it's like in the army pizza deal? it's really strict. i'm not a morning person. i don't want to get up so early. was like a high cut off because it's hard work. even have to go out when it snow isn't sleeping attend. the training is really tough. people read lisa. yes. well, what are the, using someone who will, you want to know what the young people often don't know much about the self defense forces? he's an old and they're not interested. they're mostly in difference on either positive or negative. we use the updated causes a b on these 1st division in tokyo. new recruits come to swear an oath of allegiance, but the chairs are largely empty. the army is especially source of ground troops.
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the defense poles holds an open day to advertise for new recruits. but most of those who come on relatives of people who are already signed up there are jobs going full. all the family in the post view. sorry. so use was focused on disaster response units. now the government needs armed forces. so they doing all they can to win over the countries disinterested, young people to anyone who even just tries on their helmets like school students, my quotes are not got tony is immediately invited for a korea's tool. of course, i mention that he's into marshal lots you might have been in the could join the army model to think about internal model with us. you could become the number one in karate tooth on to try to click on it. maybe you could even reach world class that's quite possible to vincent human auto. how most of critics to argue most
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anything to win a new recruit sociologist who may cost us, who has investigated the personnel shortages faced by the self defense forces depends folding best rate is a huge problem. the lower ranks of seen personnel numbers dropped 20 percent at the same time, national defense is increasing the and focus on the hotel condo called a security situation has changed. as the self defense schools is now have a new job description call in future people in the services will face a higher personal risk for a serious folks. i did do. many people used to just see the self defense forces as a stable job. but these days that wouldn't necessarily be the right career choice if that's what you're looking for. a point where the turning point military li, japan has indeed turned the corner while the constitution still renounces the
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states right to go to war. many politicians are speaking a different language. the government is now partnering with other countries to develop new 5 digits. the defense industry sees japan as the growth markets in east asia. the country's defense budget is set to double. but solving the personnel problem remains difficult. you need to, we need to think about how we can do missions with fewer people. so what, what's the use of artificial intelligence and technical innovation could certainly help us here. i think that's the whole, you know, but even that has its limits not using it. we have that's not, that's what again to but he will drive the tanks when the number of people of prime recruiting age continues to full. and just 5 years, japan will have a new 1000018 year olds and almost no one here is this came this boshra that was a walk or the night this generation of young people in japan will continue to
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choose their own profession. unlike students, my co so few are open to serving in the armed forces. but even of course, the best thing is if the self defense forces are needed in the 1st place and all this around here. but if something happens and they are needed to locate it, then you have to be prepared by the self defense forces us to put as to be a deterrent to would be enemies. but right now they not exactly intimidation. they more like their mass goes into to friendly siegel the . if your family planning complete full. maybe you don't want kids of a set to
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a male sterilizations could be the opposite. it's one of the safest contraceptive methods of demo honk. if you had your basic to me, is the message on the back of the vehicle. and every few minutes someone does. it makes s guided reading and smile every time. the 45 year old physician is the proud owner of the only mobile, the sick to me, clinic in the us. once a month. he takes it across iowa, providing minimally invasive, affordable of his activities that take less than 15 minutes. it's a pretty lucrative business. but the doctor is also keen to change approaches to contraception. women female individuals are fertile from the time that he, puberty until the time their mental also which is around 50 years old. and they were fatality is only one day every month. instead of focusing on the individual was fertile every single day of his life. from the moment we had purity until the
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time we done. so it seems like there's an awakening, an awakening he wants to encourage. that's why he visits remote parts of the state where education levels tend to be low and where men would have trouble accessing the surgery. puddings mobile clinic divides opinion many in the us don't think contraception is a man's responsibility. but then there are many who think women shouldn't have to deal with the risk associated with harm model birth control. and crucially, abortion is now banned in a number of states. greene has arrived in the small town of waterloo. he usually parks, in the center of town, the clinic is perfectly legal and local authorities don't generally mind. the main problem is making sure the trailer doesn't warble. i don't want me to just pay the right all those things that i never thought about having an
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r v and i had to work with a demand for his service is growing in the wake of last year's supreme court decision to overturn the constitutional right to abortion it's now banned in 14 states. many health care providers are reporting a rising number of patients seeking of a sec to me. according to the n g o planned parenthood, there's been an increase of over 30 percent. and i think that going back to, to why the, what i admire about the united states in terms of defending and promoting a personal rights. i think that that's the reason why that, that became the most important thing in the mid term election. because it was affecting a very basic right for an individual to choose about something as basic as, as their fertility. it's all the dates that andrew and christian color had been
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following for some time. they agree that it's a woman's right to decide for herself. the couple have 3 children, including twins and don't want anymore. you can just, that's why 35 year old andrew is getting of this back to me. then you see this is more, there's a possibility. i mean, my father had one done a long time ago now in so we've always been pretty progressive thinking i regard so hopefully more man just to be that way. doctor, getting used as a new skillful technique and simply blocks the bath tubes. it takes just a matter of minutes. a christian meanwhile is glad that you'll no longer have to take the pill. she was on it for 18 years and struggled with the side effects. so it'd be nice to be able to kind of re regulate my own. my own body, so that would be that would be nice which use very i think he's excited,
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excited about that as well. patients arrive at the mobile clinic every half hour. dr. glaring charges $599.00 for the procedure. about half the national average cost of, of a sec to me it's estimated that several $100000.00 men in the us undergo sterilization each year or ashlyn and jacob barbara's decision to come here today had a lot to do with a new abortion regulations. i think my views of all that had changed personally for my self i guess over especially now like you said, rosie wade and like really made you think about it where before and it made me put so much thought about it and now being like, oh my gosh, that could be a real issue. you know? yeah, yeah, it definitely did. but probably just more recently. yeah. goodies, clinic has an effect and it nickname that might put some men off the nutcracker.
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which is, which is cute. but it's very deceptive because that's not what we do. we not, we don't crack anything, you know, but instead i like to call it the mist. correct. you know, they, the mobile, the sec to mcclintic is a way to crack some of those manse around the task. new abortion rules in the us are leading to a re think about men's responsibility for contraception, of aspect to me was long seen as somehow immaculate, but attitudes are starting to change. and man, or increasingly taking charge of the reproductive health, the climate change is causing or scarcity, entire regions of drawing out. but there are lots of ideas about how to address the
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problem as exacerbated an ongoing crisis and to us water, gas, city, water salted, has become a never ending issue with an approaching global. we also causes liquid, fresh water is not a future problem. half of the global population experience is what the scarcity of doing, at least some parts of the, of all the consumption he thinks then it's as bad. what the management of training all ground water, rivers and lakes world wide by the middle of the century. every 2nd country will struggle with limited access to water. to tackle this problem, we need to manage our water better. we need to re use it and figure out ways to use less of it. but that alone may not be enough. scientists think that we need to look beyond use of water sources like rainfall, snowfall river run of around for to frozen i seats in the arctic stone. it is 70 percent of all fresh water resources globally. thousands of square kilometers of
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ice breaks fault as ice boats every year it melts into the ocean. fresh water that is wasted duty such has demonstrated that this. busy opportunity does force prevention start bringing water from the northern hemisphere via defendant water to those 80 yards via the need this month. so it can be as easily scientist at the united nations university and also have to both unconventional water resources from a technological point of view. i spoke to already told today ships from the oil and gas industry up pulling smaller chunks away from drilling platforms to provide a city like cape town with fresh water for roughly 10 weeks. we need some think a lot bigger than ice mountain wing around a 125000000 tons. in comparison, a large cargo vessel weighs around 200000 tons. and instead of pulling it just
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a few 100 meters, it would have to be checked thousands of kilometers. it's a huge feet. that's computer simulations from 2011. have shown that this is possible. well, theoretically, it's still a long way from luxury 3 d animation to reality one and logic company, the national advisor bureau as pets, into the technology to eventually put it off. but they select the funding to start the pilot face. for now, you guys book idea is proving too big a fee to solve today's problems. so let's look to something lights up, something that can be found pretty much everywhere. like there, you know, in the morning everything is covered with a small droplets. guess what? these would be for exactly how to fuck humidity and it becomes liquid when it cools down. that's why i called glass of beer is wet on the outside, even though no d a spilled over nature. this usually happens in the evening and at night when the
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temperature has dropped and it's possible to take advantage of this phenomenon and have is this humidity? so fog harvest team has been practiced by indigenous people on virtually every confidence. this is rebecca funnel. she's a consultant and research at one of the most successful fuck harvesting operations globally. you've got some kind of material. this one is nice and 3 d 2 got a lot of physical surface for the water to get stuck on. and then as far as passes through, it's just the cloud, you can kind of see the spray coming through in front of the other bigger net. and then it gets caught on this net put into practice. it looks like this. on the edge of the semi eric, i bump from region to morocco, there's very little rain. but for 6 months, a sick folk hangs over the region. in this fog passes 2700 square meters of mesh which makes it the largest for competing operation in the was the for condensers and trips into large underground deposits from where it is distributed by
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a pipes to people's homes. and that's collected on 35000 liters of water every day, which fulfills the needs of more than a 1000 people. and it's even used to what the crops today, the big folk harvesting operations and julie morocco gonna. they would try a seal in south africa. but the potential is much bigger. this suitable size, almost every, with the 40 square meter net that is about $200.00 pages, but they costs roughly $1500.00. so this is the communities that would benefit the most from this particular technology are also those who were kind of most marginalized within countries. so getting the attention there and the kind of start up capital where it needs to be is not pill bottles. although capital is needed for ca, this thing is fairly cheap and scalable and a great solution for people living in remote areas. but it's not an option for big cities. there's simply not enough. bog and cities need more water than that's can
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catch all up solution does not seem very crazy at 1st. but what's crazy is the amount of water we could safe by implementing it. i think pipes are the reason we lose nearly 30 percent of all fresh water globally bits of staggering 346000000000 leaders a day. to put that in perspective, that's 13 times more than german households consuming per day. or more than 2000000000 beth tops a year. perfectly good water. we could use to drink, wash, clean, grow food, fits just being wasted. like sun quoted me on a full space. so we'll basically thomas some of the times. this is lauren guy. he co founded a tech startup, a stairwell from us is a bit open on the statements. i stay with trex water leaks from the space. they make satellite images with the help of microwaves. the microwaves reflected differently depending on which medium they hit. full space we can get within the
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sci fi, underneath the outside input, the soil input, the pipes, the am. so i'll go things actually gain linking. what we can say phone space is the water on the spot for like, for example, based on the data, always from rain or something else. they're looking for the composition of the water. if it's drinking water, they assume it's a leak. and mostly the that's the result. so like this, every adult on this met, for example, is a leak. and here to leak up over a 120 meters per minute detected in proud to italy, point in bulk or in chinese cities, estero sales, those maps to utilities globally. so they know where to fix makes and save money. locating leaks is only the 1st step in a long process. fixing one the my trip new ones, because it can affect the pressure within the buds, improving and renewing pipes and infrastructure is key to saving water. and then
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any $40000000000.00 that going down the drain globally do on the take talk is just for the younger generation. always in china, senior influence is a pretty big quite the opposite. the meet, the stylish brownies of beijing. these elegant elderly ladies are between 68 and 77 years old. they are being filmed by one of their daughters in law for a live stream on a video sharing platform. the. they advertise fashion, beauty products, and even books. they don't personally spend much time staring at their phones, but they are interested in users opinions. again, it's a home that's the best comment was i'd like to be your age and have your kind of
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life, john, or some sort of the one who use a said you'll to saying it doesn't look good. that signal that comment 68 year old lin way is a former nurse in china. the retirement age for women is $55.00. the ladies now known as the beijing grandma's, our upper middle class, and met at an evening class for older amateur models. their fans loved them for their head to toe style. puncher needs to talk alone. they have more than 2000000 followers whose average age is 50. china social media platforms are full of lifetime content. anything political wouldn't make it past the sensors. this influence there is an 86 year old, former professor with 6000000 followers. china is an increasingly aging society. one person in every 5 is over 60.
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social media is a place to population turns to for a bit of harmless, fun, all the time. they know why a to the we visit some dance crazy, very active senior citizens in the country side. this town around 700 kilometers south of beijing is home to some 3600 residents. many young people have moved away. these senior citizens meet up almost every day at mingle is place. he's 28 years old and sort of a private geriatric nurse. his home doubles as a village cafe. the important concept is exchanged here and wherever they get up to whether it's dancing or baking, mingle or posts. it online, one room each. i can't wait to get moving. she's 85 years old and has hip problems
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. but here at meaningless, she can forget about them dancing. she tells us, does her a world of good many years live alone making the begin organizing these meet ups 3 years ago, shortly after his mother died. or motto, hold on. what kind of my life felt meaningless? what i wanted to do something from my late mother who am i to whom am i speaking with? i have so much grief. i'm doing this helps me overcome. it. doesn't have his guests. affectionately call him. they're managing director one religion and her husband are farmers. they barely managed to make ends meet. they both could do with a new set of teeth, which is simply an affordable but they say it's fine.
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yeah, man, i can chew, invite roughly, use the knowledge i'm i do it to gave me money, but i don't want it to level. i'm too old. i don't have many years left. i don't need it football. or we had planned to meet some other social media stars in another village, but they came under pressure from the authorities even though they're not doing anything political back in beijing, in the privileged world of the beijing dilemma. the authorities don't mind them in the least this dinner at the home of soon son is being live streamed bundled in here. country young people think old ladies a good for nothing. so they have no place in society anymore. title one, but we can still contribute. these elderly people in the country side aren't making flat bread as a lifestyle statement. this is the reality. but coming together is
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a welcome distraction from the monotony of everyday life. that's right. here we can chat together and do a little work. the day goes by foster that way, and that's when you, when you tell them that many of them only use their phones to make calls. they're not interested in tick tock. what happens in the real world is what matters to them . right now for all the label ideas, they show media stuff around the different kinds of meet route to the rach inspector. yep. this african giant pouch stretch is being trained in the us to clamp down on wildlife smuggling, for example, to smell when a shipment contains hardwood tender or packing in these so called hero. rats can also find people in collapse buildings and detect diseases in lab samples. but the
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most famous will sniffing outlined mines and explosive materials. besides the keen sense of smell this size makes them, i do fast, small lights and can fit into tight spaces easily and they live twice as long as other rodents. so would you trust unit to run inspections at your airport the the
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of the stopping climate change? that's what they're aiming for. we want to achieve rethinking and society of civil about commitment and hope about visions and the people
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behind the learning catastrophe. climate change the 15 minutes on d. w into the conflict with tim sebastian, it's nearly 3 weeks since rushing most new ways from the 500 points here. that tags towards most, god turns out that 5 days off to the episode because both c, p goshen was having phones to fulton and the from what does it all mean? my guess is russian political sciences to customer now based conflicts? 19 minutes to you, the free clinic already told me
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about sugars paralyzed between your societies, computers and governments that go crazy. so your data explain how these technologies work, how they can that's how they can also watch it. now, the in many countries education is still a privilege. property is one of the main causes some young children work in mind drafts. instead of going to class, others can attend classes after they finish working, the millions of children over the world can't go to school. we ask why? because education makes the world
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a more just make up your own mind. dw, made for mines. the . this is dw news live from orlando downtown for india, submission to the moon. lashondra on the spacecraft aims to put a rollover on the unexplored south pole of the moon to search for ice. but 1st it has to avoid another crash landing.

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