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tv   Kick off  Deutsche Welle  July 18, 2023 4:30am-4:59am CEST

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it says stop some one move back and it actually goes, facing the country to the guessing pushed back even from their own family shows on slicing social loans. seeking his self determined life, douglas escaped from drudgery and abuse. the oldest 5th on d, w. the around the world climate activists have attached works of art for them. the reason is clear i would say is because as i do this, my odd, provide vandalizing art doesn't protect the climate. some say the attacks go too
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far, but they do make headlines. and with that bring awareness, sort of these attacks help the climate cause or are they just vandalism? of input in any case, i wouldn't say it's an expression of love no heading was damaged, but the impact was huge. so in that respect, could us the activists 5 i'm, we won't just lose our livelihood in the climate crisis, but our culture to the, when it comes to fighting for a cause, can you go too far? and why is art so often targeted to better understand the civil disobedience? we take a look at its historical residents and as why it is often women who have been
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willing to break the rules to achieve change the for push, the riot civil disobedience, political protest, and art are inseparable. the russian feminist punk band are known for their powerful in austin, provocative performances. their current mission is to protest against russian president vladimir putin and his war and ukraine. this joy says to give this concerts and to support your brain. we cannot just go out to the strategy because we have from russia the riot source came to international attention with the performance in moscow. main continue drill in 2012
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virgin mary. mother of god, banish crews. and they screamed and their punk prayer. is that to outrage in religious circles, the kremlin decided to make an example of the 3 seniors. they were sentenced to 2 years and a penal colony. in 2022, maria akina escaped from house arrest and russia by disguising herself as a career on tour in europe, pussy riah talked about their lives reality in russia and express their contempt for truth. we do not exclude us from part, so we don't do just we do political actions and political art and we believe that our should be political. it should be, it should says, the society as a reflection of the situation. police wasn't station part as activism is one thing. but what about throwing mash potatoes that a cloud mode?
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a painting? is it acceptable to target artworks for a cause as the you won't lose any of our social spears intact, including culture. we don't just do this in museums and we're funny, but there are one of the places where protest would be talked about test question, mr. then the doors continue to take hold here in europe due to a shortage of resources. now there's simply won't be time to engage with our in culture schmidt, which was awesome. that's, that's, that's tied to the head of the barbara reading museum and potsdam does not necessarily agree with the climate activists approach. yes please provide quite really what violence against our service and parts should invite dialogue. such a violation of boundaries is destructive caput, but it also attracts attention just over a 100 years ago. the suffragettes also targeted art in their fight for boats for
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women. in 1914, mary richardson slashed the ropes, the venus by velasquez. it was one of the while in the us, the active as tended to seek debate. in england they were even prepared to die for their cause such as emily davidson, who threw herself in front of the king's horse at the epsom derby. in 1913. she died 4 days later. fighting for a cause, no matter the cost, nothing, i'm coming to get some good guns. looking back in history, you can see what help set the ball rolling and what might have been a step backwards. nebraska had been by special, got younger, with round demons, christian, and accordingly, we've decided not to destroy or deliberately break any artwork which finished. and we decided new people or bystanders should be involved, that no one should ever be hurt, seen as a kind of kind of mentioned. so products, climate activists tend to agree that there should be no destruction, no hurting,
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of people. just maximum media coverage. but does it help their costs to throw flour at the car painted by and the warehouse, the will such actions change people's minds or just lead to head shaking the as an extra this from the global. so i feel that extra things like that. take away the focus from the actual problem. and the problem is the global solved is already experiencing the climate crisis. now, maria chicago is a fashion designer in climate activists from the maybe a. she uses recycled materials for her designs and for political actions. these protests, banners against international energy giants, for example, are made from left over fabric. i've always used to say
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something just to make hard for the sake of saying it because it doesn't make sense . you know, i believe that access to be communicators, you know, dislike active is the artist is one of the leading climate activists and a co founder of fridays for future in her country, which is separate from extreme drought for years. the activists are currently focusing their attention on a canadian oil giant recon africa, which plans to fact for oil and gas near the oaken van go delta, which could become polluted and dry out even more. convo says the global sales, which is already suffering disproportionately from the climate crisis, continues to be exploited and the countries of the globe are no. i have been shopping for ask for a full, i guess,
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an africa using the energy crisis at the moment. the war in ukraine and the energy poverty in africa as a pretext to start doing just production in africa. what that means is obviously opening up new gas chains or infuse and also putting the entire carbon budget interest. yeah. so green movement. but in this sense, where we are more focused on the climate education of food security and just opening up the conversation because one thing that i for you less, especially through my interactions with the use in the office is that we don't really have a platform where we can discuss how the climate is really affecting climate change affects the whole world. the global self is most affected and the most
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radical activism is taking place in the global north. which raises the question of which forms of protest are justified under the banner climate action is not a crime more than 1000 artists and people from the industry expressed solidarity with the heart attacks of the last generation. the renown german art magazine mono pole even raised them to its cultural policy on listing them at number 19 of the 100 most influential people in the art world of 2022. but is this unwanted advertising for the museums? i just, i just kept was like a comedy. sure. you could say this have the unwanted effect of museums having more visitors offices about the i've been maybe attacking these institutions and they're a nurse. so it wasn't so misplaced. one of these is a stats, it's a no surprise. the reaction has been to increase security. and that's the besides
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the 4 people in class in the handbook who is tyler decided not to increase security, although some works here could be targets. the director is happy to engage with activists which would a good stock be interested in. i've been asked how i felt about the attacks, and i said i could well understand them and that i see the climate debate is highly important to build it and then it to be positioned and to fix them on the active as contacted me in a dialogue developed and we're still talking between discretion present the hunger explanation for the 2022 future exhibition the crews, tyler organized sustainability workshops with fridays for future of the posters were then used at a rally the kind of museum we should be glad to be a platform for protest that one to achieve social progress. it seems reasonable to
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say, museums should be on the pulse of the times and an open space for civil disobedience . the quest, the people who does include art institutions and market always betray themselves as being on the right side as progressive bits, as well, especially in amelia, by the american. for example, the people on the boards of museums are the same. people who in real life feel devices from bugging dissidence as often bottom clear rain forests and create toxic waste. wood. and it's contradictory as it, as post identity says, i mean, even new york metropolitan in guggenheim, museums, and the paras lou have been accused of double standards. the major museums that have also shown 9 goals and spaces, the photographer rose to prominence with her pictures from the queer, new york underground. intimate an honest snapshots of her friends
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and her own life in 2018 gold and took on the billionaire sackler dynasty worldwide. the most important patron of art institutions, they have been immortalized with inscriptions and their own exhibition holes. but their reputation of donors has been tainted since their per do. pharmaceutical company caused the biggest opioid scandal in the us. their pain killer oxycontin drove hundreds of thousands into addiction and told into was an addict. the documentary all the beauty and the bloodshed shows her as a woman is scarred by personal struggles, becomes a strong protest, or we need to demand that the met museum. similar to take peers donations from the backwards and take down their name. the message is that tainted money should no longer fund art institutions, and it was heard,
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the guggenheim and the other museums have declined further funding from the satler's and removed their names. the campaign was 9 golden spar success as an activist in the quote and skipped to sometimes see the codes that the many artist like nan golden follow the money trail. then take on corrupt patrons. need somebody's be and then go there always scandals. jessica impala that goes hand in hand with what the last generation ones do. that's again, that's sort of the, the one change. but change only happens when institutions change and it was stopped . and this is a tune and bringing change to art institutions has also been part of the gorilla girls mission since the 1980s. in particular, they want to see more p o, c, and female artist and museums, and exhibitions. the group became known through illegal poster campaigns in new york for to this day, no one knows who was behind the gorilla master degree of spreads its message
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everywhere and stands up for their peers. with imagination and humor, their posters will be on show and hamburg in march 2023, the security that goes pop quiz. if february is black history month and march is women's history month. what happens the rest of the year discrimination? but this is what their humor draws people in. and it is fun to then point your finger and say, that's true, what's going on. and here's also here's why is 90 percent of the art on display by white men suffice. this doesn't deals stage and it really makes you want to stand up to these days go really, girls are active world wide and open to female collaborators. they have prompted museums and exhibition organizers to think about the representation of women in
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arch which leads to a new question. recently we've been busier than ever. and we've also faced with kind of a huge dilemma. what do you do when the system you've spent your life attacking suddenly embraces you? because it's not traditionally, that's a shift that people who have stood up to institutions are now being invited and paid for their work by these institutions. i'd always, but i don't think this detracts from the work but rather a test to it's beginning to work on a structural level. and even though it's vincent, brazilian, after this call you saw also expose the structural tangles with her art. her performance against the greed that exploits and destroys the rain forest is called a fix the suffocation this osh full. augusta inquired, who was the place i found for myself own g,
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or i can be heard dodge or i become visible because art gives me this place of greater perception with art, we can do faith things more sensitively. caesar can be high. yeah, the bottom line, the, the indigenous artist home is the amazon under both scenarios government, the destruction of the rain forest was fed up 18 percent of the rain forest is raised. another 7 percent will cause the world's climate to tip. this would impact everyone, but most of all the amazon's indigenous peoples citizens. they thought i was born and grew up in a protected territory. the auto body on the go increase. but for those whose land is not protected, it is very bad. they are exposed to violence and displacement most of your needs. they have no right to their own land that he does. so i feel that the merchant of
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indigenous lands of territories is one of the most important tasks that guy use of us says it's not only the land of the indigenous people that's endangered, but also their culture. until recently, they were living in balance with their natural environment. but that is changing. even if the global north still likes to exotic size the other hand, you're going to remove the key aptitude and i hope to see indigenous culture respected. and people maintain their own cultural tradition and not try to fulfill the wishes of non indigenous people to think that's 3 sharepoint as the as an organization. through our activism and civil resistance, guy used to guys championing indigenous rights and protecting the rain forest in a fight for survival. the why is it often women who
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step up and dedicate their lives to a greater cause, rid of tune the cause, become the face of the climate movement. she began calling for school strikes while still in school, herself. she's known for speaking truth to power. we say no, blah, blah, blah, doesn't get away anymore for so called school strikes for climate demonstrations gave rise to a new form of civil disobedience sparking the worldwide fridays for future movement to and the became the symbolic figure of a generation that sees its future betrayed by his parents and politics, the world is waking up and change is coming. what did you like it or not? the type of fish trying to fight? i don't think it's a coincidence that women have somehow become the faces of the current climate movements. and as i, they've always played an important role in silver resistance. but unfortunately they've not been seen as such about light initiatives in board and consume spies. i
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don't want to say they've been erased from history since we're still talking about them just much less than their meal contemporaries has been idolized into that type gap. innovative rebellions led by women can actually be traced back to ancient greece. enlist estrada. a comedy by aristotle, if any of the women of athens and sparta joined forces to end a war, waged by men, their logan. this defies the rule. the crayon after he refuses to bury her brother for being a traitor to replace. i tell you, says i resist. the ruling system fighting for the rights of an indigenous and landless population. and i think the soldiers go venge forwarded to us. all governments have been like crayon. we've always had to fight to have our rights respected. the pussy riot are also fighting against their cri on vladimir prudence,
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who is ignoring international law and waging a war of aggression against ukraine. women in russia have not given up and protesting what of the women and mothers as well that are processing. this will cause the, you know, it's a, the, some of the, some of the issues are not that far from onset war activism. because the, all these are 2 of militarism, it's all very much the stick and it's very male energy like comcast of the world. and the occupation everything their videos are a plea against is brutal macho, militarism, bringing suffering and death to so many civilians and soldiers. a like the what can civil disobedience really accomplish? and how mahatma gandhi,
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probably the most famous proponent of civil disobedience, let the indian independence movement and concern as to marched nearly 400 kilometers to the sea with his followers to symbolically harvest slavery and the us war against mexico. kind of give any kind of a full service where it's a violation that was arrested when she, a black woman, refused to give up her seat on the bus to a white person. for defiance had a great impact. after a year long bus drives by the african american population, the law of racial segregation, and buses in schools was found to be unconstitutional and repealed in the state of alabama. it was an important victory in the beginning of the us days civil rights movement under the leadership of martin luther king. the charismatic speaker defended rosa parks, refusal and promoted civil disobedience as a means of combating segregation in the southern states. the right to vote for the
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south black population. the different times, some might say literacies precisely, the role models of the more recent protest movements, whether it's the anti nuclear movement or occupy wall street, it's all about non violent protests. but how does traffic obstruction fit into the picture? across from vocab your hands which the road blockades are part of the standard tool box for civil disobedience comes. i'm the even germany's federal constitutional court has recognized that something like blocking the highway falls under the freedom of assembly. good. i think this is a sign this point. it's been a bit lost and the ongoing discussion of that assemblies in democratic protests will always have some risk and annoyances. but that's the price of democracy agen this difficult. it is the price of democratic democracy should be able to withstand the various means of civil disobedience, especially when it's not just about local concerns. the global ones like climate
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change and yet codes for harsher punishments are growing louder in the u. k. extinction rebellions actions have already led to restrictions on the right to demonstrate the steve, i'm so we need more incendiary speech making it clear to people that were in such a deep trouble. that something has to change and then it's supposed to and something will change it. that's like what a tune bug said, and changes coming with you like it or not like it or not. but what actions will resonate with people? do we need more radical means? or more hunting images like those of the ocean rebellion who point to the dying of fish and pollution of the oceans. for those of the red rebel brigade demonstrating as silent witnesses to the climate catastrophe. like here in berlin. the ships pushed on themselves were allowed to demonstrate and were protected by the state for the freedom of assembly were allowed to stand here at
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the brandenburg gate every day and protest against anything they don't like. and then the nice and many countries, rebels can't do that. they're immediately arrested, killed or disappeared when they try to protect what's there. and that's a shit. as is the case of the russia where the members of push the riot are not saved due to the radical and open criticism of the status quote. so is it not important that civil disobedience in all its different manifestations is tolerated in democracies. shots? also the
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or the returning leech. it is a moral obligation for germany. * this key, the former colonial power wants to make amends,
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especially for its crimes in africa. but repatriation brings about its own new privilege. returning looted restitution in the cross has of world politics close on in 30 minutes on d w. the shadows. so you just going green kobolds premises, clean mobility, but mining is darcy. this critical role material is used in factories for electric cars. mines mainly in the congo under terrible in humane conditions. votes rush and look into the of this in 75 minutes on d. w to i feel kind of emanuel's engine via you belong to the 77 percent because i don't go to $65.00 total was while those top 5 power i years. 3 reasons
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just click away, find out best document trees on you to see the world. the slide now to dw talking entry the . this is dw news slide from portland, russia blocks ukraine's green exports. united nations saves most close withdrawal from an international agreement will affect millions of people already facing hunger. also coming up for a lend react to the news of russia's too large dw,
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talking to germany's foreign ministers to gauge the mood on the floor. the united nations plus law school condemns what it calls a terrorist.

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