tv The Day Deutsche Welle August 25, 2023 10:30pm-11:00pm CEST
10:30 pm
with i have never been to hell, but that's what it must feel like. this. a heroism fail. i swear. what remains to this, i just want to be 3, the, the house on the edge of this a hard on the last shelter start september, 2nd on dw, and donald trump has 100 himself and to atlanta is fulton, county jail ways facing charges for trying to overturn georgia's presidential election, the former president's antics of overshadowed of a republican party search for the candidates for the next election. even though he boy coffee, the 1st the by to potential republican nominee, easiest week. mr. trump still dominated the event as of the headlines ever since. so why is the republican party still so in his throw? i'm feel gail in building and this is the day
10:31 pm
the what is taking place here is a travesty of justice. we did nothing wrong. i did nothing wrong. if donald trump was land on the beach right now on his beach plan golf, this wouldn't be happening behind us. i know it for fact, because i'm an intelligent person. what they're doing is election interference or try to interfere with an election. there's never been anything like it in our country before because this country is too important to lose. we have to have donald trump, it's trump, or also coming up, denmark moves to outlaw public buildings of the car on the meanings. these are meeting this towards the top, no of the toughest sense of great difficult and hatred or his tom's denmark and daddy's interests and risk the security of things out in the world and at home. oh,
10:32 pm
you're welcome to the day. so donald trump has been formally arrested in the us state of georgia after surrendering to law enforcement authorities. it's a full time the for the former president has been arrested this year. but the 1st time his mug shots been taken for official records is accused of trying to legally over to and the results of george's vote in the 2020 presidential election. by now familiar sight trumps motorcade. dropping him off to face charges. but this time is different. this court photo of trump, along with an inmate number, is now sitting in the public records of fulton county jail. it's the 1st mug shot ever taken of a former us president. it shows that even if you have all this money and all power, you're the most powerful person in the united states, you are not above the law and you are not about consequences from surrendered at
10:33 pm
the atlanta due to face charges that he illegally scheme to overturn the 2020 election results in georgia and a phone call trumpet asked of republicans secretary of state to find them votes to change the outcome. trump said he's being prosecuted for making a quote, perfect phone call. when you have that great freedom to challenge you have to be able to otherwise you could have heard this honest collections. what is taking place here is a travesty of justice. we did nothing wrong. i did nothing wrong. instead of letting the latest spectacle damage his candidacy for the next election, trump is using it as a photo op from made his 1st po since 2021 on x. the platform formerly known as twitter posting is own much shot with a link to raise money for his campaign and repeating claims of election interference, which many of his republicans,
10:34 pm
supporters believe that this country is too important to lose. we have to have donald trump, it's trump, or death. trump was released on a $200000.00 bill with a grand total of over 90 charges across the board criminal cases, the ex president pieces escalating legal troubles a. so where is the republican party in all of this? as it's biggest vote with our faces, potentially mandatory jail time and dominates republican debates, even when he's not there. let's pick it up with the guideline. he's a political strategist and co founder of the lincoln project. republican politician, political action, can we say we just that's up in 2019 to oppose donald trump's re election. welcome to dw, would it be fair to say that with every sense of criminal charges, the former president faces that he support and his grip on your party groves?
10:35 pm
i would say that you're absolutely right about that. he has never been more popular since the 2020 election and he is right now with republican voters. you know, if you look at the recent survey work that comes out here in america, more than 60 percent of republican voters nationally, want him to be the republican nominee next year. and every time he is indicted has his mug shot taken is you just ran a story there. uh yeah. the people behind him become even more secure that they are . he is the person they want. so your policy was critical of him after the like left to the public and performances and the 2020 to mid terms. so how have you gone from that to your current parents supine this as well? i would say it is, i'm no longer a republican. so i do everything i can every day to make sure donald trump is never the president again. but what i would say is, this is us. it is a relationship with republican voters. but really more importantly,
10:36 pm
republican politicians that is based in fear they are afraid of him saying bad things about him or them there. he is afraid they are afraid of him saying that his voter should not vote for them. look, there was a recent survey here in the us that said, if donald trump was not the republican nominee, some 20000000 republican voters would stay home. and so that would mean that not only would truck not win, but no republican candidate would when. and let's be clear about this. what the republican party and its leaders were upset about last year was not the fact that he tried to overthrow a fair free and fair election or any of the things he said and done. since he came when the american political stage, but that he costs them power, that the people he had chosen in his actions cost them seats in our us house in our us senate. and so they are still in the same relationship where it's very hard for them to win with him on the ballot, and it's impossible for them to win without him. um, is he an act to lead of your party?
10:37 pm
does he but attends committees and do all the the, the boarding political stuff or does he, is he just this big figure within the pocket and leave those details to someone else? i'm trying to get an idea of, of the how activities that yes it wasn't for him. the republican party is a means to an end. for him, it was the means to really be more popular than he was to be more in the line life . and he was in 2016. remember that he did not expect to win that election. he did not expect to be president. and then once he lost, he wanted to do everything he could to maintain his power. what i would say now is that the main change authority over all of our different state republican parties, our local republican party, but he doesn't do a lot of the dirty work. he has people that do that for him. so this week we saw the 1st debates among potential republican presidential candidates and trump chose not to attend and still dominated the events. how could non trump republicans
10:38 pm
break through when the trump said? because the so dominant? well at this point i don't even know that that's possible. um if you look at donald trump support along with ronda sanchez, the florida governor, who's numbers who 2nd and then very back around the strongly young business person . they have about 85 percent of the vote between them and they are all very aligned in a world view in policies, in the way that they would govern. that they say that they want to govern the way they see about all, you know, american foreign policy. and that leads about 15 percent of republican voters for anybody else. and so at this point, i would say it's almost impossible the donald trump should be once the nomination wouldn't get it next year. so is that now the republican model has donald trump, so changed that policy, that only the most rabid and see gay and to minority woke water. you can stand any
10:39 pm
chance of success in the republican party. i would say in most places, yes. now, there might be some states, there might be some legislative districts in which that's not the case, but i would say this is that donald trump and his belief system. and what he has done has speak down into states into localities, into different party structures. it would be very difficult for someone who opposed him or who did not go along with the things he says and does to get elected. so the fact he is radicalize, the republic and policy there's, well, let me say this, i think that there were radical elements of it. i think that there were people in this country who were not involved politically that came to the republican party when he appeared on the scene. and so i think that this was a situation in which a lot of opportunity met preparation. there were people who are very, very conservative. someone like trump, remember he doesn't,
10:40 pm
he's not really what we would consider a conservative. he's not really what we would even have considered a republican before he decided to run for the republican party nomination. but she has turned the party into his vehicle. it now belongs to him, and it will be his as long as he wants it. so can you see any way that the republicans was chosen as its next presidential candidates because of all these criminal activity and legal activity around i mean short of him deciding he doesn't want to be the nominate or some exit outside event, you know, health problem or something like that hard for me to see how he's not depressed and how he's not the republican presidential nominee in 2024 fast. and i think thank you so much for joining us in the outlining that force me, galen, co founder of the lincoln project. are the kinds of denver where the government is proposing
10:41 pm
legislation that would make it illegal to desecrate to how many books in public would apply to the christian 5 of them, the jewish town. but there's no doubt that it's in response to a recent spite of public bindings of the muslim holy book, the correct denmark on neighboring sweden have seen a number of such crown buildings in recent weeks promotion. a backlash in muslim countries is a danish justice minister, minister to homo, god. and freedom of expression is a corner stone of democracy in denmark. yes, home again. therefore, the government wishes for a limited and precise legal innovation, therefore prompt you to know for the government will proposed legislation that prohibits the inappropriate handling of objects with essential religious significance for a religious community. the bill will make it punishable, for example, to the public. the crown the bible, all the tara in a 216 full. they say that i'm so feet allowed to use uh,
10:42 pm
on pad edison at bowie and scott, the danish daily newspaper. welcome to the w. a y have denmark and sweden seen the surgeon crown buildings um, well, a curiously, we have a mentor as a politician in common, somebody who is. uh, honestly, i think he's hosp swedish off danish is he's called a family ties to both countries who has in recent years become quite intimate, so famous by putting a oh, you're in aging on the crime, in particularly in neighborhoods where there are many migrant residents. so he's been touring uh, in stirring a story. i mean, you know, country is, this is probably the down the people. yes. okay. so he's been standing up this hate? yes and uh, and then do you know uh when,
10:43 pm
when the one just says other people get the same idea. so the people sign in cronsa thought i was right wing streams. but we also have manifestations by, uh, people who uh, have origins. and it was from countries who are politically protesting the face or the machines built around them and the minority. but they have different expressions, maybe not funding, but other forms of expressions around the so talk to see what the government's proposing, then what, what would change it and who's, how many books will be protected. and then i suppose you have to define what a religion is and what a, what a holy author factors exactly what it's a days of about of months ago. the government said, well,
10:44 pm
what we're going to do is we're going to offend this activity. is what everyone thought was that the government might sort of give a more expensive powers around the low topical order. but what they instead propose today was to uh, put in a new, um, new uh, wording inside off, you know, code to criminalize, the inappropriate or maybe even in moral treatment of the objects of have a certain important significance to religious significance to faith based communities. and what is like a moral or inappropriate? that's exactly the judgement that police officers will have to make when they stand uh, in the streets. and a lot of people of the people, one way is like myself, have been saying, but this is going to be very, very difficult to administer because what else is it immoral to read the koran
10:45 pm
in, in the rainbow flag, let's say, what is this in front of a, an embassy, there's a lot of different interpretations here and that interpretation of their liking to be made by police offices in a on duty tokens or some of that reaction. i guess spanish muslims a welcoming this what. what about the countries, christians and jews, and those have no faith, but a tool mean curiously, we have quite a big part of the population who supports at any kind of action to quell. this is the quote, the quote, but the, the bad things. oh, the good for right now. oh yes, exactly. a lot of games find the different findings. crohn's, it's tasteful and ridiculous that and,
10:46 pm
and also more. so the government is not acting against the danes, but a lot of people are saying this is a very big step back for freedom of expression to denmark in denmark has a very strong tradition. maybe you remember the consumer price is out of 2005 and 6, and a way of denmark to get quite a big get also an export to defend the right seat. religion also is on an end to us. it's been traditionally, we've said to notate speech, it gets people, but we will have to be able to criticize ideas. and their religion is also an idea and even critique that might be on the civilized world. or even now brutish has to be able to. uh, okay. all right, so the, the, if, if it was this, if there was this, as you said,
10:47 pm
that base this international backlash that, that happened in 2005, it's the low, it didn't change, then. what does change? so that makes people want to change the law. now i think what has changed is that, um, over the past 15 to 20 years, denmark has become more of a collectivistic country. maybe york has become more collective as we are, maybe willing to have and politicians and governments of the most just saw go closer to our right of privacy and our freedoms. because we think it's important. and that kind of the next in a time where. 7 there are many different people with different origins to get the countries also times the changing and all the security with before. and i think that kind of leaves most of the room to for collective um, just wrote
10:48 pm
a setting of what is appropriate and what is not appropriate. and i've been calling this and, and about a year and a half ago, i wrote a piece that said, i don't think that the custom crisis would be able to happen today. and what we've seen as the government has been very fast moving to diplomatically come the waters, but also now to try and legislates to, to not have a reputation last night. and we'll see where that goes. thank you so much for outlining that for us. i'm for free law from danish, from david newspaper, the buildings go of the other. chun dry and 3 lunar rover has begun. exploring the moon's surface after india became the 1st country jolanda cross near the launch the unexplored south pole had drawn 3 sent back. these images of its 6 wheeled solar powered rover, leaving the craft to conduct experiments. the next 2 weeks,
10:49 pm
emissions success as by massive celebrations in india. it's only the full country to pull off a soft blue atlantics. and for the relatively low cost of around $75000000.00. and it says it's next ponds offer a crude mission to the doctor. number onset, ga swamis, an independent scholar of space policy and a great power politics chase. a couple of scramble for the skies. the great power of competition to control the resources of the hours of space. so welcome back to think w, this mission seems to be going very smoothly. yes it is because uh, one thing that surprised i think most people is that how soon the roller was rolled out. and so that itself is a great feat. and as you mentioned, it has already send back images. so for me, when i'm watching it, the one thing that strikes me as quickly important about this particular rover is
10:50 pm
that now india has a one stop lunar technology. so it has the ability to launch. it has the ability to enter lunar or bits and to the right elliptical orbit break and utilizes propulsion system correctly. land on the lunar surface safely, which is extremely important, especially the south pole. and then finally send out a rover to study the lunar surface. so it is extremely significant from that particular technological feed to my mind, right? until august through what they space the road is going to be doing for the next couple of weeks. sure, so the rules are, is designed to survive a lunar a day, which is 14 earth days. so the lunar itself has to payloads that has become active as for the indian space research organizations. uh, you know, the, the tweet that they put on x. and so a,
10:51 pm
one of the experiment is extremely critical for future emissions. so one of the payload is going to study the lunar surface for elements like ellen when you are in or titanium. and why is that important? it's because if you think about application that nations are looking to establish on the moon, for example, india is a partnering with the autumn is the chords, so that kind of resources can be utilize to manufacture and build on the moon itself. the lunar rover is also looking for what to rise them to confirm it. and that means that it will be able to sustain those emissions that are coming in the future. so i think the critical significance of the rover is that is going to give us a good map of lunar regolith, which is so it will explain what the elements are and then offered the data for further missions that are going to come in the next few years and just next time
10:52 pm
vision is to send people to the move cannot be the next step forward. you have to sort of practice for sending people into space to yeah, so uh, interesting question. so india is uh, going to collaborate with the us in terms of the item is a cord and the item is a guard has ambitions to us. and the next uh, you know, uh human of the next woman and the 1st person of color to the moon. and indians join that india has a gun young mission, which is a human space flight mission. i think the 1st goal is to send humans to low earth orbit. so india is now collaborating with the united states to send a mission to the international space station. next year, and so the next step will be the moon. so i think you'll have to 1st sustain in laura or a bit and then look for sending humans to the moon. that would be the next step. i would see that in the next se, uh by 2030, is what i would say. and how does that,
10:53 pm
how does it be inclusive of living things on a mission like this? how does that multiply the difficulty it is very difficult because 1st of all, the lunar surface and the lunar at most through the lunar, basically the moon doesn't have the capability to sustain, doesn't have oxygen. so or, or it's got frozen water, but now you have to turn that water into hesitation. you will also have to build a hesitation model that can sustain human life. you'd have to build up entire end to end logistics system. so until the time you can build the technology to extract the resources on the moon, you'd have to build that capability to launch and, and supply human habitation there. and, and to also ensure that hesitation can be sustained for a longer time. do now you had human beings go to the apollo program, but they were never there for a long term and also not for resources or economic perspective. so the difficulties
10:54 pm
are extremely high. china is going and 2030 to the moon and setting up our research station by 2036. so you do have other countries interested in this as well, but not the of demonstrate it. so it will be an amazing feat if it can be demonstrated successfully. i mean, we've seen lots of pictures of that and you, people being very happy that this has happened and successfully i'm what have, i mean, are they too happy to, to asked the question what they're actually getting for the $75000000.00 investment in a junk drive 3, that's been in to so i think uh, overall uh there is of course, a sense of pride and happiness and the fact that this is the 1st time india has gone to a celestial body. but what is fascinating is that there are actually great debates and a scientific conversations about what this mission means, right. and so 1st of all, the cost was a very critical factor. second,
10:55 pm
india just took a decision, this seo to privatize the entire space manufacturing sector. so the box forward now is how does this particular mission that has about $75000000.00 investment return investment? that is 10 fold. how do you actually privatize that to bring the cost down even further and buy depth? what keep up capacity can india actually bill for establishing a completely system lunar communication eco system? so by that i mean of communication survival, secure, safe missions from low earth orbit to the moon. so those questions are already being asked and already being mapped out as we pass that i think as a dr. gosh, while i'm a thank you so much for joining us again, dr. number onset, swami. thank you so much for having me.
10:56 pm
10:57 pm
let's view, we'll tell you who we are happy that we are boxing the story. we have a getting a visa is more difficult than finding gold hosted to use force and for the future in the stories and issues that are being discussed across the country. news africa in 30 minutes on d. w. the invasive was the highest end of choking india's
10:58 pm
voices. so it goes to a fuel sleep. it's lifestyle, wind up turning pests in the process. why not do some research you, i'm make something as traditional weavers on now toss of the solution from the logical mentors to textile resolution 90 minutes on w. hello guys. this is the 77 percent. the platform for the seats issues picture idea. you know, on this channel we're not afraid to pass and then it gets to talk to young people clearly have the solution, the future of this 77 percent every weekend on dw,
10:59 pm
and i wish i could have done more the same. you just click away, find the best document on you to really see the world as he's never seen it before. the dr. no t d w document, dw store. once take socks, we in fact, every day the world crashes are your texas to work for free part of our time. like because we can make the different w call, the world unpack pulse of your info is and all the input u v w installed. now onto the the,
11:00 pm
the, this is the w news. why from funding was ukraine involved in last year sabotage of the north stream? gas pipelines, german media reporting fresh clues of explosions that rupture apply funds built to carry russian gas to germany, to speak to one of the investigative today about what he believes happened the last september. donald trump surrenders to georgia pain, a little socrates in historic for us. the former us president had his mug shot taken.
18 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on