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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  August 29, 2023 4:02am-4:30am CEST

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us, it was a watershed moments for the us civil rights movement. 60 years ago today, 250000 people marched on the capital, washington to demand the rights and freedoms promised to them by the declaration of independence and constitutional amendments. hopes were high when the civil rights acts and the voting rights act were passed in the years that followed. but even 6 decades after doctor martin luther king junior, made his impassioned plea for justice and equality. by formulating the dreams he had for his children and the nation that dream, when he shares with millions of people belonging to discriminated minorities in america, is still far from coming through. on the call for lucian berlin. and this is the, the final. while the spanish football team denies allegations of sexual assault, his case has led to a nationwide discussion over internalized massage. any less. again, if i knew less than se, honor, society is a profoundly feminist society, the forefront to be cool, right?
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it was that one. this almost how long this a stomach sexism we're talking about. so it's almost everyone has seen with this open sexual aggression look at most of which has been seen around the world from negative feel says nuff represents our country of near to don't know. there's no none of us in that understood by welcome to the program. that's good timing with us. 60 years ago, 2 of the day on august 28th of 1963 us civil rights leader, dr. martin luther king junior, gave one of the most famous speeches in american history. he told a crowd of a quarter of a 1000000 people, the largest political rally. washington had ever seen up until that point. that he had a dream. that dream being that one day the united states would live up to its ideals and achieve racial equality and march on washington for jobs and freedom as widely credited with lead thing to the passage of the civil rights act and the following
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year. which outlined discrimination based on race, gender, and ethnicity this weekend, thousands again, march in the us capital washington to remember that pivotal moments in the nation's history. but many of the speakers, including dr. king son, expressed concern over the stage of race relations. 60 years on. here's some of what he had to say along with a views from other americans. i'm very concerned about what direction our country is going in. and it is because instead of moving forward, it feels as if we're moving backward. do you know we are still in this struggle with still fighting the battle? we're still trying to integrate into a suicide that did not accept that. in the beginning, we elected a black man, the whole, the highest office in the land wise. and that the, to me, that me,
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me trust america believe in america believe in the idea of america. search for years ago model became talked about a dream. 60 years later, we had a dream, but the problem is we're facing the scheme was the time of, of fighting for voting rights. this game is a changing board. a regulations in states start a little deeper into the legacy of the march on washington and the work still had to see racial justice. we can now speak to attorney barbara arline, former head of the lawyers committee for civil rights to joins us from washington. welcome back to the day. so good to see you. now, how do you think dr. king would view the state of affairs in the us today? i think he was fine. it's probably disturbing. of course, the real. he would want to see a new beginning and america towards job is to. 1 racial justice,
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he would be this chris watching this current campaign please. and then have you seen the d o b debate last week? he would have said, this is all wrong head. then you can not. when would he and you got to change this entire narrative to be inclusive and to be really focused on a multi racial democracy and stop the multi uh, you know, dismissal hateful narrative. what is to blame for it? this troubling state of affairs as you describe it, as it is without quest. in fact said demographic toby, the united states is changing and is becoming a majority non white space. and as a result of that, there's tremendous speeds that month in the year in
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a certain segment of the white population and fox news and. 1 other entities have gone out of your way to promote the great, wide replacement theory. and the white replacement theory basically says that black are purposefully tried to out number whites. that immigrants are coming into this country from mexico, from, you know, central america from latin america, with the 10 uh, you know, replacing whites and that, uh, that the, and that this is no longer a white country. and that that's wrong because it was meant to be a white country. so is a very wide premises of lime and troll, but that's what they believe. and that's what they're promoting. and that's why you end up with people killing folks like the guys just the uh, 2 days ago in jacksonville. yeah. you know, actually black because of hate. but let's talk about how these issues are being
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addressed. sorry to jump in there. um, i just want to bring up something because on sunday, um president 5 and published and all that in the washington post. kind of heavily patting himself on the back for his track record on, on race relations and race a quality in your opinion, how well has the binding harris administration done so far in addressing these issues? or i think they have done better than the last administration without any question. i think they actually in some regard and even better than the obama. but i do think they have a lot of ways to go do a lot of leadership that they have to learn to serve in this moment to, you know, get ahead of the type of shape requires that they take
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a much more firm to voice here. i think terraces, dollar speed, you know, some of these issues, but i think that they have to, at the same time, really make sure that only one year their personal voices, but that their institutional voice as the government is heard, why you're very strong is the fact that there is no specialist and we need a grass program to deal with these domestic chairs for house showing people, jews, black. so i read all the because the racial haze is a failure. the ministration got to do better than here. i can the what your cannot do, what more can they do? because they have to, to dedicate every branch of the white house and the government to eliminating systemic racism. and it sounds like you don't think that that is what they're doing
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. so what more needs to be done now? no, i said, i think that they could do more like the president could i have a commission right now. he points themselves on race. the reparations he going to have a commission himself is your points right now to deal with rachel in justice in police . he could at right now have a pony commission total body throughout all the states would represent still looking at this issue of domestic terrorism and looking at getting rid of the domestic terrorist that are in the law enforcement itself. and looking and having the f b i, you know, do a better job on targeting these tariffs and, uh, you know, and i just think that there's more they could do it. especially if i book banding in all of these field failures to don't teach african american history. i think
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they can take a much more formative stand and that they have to then. so in this time when the haters are so of low robots and burn bowls, that is incredibly critical that they do more. more not less. yeah, that was so rife, lawyer, barbara island many thanks so much. thank you for joining us. thank you. update. and we can also speak to professor gloria j brown, marshall. she is with the john jay college or criminal justice in new york. welcome back to the day. good to see you too. and i want to know from you to how close has the us come to dr. king's dream coming true. as i think by the time dr. king was assassinated, close to that time period. he had started to look differently at his own dream, his own aspiration, because we're human and what human beings do is fallible. but here's the problem
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that we're encountering more than anything else. african americans have progressed greatly. we have an african american on the us supreme court. f was pointed out. we've had african american president, we have an african american vice president. we have advocate americans in every level of government and businesses in the arts, in sports, and that frightens people. and so we're always going to have problems because they're always going to be people who believe that their identity is that of someone superior to all people of color at all non christians. and so therefore, there's always going to be a problem, but this country have to realize that this is an ongoing problem. and there always has to be this idea as in germany, where you have ongoing issues when it came to and assumed semitism and you work steadily on that this country has to work steadily on it and nothing just because one positive thing happens that all of racism has been wides away. yeah,
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i'm glad you mentioned this because um, i want to bring up something that is of course happening while we are celebrating the 60s on a variety of the march on washington. there is a hyper polarized kind of feeling in the country, especially when talking about critical race theory and the teaching of it. this has become a hot button issue and it's so emotionally charged and instrumental lies. how is this affecting the process of actually coming to terms with the us history and the presence of racial discrimination? excellent question. because is going to hurt a little, is going to be embarrassing because this country had some horrible practices. this country took the land of the indigenous people, and it's kidnapped after tends from around the world, brought them here under pain of death to work,
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to build this nation. it treated many immigrants from europe horribly. and you can't just say, oh, this is a wonderful nation. this is what we have now, and in trying to turn your back on your path is going to continue to haunt you. and so this country, as long as it buys passed and instead of being mature in saying critical race theory after american history and other histories of people who have been oppressed, this country will be something we learn from and become stronger going forward. many people in this country are thinking they want to believe in the tooth fairy. they want to believe in, in the, in the lie of the past. they want to live in a make for the world where they are only good and everybody who the person of color benefited only from the goodness of white people. and that's not true. and so there are many people, especially young people who have been waking up based on his history. and that's why there are certain people who are conservative, who want to live in the past and make, believe it all the past didn't happen the way it actually did. and because young
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people k through 12 and you're up to 18 year old or college students, are starting to open their eyes and not question whether or not this is a good country, but take it as a whole list of history. and this country is one that can deal with this past once we get there. and that's the problem. there are certain people who don't want to deal with it and don't want to get there and don't want to help the country. and unfortunately, they're in powerful positions, but the truth is powerful to and as well as the king said, it can be crushed to the ground, but the true will rise up. how can we get there? how can we get to the point where we can talk about race and come to terms with the past to build them better future for all as the same way germany did the same way so many other countries did. it's going to be a little painful. it's going to be uncomfortable. we all know that, but it's gotta be incorporated into our lessons for our children. it's got to be in the books that people have access to read. i mean, my book race law in american society, or she took just as the black women,
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law and power. all these books are available on the internet. so young people are going to find them any way, but it should be adults who help to shepherd young. people through the understanding of their history that every single nation has done abominable things . but they have to deal with it. that's what, that's what you already we've, uh, we've all failed in some way as adults. but we have to own up to our failures and become stronger, better people, and our young people through books, through plays. i'm a play right? but through many different avenues can learn about our country and those people of good will want to know more can read books, can go to plays, can have better understand this conversation we're having right now is so necessary to the ongoing understanding of what a nation has done in the past, what it has to do in the present to be better in the future. thank you so much for having that conversation with me though. as constitutional law professor gloria j
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brown, marshall bye a or explains football or should have been celebrating their historic victory in the women's world cup. but since winning the tournament just over a week ago, they've been forced to reckon with the actions of this man, a powerful man off the pitch. during the award ceremony, the head of spain's football federation, luis ruby, alice kissed player jenny her most so on the mouth. she says it was non consensual under pressure to resign at an emergency football federation meeting last friday. he delivered a defiant speech defending his actions and denouncing what he called fake feminism . first point. it was a spontaneous case mutual for you, for it, and conceptual that is the key a little bit. is it so serious that i have to leave off to having achieved the best performance in the history of spanish football?
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do you think i should have to resign? noble? well, i am going to tell you something wrong. i will not resign. i will not resign. i will not resign, nobody i didn't receive one despite the applause that greeted really all his speech last week, the spanish football federation has now called for his resignation for seriously damaging the image of spanish football. his actions have received widespread condemnation in spain and around the globe. many footballers and coaching staff has been expressing solidarity with jennifer most so. and the spanish authorities are also taking action. prosecutors have opened a preliminary sexual assault pro and government ministers are calling for consequences. football is worth governing body. fifo has suspended ruby ellis for 90 days while it investigates the incident. france is banning full length is law, make
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a by addresses in schools. the government says the government breaks strict rules, prohibiting religious symbolism. the critics say the ban is unconstitutional and an attack on his mom next week kicks off a new school year in france. but a by a outfits like these will not be back in class rooms. the new education minister has been to the long flowing traces pointing to what he calls an increase and attacks on sick killers. them by the by a has no place in our schools and neither do religious symbols. this has to comply with almost fundamental principles of secularism. and neutrality in france already bends religious symbolism in schools including crosses. jewish cape is and islamic kid scouts. but many question with that the a buyer is in fact religious. typically, a loose commons popular with some muslim women and girls, similar outfits,
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a warrant across various cultures and creeds. the band has divided opinion of a as in the hall, the a buyer's address for the heat. that's all people want to turn it into a religious garment, but it's not religious at all. whatever. finds people the secular risk means we must not display religious science in place of education or administration uncle and that is on the road. yes sir, by us a long dress that's quite loose as long sleeves, but really it's normal clothing, but it's not a distinct religious symbol. critics argue that the band stigmatized as muslims and the issue is being blown out of proportion. further, it's a racist xenophobic, anti muslim is lemme phobic diversion that seeks to stigmatize young women in particular. and it's going to create lots of difficulties by confronting schools
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with an impossible decisions. what is in a bio and what is a long dress in the of needs? the education ministry has not had issued risk and guidance on the avaya event. and the legal challenge is likely. spain has been enduring a sweltering summer with several consecutive heat waves fueling wildfire. well now record temperatures are being replaced by violent storms. heavy rains and strong winds have pound that the ballet, eric islands, causing several injuries, dozens of flies, cancellations, and thousands of room vacation. this is not what holidaymakers had in mind when they booked the flight to new york. the island famous for its beaches resorts in sunshine. it's one of your top holiday destinations. but over the weekend, torrential rains put down and stays, winds less the streets of the capital panama,
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towards film fedex as go flying with gus, strong enough to fail trees. the with the winds, with all of my thought satisfying away the me, i came out to check the chairs and i turned around. i saw the tree folding for me. there was a motorcycle under it and it fell on my car. another car that was driving nearer, let me go to, you know what to give us all to clear up. it's now in a way that people wait for the sun to return the loch ness monster. affectionately nick, named nancy, is arguably one of the most famous mythological creatures on the planet, but it is still just that. and with a logical creature. now hundreds of people have joined the biggest search and decades to find evidence of scotlands legendary beast. but even the most sophisticated, high tech equipment has so far failed to turn off,
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the most legend has it that below the surface of these marquee walters, next a monster of the deep, the hordes of volunteers, and nessie enthusiasts gathered at loch ness in the hopes of catching a glimpse of the famous creature just don't know it exists, which is why the quest this weekend is so intriguing and so important. there are and it was so fraternities as to what this creature is that people have been citing since the 19 therapies. now, should be on the 1st site thing actually happened them from this hotel where i'm sitting right now. this year's size, if the law makes exploration a challenge, it can hold more walter than all of england and wales lakes together. nonetheless,
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the expedition deployed drones with thermal scanners, boats, with infrared cameras and an underwater hydra fully to try to unravel a mystery. this has captivated the world for generations. does not corners the globe you can go to why you haven't heard. it's a lot next months to so everyone knows it by set, but it still today, one of the world's biggest on us of questions is still one of our biggest mr. walters, the loch ness months. the. there has been over a size and claim sightings of a creature in the water. over the decades. there was a famous photo later revealed to have been a hoax. some have suggested the monster could be a prehistoric marine reptile. the legend has sustained a major tourism industry. a come from from suggest is the deluxe. because since i'm younger was like some of the come on surveys of all the look in this. and i'm really interesting about that. this search has brought up little evidence,
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but it hasn't disprove the existence of a creature. mfc is a mess that refuses to be defunct. and finally in the netherlands, a group of ginger's and strawberry blonde is gathered over the weekend for a unique festival. organizers say some 5000 natural red heads meant to celebrate their hair, and overcome bullying and prejudice over their fiery looks. the festival began in 2005, and this year people traveled from all over the world, including germany, israel, italy, and even new zealand. bred had to make up between one and 2 percent of the world's population the 3rd time,
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but make sure to stay informed. stay engaged and to stay in touch, follow our team on twitter or x at the we news at myself at nicole underscore for list. if it's the latest headlines you're looking for, there is always our website that is dw dot com for now though, from the entire team on the day. thank you so much for spending part of your day without ceasing by the the,
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