tv Dancing Despite War Deutsche Welle July 14, 2024 3:15pm-4:01pm CEST
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so yeah, interesting the we've had similar statements to what we've already had from the you institutional heads, the european commission president, us of on the lions agencies deeply saw the you kind of so president, i've going saw me so same, put, political violence is absolutely unacceptable in a democracy, but i think the most interesting reaction from across the european union came from robot feet. so the slovak, a prime minister to himself was shot during campaigning ahead of the european parliament selections in the middle of may. he wished off a couple of times and he has released the statement to say that this script is as through a photocopier, the ac attacker in the united states could read slovak. it would have been the same kind of attack that happened on him. as on donald trump, so there is a kind of clear memory of a recent attack on a european leader as well. and that sort of back codes what the european of foreign policy chief, joseph burrell tweeted. as part of the reaction to vista talked in the united
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states, he said once again, we are witnessing unacceptable acts of violence against political representatives park. thank you. liza to you as well. matthew, thanks for joining a hold of those keys of it to is a member of the german parliament with the christian democrats and sits on the foreign affairs committee. thank you very much for being on data. will you use? what was your initial reaction to this next? well, thank you man. well, this attack is to become them. however, we should be very aware that the us societies quite polarized. and the problem has this now harvesting what he has seated the last years he has now to the fuller i society and it will be very difficult after this pain to bring this american society to go. i just think i can just saw it in there. is it fair to say that having polarized society leads to something like this political violence
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or an attempt on the phone, the president's life? i don't know whether it's fair. it's true. and that's a pity. and he is also the origin of the results he has caused what, what's the basis on if, if you're saying this is the truth, what, what evidence do you have to make that connection? i just came back from the united states. well, for example, the hudson institute was very concerned about poses arise to s society and that the trump is even more trump, then trump himself, so that we are of the competition amongst those. she was the more challenging of positions, then trumpets and on the other side, the triangle. chris also very concerned about the split society. us workers have only trustees leave a year. there's german workers have 30 days,
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so they are working for the website at the security of europe. and it is really a challenge for us society to bind to be bound together. and on the other side is trump was pull arising with, condemning for the, for in migration who's condemning a, buy it and, and so on. so we have to be very aware that somebody must be found who's trying to gather us society off the presidential election. okay. we'll get to that in a moment. first, you just go back from the us. you mentioned how concerning his political violence in the west, in as well. i believe it's very concerning due to the fact that millions of people have hundreds of millions of lessons. and we have to really convince the american congress, the house is that they work on more a stronger rule that the lawmakers contain the, you know,
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sort of the formation of smaller offices, united money, all the things you could want to something good come of this. i mean, when we talk about the republicans, we're talking about a policy that is against gun control. yeah, i say this is the result of the proliferation and the willingness to close it for a small us enough to contain them for the last the dictates. see, so this is also being arise in political attacks in germany here. you were attacked while campaigning recently. briefly what happened exactly while i was attacked on the electro real market to this uh, the place where i try to convince a lotus to a to go to the european parliament to re election. and i was hit on from a to the soil. nevertheless, i keep a, i'm going to proliferate my arguments for
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a cohesive society and for an engaged society. security needs engagement. so it hasn't made you think twice about what you say, way you say how you say it. no, i'm really concerned about this assign to cohesion. in germany, that's to withdraws it's the more mitigating voices i was drawing them directly to the voices of become here even louder. therefore, we must be really uh, the decent and also a step fast and defending our freedom of speech and defending the societies of cohesion against these a while. and people, how do we do that in being present and being most colored and hiding away in approaching the people and listening we need to be careful. listen, those 2 of those who are concerned and trying to split all society. so we have to confront them with our presence. what's been great listening to the hold of ice
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keys a bit, a member of the german problem, and thank you for being here on d. w. thank you. good luck for the reactions now from russia. have a listen to our correspond a new, hey, you have a sheet to who's now based in rica of to run share kicked out the time. we are in the rush of the attack on. don't know, trump is being used to propaganda purposes, to pick the size of the usa in general. and does the support of ukraine is of organs, prostate, in particular, for an office book. so when, when money is a horrible condemn to that at tax on president, would it be a tradition of you as domestic politics as you sent your explanations was spreading hatreds towards the opponents, countries and entire nations. instead of supporting ukraine, the usa should invest money in domestic security, russian for an office box woman sat in moscow. and talking to the reaction from asia out correspond james to try to inside by solely off of the news of this
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assassination attends on the phone with us present. donald trump, we had a statement from the time when he's president lighting, who said that his thoughts impressed with donald trump. he added that political violence of any form is never except said, you know, democracies, this is a sentiment that's really been shed by lead is across the stage or with the japanese prime minister, steamy okesha to saying that we must stand firm against any form of violence the challenges of democracies against similar sentiments occurred by the president of south korea. you talk y'all. he described this assassination attempt as a hideous act. interesting people say hardwood from badging. a capital. of course, with weight shipped, trump had many tens. norman's during his administration, the foreign ministry and badging saying the chinese, the, the shooting, paying has expressed is conducted, says to donald trump. a tie correspond to james trying to let's take a look at some of the stories making use. german media is reporting a shooting in the town of i've stopped flouting and in germany's southwestern state
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of buttons looking back. police have confirmed that several people have been killed . i spoke 1st and says the general public is not address of the city and state media as, as these way the strikes in and around damascus have killed one pro, government, fight and wounded free. all those according to because way, the army, the attack targeted infrastructure belonging to the syrian army and a defense in response to, to drones, launch towards israel from syrian territory. sports and is now in tens of thousands of football fans have gathered here in bo. then for the final of the year of 2024. excitement is building is england and spain prepared to face each other at the german capitals olympic stadium. kickoff is at 9 p. m. local time. well, tom galloway has been reporting for matches for us during this tournament. it's been an entertaining tournament, but what about the favorites for tonight's match festival? well, i think i might be just about the earning this been in the lane,
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who will tell you that the 5 it's probably all spain this evening is off top of my jobs to be impartial. i think it's probably fair to say despite and have been to stand out, same of the tournament size fall and they've played really, really great, really interesting attacking dynamic football right from the very start. now, i 1st saw them play in goes in cation in a 2nd. group game where they came up against it to the team that was strong in defense and in a g, g don't over my in a goalkeeper and you know, really doing everything that you could to keep spending now. and then they managed to find a way, eventually and ground out one new when now in other games they, they've had measured a bit more flat, been a bit more dominant and i lost all of them in that, in the semi final against fronts where they went behind a very audi on but what quite quickly i able, thanks in part to a moment of genius from a young seat to start him. so we're going to talk about in just a couple of minutes and to turn that game on his head. and then the 2nd half of that game was just, you know, a pretty and exercise in, in how to manage
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a victory all the way throughout the tournament. they've been the team who i think has been strongest out of the many favorites that we just as the head of this competition. i think it's fair to say that they will have the higher expectations tonight. but what about your team? well, i mean, you know, the, perhaps they're calling this thing they can say about in scifi is that they've made this fall. because obviously they started off and sluggishly. it's fair to say if not, you know tediously or was very young calling, things have been said and some of them probably ferry uh you know, reasonably about the football the ingram site in the group stage because it wasn't particularly energetic and they've got a squad full of such talent as such superstars, but they weren't really able to display that talent and to show what they can do on the page. and, but they made it through the group stage and the one that group, and in the round of 16 a, in that game against a vacuum. it was so in, in goes in cation. it looked for such a long time, like england was, uh,
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tend to go out. you know, i was standing there looking ago. southgate thinking he's going to make a change. he's got half an hour left of his coaching career. now he's got 20 minutes left. and now he's got 10 minutes left and he didn't. and then eventually, you know, jude billing and produced a moment of genius. and from that it was almost a natural conclusion and then went on to win that game then in the course. and finally, they came through a semi, uh, a penalty shoot town. and you know, england don't come through penalty sheets out o that often. i mean the semi final, they won the game with just about the last week of the match in the 18 9th minute. i think i have with a 90 minute actually. so you know, they prevailed over all of those how it was and they have made it as far as best 2nd successive final at the european championships. and so, you know, maybe tonight isn't i off the road? what did you make of germany or the crash out that the quote a final 6? yeah, i mean, i think for germany, the pressure on this tournament was, was so high because they were the highest because you didn't august man has been
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able to or was able to ahead of the tournament inject to sort of new lease of life into the team. and i know who said, because when gemini lost how he stayed a major told him that back in 2000 and cx, it's a tournament that is gone down in history is you know, a really pivotal moment in the kind of history of the unified federal republic so that was something that's remembered. so finally in germany that the pressure on this tournament to deliver a new summer fairytale was, was always going to be events. and it was immense. and you know, in the course of final exit, germany perhaps did come. sure. but they managed to create an atmosphere during the games while they were playing the i think will be remembered as, as being quite special. and in other regards, you know, the transport situation at this tournament has been endlessly troublesome for supporters. and so in organizational times, that's something that really hasn't worked. but then there was a massive secuity phase ahead of the tournament. people were worried about hooliganism or about potential tara attacks. and those things haven't materialized
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really quickly. that superstar you were going to pull the values, of course, let me in your mail. yeah, i didn't mention his name, but you know, the spanish flyer, he 1017 just yesterday on his the i've been told him and he's going to the cat 4th . and i tell him, thank you for, i mean, that's great reporting and i'm sure it will be a great game. a reminder of the top story way following for you this allen, for you as president donald trump has been wounded and want the f. b, i is causing an assassination attempt a gun, and 5 shots, a trump, that a campaign binding in pennsylvania. 30 say they killed, the suspect to, to, to and the member of the crowd is day coverage. continuing next. now on that breaking news, i paid for the golden state with the how healthy all the cost of the researchers from switzerland,
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$1.00 to find out with us official intelligence, they scanned the carl re off the coast and process the data and delivering the results. a 3 d model training tomorrow today. next on d, w, growing up and the refugee on the present palestinians ever known, we don't expect much living with a bare minimum. this is not a good environment. not for me, not for my children. without civil rights. and with no prospect, but what can we do in david shadow, scott's oldest good. on the w conflict crises,
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every single connex mapped out shows the geophysical reality beyond the board is what makes things the way they are mapped out, navigating a changing world. now on youtube, the around the world hall, the start dining mass bleaching events are growing ever more common driven by a record breaking each end forming ocean. if the planet warms by $1.00 degrees celsius, between 70 and 90 percent of research globally could di researchers oh no rushing to map and inventory, the world's remaining corals. all that and more coming up on this edition of this sewing and show on dw, welcome to tomorrow. today,
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the coil reached off the coast due to booty in east africa, or stainless for their beauty. but the unusually warm oceans of last summer had left behind patches of bleached stress. coral monitoring. those changes on a large scale isn't easy. but these researchers from the technical university of loads on switzerland want to change that. they've mounted ordinary underwater cameras on to a metal frame, which they bring with them on their dice. a reference rope and gps data will help the software program create a location map of the images. later in the lab, we meet the research team back and loves on a software program, analyzes their video material and turns it into a 3 d model. it also records the different types of corals and what condition they're in. so current carl monitoring cookies based on the method, so they're very labor intensive, then they're called for the budget. so we put the square on the, on the corolla,
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end of the sketch, expects to look at the pictures. and thanks to this and methodology, we can now cut off and make a cover fee of the reef of hundreds of meters uh, in the upsides which was not possible before just using cameras to the very simple other scientists around the world are also trying to monitor coral reef, but so far they've only been able to monitor smaller areas or in less detail gotten caught, you mean we're using a i to automatically identify carls and carl species. and that allows us to quantify the areas where there are carlos and follow them over time and document the changes that are happening. don't you know? i think to, to design conservation strategies to very effective decision makers need facts and dislikes, need to be based on data and evidence that we can bring with this mythology. but they have a lot of work ahead of them. the team year to beauty are collaborating with
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neighboring countries to set up an international monitoring network. scientists from florida and southeast asia were also interested in this new monitoring man side to stay healthy. karl reeves depend on sea urchins, which feed on algae that deplete oxygen. but in many oceans, despite the creatures are under threat from a deadly disease, along with their importance, the coral sea urchins are also vital to medical research. they've been used to study the mechanisms of cell division. in 2001, 3 scientists from britain and the u. s won the nobel prize for such discoveries. other marine creatures are also helping revolutionize medicine to make some very special miracle worms. low tide at 10 in the evening is the perfect time to hunt for a humble creature that could help revolutionize medicine. already called them
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a re not commonly known as the lug where it's an ancient species. hundreds of millions of years old, about as big as a finger and 40 centimeters long. mostly they're used as fish. great. the but there are people who desperately need a substance. this marine warm could provide. it's a substance that carries life, giving oxygen to the organs that needed a form of hemoglobin that's dissolved in the blood the for the last 20 years. well, waiting for something new, fun things i may improve according to you of the organs, and we didn't get anything, you know. so it's really huge at the beginning. every book, people think that while you going to talk about marine biology, we're and we're on the we are, we are a doctor, any going to to talking about war. i mean,
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the hospital that was 25 years ago drunk todd was studying animals that live in extreme environments and noticed something remarkable. i know is that there is a warm of the beach cut off and you called, i'm not enough. and this one was very interesting for me just to try to understand where i'm can breeze during low tide and i tied so it was at the beginning just hold on with our research just maureen biology question. and one i work on this question and iphones, that's a world stop to greece some between the low tide he was just bracing when he was on the water. like fish, lug rooms have gills and breathes under water, but they don't suffocate when the tide goes out. instead, they can survive for up to 6 hours without breathing. so i spoke to my attention on the score and i found this very special like which is nothing food on the red blood cell, which is don't type of blood typing, which is very similar all to the soup tour was a h, b, a from you man,
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i saw had discovered an extraordinary oxygen storage system. convinced that harnessing this love were him him a globe and could transform medicine. he left his position as a university researcher and launched his own company. marina. it was like a originally adventure to, to arrive to date that so we can use these products for a full human use. today, use biotech company as more than 40 employees, the substance they extract from leg when blood contains the supercharged hemoglobin protein. a single small bottle can replace an entire bag of donated blood at the university hospital in the city of the west, in western friends, jani columbia specializes in kidney transplants. he's helping tests the effectiveness of this special love for him. he mcgue logan. this product is very
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important because it can deliver within the tissue, oxygen. and of course, one of the 1st example is again truss condition. because we know that during the procedure of transportation, the over guns 0 guns you know, need oxygen. and then when you take control gone from a efficient and before the trolls foundations, you have to preserve the oregon within a preservation solution. and today these preserver swing solution are without oxygen a tour. so during this po and these very critical patio and of course salvation, the, the, the oregon may a prison some what we call it, excuse me, group f as in injuries. then let's just to say that the or gotten we suffer from the lack of oxygen. so this product of course is, is a great multitude renew,
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then that can denny the oxygen directly to the, to the on gun. and in fact, we prove that the motor to, to was safe, but also ins. we add really some debt. does that prove that works? organ transplants are just one possible application in theory, the warm derived human globe and could be used wherever tissues in the body are starved of oxygen. these tend amazing shows how it could work. human human globe and inside red blood cells can hold for oxygen molecules at a time lug where mima, globin is dissolved in the blood and can transport almost 40 times as much oxygen the leg wherever human globin is, also much smaller than human red blood cells. so it can transport oxygen even when the blood vessels are narrowed or blocked. that could be helpful in treating strokes. it's already been successfully tested in kidney transplants. you know,
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we can imagine a ben shelf actually cation jerseys, auction guy, and you can see it's just coming from the buzz, the can you model? what is that we could work of the having such a new procedure entire. we new object don't patient to say ok. look one the to using as a blood substantial. but uh, i mean, uh, even if the existing unit is only 16 in, in, in 12 o'clock it's, it's, it's in here which seems huge. i think he makes a huge nobility. it's very important from the sand to the operating room, the already called the marina might hold the key to a medical revolution every year, more than 100000 people around the world receive a life saving organ transplants. but there's still a serious shortage of donor organs. in germany, some 8500 series,
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sweet young people are waiting for that gift of life. this is what the lead of all it looked like. not all too long ago, as though she was 19 months pregnant in her own words. her letter was failing, and fluid was collecting inhabitants. 15 years ago, had the titus had caused her own liver to fail, however, she received a transplant but eventually the donor liver also began to fail. these days she has to go to the university hospital in cuba. once a week, to have that fluid drain to come to you, i know its meaning that if you need to be leaving credit to definitely affects your quality of life, you're not really part of things anymore. bombing the, i'm, the food comes from you can't do things. most people do. i'm just confused because you're the actual, i feel like i'm slowly losing touch with the rest of the world. thank you. i'm booked here and that's how they are for i'm what i've already been lucky once and received a donor organ. i don't know if i'll be that fortunate again. what is it?
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i hope i will be because i'm not really done with living. but of course, i think about what will happen if i don't get one think i'll sort of a novel, the spanish, the use of waiting for a donor liver have left their mark time for a bit of strength training and is now a good squeeze with your other hand or elite advisors isn't ready to give up with our fluid back until she's come to the university hospital to speak to some high school students about organ donation. let's keep to move his card mentioned. it's a way to help people, because at that point you don't need your organs yourself anymore. on his meal one, come on, i mentioned have many people don't realize that organ donations are gift of life. the students here have never met anyone who is waiting for transplant as fish on toy. if it would be great if this were over in a good way, of course we'll get to them. then are there any questions? at this point?
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she didn't know that just 9 days later she'd be receiving that all important phone call. a donor, oregon had been found. it was an emotional moment. before checking my and kindergarten, i pictured my children crying. that was awful. i do. for me, the situation was simple. i was exhausted. i was glad to have a decision to make because i just couldn't go on anymore, but i was worried about what my children might have to deal with on scratch. the 2nd transplant went without a hitch. she spent a week in the hospital and now comes back for weekly check up. she doesn't know who gave her that 2nd gift of life. that information is confidential. good morning morning. how's it going? great, i'm doing great. of the swelling has gone down in ultra sound shows how the new liver is working. lita valez will have to take medication for the rest of her life to suppress her immune system. otherwise her body will reject the donor,
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oregon. and it's easy to use, but it needs to look on. when someone regains their quality of life, you'll see how amazing a transplant can be. i wish more people could benefit from this or it's in therapy that can give the gift of life quality of life. and mrs. valez is a great example of that teaching kind of pull pallets and stuff. this device time to celebrate with her 2 children and their partners. 20. and i have 3 birthdays in your, you know, and lots of presents. elidah valez had already decided against a living donor transplant like from one of her children because she didn't want to put their health. that was the 2nd transplant was their last chance. the biggest interest i feel fabulous in mind. that's really the only way to describe it. it's hard to express how happy i am and how great i feel. lucas has been on people just me gauge. today, she can go for
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a walk without the thought of death on the back of her mind. she's grateful to the donor who gave her another chance that life and she's made a lot of plans for the future, leaving light to close this, looking to be my plan to make the most all life and the future. and if leaving, i'm determined to start over. i do. i don't want to keep living the way i did before, because none of these i want to embark on a new microphone, i'm far noise leading victims. for now, she's decided to start looking for her dream home and to finally do a bit of traveling. again. embracing new experiences can be part of what makes us happy. fine, right gland also plays a role because it helps and regulate your body's hormonal balance. ready if you're feeling tired, depressed, or unmotivated and underactive, thyroid could be part of the problem. or if you weren't sure close on
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a from afghanistan, had a question about that. what happens if you haven't underactive thyroid gland? that's 1st check out what a firewood gland looks like. it's shaped like a butterfly and has to moves along with storing iodine. it also produces hormones like fi. roxanne, sinusoid hormones help control many processes in your body, including growth in children metabolism and regulating heat conservation. and heat loss in your cells, thyroid hormones can dial late, the blood vessels affect your blood pressure and even make your heart beat faster. they help prevent bone loss called osteoporosis. thyroid hormones also play an important role in kidney god and liver function. so the thyroid gland is a hard worker and decide where a disease can cause all sorts of problems. and underactive,
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thyroid is generally caused by an infection iodine deficiency can also we can beside royd. as a result, it doesn't produce enough firewood hormones. their production is regulated by a hormone produced by the pituitary gland in the brain. if the thyroid gland is weakened, the pituitary gland tries to signal it to maintain normal thyroid hormone levels. but that only works to a point individually. the pituitary gland can no longer compensate. the a blood test can show whether you have an underactive, thyroid gland. certain medications can help treat in underactive cy, right? but they have to be taken every day to protect your thyroid gland. it's
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a good idea to make sure you have enough time in your diet. iodized salt can help, and so can dairy products as well as cheap from such a salmon. if you start gaining weight, even though you're not eating more than usual, if you're constantly tired and fuel cold easily, your thyroid gland might be to blame. ready it might not be producing enough of those crucial hormones. let us read why you have a science question, then send it to us as a video, text or voice message. if we answer it on the show, we'll send you a little surprise. it's a thank you to come on. just ask more than a quarter of people in germany have foreign roots, a migration background. many of them feel they're not treated as well by doctors and in the hospital. racial bias can be
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a problem and diagnosis to medical textbooks almost exclusively feature. why people so does medicine have a race problem? the miss diagnosis rate was higher when it came to a dock has been told patients. so not so with race. white people are still the reference point in medicine even today, and this has consequences in clinical practice in an emergency, you can see that a patients lips may have 10 blue redness or a rush can be a sign of inflammation. these parameters can be hard to, to detect, and people with black skin when i'm in the emergency room and i can only look for things or symptoms that i was taught, the consequences put could potentially be that i missed diagnose something that i under diagnose some things that means that i probably don't end up making the right
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decision, so when it comes to treatment, doctor. so notion crew wants to change that field of expertise, skin of color dermatology. when we look at our textbooks that i learned from them, you do see ever presentation off lights of skin tone. the doctor works at the, shall retain a hospital in berlin. just like hallad said, hooley, he has long been an advocate against racism and mets, and if you look on the media or, or the even the activities in social media. but even in the print media or that it's very frequent to that. they used to deal with typing materials, and this was even with this, with any of the fiction deceased diseases such as monkey pokes are often shown on black skin. even in 2022. when the virus broke out worldwide, especially in europe,
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in the us, affecting many white people, the virus is called monkey pulse because it was 1st discovered in a lot monkey in denmark. it can spread to humans, as even most is just like the corona virus. however, it's not monkeys, but shrews and rodents. the said to be the who's to animals. and in fact, other creatures and humans. even though the virus originates from west and central africa, it has long since spread world wide. many white people in europe in the us also felt ill, but the media showed almost exclusively photos of black people. according to the world health organization, the wood, monkey pox, can be seen as racist and stigmatizing, especially among white people. it seems to produce stereotypical images that equate monkeys pulse and africa. the fact that only others are affected by the disease in the eyes of white people is
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a phenomenon known as other ring in research. the w h o now recommends the abbreviation m parks. and we have no to on the estimates, the power of visibility because many of the things we learn are unconscious and based on pictures and visibility pallet severely has gained a lot of experience at the clinic. he says when patients don't understand jim and this often leads to misunderstandings and discrimination. and there's often a lack of training translators, the results to little information, incorrect treatment as if it didn't matter if the patients don't understand exactly what it's all about. i was even invited in many cases, to go to translations. i can speak very weak, more look, that's not the rhetoric. but i was invited to patients coming from iran
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coming from i've got this done for breakfast because they believe i can speak all the foreign languages. and this something, what i mean desk is a part of it and says to chanel or organizational risk is our discrimination. because you notice and you accept an inferior access to knowledge and this i think is enough. damn it totally. just if so, new should cru, offers information privately on social media for people of color and up the clinics . she now also provides consultation for skin of color metrology. uh, the 1st institution who does have a special space for am having patients with i'm diagnosed, i'm good symptoms and what the real, really trying to do is just create a space where those people who approach me can come to me,
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which is through the work up and, and the goal is to come to a proposal to come to a diagnosis. i just imagine you want to study mass, but can't see all the formulas, diagrams, and graphics. people who are blind face that on a daily basis to overcome those barriers to studying math. the university of my book in germany is now working on making math education more accessible. but what is this and what does an illustration? it's a high parable lloyd. oh, okay, i've never held one of these before. the people who are blind use their sense of touch to proceed complex geometric forms for years. now a cli class has been providing support to visually impaired my students. back when she started the hurdle scene, huge the, the if you're blind, how can we work with a graphic or understand and perceive geometry or mentally visualize
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a 3 d shadow cast by a body of rotation under the image and something flushed in 10 years ago at the phillips university of my book in germany, a blind student asked her about adaptive learning resources for students with visual impairments. but she couldn't find anything on the scene with a mr. martinez and my student wanted to study math. so of course, i'm not going to send him away. we decided to come up with something that was all graphic elements can be depicted in brown. so she decided to get a tactile image printer. it uses an infrared lamp to heat up geometric shapes on sheets sensitive paper, creating a tac toe image that can be read with the fingertips. the image can also be placed on attack to know an interactive reader for people who are blind or visually impaired. and relate to a database which is supplied with information from the university lecture that allows blind students to understand what the graphics are representing the piece
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doesn't mean when you put your finger on a specific point. it reads the information linked to it because a lot of people who are blind and people who are cited collaborate on the project. it's taken off and meanwhile, get support from industry foundations. the use of one and we want to create a portal, a database that contains all of our materials so that it can also be used at adapted by other universities to make us more comfortable. i'm not disclose to income over time, they'll be importing and adapting. important math textbooks so that they can be used by blowing students. it can be hard work, but it's exciting to try every problem. there's a solution, you just have to look for it and to take it step by step if somebody and once it's in time for a quick break, they are close that team working on a project that matters to all of them.
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outcome because he can't waste materials and waste to extract the transfer with 3rd line. they can also produce oxygen because i can find the c o 2 we exile, create 2 oxygen to the same time. in 30 minutes on the w, the innovation green, the green revolution global. so listen to a whole lot of crime. it's probably up to speed. is secure, subscribed to this channel. every friday. subscribe to plan is
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. this is the w news life from bell in donald trump survives a shooting. take a look what happened before where you as president comes on the fire at a campaign, riley, i'm with the family, is cooling at assess the nation attempt. trump says at school that hit his ear, but he's fine. the secret service killed the suspects. president joe biden calls the shooting 6 saying there is no place for this kind of violence in america . leaders around the world join him in condemning the attack.
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