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tv   [untitled]    September 5, 2024 12:00am-12:31am IRST

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grow up till you're taught to fight back. الله لا اله الا الله لا اله الا الله لا اله
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الا اللهيه الابيه كبر يا مسلم كبر وعرش الصهيونيفجر وعرش الصهيونيفجر وبلغ وحدتك. in
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what do we want, liberation? when do we want it? now, free our systems, free ourselves, free our sisters, free ourselves, free our sisters, free, the slogans in these placarts are. protest to the law and the us government's indifference towards the demands of the american women during the 60s and 70s, indifference towards women's rights to education, equal pay, suitable jobs, respect and social rights and most of all protection against domestic violence. of course, perhaps these women's anger was more towards the laws that did not have their back rather than their husbands. women who were beaten at home
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by their husbands for different reasons, yet the law only supported them up until the door of their house. the law's excuse for this was not to intervene in the citizen's private affairs. thus, when it came to the house, it was the men who made the law. the battered women would cover up their... losed faces with makeup, and there weren't many who were much inclined to speak about the things that happened to them inside the house. okay,
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"the men on the other hand did not shy away from violence towards their wives due to the free pass the culture and law gave them in this regard. the women of america demanded rights to education, payment and security. equal rights to uh to set forth our own humanity, equal rights to get into graduate programs, to get into schools, to training programs, we're the bottom third of the employment in terms of pay, we represent nonetheless the..." 34% of the workforce, yet we're the first to be laid off and the last to be hired. there aren't privalous demands at all, we just want what men have had all these years. this issue did not belong to past centuries. this is the united states of america of 1970. although protests against domestic violence intensified during the second half of 1970, husbands abusing their wives and justifying their actions. had roots
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in times as far as the first american immigrants who settled in those lands. when the first immigrants arrived in this region, they started to write laws for their newly founded americans. by forming a government, the first settlers of america took their law from the common law derived from the traditional rules of the british judicial system. common law originated in england in the middle ages and was applied in british colonies across the continents. according to this law, a man had the right to punish his wife if needed. in 1982, an important event took place that marked the beginning of a review in the issue of domestic violence against women. tracy thurman, housewife in the city of torrington. first in october 1982, charles, thurman's husband, had a fight with her and threw her out of the house.
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tracy went to the police department, but the police did not handle her case, because there was no law to support her. a month later, it happened again, this... time charles, tracy's husband broke the car window on her while she was sitting in the car. tracy's body was covered with broken glass. this time, because the crime happened outside the house, the police got involved and the court issued a restraining order against charles for two years. however, during this period of two years, charles repeatedly violated the court's order, and each time tracy's complaint did not result in anything. charles even threatened to kill her once. but the police did not do anything about it. a few months later, when tracy was at home with her child, her husband charles entered their residence. tracy called the police. charles stabbed tracy's neck, throat and chest with knife. at this moment, a police officer arrived, but charles, without fear, kicked
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tracy in the head with another hard blow. tracy was now lying on the ground in her own blood, but the police still did not react. charles was about to attack tracy who was sleeping on the stretcher of the emergency team, but this time the police stopped watching and finally arrested charles after he had inflicted multiple stabbings and hittings to tracy's head several times. tracy thurman spent eight months in the hospital. some of her body parts were temporarily and others permanently paralyzed. this time, instead of suing her husband, tracy sued the police department for not supporting and defending her. now women's slogans had become more uniform and coherent. women unite, don't let racism divide us, girls are powerful. of
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women's protests against men's violence, along with the liberal slogans marked yet another event. feminist movements were gradually born, and protests against the inferior status of women and the violence they endured at home began in the american society. american states one by one began to repeal the laws that allowed men to punish women. what does international women's year mean to you? it doesn't marry me. doesn't don't have any effects, i don't think about it, do you? i don't take interest in women's liver, it doesn't worry me at all, i don't like it, why don't you like it? i'd rather be the way i am, i like to be on my husband's thumb. i reckon the man should wear the pants, you know, he should sort of be the
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boss in the family, you know, sort of, i'd rather him go out to work and earn the money than me go out and earn the money and look after the kids, you know, but oh. just don't believe in it, what does international women's year mean to you? nothing, nothing at all, nothing. has women's liberation affected your life at all? no, no, i don't believe in it. why not i don't got no opinions on it. have you resisted it? do you? no, have you ever read anything about women's liberation? no, what does international women's year mean to you? i'm afraid. not very much really, i'm a bit old to be worried, you know, do you ever think about women's liberation? i don't tell you the honest truth, no, i think possibly i'm like lot of women and depend a lot a husband, on the male on the male race,
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guess. the us government, maintaining that a man's home is his castle, had traditionally been reluctant to police the conf'. the home, moreover, many legal authorities insisted on blaming the victim and believed that the wife was partially responsible for her beating by provoking her husband and making him angry. american laws allowed a man to punish woman under the pretext of reforming her. the courts only considered the complaint of beaten woman if the woman was severely injured during the beating by her husband. this is the police. okay, what i want is batter woman. you are. mattered woman? yes, who assaulted you? my ex. he's in the house
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and i'm scared. is he in the house? yes, but i'm scared. it's a frying pan that he threw at me, and i'll show you the night gown that i have that's got full of blood on. david, gender arrest for domestic violence. president, however, the universal declaration of human rights, which was approved by the united nations general assembly in paris on december 10th, 1948, said something else, article one of the declaration, all human beings are born free and are equal in dignity and rights. they are in. with reason and conscience and should act towards one another a spirit of brotherhood, approved by an
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overwhelming majority, the declaration of human rights as a standard of conduct for all, and let us, as members of the united nations, conscious of our own shortcomings and imperfections, join our effort in good faith. to live up to this high standard. but women were still deprived of such a right in america. violence against women was considered normal. this normality can be understood in a joke that was broadcast on the bbc radio in the same years. a woman asks another why she feels her husband doesn't love her anymore. she hears the answer, he hasn't beaten me in a week or two.ence calls have already come in. how many domestic violence calls do you get on most nights? not been usual to have six or eight. this is the first time this has happened. he got pissed off at me and uh said i was attacking him and
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then he started hitting me. little by little various organizations started to deal with domestic violence against women under the title of non-governmental organizations. the law changed, but the culture of violence against women still carries on. the slogan of gender equality gradually made women own rights that might have been. to think about in the united states few decades ago, in addition to the right to vote and the right to employment and equal wages, they now had the right to wear clothes, they could decide for the life or death of the fetus inside their womb, or they could even have other kinds of freedom in sexual issues, but did helpless women really join feminism movements to achieve such freedoms? "apparently
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everything has benefited women, but there is still a problem: women were still beaten by men. liberalism, it reinforced racism, classism, and other forms of oppression. women were now oppressed again, but this time this oppression was not only from their husbands, every man..." who had the chance to communicate with that woman would provide the basis for this with sexual harassment and physical violence. these are official statistics from within the united states. every year about 500 thousand people in america are victims of sexual violence, including 12-year-old children, however, 90% of the people who were raped are
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adult women, stop domestic violence, stop domestic violence, stop domestic violence, alicia is amazing, she's she was my only sister, my younger sister, we're five years apart but super close, she's my best friend growing up and into adulthood, um, she's the life of any party, she let up any room she walked into, so she had goals and dreams and aspirations that were taking from her at the young age of 20 years old, um, in a domestic violence situation as we're here today to um honor, she had been away from him about... three or four months when um she had restraining orders and ppos when he um tracked her down and took her life. we organize a domestic violence walk in honor of my sister and those who have suffered through domestic violence or victims or who are survivors with got now um anybody and everybody who has um been in domestic violence situation we're out here today to honor them and um hopefully spread awareness
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that you know you're not alone and there are resources out here she was amazing good kid. she was all about her family, always always with me or her sister or her niece, her dad, never got in trouble, yeah, never in trouble, just a good good person, a great, very good girl, would help anybody, she'd give a little shirt off her back, fuck is pretty bad, it's sad, she's you know we miss her every day, you know, she she was my baby niece, you know, so it's been pretty rough, think about her constantly, she's a beautiful person, so loving and... friendly and like she said, she was life of party, she's a great person, just that you know it's sad that we have to do this because you know they took my nice from this, you know it's sad that this thing we have to do, but we're trying to get justice for, we wanted people to be aware of it, what's going on, honestly still on autopilot, don't even know what what to think, i still
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keep thinking my baby's going to come home any day, but i know she's not, yeah. 2022. according to statistics, one out of every three women in the united states has experienced violence from her husband or partner. about 20,000 calls are made to the domestic violence help centers every day, and on the other end of the line, are people who have been beaten or threatened with death by their spouses or partners. the phenomenon of violence against women in the united states may not be at the top of the world news like that of. third world countries, but this does not mean that violence against women does not exist in the states. according to statistics from the national office on domestic violence, one woman is battered every 9 seconds in the united states. florida state
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senator janet cruz's report is worth considering. in florida there were 106,000 reported domestic violence offenses in 2020, um, and that was including more than 200 domestic violence murders. this log home at big lake was one of bree moore's favorite places. her formal name is brianna, but as she got older she wanted to be called brie. her parents say they can still feel her presence here. she would get me up early in the morning and say, "dad, come on, we've got to go, we got to..." ride she made every minute out of her life special, police told them their daughter's body was found at her boyfriend's home where he lived with his parents, the mores asked if there had been a home invasion, they said no, they said josh, her boyfriend killed her, we would be the last years later what really was was
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happening with with josh and in his history this was really the... but at the time, brie seems so devoted to her boyfriend, busy at her job as aid in a dentist office, but behind her smile, bree's coworkers saw signs of trouble, signs they didn't reveal to the mores until after her death. they told me that she had come in several times with black eyes and uh one time she came in and she hadn't just been hit, they said she had been beaten and she couldn't function. and she vomited in the sink and she left after about 15 minutes a center home. there were other red flags. well, i'll read you text message that we found on phone after we got her frown back to an half years after she was killed. pre text, you better love me and stop hitting
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me please, with the exclamation point. josh, of course i love you, and ram, ram rod hit you, not i, so ramrod must have been, when he got angry, i'm assuming. nadeen m. newfoil, director of the department of violence against women at the us department of justice says, based on our findings in the united states, every day three women in this country are murdered by their spouse or ex-partner. this statistic is very alarming for us. nadin m new foil story is not the story of primitive. african tribes, or so-called third world countries. this is the united states of america in the year 2022, the 21st century,
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the cradle of freedom and democracy. because brandy's case reminded guard of anitra kobern. carter kidnapped a nitra and eventually took her to her grandparents trailer in franklin county. cobern's boyfriend kidnapped her from her pitt county home in. her after holding her hostage for a week, hello, what's the matter? what's the matter? half a century has passed since the protests of american women in 1970, and now domestic violence has the voice of angelina jolie, a hollywood star who was also once victim. most of all, i want to acknowledge the children who are terrified and suffering at this moment, and the many people for whom this legislation comes too late. a bipartisan
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group of us senators has introduced a proposal to reauthorize a 1990s law that expands protections for victims of domestic and sexual violence. this law was dissolved in 2019 due to the opposition of republicans, which has led to the... promotion and increase of violence and murder in american society. angelina jolie asks us senators to approve this law and says, "i repeat, this is one of the most important votes you will cast in the senate this year. when silence comes from a congress too busy to renew the violence against women act after decade, it reinforces that sense of worthlessness. it's clear that the indifference of the congress and the american government..." has troubled the 47-year-old oscar winner. this was the third time that angelina asked the representatives of the u.s. congress to revise the law to control domestic violence.
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this law was first sent to the senate in 1990 by joe biden who was then a senator with the aim of reducing domestic and sexual violence. a later version was included in bill signed by then president bill clinton four years later. congress has since reauthorized. and extended the violence against women act three times. senator joe biden invited them to speak. battered women need to be taken seriously. proper police response can prevent what happened to me from happening to someone else. thank you. thank you.
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the story of domestic violence in the united states and the law to deal with it is a paraphrase of the saying, the law often shows its teeth, but does not bite. the united states has moved away from the slogan of creating equal conditions and ideal and happy life for women. in a way, this shows america. not be a good model for other societies, feminist slogans try to make women
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equal to men in all matters, for example, the society should widness that women are beaten less, but why did feminism and women's movements target the family to achieve this goal? it was already known that woman without a family would be disarmed, and that's how it happened. in practice, women still did not get their real rights. until yesterday they were under male violence at home, but today they are under the domination of employers and cheap forces. they are now also responsible for financing themselves, task that at least in the distant years was the responsibility of men. a century has passed from the american women's efforts escape domestic violence and achieve equality, yet
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domestic violence. still takes three victims every day, families are broken, women are employed in minial jobs, and the salary and benefit system still consider women as secondh labor. kindergartens have expanded, but next to girls high schools, right beside unmarried mothers. jonny ernst, a republican senator, is also victim of sexual and domestic violence, lucky, the fortune of all womankind, they're always control. and they're always confined,
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controlled by their parents, until they are wise, them slaves to their husbands for the rest of their lives, well i once knew. a girl and her story was sad, she'd always been courted by the wagoner light, he courted her truly by night and by day now his wagon.
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the siege of gaza must end. we're coming back and we'll keep coming back until palestine is free.
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your headlines here on press tv is the occupation of forces kill, more than 40 palestinians in the gaza's trip in 24 hours raising overall death toll closer. to 41, hamas warrens tell me regime that the only way for safe return of israeli captives is to stop the genocidal enslot. israely forces continue the devastating incursion into the occupied west bank ravaging civilian infrastructure across the palestinian territory.