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tv   [untitled]    July 21, 2012 6:30am-7:00am EDT

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situation. with. political demonstration.
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i would look at the people who committed their lives to promoting change in the world. sure my. feet.
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here's one of the largest rivers in the world the plan is to dam all the major tributaries of the amazon river. there will be immense pressure not only on ecological reserves but also on the communities and the territories that are used sustainably by indigenous people. meanwhile agribusiness is encroaching illegal logging is taking place and so the single basin is now at a crossroads and this is there's a resistance against this dam project that was going on for twenty years. who had gathered here to defend all waters as it on demand so right.
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to finish it and these energy will power and the big aluminum companies and on mining companies. oh well and resources. the. the. the. jews to the grief and anxiety that the indigenous people are suffering. and i don't think this story will end well. and there will be a lot of conflicts. why did we choose below monte for a dam to work we need height and lots of water was it the stuff bellemont a demo we will stop brazil stop bellemont
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a dam or we will stop brazil was the was the. will be viable that was the kayab all war cry nobody should underestimate the indignation that their feeling on the. us would benefit i think that the federal government should see this as a message a message that much more blood could be spilled in the chamber river valley if they
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continue to pursue the project in this way as the. the one day apple want to do something they do. out in the open and not behind people's backs like the government my tribe and i i'm not going to accept this. out of. my. boards its solution to. all of us injury i'm not orphans were taken away by britain by france. with no goodmans the us. losses were exported from have been for the british ones
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fault i'm all for my jail for because. i didn't vote for watching the africa the i did what if you leave the people with money pleads so that was to get ignored sources of africa for next to nothing to do to get by with you of america but. i just don't get it doesn't help i don't know yet is it only because man music is the whistle. it is the feel of the future i was about thirteen when my father was singing about all those i'm forty seven now and i find myself still singing about these things my father was fighting for in this times we're young it's only monday night. to the end of the. nuts. oh. no no. no.
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you got to let the record effort those are drowned out by me jewish. accounts are comparable or sickness is good i don't dislike the republican. shipman competition. well for a minute is enough to rule out the long haul and move for peace on the river front of the lens. but even though they do see that this year did not. so did their long winded stick those on this only to trade up to deval it does that in the eyes of government without until those last or group of fish on the puzzle believe that is a loss also whole problem because they want to nationalize the oil is a new problem with that is going to. say i told them to stop the heat. that was going on with me i thought of going to the moon go you.
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see before i can go to the wall the wall why what else will be there is what i ask of you then i'll get out. because of all those things through my vest after you've gone. through something and. then to no useful way i'll put this to you know they'd friend can so. you know was making a peaceful protest sat stiffly at best not that that in a good. team he's a good leader the montra good to see kids are we've made a peaceful campaign against the shell oil company. the fuel the dictator son my child and trumped up. in those individuals god we michael matz i did you can be a son a comment too much my father will be me people have sacrificed risking their lives
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to put the truth for the generations to understand. that we've got to be like us are we on the faucet after i get. all these molecules you want to pass that you can't we're not twenty which we've got. that's very hard to see nonviolence is distributional. if they're treated with you know we have elections and we don't have political for people you don't listen then in large generational conferences well i'll buy those tried nonviolence maybe we should try violence how do you bring people in whom without we weighed the government as look if i did force people. it's all a bit. of a battle but when one speaks of genocide one chance of
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a wonder or darvell or allusion never speaks of the congo. or the united nations' senate that there be a conflict in the world since world war two. languages geological scandal because of the enormous mineral wealth that's in its soil the. conflict is based on who's going to control the resources of the congo that's really what's at stake we're talking about ten year rainy i'm cobalt or you name it ira and they have a new b m is there in the congo and nothing's in their backyard but you ask all the soldiers who bring the fire to bed what the children are at odds. it's all right so you have a number of major corporations that are implicated illegally exploiting congo's mineral wealth so you have cabot corporation out of boston massachusetts o.m. group out of cleveland ohio you have freeport mcgraw hand out of phoenix arizona
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microsoft panasonic. you have no motorola been questioned about the call to buy title that's used in their cellphones congo has anywhere from sixty four to eighty percent of the world's reserves of coal tan three letter conductive and is found in almost every cell phone in the world and in almost every electronic device so these are some of the corporations that have been involved in benefiting from the car while on the other hand we have the congolese people dying to the tune of fifteen hundred a day forty five thousand a month five point four million in the last ten years hundreds of thousands. women raped. so what really discouraged as you is to see a patient you treated in two thousand come back five years later with the rape or and even worse than the one she had before this is terribly discouraging is
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a cute dog what gives us courage is the capacity of these women to fight. through this. if one person is brutalize the front of everyone by the time that ends everyone in the area i'm going to take their baggage and leave the community. as they have been displaced is the region where are most of the minerals i look at it so that's the best way to move the people. so the actual rapes taking place the ramp on the land and the report of people and these two rapes in the district of believe thank you. very well i asked for you to ring off your.
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piece. in the name of my organization is you there does balling you know that you were just voted. away day organizational. change or of people contained by things. now i would go out into my space and cool . but asked are we taking the jokes given to the fights. i know or oh he's ok we should get karen had a vocal minority for the next thirty years it's a. new war our friends and i gave all the people.
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i was in this group of students movement. you can see there's a man day he has gone. down and i wanted this and i want to. make sure that he's caught it just shooting. in on you know the nine down below zero it was so so i so sad to see austin i want to ask. i think we're just going to talk move on we just bought by this company alcoholism is a mile.
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from the also the drawings i walk to the door and also from all in the documentary was taken place when i was close to impress a wrong as an artist. because i felt i was mildly gish and while the recorded account you know artistically even though i was doing there was in doing so. we lost artist we try to encourage the people we show you know what we sing it or write about it and no people are picking up. but you can make a little better and want to rule and transforming the lives of the people. to day is the opening of the international women's. to the finish president of. you know the one to remove him to come out
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to be deliberate welcome welcome welcome. the liberian women have always been strong we have the only woman president in africa. and we want to make sure that they are more women that's what this coming together is about for us to sit down every three months if we possibly can to keep the. prince up liberia papa supply period. i welcome you all to see me get. into these women. they are placeholders. sometimes they are the boldest of all of the people trying to stop the war because they have so much invested they know it's their daughters that are going to get raped they know it's their sons their are going to be picked up as child soldiers it's their husbands who are going to get killed so they care deeply about stopping that violence.
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no could you who call them to. understand to educate into the being to nineteen to. one million people. who are not and they came with machetes spears shouting and looting hoeing us they were after the ethnic tutsi we thought towards. the shores there was so much negativity during the genocide people also showed humanity yet there's a there were people who dared during the genocide to hide their neighbors despite the threat to their lives because they could have died most people would ease. yeah fish she took me into the house and suggested that i hide up on the roof she put me
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there she works harder in sick i took him in and instructed him to hinds in the attic but when the war the genocide started and i was nine years old i was in third grade. of course i was afraid. i had to be brief because they attack or so would come and ask me these there anyone in the house and i would say no there is nobody if you were me that if i peer out of myself they could kill me and my children i came out after three months together with this brave woman but first we really need to prevent genocide from happening again in a dress and staggering aftermath so we can rebuild this world my advice to people is to have longed. for you to let love come back in manas so that war never returns to this country.
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six years after the chant aside we started bringing troops over wanton women leaders one of them was a lawyers here in new. we don't speak as different political but his speech was the one that she had to figure out how you bury eight hundred thousand corpses without any equipment and what to do about five hundred thousand orphans. adopted the program. and one it took them to the homes. this is sexist or one chip in this hole that repeated to. their the highest percentage of women in any parliament in the world. to fit in and that's a strong message but then a couple to the poll are. it
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is it that this country can be. in music the thing to do and will do it but. we unity that equips mission of the people. even. if it is a bad player not only real one didn't hear at the fest pad festival but many countries responded to the invitation that's replace the delamont pop up later in the afternoon and. then it's to be a different level of conflict with the nuclear people who refuse to be involved. so that it's tomorrow it comes up and says bits go and fight these other girls. pussy just a minute we dance together we sing together why should we fight. you
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say your shoulder to the show so do we try to sing songs or a piece for us i'm a haro it's piece of boom ways unity with you and we try to cultivate national pride affected us you know. the colors that we wear the colors of the national fly . the boston sensually is that we are making a contribution to the unification and thus unity which brings a by peace. your mind should look at the darkness but your real and your action driven or true. regardless of what anybody thinks of the iranian government and regime i think iran is grossly misrepresented. they run your nation as a whole it has always been
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a defensive posture it's never been in an office of posture. you have been good wages for intervention you know specific in one thousand fifty six when our first democratically elected government said it was overthrown by a cia agent and it british. there is a very serious wall of mistrust between that iran and america because of america's past performance and actions in iraq. they want iraq war was a very stark reminder the line is that they were isolated as iran was being pounded in its civilian centers the western powers were giving arms and weapons to saddam hussein this has been the root of most of the ones mistrust where the rest of the world.
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looks. like cut. out of. it all you express ourselves through rap music when the mode of the jew we talk about things we see in real life i'm living with you know i'm the. go to those good job the whole goal posts just. a. little of them but as comes from nationalism and i'm from the love of our mother would enjoy and we're trying to reach people and have our words heard not just in iran and but by people all over the world hopefully will have a positive effect even if it's just
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a small was. cut cut. cut . i always wanted to somehow merge the mill of these are there learned in my childhood and use them in my work. her car. her. its close silence city and in so much to a lecture the village that was bombed by saddam hussein and was wiped completely. her. her. it's the history did i think it's one of the calling in our century
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a leader been doing this to so many people. for. the first there is nothing we can do about it but the membrane collapse we can make you think how to prevent the. her womb what can we do to stop making it happen again as humans not this there's not this iran is not the same world she's you know not as citizens of any country but as humans. or. this is basically the adaptation of ageing from one thousand to twenty my interpretation has been to bring all of these elements in this this moral painting and see how it works in fun temporaries time. as i was working the ransom here on
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earth taking place in the green movement so a lot of this is his just parts he demands that they're shocked by mobile phones and recorded as rossi's made their patients the detainees and still. there's a reason for this uprising is that people vent on voltaire's and their voice was. told people even though you want their voices heard on. this movement as. the civil rights movement. i talk about the symbolism of what activism is built with your mind should look at the darkness but the real action should be driven work to chance.
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an.

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