tv [untitled] March 10, 2013 12:30pm-1:00pm EDT
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we want an independent state of bavaria this is an extraordinary aim there are twelve million barbarians if independent we could be the ninth biggest nation in the e.u. with the fifth largest annual economic turnover i'm convinced we have the cultural historical and economic strength to survive the bavaria party's campaign literature certainly doesn't pull any punches when it comes to showing how they believe the rest of germany treats the sun state the group poses little threat to germany's political big guns it took just over one percent of the vote locally in two thousand and eight but their ideas are spreading an increasingly influential circles in the shift to predict when i look at the map of europe and of history i see that boundaries are not made to last forever they can be moved by free people czechoslovakia made the peaceful transition into two democratic states in two thousand and fourteen scotland will have
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a referendum there is work being done in catalonia this movement is happening in europe today. the varia is booming when it comes to business it's home to some of the most recognizable and expensive brands in the world b.m.w. audi. and siemens have their base of operations here while munich is one of the world's major economic centers all contributing to an annual income of almost half a trillion euro a major factor which sticks in the craw of the variance is how about wealth is distributed throughout the federal states they're sick of paying for poor lin it hands over around three billion euros a year to the capital what impact would an independent bavaria have apartment daily lives of those living and working there to find out i've come here to the beautiful bavarian countryside to speak through a very keen on it dependants. yossef farm produces bio gas suffered he diversified
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from dairy you know generates electricity from local homes definitely a case of where there's muck there's money but it's where his tax cash goes that's concerning him more than the smell. because it's we're completely unrepresented in germany on our own we would be a good size european state all we are now on the financier's of berlin and others are. and for yossef there's more at stake than just money for one of europe's oldest states. is since reunification there's been too much number of very an influence on us i want my kids to grow up feeling very culturally linguistically no one learns the bulgarian language in school we want to change that. when germany's unity day celebrations get underway in the autumn open ice is might
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find that here in the largest states they're more keen on parting ways than partying these are all over the very. still ahead here the south china rushes in a new generation of communist party leaders is up and up its annual national people's congress in beijing flexing its military muscles and rattling the caves in washington examine that a bit closer and also as soon as sobering thoughts on the attacks campaigners in the u.k. crying into their beer they're calling for an end to the constant rises warning that put the future of the pubs at risk i report on that as well but after this break. as was the envy of ambrose. never put his trust in anyone and rightly so. his body was found on the floor of his huge empty house.
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but did he die of natural causes. the mystery of stones. documentary. download the official application to yourself choose your language stream quality and enjoy your favorites from alzheimer's if you're away from your television or it just doesn't matter now with your mobile device you can watch on t.v. any time. and we were.
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again this week china opened its annual national people's congress in beijing this year's gathering of seems more important than most as it will see the ushering in of the country's leaders for the next five years with a list of priorities economic growth along with the pushing through of a large increase in defense spending join our expert professor steve saying from nottingham university told us the new leaders focus on the military's because of washington's policy in the region the new chinese president xi jinping is a much more self-confident confident assertive and nationalistic persecute and therefore we are likely to see a china much more assertive in an extend yes in terms of what is described as the american pivot back to asia the chinese sees these as a major change in american policy that is directed against china as a less than friendly act and therefore the chinese are trying to. undermine
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american rebalancing and it is also part of the reasons for the double digit increases in chinese military spending. the great british pint is struggling to survive these days and is in danger of running dry because of rising taxes to be is going up by two percent above inflation every year forcing brits to pay up to ten times more than some europeans campaigners say freezing the tax would say fountains of jobs and help preserve beloved boozes sarah firth reports next on why there are fears that calls for lost orders could soon be permanent. something is brewing in britain with any budget around the corner beer is set to rise again a third of the cost of the point where he goes to the tax man campaign is have said enough is enough and are calling for a freeze. hang around ten times as much as drinkers in germany so.
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just be right to hold up. hold on the increase. and keep the. pumps over time old tradition in person but fully understand their appeal we have to go three hundred miles from london here to hesketh new market a village in the heart of england's countryside and steeped in history ten years ago when the only pub in this but it was put up the sale the people who lifted a rather than risk seeing it fall into the hands of a big chain and if you need character cite it's this something a little bit different take matters into their own hands. together and pull the pub turning it into a co-operative believed to be the first of its kind in the ek the pub wasn't about money but it does turn a profit but even here the big g.t. hikes are felt every time.
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it's another. round the corner and the microbrewery that supplies the pub is also a co-operative that is doing well in the u.k. small approved pay half the taxes the major companies best kidney markets being lucky a mixture of good business sense and strong community spirit has been the brewery and the pub have avoided the slide caused by the big g.t. escalator across the u.k. they and many others have been say lucky big businesses can afford to pick up the tab it's small into. tens of that stuff in the last four years thirty six thousand pups that closed is old thing is tens of thousands of job losses i mean very little section is the only woman to sleep doing well at the moment for the city going against the trend not falling sales will go gradually on here increases as we can
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realize i get many times the prices the service will tend to be improper pokers. growth you know school was a big screen serving so for me to still log in it's an individual basis in an environment way from which the somebody could work so hard. and beyond profits it's the risk of losing a put each institution is pretty things that just so you bring to it you can see so what this is mark is a community it brings people together people. it's more of a difference between social networking and meeting somebody in real life there is no substitute for this kind of conviviality the old crowd might be unique in britain these days harking back to a time of community that many of us have now the gulf but it's a reminder to be a voice some traditions up best. sarah. has got me market in cumbria. coming up after this break neck start interviews an arab member of the
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israeli parliament dr ahmed to be about the power struggle in the region the sonics program tonight. john kerry made his first major verbal gaffe as secretary of state by mixing the nonexistent country of courage to stand in one of his speeches of course it is funny when politicians misspeak george bush was pretty good at that but i can say that we all make mistakes when we speak trust me it is very easy to butcher the pronunciation of someplace on earth like course to lobola or walla walla washington the thing is that he didn't just misspeak his speech was written correctly and if you look at his eyes as he said it he wasn't really looking at notes or something he was reading it off of a teleprompter right now i am reading off a teleprompter but i put every word there myself which is probably why john kerry is spelled with a q but my question is would kerry and prompter mr obama just read anything put in
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front of them so they even really know the realities of the tiriel they're reading in their speeches if you're deeply versed on some subject then you should need to read word for word from the teleprompter to give a speech just try writing some notes and speaking with your brain and maybe your heart like in the good old days but that's just my opinion. choose your language. according to kill with the infidels some. choose to. choose to get to. choose the stories get him to. choose access to.
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. the debate around britain's membership within the has taken center stage here in britain and it's not going away anytime soon in the u.k. independence party all you keep is the name of ill health the view that person would be better off out and as for their leader well if you haven't heard of him yet where have you being he's the firebrand politician he once told the president herman van rompuy that he had the charisma of a damp rag his outspoken views often raise eyebrows but he seems to the fleck criticism with these years all through all the man he survived a plane crash just whatever then tell him where he can or can't make we are of course talking about nytol for us thank you very much for joining us let's get straight to you kep the party do you think david cameron put the promise of an in out referendum on the table so that's your thunder stolen isn't it well i mean he
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said if he wins the next general election well that looks pretty unlikely following a renegotiation which given the temperature in brussels looks virtually impossible in five years time he's going to give us a say whether we should remain part of the european union although there's one really big problem with that he's done it all before in two thousand and seven he gave us a cost and guarantee that if he became prime minister we have a say on the lisbon treaty and he's let us down like a cheap pair of braces on that one and frankly i don't believe in i don't trust him i won't because i do me is we don't want to wait five years let's have a referendum before the next general election if he said that i cheer him to the rooftops if we do get a referendum they where does that leave you keep. it doesn't matter what matters is we get the independence democracy and self-government of this country back the reason we're in this mess is because twenty years ago at the time of the bow street tracy tory members of parliament decided that the that the well being of their
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passes unity mattered more than the independence of our country and i'm not going to make the same mistake with ukip what happens to you get doesn't matter the reality of course is we're a party with a plan for what we should do once we leave the european union but that isn't the issue the issue is are my children going to grow up in a country that they can call their own people winning the battle proving to the basest public that you can be a serious credible party. well i think you look at the opinion polls if you look at our performance and recent by elections you know people aren't voting for us just on the constitutional question of europe they're voting for us because of our stance on open door immigration they're voting for us because of our stance on wind turbines they're voting for us because we're a party that believes that social division has become wider and wider with the abolition of the grammar schools there are lots of actually very strong and positive reasons why people are voting you can let's talk about immigration the coalition has said they're getting serious about it yes you're absolutely right
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david cameron was in india he said the there will be no upper limit i repeat no upper limit on the number of indian students that can come to britain and then settle there after of course he also. not only endorses rumania in bulgaria i'm having full access to the u.k. labor market and social security system after twenty fourteen now even that's not enough for david cameron david cameron wants turkey to join the european union with the free rights of access for another eighty million people so that's why david cameron is on immigration he is encouraging open door immigration in fact just in the same way that tony blair did well what do you say to the criticism your bs on immigration are fueling prejudice well that's complete that you know i mean i just resent that reject that and if people are deeply prejudicial against those from overseas they can go and vote b.m.p. don't vote for us go vote for the b.n.p. if that's how you feel if you're like ukip and you know you wish people in romania
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and bulgaria well but you don't think that total unlimited open door is a responsible thing to do at a time of twenty two percent youth unemployment then come a vote for you what are your concerns regarding immigration when it comes to winning in bulgaria never in our history until two thousand and four have we ever had a complete unlimited. open door you know ever since nine hundred five we've had an immigration policy in britain something like thirty to fifty thousand people a year for that fifty year period came and settled in this country over the last seven years it's now between five and six hundred thousand people a year nothing like this has ever happened in our history and i think the great danger would remain a bulgarian is that we're dealing with countries that are several times poorer than poland latvia lithuania are the ones that accessed the u.k.
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back in two thousand and four and you know there is a risk that over the course of the next few years very considerable numbers of people will come and frankly i don't think our labor market or our social security system can bear it do you think is the right need to attach this. remaining immigration at the beginning of the next year. i honestly believe. that even though i doubt the sincerity of cameron's pledge on a referendum the what he's done he's let the genie out of the bottle you know we are going to have over the course of the next few years a very big open honest debate in this country about whether to remain part of the e.u. or not and i predict. but the key issue on which this will will be open border immigration that is going to become the number one issue when it comes to a referendum that above everything else is what people are going to vote on these sales standing up for the faceless people well yeah but i think you know particularly you know unskilled labor. you know they are having
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a very very difficult time and equally quite a lot of skilled labor is having a difficult time because of massive price on the cutting you know i do understand that if you are a big employer then open door immigration's a very good thing because you can get people to pick cauliflowers far more cheaply you can get people to work on building sites and save yourself some money and that does push down wage inflation in this country i accept that i understand that but on the other hand. and if that is directly putting people into a situation of unemployment then why is it maybe good for the big employer it certainly isn't good for the country these say you stand up for everyone but what exactly do you mean by that well i think there is a feeling i share it that we now are run by a political class of people they all go to the same schools they all go to the same oxford colleges they all take the same degrees they all marry each other sisters and they all finish up having gone from research offices straight into parliament
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you can't put a cigarette paper between them in terms of policy they have no hobbies or interests or what denny's he used to call him to land's i mean they don't even collect stamps these people you know they spend their weekends sitting around together talking about politics they are utterly disconnected from the thoughts hopes and aspirations of the ordinary working family in this country and i think we as a political party are far more in tune and idea name for making comments like that and you have firebrand character do you think they are a politician. i think of myself as a politician i was in business for twenty years i only got into politics because i felt the entire political class were taking us down a road towards a united states of europe that would mean that not only our democracy but actually our place in the world would be severely diminished and so i got into this and indeed in this very town that we're sitting in today recently i was ukip first of
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a candidate and i stood in the byelection in the twenty years ago and i i believe even more strongly that if our politicians were out of touch twenty years ago when they took us into the exchange rate mechanism and signed the maastricht treaty they're even further out of touch today we leave. ukip get what they pay in fighting for what happens to our trade with culture i said he was i'm absolutely convinced that my favorite react to produce will want to go on selling many many cases for kerry. i'm absolutely certain that the seders will want to go on selling their cars from big showrooms in london and remember that the last year that we have trade figures for we traded with the european union at a deficit of forty six billion pounds a cumulative trade deficit over the last five years alone of two hundred billion sterling we are one of the e.u.'s biggest export markets in the world and we get this rubbish put out by mandelson and kenna hazell tion and all these ghastly
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people telling us that if we were part of the european union all economic activity between britain and the e.u. would say it's absolute rubbish no where in the world do you need to be in political union to buy and sell widgets from each other it is arrant nonsense see thing that it's. building tabling for the country thanks china for example. dave cameron was in india with a great big travelling circus supposedly the biggest ever trade mission of the british prime minister has ever been on and whilst it's true that we can do trade with india the one thing that cameron could have put on the table to really secure . vibrant exciting trade relationships with ships with india he was incapable of doing he wasn't able to go to india and say right let's have a tariff free trade deal between our two countries and we can't do that because we're trapped in this completely outdated concept of
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a european union's customs union we are banned the world's largest trading nation and we're banned from making trade deals in any other part of the world it's really funny because you know we're told oh you must be part of a big block we'll look at switzerland it's a total of a country in terms of population and yet the swiss have more trade deals with the major not e.u. economies around the world than we do independent says you know part of what is independent. it means that you govern your own country it means the british people at general elections put people into westminster and it's those people and those people own the decide what employment regulations are the decide what our overseas trade policy is the decide what we should be doing about britain's looming energy crisis and that that parliament is able to take those key decisions and at the end of a four or five year period with the british queen because assess them we can boot them out and we can pick somebody else with a completely different manifesto and one of the reasons why general election
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debates in britain are now limited basically to schools and hospitals is because on virtually every other area the legislation that is made at brussels level cannot be changed by a british government or british parliament it's narrowed in political debate in this country so the defender of independence the scottish independence referendum well i can't understand anything out examiner said for twenty years because isn't he the scottish nigel for isaac ali you know he's a con job isn't it because he's been saying we could leave westminster and be an independent state in the european union well i'm sorry you know you cannot be an independent state and be part of the european union and actually sat. his position has changed i mean now he wants to keep the pound he wants to keep the queen and he seems to be quite pro military cooperation as well and even his independence in europe line has now been dealt a fatal blow by mr barroso i never thought i'd ever say anything nice about mr
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barroso bad he has said that if scotland leaves the u.k. replies it would have to reapply to join the european union and sign a treaty that committed scotland to joining the euro and the scottish people looked at that and said no thank you very much indeed so i think the independence referendum in twenty fourteen you know i very much doubt that more than twenty twenty five percent of people will vote for independence and we can then have a proper debate about the relationship between scotland and westminster personally i'm pro more devolution you know i've got no difficulty with the f. word the federal structure within the united kingdom but i think the scots should actually be raising more of their own money and spending more of their own money as prime minister always pretty unlikely isn't it i mean look you know here we are we are third in the opinion polls we're above the lib dems we've made huge progress i very much believe that in the european elections of next year we've got a serious chance of winning those elections nationally i think it unlikely that
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we're going to be the biggest party in westminster in twenty fifteen. but what we could well do is we could well catalyze some sort of realignment of british politics that whilst we draw our votes from across the spectrum it is pretty clear to me that the conservative party is now going through i think just about its deepest crisis in history there are two distinct wings of the conservative party they don't agree with each other on virtually anything and i think if you get gets much stronger than it is today we could see something really new and really quite exciting in british politics thank you very much for joining us thank you. live. victims multiply here each day. it's very profitable to invest in colombia
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which. is a very high return on investment. you'll know me i said but i've been working in this area for thirty years and i've always had to pay the armed groups that they needed by this i knew the managers of change their name and strategy but just tell the same budrus. high ranking suspects you know comment pretty upset about that mr president goes. to president clinton. but. i won't give an interview i'm sorry but no. investigation is a dead. end and he says sick and stop your bullshit and keep quiet or else you'll suffer the consequences. even if they're your bodyguards to watch themselves because the same goes for them. blood rivers from.
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