tv Watching the Hawks RT April 1, 2019 10:30pm-11:01pm EDT
10:30 pm
that you know they should have attempted to wake you in the united states you know an extremely for all small fraction and i believe these police officers should be charged with murder as well screw up tough boss five in the morning you know moscow those are the headlines for this hour join us again in thirty minutes for the latest update. the security council should have a mandatory one percent of all stock bonds for x. transactions to go into social security so that every individual let's say when they become eighteen they've got fifty sixty seventy thousand dollars and there that they can go spend on college if they want to that's a that is a that is an extra analogy of this economy that's being recycled repurposed regenerated into an ecosystem an economy that is like more mimics that of nature.
10:31 pm
greetings and salutations no one will argue that there is a lot of pain sorrow and truly deplorable things in the world today and most often they find their way onto your evening new user new speeds every day and truly daily basis or watchers and it's not hard to see why given the industry that brought you if it bleeds it leads is a news station mantra as the old saying goes if you want to be depressed turn on your news. but not that today no this week we decided we'd bring you an april fools
10:32 pm
day show that will only focus on the most positive uplifting in the important news of the day that doesn't showcase the worst of us only the best of us so let's start the show off with something truly great the great green wall of africa yes well u.s. president donald trump has been busy building or trying to build walls of barbed wire and hate metal in order to protect our southern border from poor people that don't look like him farmers environmentalist and scientists working in more than twenty african nations have been building a wall of trees indigenous land use techniques environmental pretty little protection to help combat the desertification of africa originally started back in two thousand and seven with just eleven countries involved the ambitious project stretches across roughly six thousand miles eight thousand kilometers of drain that at the southern at the southern edge of the sahara desert in a region known as the sun how backed by a cod ray of conservation groups and governments around the world if the wall is
10:33 pm
completed it would be three times the size of the great barrier reef. with fifteen percent of the wall completed just ten years in the project there's still yes a long way to go but supporters are determined this grand green dream will work because unlike walls made of stone and concrete this wall is made with love and light which is the only walls truly worth building when you're watching the hawks. you. wonder what it. looks like real that this would. be the plot of. the day like you know what i got. which we. did. while they were on the watching the hawks i am a robot or sometimes have
10:34 pm
a thought. this is the kind of well i love to see yes this is also a fun show to have just not have miserable things to talk about i'm really excited about this and i think this is one of the coolest things that we've seen as far as ecology and a whole continent involving numerous countries coming together and so the result of this plan was to plan this great wall of trees so it's going to be ten miles wide and ultimately forty three hundred fifty miles long and what it does have bisects about a dozen countries but it runs about senegal in the west and then just to djibouti in the east but the biggest problem with growing something of that size and this scope is desertification so where places were. food bowls and places where things could be you know grown and all of the it's much harder now it is right they ran into the heart of swathes of way on the ones on the want to be
10:35 pm
able to cultivate the individual trees as they grow and things like that but plans change and they realized it's not just about the individual trees it's about how to protect them how to change how you're farming bringing in techniques even i there was one story about an australian visitor who visited said oh you could you know change the land up a little bit like this and then that would mean that man has been carried on like ten two decades in. a car of the lead environmental specialist for the global environment facility at the world bank said quote it is not necessarily a physical wall but rather a mosaic of land use practices that ultimately will meet the expectations of the wall it has been transformed into this kind of metaphorical thing there they're changing the land for the better in order to create this you know quote unquote metaphorical idea of a wall a good wall a good one and so those are that's interesting so it's the african union and the united nations food and agriculture organization refer to this now as sort of
10:36 pm
africa's flagship initiative. to combat land degradation to certification and drought because that as these things are poles water and. learning how to grow in these areas where they haven't before and really looking at these each techniques because what they have what they've talked about and why this is such an issue is twelve million acres of degraded land has been restored through these but the issue of these projects in nigeria about thirty million acres of drought resistant trees were planted across senegal and a whopping thirty seven million acres of land has been restored in ethiopia and for those of us who are in our age group chamonix millennium kind of thing we remember what amount ethiopia was you know there was drought there was famine or kids and now. here we are to a point where they're bringing that back they're bringing not just bring them food as it was through our generation for so long but we've gotten past the we can just bring the food to making it able to grow food and being able to be affordable for
10:37 pm
everyone not just themselves and that's the thing is like you can't just rely on philanthropy all the time you can't just rely think we've become i think the upper one percent of this world kind of feels like well if i just give enough money and throw enough money at a problem that it doesn't there's much more beyond that and you know there's a there's a hundred different things that this kind of idea of this wall improves but i here's a couple of them that they list on their website that goes along with what the u.n. wanted to list in terms of like how they want to change and better make the environment i think is by like twenty thirty twenty fifty. one of them is big you know the growing improved water security and they know it's also improvement for women too because now when you have these trees growing you have these new practice is being being done there when the girls don't have to spend hours a day fetching water because the trees will naturally kind of keep the water in the region. growing fertile land that's obviously one. land is one of the many humanities most precious resource this project does that it also creates jobs it
10:38 pm
creates green jobs giving incomes to families across the aisle i mean that's a huge thing right there when you're building and creating jobs up this that's monstrously important you know and then finally one of the other ones that jumped out of the it's also starting to just it's creating sustainable consumption patterns and basically. people there can grow enough to be there so you don't have to rely so much on imports act you know imports of food like that exactly incredible it truly is i wish we were building that kind of a wall along the southern border that. living through tornadoes earthquakes tsunamis and other natural disasters can be incredibly devastating nature's fury. even in today's age of technology and human ingenuity is still unmatched even by our own standards of destruction while witnessing nature's wrath in the moment is truly frightening oftentimes the
10:39 pm
aftermath of such an event can be just a scary in face of the loss of infrastructure and life and it's those nervous moments in which goodness most often shines through and march the state of nebraska here in the united states had a bomb dropped on it in the form of a bomb cyclon the cause more than one billion dollars in damages to states from the to the state from a very rapid rainfall and heavy snow melt this included over four hundred million in the last crops for a state known for its farm and livestock dependence but thankfully nebraska has friends willing to help friends troxel lost a lot of hay farmers from my home state of wisconsin drove to penn to all the way to farmers in pennsylvania were seen driving caravans across america's highways and byways delivering food supplies and lots and lots of hay to nebraskans to help them in the time of need kevin and kendra schmidt organized a supply trip to nebraska from stratfor wisconsin after a trip they told the media quote we started off with only two trucks and trailers
10:40 pm
and at the end of the day we ended up with a truck full of hay personal goods and feed for farmers it feels good to help somebody that is that most definitely does to those farmers we salute wow that's a really neat story i think this is something that it sounds sort of cheesy being that i'm from wisconsin but it's true if you grew up there and you know this about the midwest and you know the there's just something very cultural that when things happen we don't think twice about you know when something happens you say what do you need we're going to go find if we have it if someone else says it will bring it we sort of don't wait especially in terms of farmers and we don't wait for these things to happen it's a community effort nobody's competing with each other in this sort of capitalist world. you know agribusiness beyond that there are these people who've got their livelihood and everybody works together and what you see here is literally people are taking their own trucks their own things and saying look i have
10:41 pm
a little extra why don't we. and i think this is one of those things that really is what we do need to see more of i think the media doesn't show this stuff but i know it happens all the time and that's one of the stories about these is that this happens all the time this is what we do when one community needs something. or. other and i often wonder why the media is so. negative. things like. you know they kind of leave it up to local media every now and again but they don't they don't feel good or they're only allowed to go there. but the local but we're never going to hear about basil which is one of the reasons i like doing these shows like this i mean when you look at the damage that the brass were talking point three billion. that includes you're saying
10:42 pm
that's four hundred forty nine million in damages to roads levees infrastructure for four million crop losses four hundred million at a loss what these people are doing i mean just. lost one hundred percent of their hey hey you like one of them my mom and dad had a horse farm going to high school one of the base crops running a farm or an industry dealing with animals and farming you need. they need the goes. animal treatment as well and whatever you can say and whether it's. one of these cattle are there for. these kinds of things literally animals starve and one of the worst things you talk to any real farmer not a corporate you talk to any real farmer. seeing their animals stars no matter what those animals are going to be used for at the end is heartbreaking and that's not what they want to do and so this is the kind of thing that this is food for those
10:43 pm
animals you know it's not you know it's not just about your pork chops and your cheeseburgers you know they're saving their lives also i'd like it's pointed out that tyrrell really doesn't like cows of course you go to their little stamkos but . it was just somebody still really is that they had to say. you know look i mean i love saying this because you know you mentioned it earlier to farmers know farmers there they know that they're all you know their lives are dependent made sure and when nature turns around and bites you like it has been through quite a change they're going to be there for support they're going to say hey you know what we have to bring it to nebraska that's what twenty six thirty hours they had to leave their homes to go boo this is incredible story and a lot of people today would see it because they were they caught it like a. viral video shows up it just happened that you know somebody somebody was driving and saw and that's the only reason i saw it and because there isn't
10:44 pm
anything aside from a few local news reports they don't have a just yeah i mean we try to even things out on here certain days can be worse than others but to me and most times why wasn't even the need of these farmers i brassica should have been brought out but that's the thing it's not just about your fun whether graphics and will or will not whether cause a huge huge issue for my commute to work but really understand how it affects everybody and i understand i think this is another one of those things that you can understand where your food comes from if you understand how things work you know to back up what you were saying. loretta meyers a lycoming county pennsylvania one of the farmers bringing food there from pennsylvania she actually said if it's not. what they want to bring down with them if it's not monetary it's cleaning supplies that it's not cleaning supplies it could be food supplies we're getting a little bit of everything from a little bit of everybody we are farmers farmers help farmers everyone should be
10:45 pm
taking that lee yeah we are a community and the community of support one of those things called the wall before either one of the sixteen volunteers who made the trip to nebraska said we had some flooding issues here in wisconsin but it wasn't as bad as what we saw in nebraska was ten times worse than we got and that's the other thing you can have your badly yeah you have flooding yes these things can affect you but when you look and say look i made it through this you have it harder i can help you you know it's a simple idea of paying it forward that's the pay it forward let's help each other at the end of the day is not the most important thing to go to see good examples already as we go to break off watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on facebook twitter and you tube and see our poll shows that are. coming up with the walls brings us the good news of the world literacy in artie's turn of the chavez burger some extraordinary news that in new york the state government yes is actually fighting back against traffic congestion some plastic trash actually pass something it's incredible all right stay tuned to
10:46 pm
watching the hawks. breaks it count. we've always you got a problem. was extreme is a problem really just perspective and particular from within the muslim communities . and because we haven't been addressed enough to effectively. it's no doubt. that narratives of them come out from within societies is going to give rise to the white supremacy and far right extremists.
10:47 pm
seems to do crack when i was a little kid my dad he was like oh. so you know i got like what i needed when i was a baby but i had a bad child. there's always been single mothers an african american community service and slavery. i think it's more of an issue of these teenagers having kids. you can expect a fourteen or fifteen year old first daughter to order for and there be a far there and he's a chat. the last place on. my car and breaking down i was unable to get to work on time so they let me go with my paycheck that i bring home. early enough to pay my car insurance.
10:48 pm
literacy the ability to read and write is one of the most important life skills needed to thrive in today's modern world according to you know the united nations education scientific and cultural organization people with poor literacy skills are twice as likely. to be unemployed they make thirty to forty percent less than their literate coworkers and across the world sixty eight sixty to eighty percent of those in prison have below average literacy skills as of twenty eight hundred nearly seven hundred fifty million people across the globe still don't have the ability to read and write on the flipside for the first time in human history literacy is no longer in the confines of the rich and powerful but accessible to
10:49 pm
the masses from ebooks to the good old fashioned library card never before have books and the skills to read them but easier to get one's hands on according to the organisation for economic co-operation and development it was found that today a mere seventeen percent of the world's population is a literate while back in eighteen twenty only twelve percent of the population were literate as they could read and write one of the most compelling and successful ways people globally have increased literacy within their families is through the shared experience of reading so hawk watchers let's celebrate this upward trend in literacy and discover some of the additional ways individuals and groups are sharing the gift of literacy. that's incredible that from the eighteen hundreds to yesterday that incredible news i'm so happy about that i've also heartbroken that there's seventy percent of any of the seven hundred seven hundred twenty million four hundred twenty million. and even two three years ago they were estimating was that eight hundred million so we've got about fifty million and over the last
10:50 pm
couple of years and part of that like when you look at the numbers of you say like generation to generation we've been getting more and more literate it really is a power struggle because when you talk about twenty school all of the books we didn't have libraries it wasn't until really carnegie started coming in building these public libraries that you'll see across small towns and really building a structure and have a university is where they were public people there weren't library circle to go to so what books you had is what books you had and if you couldn't read them you couldn't read them because they weren't schools either a school system and part of that is why there was that was a twelve percent and it's literally everyone right at the top because education literacy access to books those were things that were only allowed to the very elite to the very rich to the very powerful and keeping those away from people was how you kept people working and lousy jobs that were dangerous it's knowledge is power you want to maintain power and that's the thing it's like i'm really excited to see these numbers and it is part is part of the good children the and that's why it's
10:51 pm
so important we have to protect that that's why it's so important that we have people out there protecting the information and keeping information to the public not just hoard it at the top. and one of those people who is. lovely and always wonderful dolly parton little did you know so earlier this year her literacy program which is called imagination library they donated it's one hundred nothing in the book to the library of congress so she started this charity back in one thousand nine hundred six as a tribute to her father is very hard working a lot if you know anything about her back story. he never learned to read or write he didn't get to go to school couldn't because at where it was and what she said it's so important to me because if you can teach children to read they could dream and if you can dream you can be a success and i'm kind of and you can see that in the numbers and there are so obviously if not reading and not being able to read and write puts you in this in this case and being able to is this gift and one of the things that she said that's
10:52 pm
why it's so important in julie is because you would like i mean we both know what we couldn't do the jobs we do if we couldn't read in your sleep you can't do anything you can't drive a car if you can't read read signs it's also a medical issue there are health issues if you can't read a label on a medicine if you can't read instructions if you can't communicate it's it's a problem with language and reading is the most powerful tools human beings need to do truly a change in their lives in the make their lives better you know best of so important and when you see i mean the fact that you even have you wouldn't have any quality of literacy in gender oh yeah is that the same to me too yeah so you've got in the seventy's only around sixty percent of women globally were literate so around the time of the letter of m i was born only sixty percent of women were literate twenty sixty and that number had gone up to eighty three great
10:53 pm
a very percent literacy until you look as the literacy rates for men are still at around ninety percent across the board and only one in four countries have literacy rates for women above ninety percent and this is this is part of it goes back to whether it's teaching a girl to read or making getting water from your village close are these fundamental make a huge impact and literally make everything better and lower crime i mean like what else do you need to know everything is good it really looks good good for. cleaning your clothes and. there's a new little program called mary. some organizations have actually tar identify those areas where families as you said as important can read together a lot less of the laundry literacy coalition i love this they created lot of laundry and literacy kids consisting of items such as a sofa for parents told to sit together a colorful alphabet rug an open facing bookshelf an assortment of children's books and a set of four colorful puppet animals please let's get that in the water rescues anyone
10:54 pm
who's ever been in a laundromat can be one of most depressing places in the world new people can sit while their clothes are getting washed and read and learn with their kids so important please keep literacy strong that's how we how we have power in this world where. oh and i have a lot of good news for one of the biggest obese on the planet from york city a move to help the big apple's infrastructure and environment the new york state legislature just agreed to and passed a new budget deal that includes a ban get this on single use plastic bags and the new tax on traffic congestion artie's america hurt the america's true chavez has more. after weeks of negotiations the new york state legislature and governor cuomo signed off on a one hundred seventy five billion dollar budget that includes a ban on single use plastic bags a manhattan mansion tax and a groundbreaking plan to charge anybody driving into manhattan honk if you hate
10:55 pm
taxes now drivers who cross into manhattan below sixty first street will be hit with the nation's first congestion pricing fees starting at the end of two thousand and twenty eight the drivers will be charged for electronic readers that are automatically assessing tolls affecting the estimated seven hundred thirty one thousand drivers who travel into manhattan daily wow i didn't know that that will be interesting at the through hopefully it allows less congestion then because it gets pretty intense at all times. while similar knishes have been adopted in other cities including london stockholm and singapore new york lawmakers say the plan must not enough money to support fifteen billion dollars in capital improvements. over the next five years the city's m.t.a. will create a review board tasked with determining total amount depending on the time of day along with exemptions the funds will be dedicated to upgrading the city's transit system as you know the subways. and the bridges and roads and everything and i'm sure upstate too so i think infrastructure is very important. the new provision
10:56 pm
also includes the ban of single use plastic bags that are found at grocery stores which often make their way into waterways and oceans displace schickel over i mean even the it wasn't that way i know i sound old but when i was young there was not plastic in the ocean and now it's gotten out of hand new york will join california and hawaii as the only states in the country with such legislation the ban which is expected to go into effect march two thousand and twenty will apply to most single use plastic bags provided by supermarkets and other stores i do think that is a good thing we see too much plastic on the streets and i think it could help the environment and it could help the price of amount of plastic that we waste everything on the provision allows individual counties to opt into a five cent fee for paperless bags with two cents going to local governments and three cents going to the states environmental protection fund yes good save the
10:57 pm
turtles susi susie save the turtles oh my so this video and it was like like a body of water covered in trash like literally the entire service company tries to it's disgusting please stop littering save the turtles the budget also includes two other dedicated revenue sources for the subways a mansion tax on manhattan homes that sell for twenty five million dollars or higher and a tax on internet retail sales other agreements in the budget include the closure of prisons eliminating cash bail for misdemeanor or nonviolent a rise and also a permanent annual two percent cap on local property taxes reporter going to york tonight each of us are today. by now most of us have forgotten about the christmas or you will trees we decorated with such great care just a few short months ago but for the wildlife the by you national wildlife refuge in louisiana your all quality decoration is their new lease on life on march twenty eighth the u.s. fish and wildlife service conducted its annual christmas tree drop in which they
10:58 pm
however copter dropped nearly eight thousand used christmas trees into bayu savage marshes the trees will act as natural breakwaters that will slow down wave and wave and water movement they trap salt and encourage the growth of marsh gases why is this so important well for one the wetlands act as protection from floods that threaten cities like new orleans during storms by functioning as natural sponges they create new marsh habitats by building structures that can support native marsh crashes it traps and hold settlements creates more land and a more stable environment for animals and it even serves as valuable training as you can see for the louisiana army national guard harris of the new orleans office of resilience and stability sustainability for using some leftover holiday cheer to buy a savage the second largest urban wildlife refuge in the u.s. all right that is our house to show for you to barely remember everyone in this
10:59 pm
world we are not told that we are loved enough so i tell you all of you i am tired rover and thirty nine thousand dollars keep on watching all those hawks out there have a great day but. the biggest political hoax in american history russia is almost a thing of the times brings it on the other hand only seems to drop into deeper levels of the dollar and what is very much is really.
11:00 pm
27 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=122018478)