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41
Aug 20, 2016
08/16
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don''t hae enforcement, a y you got thehe chance to me pipiles of mononey, guess what''s ggonna happepen. right, and we're s seeing that play out. from a pure economic standpoint, you've got to sort of look at all the politicalal actors. the palm oil is generating revenue for the government in termsms of export taxes on palm oil,l, in terms of papayroll taxes and paymyments o sococial secucurity systems and all of t the government programs. palm oil is more valuable than the forest right now because of the way we value forests. >> while indonesia is looking to scale up its p production of pam oil, thisis will come at a great cost. it wiwill come at a great cost to o the enenvironment ande ecosystem. >> with their old homes ddeforested, elephantsts and otr wildlife have toto move somewhe. it's here in farmiming villages thaat humans a and elephanants cocollide. inin aceh, comommunis rely on agriculture, and when elephants begin eating those crops, conflicts become deadly.. >> [speaking local language] >> loss of life isn'tew to the pepeople of aceh. for over 30 years,s, violent c clashes
don''t hae enforcement, a y you got thehe chance to me pipiles of mononey, guess what''s ggonna happepen. right, and we're s seeing that play out. from a pure economic standpoint, you've got to sort of look at all the politicalal actors. the palm oil is generating revenue for the government in termsms of export taxes on palm oil,l, in terms of papayroll taxes and paymyments o sococial secucurity systems and all of t the government programs. palm oil is more valuable than the forest right now...
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Aug 18, 2016
08/16
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. >> there wasn't t much happepen at t toms river. chicken farming was the biggest industry. there was a little bit of tourism but not much. when this very large c chemical concern said we want to build a factory to make dye in your town, we sasaid come alolong. >> thehe company brougught jobs brought about poor waste management practices. >> it was very clear as much of the major dye manufacturers in that era t that they had big issueses with pollution. they creatated contamination problems wherever they were and ciba was no exception. ciba een 1962-1966, geigy had about 20 sites. on the days the plant was operating, over five million gallons of chemical waste were dumped directly in the riviver. thesese were days whenen the philosophy was out t of siight, ouout of mind and didn't have proper waste disposal. >> don bennett grew up in toms river and ran in the river as a young boy, just downstream from where ththe plant dumps. dd >> it was bizarre to a teenage kid swimming in what looked to be just another river. the e water was alwayays ice co evenen in the m middle of the s
. >> there wasn't t much happepen at t toms river. chicken farming was the biggest industry. there was a little bit of tourism but not much. when this very large c chemical concern said we want to build a factory to make dye in your town, we sasaid come alolong. >> thehe company brougught jobs brought about poor waste management practices. >> it was very clear as much of the major dye manufacturers in that era t that they had big issueses with pollution. they creatated...
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Aug 25, 2016
08/16
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it will be interesting to see what happepens moving forward. i am a journalist. don't offer up what should happen, i think there are folks out there, critics on the republicans, purely opportunistic artisans, if you will, saying it should be shut down. clintons have agreed to this, an effort effectively on wanting the foundation to preserve what it does that is good, but unwind an extra kate the relationships from it. i think that is likely to happen in some of them although, "the washington post" i believe reported the promises they have made will not fully and all of the kinds of donations that are at issue here that we are discussing today. amy: paul glastris, do you think it should shut down or president clinton should step down from the board, the discussion now that chelsea clinton would remain on the board? >> a melancholy about the whole thing because this is spectacularly successful organization at helping millions and millions of deserving poor people around the world. you extricate the clintons from that and you extricate the polititical juice and ener
it will be interesting to see what happepens moving forward. i am a journalist. don't offer up what should happen, i think there are folks out there, critics on the republicans, purely opportunistic artisans, if you will, saying it should be shut down. clintons have agreed to this, an effort effectively on wanting the foundation to preserve what it does that is good, but unwind an extra kate the relationships from it. i think that is likely to happen in some of them although, "the...
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123
Aug 23, 2016
08/16
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we cannot let that happepen. for one made a commitment they will have to kill me or locked me in jail -- lock me in jail, but i will stand to protect the sacred water, and i am guided by spirit. amy: that is deborah, who participated in the 1973 sand up in which members of the american indian movement occupy wounded knee to demand their treaty rights. to call for focus for action att secret stone. >> i understand that range. i fought with cops before. i have been shot at by police. i have been shot b by police. we got it on with police back in the day, so i understatand the rage, but what we are here together to protect sacred water, let's do it with dignity, training, unity. ,my: chairman dave archambault explain what this cap is, where it is -- camp is, where it is, how many people are coming out to it, and how the state is responding. along the camp is cannonball river close to the mouth of the missouri river. mp started out in april of 2016 as a prayer camp. the prayers have been answered. there has been powe
we cannot let that happepen. for one made a commitment they will have to kill me or locked me in jail -- lock me in jail, but i will stand to protect the sacred water, and i am guided by spirit. amy: that is deborah, who participated in the 1973 sand up in which members of the american indian movement occupy wounded knee to demand their treaty rights. to call for focus for action att secret stone. >> i understand that range. i fought with cops before. i have been shot at by police. i have...
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77
Aug 15, 2016
08/16
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all that happepened, and we got more done in 10 years on the consumer, environmental, and worker safety front, under freedom of information front, on support for science and technology for the people, in terms of pushing for more benign forms of energy, pushing for detection instrumentation to detect coal-dustst levels in mines, for example, pushing for safer automotive technologies, aviation technologies. and in doing that, i thought we were going to really go to the next level. and what was the next level? the next level was to have full health insurance for everyrybody; nobody out, everyby in, with free choice of doctor and hospital. that would have saved about a million american lives in the last 20 years. where do i get that? the harvard medical school study showed-- and this is a peer-reviewed study in the "journal of american public health," december 2009--that because people could not afford health insurance to get diagnosed and trtreated in time,e, 45,000 americans die every year, 80800 a week. completely preventable. nobody dies in canada or japan or taiwan or germany or engla
all that happepened, and we got more done in 10 years on the consumer, environmental, and worker safety front, under freedom of information front, on support for science and technology for the people, in terms of pushing for more benign forms of energy, pushing for detection instrumentation to detect coal-dustst levels in mines, for example, pushing for safer automotive technologies, aviation technologies. and in doing that, i thought we were going to really go to the next level. and what was...
184
184
Aug 16, 2016
08/16
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"what could happepen? let's see what went o on."actutually, chevron's umum, its corporate l level is actually very interested i in biodiesel. mcbarnet: we are showing the confidenc we have in this product and also making the economics right for the public, uh, , keeping the price at a cocompetitive levell to alternative fuels likeke regular diesel, whihich we haveve done. kelly: i think that's been, um, kind of the anomaly in hawaii, is that usually when you have a monopoly, you know, you drive prices up because you can get it, and we have a monopoly, but we're keeping our prices low. and so that makes us feel r really goodod because we feel like we are taking care of our comommunity. everybody really apprececiates it. king: and it feels really good that after ten years of operation with the compost, it's not here. it's... it has been made into a useable product. it's gone out back into the community, where it should be. our fuel hahas helped petroleum not be e brought ontto the island. uhso it's..... it's just a... it's a great thi
"what could happepen? let's see what went o on."actutually, chevron's umum, its corporate l level is actually very interested i in biodiesel. mcbarnet: we are showing the confidenc we have in this product and also making the economics right for the public, uh, , keeping the price at a cocompetitive levell to alternative fuels likeke regular diesel, whihich we haveve done. kelly: i think that's been, um, kind of the anomaly in hawaii, is that usually when you have a monopoly, you know,...