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Transcripts For DW Euromaxx 20190504 09:30:00


impulse leaves although by a long long it s not easy to go to another country you know nothing about the wife of i don t do this because we can t stay venezuela on the subway. constantly global news that matters d.w. made for martin s. in these mountains still wrong material is being extracted for day to day accessories belts. glasses and even shoes hard to believe well it s one of the fascinating reports we have for you today on the euro max and with that very warm welcome to this edition and here is
what else we have in store for you. perfect weekend i ll report american wheat is in what exams switzerland. perfect staging along artist uses landscapes as a canvas court inspiration. next year do you love big games will be held in japan no matter where it s healthy exciting question after the games is always what happens to all the buildings and stadiums that will especially for the olympics well after the love and games they came up with a really good idea a technology park for startups and maybe at some crazy designs to make it more attractive. in east london compact and colorful studios have been built in a massive structure that certis the international broadcast center during the london twenty twelve olympics the space used to be full of gigantic ventilation
systems and broadcasting now it holds twenty one model which spaces. gascons words for who can sprout an architect together with his colleagues he design the gadgetry. i think we are really keen to try and reconnect the area with it this past the olympic games were hugely positive for london i think for the local area but because of the level of development it happened. it s swept away a lot of the sort of local history and so we want to do this project as a way of reminding people about parts of the local history that they could be proud of. the bright colors used for this studio is for sun for example echo the practice of suites that used to be manufactured by. i just love how bright. you can literally see it from across the park so you look across the park and this is one of the ones that really stands out catches the eye i think it s actually when they
when they hear that it s inspired by a rapper they remember they can see this is from their childhood the founders of infinite session range another word space they re twenty five square meters studio cost seven hundred fifty euros to month which is quite inexpensive five hundred standing here the two brothers manage the production and distribution of alcohol free craft fair just the fact that our studio was designed off. the first perforated toilet paper factory in europe is like a funny thing that we can mention the first time anyone sees our office and it s sort of a great way of like breaking the ice with new kind of suppliers and customers and that kind of thing that come and see as. the architects didn t only joy inspiration from previous local businesses one studio facade commemorates and then you. usual landmark they used to be in the area. before the olympics. there s a very for a famous local landmark on the canal which was nicknamed fridge mountain. just
a few years it was europe s largest white goods dumping ground effect the giant pile of fridges freezers and so on and so we love the idea of creating a unit which was it was a tribute to that last monument. lieutenant s of the twenty one work spaces are as varied as the studios for scientists. makes includes a record label to music studios architects engineers and also designing. literature lydia rents a desk rather than a home studio. from here she manages the sustainable night with a label. she designs the collections in london and has the pieces made in italy. is very different from the other work in spaces that are being most of the work spaces of being the really big quite noisy quite loud and here if you like
a family so you go when. it s very colorful is in the middle of the park there are lots of nice events as well. these are thanks to house manager patrick scully his employer the tramper was hired by the technology park to look after the studios and its tenants. we can make beautiful spaces you can design amazing spaces you can have great views but ultimately the thing that makes the place tick make it last beyond me to try and prevent as a company will be the stories in the collaboration s and the network that happens for people interacting day to day growing their business to go. that s sure to be a. a lot more fun in these kind of cool studios than a great drab office is. staying in the british capital the london design studio kitchen theory hasn t quite decided if it s
a restaurant or a laboratory up to ten guests can try a ten course meal for one hundred eighty euros per person but it s actually quite scientific it s all about exploring i was since a re and psychological relationship with food. can sound effects add flavor to a meal can color and presentation influence our eating experience does enjoy our taste different around in the london restaurant kitchen theory menus are designed to please all of our senses each time we eat as a multi-sensory activity but it depends on how much mindfulness perhaps is going towards that kitchen theory what we re looking at doing is heightening people s sensory. enjoyment of the food drawing their mind towards the smell the touch the taste the sounds that they re engaging with and overall
heightening their perception of flavor and taste. the first course comes with headphones alongside a dish of jellyfish. just stuff you said is aware that many people find jellyfish disgusting because of their consistency it has more than a jellyfish kind of texture it has a kind of bite to it not something that my team and i discovered when we first tried it and it had a kind of safety crunch that well this is actually really really present. the sounds are played over the headphones are meant to emphasise the clock. it sounds a little bit like you re under the sea. but there s also lots of crunching like sounds eating a packet of crisps actually like you described and then when you eat it you can hear the noise is making when you re eating it but also in hoxton you know an. experimental psychologist charles trance works with chef use effect kitchen theory
professor spence is head of a cross mobile lab at oxford university and researches how effects can amplify influence and even deceive our sensory experiences too much testing in a science lab it s not like releasing sticking people brain scout s which part of the brain lights up you can find things out but it s nothing like a social. experience so we try to capture people in the wild as much as possible and here s where the perfect potential opportunity for that is a coming to a kind of intimate if unusual experimental almost dining experience does a mushroom dish taste more like it came from the forest when it s served on a wooden platter. out of the shell. do you only see the color red here because. back at the tasting menu. the main course squid resort calligraphic designs are
projected onto the table does that impact its taste intensity. the fact that your brain can t quite make sense of what it s seeing what s the food what s the and which was leading the other is kind of attention capturing say more likely to pay attention to what you re eating and by paying attention to what you re eating that s kind of the trick at work in a number of the dishes using the technology of the texture of the storytelling to really make people focus on the food by doing that that s likely to enhance the flavors that you get. but the big shot comes last with dessert. as ships were interested generally in this idea of emotional engagement through food how can you kind of engage people in a kind of stimulate one emotion that we thought was kind of underrated dining experience is. fear. finishes the need. to eat
a dessert with a shard even if it s made of sugar. and silver is really cold and it s made such a different texture and you get something very kind of hard as you can hear it does sound like the crunching of glass and i don t mind these here but definitely the first. the first mouthful was me but now that i know it s ok i quite like using it. which glass best brings out the taste of a look or. how to care about hairspray change our pleasure levels one thing is for sure those who dined at kitchen theory lead with a whole new awareness of how different sensory experiences come together when we. sometimes the passion industry is quite experimental too for example when you design us try out crazy new materials don t like this can actually be made into
a shoe do you want to know how they go look. these shoes on make with stone which flexible slate. typically made from. they belong to the sustainable next week brand is not shielded from munich sebastien teases the fourth found his family has been in the shoe industry for six generations but even for him working with stone was. one of them if you want to it s hundreds of millions of years old all natural and each pair is unique. technically speaking it isn t superior to leather because some of the shoes are a bit less robust so you shouldn t wear them in siberia at minus forty degrees celsius or they go but they re perfect for normal day to day purposes. the process of making stone flexible enough for making stones with huge blocks of marble.
using a special technique very thin slaps the saw one off which i then glued onto a flexible material. the method was invented by based company and. works with the flexibility of the spine as a life when i increase the money the stone becomes flexible if you make it very very thin. we re talking less than one millimeter thick and then combine it with something stabilizing the. roof of an issue that can be fiberglass or cotton fleece . either will stabilize the slice of stone and hold together the stone particles even when the slab gets bent to. the stone used then exposed to heat in cold alternately to make it even more flexible. but that process is a trade secret. by the end it can even be stanched. next issues there are also belts some. banks but their own limits to the usability.
when it comes to stone t. shirts jackets and such it gets complicated. we ve experimented with those kinds of items but other materials offer different breathability and range of motion. it s also going to stay expensive and labor intense so it will probably stay more niche than mass market sebastian been looking for any again and again he had tested using unusual materials for shoes like you never made from tin the fungus a tree parasite stroll from the berry and austria. but also coffee. mill. and fish skin have whole been tested potential suit committee reveals. my father developed the first pair of compostable shoes back in the nine years of so natural materials have
always been a big topic for us to my good nowadays so much more is changing because people are more aware and that of course leads to more innovations in this area. natural rubber as soon as vegetable tend leva cool in cells even less prominent parts of cheeses shoes are mostly natural to and it s not as. the same ability is a must for us and not just the way the media is propagating that term down and the bottom line for us is that if it isn t sustainable you can t call it a quality or luxury product it s kinds of business we cannot hide because. it seems the best in teens will keep walking even if it didn t mean his shoes made withstanding. travel is a passion of europe next report of magen lee but she only has forty eight hours to explore certain european cities and often the best tips for a perfect weekend this time she was a resentment that song may geneva and the french speaking part of switzerland here
you will find a lot of what switzerland is all about mountains and water cheese and chocolate and a historic old town. this scenery is too good to be true and in fact it really is today snow is blocking my view of lake geneva. this certainly isn t this spring can be so unpredictable especially here in switzerland but i m not going to let that ruin my perfect weekend. weather is a good reason to start my visit and the olympic museum lives on has been called the olympic capital since one thousand nine hundred four because it s home to the international olympic committee s headquarters. here at the museum visitors can learn the history of the games from antiquity to modern times. it s also filled with relics from past games including dozens of medals.
and show by he is responsible for the museum s culture and education programs i become associated with the olympics so long story and it started in one thousand nine hundred fifteen when. frenchman was the founder and came to the during the first war and he wanted a safe place to for the archives of the i.o.c. luckily i brought my trainers with me to test my athletic skills. from slalom skiing to biathlon training i m certainly getting a good workout here it s nothing more. than the olympic museum is my culture to foreclose on. the sun has come out just in time for me to discover some of the city s other treasures a sixteenth century statue of justice watches over the plaster lap and the seventeenth century town hall. next time make my way up
a steep passageway which leads to the gothic cathedral notat the largest of its kind in switzerland. then i head over to the fourteenth century somewhere and. push above those on it offers great views of the city. most on is located in the french speaking part of switzerland and cafe romano offers both french and swiss specialties owner soutane invites me to sample some fun do an offer which is hard to resist. it s a tasty treat and i call an area tip for a weekend in los on. day two in the city begins at the port of this is where the boats crossed lake geneva in all directions this one is ferrying people over to every young in france a journey that takes only forty minutes ahead of to the bridge to speak to captain carlos rivera about the landscape. you go back to forth every day do you ever get
tired of these views. no no never never because it changes all the time. because i ve been working on the lake for thirty one years and i m still always surprised since it will soon be this is my activities here for a perfect weekend in los on a boat tour on lake geneva. a visit to switzerland is incomplete without sampling the chocolate which is in a class of its own and i need a master of the trade olivier folks in his chocolate factory he also conducts special some in ours on the subject. but. how does one differentiate or tell the difference between first chocolate and other
kinds of chocolate. first of all there is the cocoa bean. it is the quality of the cocoa bean and about finding the best bean it s up to the next step is to produce. action a transformation of the being into chocolate and in switzerland we have invented several processes such as refining like with milk jugs of which is to stop just the reputation of the chocolate this is my shopping tip for those on some swiss chocolate. when night falls and those on some people go out looking for entertainment but i ve discovered another interesting activity at the city s main cathedral calling out peak hour from ten until two hundred fifty three steps lead to the place where it all happens marco karrar is one of the night watchman he takes me to a small quarters to show me what his job involves. so
. long. as this is a tradition that dates back to the middle ages. you think it s the dream of all the little boys and moves on to become a night watchman probably yes probably because we ve. treated coming here and. sparking. seeing. this just for this. was supposed to speak. and finally this is my special tip for a weekend in lozano visiting the night watchman for the best views of the city. he can find more about maggots experience as a night watchman or woman plus her first off a trip to was and are you to know these objects have suddenly appeared in
a nighttime landscape brightly shining geometric shapes they are not u.f.o. s but brahma the worst of the spanish light artists have. ten years ago the teacher of fine arts put his brushes aside now he paints with lights we ve met him at one of his installations literate. three dimensional sculpture holographic image these terms describe the light installations by had. geometric shapes of the spanish artist s trademark he projects them onto landscapes with astonishing results especially on a moment or so i m always seeking these almost magical moments in my works you see in the you know i m trying to find out whether there is a harmonious relationship between geometry and nature. you know something a harmony that would move us emotionally and which goes beyond our normal
perception of nature. riyad as career began in two thousand and eight with a large solo photography exhibition in the rain s. afia in madrid since then he s carried out like projections in numerous public spaces and festivals. his installations are more than simple entertainment for him. when there are sometimes i feel this sort of reverberation which goes beyond our daily perception and beyond how we normally experience nature seymour s thought it was then this out of those moments are precious and very fulfilling for me is. beneficial i even go so far as to say i live for these kinds of experiences. bebo but he said the bowl experience is. elemental tranquil and any magic that s how the artist
experiences unspoiled nature he tries to make this sensation visible and his projections and takes large scale photos of the results. and enough. at first glance the viewer sees these two crosses the two deaths as those cool things but they are actually part of a cube the corners of which i ve removed. the guess who will last a skin us but there s a shadow of that cube in the viewer s mind. and in a similar way there s an enterprise between the projected form and make sure you know. after finding a landscape d.n.r. starts designing his geometric forms in his madrid studio they follow strict mathematical rules he wouldn t think of using image editing software to superimpose them on a landscape photo he works on site. your syndicate go on the old boy going
to remember me the right geometry compliments the place. you can t do that on a computer but when i finished a geometric form it will look like there s a key to another dimension you can t get that effect on screen and you have to be in the place and experiment with the shape on site. yesterday mental physical and. d.n.a. usually works with standard projectors which in ranges and adjusts in his studio to test out his projections on walls. this gives him a first impression. but about a water of course us i ll prepare everything as thoroughly as i can but then when the distances are much further everything might change. sometimes the image on site looks completely different compared to new york. tonight conditions in the
mountains outside madrid are ideal thanks to a full moon of yet vienna has a natural light source for his long exposures together with his artistic process the resulting photo acquires a magical quality. and that brings us to the end of dissident of your inbox don t forget to visit our web page our check is out on facebook for more about the show plus you can also take part in our current draw for me and the whole team here and melon thanks for joining us and see you again next time i know. for.
in. the. final to obama. keep learning merged reality wait a second we want to hold a shout out factors that will make ideas shift deliver us. from one measure to reality to cryptocurrency your topics for live in an ever changing digital world let s start to devise a simple. shift. on g.w. to. a small town in for india with
a huge cultural legacy. by mark. somehow by my has managed time and again to track pioneers and trailblazers join us to discover the talents cultural grids and its contemporary arts in. thirty minutes w. . some say that was born into this world alone. or not. the second we come into this world we re in it together. as can the human mind. and then we can make it real to if that s what you it is all about. that s why we ve.
twenty six to you my great granddaughter. what would the world be like. around half a century. when i was born there were three people you will share. your world be around two degrees more. sea level rise at least one meter in this century. climate impacts which. we see already. talkshow. why are people more concerned. thirty first.

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Transcripts For DW The Bundesliga 20190506 03:02:00


welcome to the bundesliga here on the league home straight on match day thirty two but there s still so much to be decided between now and the end of the season this is what we have coming up for you. after a horrible month frank but we re looking to redefine their winning form they were on sunday with both sides champions league champions league qualification hopes on the line. and will be looking at the title race open to a four point gap over the top of the table on sunday and the championship race that s all over with two games left to play. mechanic line welcome to the show we have plenty to talk about and how we do you just have two experts with me in the studio to my left for ballistic midfielder. michel d.n.c. welcome back and to my right my right hand man so to say match mera welcome to the show. now let s start our coverage in at leverkusen where the host took on frank
aside that a cell in fourth place but failed to win and the game since the end of march the eagles have really started under the pressure of performing in the europa league during the week and back on home soil at the weekend with leverkusen seize their chance and blow the race for europe wide open. letter accusing wasted little time opening the scoring in their clash for europe against frankfurt. one nil from chi however it s after just two minutes. the hosts kept up the torrid pace with yumi and grant finishing up a neat bit of team play to double their lead alive and minutes later i trained for it responded immediately with the only thing todd deflecting philip cost just effort into the net to make it a game. that was until leverkusen opened the floodgates ten minutes later lucas a lhari zero knocked in perth three one was charles of eighties powered past a listless frankfurt defense to make it four one was.
and a lhari zero tapped in for five while i. taking a cue from the leverkusen attack frankfurt defender much in him to take it in explicitly had to the ball into his own net six one after just thirty six minutes played. amazingly the score held a deafening statement in the fight for the top four from leverkusen and a crushing defeat for frankfurt. crushing indeed michel as a former player. was like on the pitch when of result like this happens to you. uncomfortable and very bad in this situation because. you never expect in the beginning of the game that. such a performance like that is coming up but you re still another forty five minutes to do and toward on it and at least you have to give. some yellow cards or something why did you have to make some faults and it s it s not
a it s not a nice situation if you have things like that so you have to fight a bit no matter what the watching fans the obvious explanation would seem to be that frankfurter play in the open leaks of the tide you know the gas tank is empty is it because it s the euro pretty hangover you know we have just only a couple days is a couple of games to go to the end is the season and of course the day they re getting more tired and they have to they have to work hard every day week it s it s it s tough for them because so many young players they don t change the team and if new players are coming in so they have a problem too to bring this performance on the pitch here without much yeah i mean the funny thing is that away games off the europa league away games they had really struggled so for the last two outspoken narrow win against your own bag of draw against but after the home games that actually done quite well winning three nil twice and then also getting a hard for draw against both spoke but you look at the game today and there were four changes to the starting line up in contrast to the team that starts against
chelsea on thursday and maybe that wasn t enough you know it s tricky to overhaul your team so big in the squad isn t that that deep in frankfurt but i felt like maybe a few of those players went up for it because you could tell when they can see in the goals they were always a pace behind the attackers of live accusing and they just didn t look urgent enough. that game especially seven goals in the first half told us about the numbers what if you brought with you yet some ridiculous dimensions of their dominance first time ever seven goals were scored in the bundesliga first off and leave it also committed no files in the first. tough which is astounding if you think as as michelle pointed out you want to see some aggressiveness when you go down and basically leave it who s and we re meant to pay frankfurt didn t put them in orbit enough positions where they have to commit any kind of fouls at the possession stats eighty two percent possession leave accusing policy a thousand fifty seven possibly because it makes it just two hundred thirty three from frankfurt which is a ridiculous margin more than five times the difference and
a real difference to the goal dificid because going into this match there were fifteen goals deficit between the two now just five and leaving know all about that because last season they missed out on champions the on goal difference so this is actually saying we need to point out as have a look at the table having the top of the tape especially with leverkusen when that means that our level on points in front of the race to qualify for europe next season is really really tight this is a question to both of you with the sides that are contentions every side down to the century which team is the best suited for a champions league one michelle i d like to start with you after this performance just on sunday from level i go with the course they they don t have to play all these cup games or international games at the moment so that s why i ll go with them and i m not very sure that you or all of the other teams they re coming closer and so you might i think you know it s right leave it all frankfurt if they can hold their stalls both teams need to do that because votes will call from hi
i m. there all changing coach so it s going to be a bit of a rebuilding job for them there s some. moves it seems slightly higher up on the table but as bines title to lose now michel have you ever seen a team implode the way that goldman have this season never never for a long time and it is nice but amazing amazing to see after a couple months there was a behind door with nine points and no dare and from what for so you can see the quality this is the quality of bowls clubs. especially if i am an ache and a coach everybody is shouting on the coach at the moment but he has the chance to be the champion and the cup winner of germany so we have to keep an eye on that michelle says quality in this squad do you think still have a glimmer of hope when it comes to win the title well on paper because they have the slightly better run in they play for to do so doors and us and by and have to
play against well frankfurt we thought was a difficult game maybe it isn t going to be what is worrying to see that mental state them losing games or that by in this whole season haven t lost a game against anything in the bottom half whereas don t have done that three times and those are the games that you need to get an easy win even if it s just a woman a win just hasn t come up with the goods so that means you know both the club start the season with new coaches of course and it s for a neutral fine it s been pretty decent season you d say usually but why is it and who just most pacifically which coach of the two is under more pressure only. on the pressure because barman it is a great big team in a wallet so and i know that so many people don t like it what he did in the past weeks. and you have to give them time you know if you see last year it was thirty thirty points behind by many so you confident forget this so this is. a great season of dog and even if they go if they are second on the table. i m happy with
this but today it s getting boring because bayamon has taken to the champion cup again all right thank you very much for that michel let s move on to some action from the teams in the bottom off the table for short of another season the top flight without even kicking a ball on saturday what would that mean of a game against just little do they now have no incentive to do you know put a dent into just most best been this nigga so far let s have a look. fried. chicken . the italian of the night but he himself won t know for the thirty days will avoid it at renewal relegates battle this. resilience or just help keep promoting the book this season. netsky leveled with the perfect place. at the start of the second half. was sent off for a second yellow card after repeated fouls. but despite having an extra man could
also win that one between two teams happy to be in mid table. and shot his goal is draw with outspokenness on the hand to be one of the most other eventful matches of the season so far but it something important for the hosts a point they mean shaka no longer in danger of being relegated congratulations going that goes in kitchens last season second place team secure bonus league survival by the skin of eighties the row blues fans will be hoping the clubs for the next season close the european places places than the relegation zone and with all the results in from actually thirty two here s the table for you as discussed by the title to lose now the real action of course over the next two weeks between places four and eights braman have a still in with a chance of qualifying for europe there s no movement in the bottom half this week but after sunday s results we do now know that only the boss and three star. are left fighting the drop and with six points up to play for them in the next two weeks however number could still reach the playoff spots michel can they do it no i
stay on strike still can t be course i m a former full play off them and they re going to play against hamburg because they have the most experience and the most experience and playing really really gratian now the relegation game is a difficult thing max is it really worthwhile doing and you think the biggest thing is i can stay in the top flight well i mean it s been going on since two thousand and nine and we ve only had two teams from the bundesliga actually going down the last time and was in twenty twelve still it got you know they spent fifty million euros the season which for a team in that position is huge. amounts of money i think it could be really interesting who they face because i do think they will be in the playoffs but it could still be on your own belly of the toughest offense in the second bundesliga opata born of the strongest second strongest attack or as you say hamburg on a losing run of seven games at the moment so it s i think they d prefer to play hamburg and it s still got really need this because of the money they spent and we ll see this time next sunday who will be playing in the relegation play all
space to war games to go so if must pay and this week we leave you now with some of the best moments of happening in iraq time by munich the club announced on sunday that revere ri would also be leaving at the end of the season as bringing an end of ten years of memory and brabant together in munich in the meantime i d like to say thank you to my guest michelle s in d.c. we ll see you again next season and good luck and. maxim out of course we ll see you again this season from all of us here in berlin thank you and goodbye. to. you as coaches so. much for you.
but. we re not here to join you. but to eliminate prejudices. we re not here to change your opinions but to open some space for different points of view we re not here to speak on behalf of anybody but to let everybody speak for themselves. we re not here to give the right answers but to ask the right questions. we re not here

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Transcripts For DW Arts And Culture 20190820 18:45:00


now he s going to be one of the softest saying as in particular music british isles is james blake a specialist in melancholy and subtle tons up he s much admired by of artists can you wes is called his favorite artist and he s collaborated with the likes of jay z. and beyonce his songs of thanks and insecurity and his vulnerable male vocals of also struck a note was so many millennia else is new album assume full sees a bit of a change as it s apparent he s old love to hop. he s one of the most desired collaborators in the music business since james blake helped shape beyond say his album lemonade and kendrick lamar s dam. and a duet with spain s pop sensation grows out of also looms large on his current album. but here at london s
apollo hammersmith theatre the fans have lined up just for him. since 2011 when his limit to your love shot him to international celebrity james blake has come a long way. you never necessarily challenge into actually saying how it s you feel out loud not through a song not through a guitar or piano but actually in words. blake has taken that challenge upon himself laying his feelings bare for his fans. on.
his new album assume form as perhaps his most vulnerable to date. play has also been open about his own battles including thoughts of suicide he had early in his career. in my twenty s in general i think i missed a lot of great things that happened to me i ve lived a very lucky life and i think i missed some of it just through anxiety and depression and i think that people. you know a lot of people. who might resonate with that. part of it was dealing with the feeling that as a man he perhaps shouldn t have feelings. the struggle to. fit the mold of the kind of man we you know. that i was i felt like i d been prescribed by god. i think. i m far more
sensitive than i ever accepted that i was. music fits the zite geist of his generation of young men who want to move beyond the cliches of masculinity but who still feel pressure to hide their emotions for the 1st came on the scene blake s detractors called his songs sad boy music. this felt like personal criticism and i felt like a. of the stigma the continual stigmatise ation of mental health and even though i think that emotional repression obviously. i think it affects every gender but in this specific case i was talking about men because you know it s true that suicide is highest i might see young men.
now blake is fairing better than before he s happier he s opened up to love in his life and in his music although he says the love songs on his album seem desperately uncool. but then again coolness isn t everything. and speaking all singing from. cilla s face is a light design company based in moscow who in just a few years have managed become a global player in the entertainment business they work closely with russian band leningrad but also with colombian pop star ship kara and this year they designed the projections for canadian superstar drake s latest tour and one of their life installations lit up the hearts of new york. the broad flashing
lights of times square make it one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world and its famous billboards have become the digital campus for russian light audits. transforming open spaces all over the world with mesmerizing installations and 3 d. projections. this renovated must go aloft where the agency developed the cutting edge visual concepts creative director alexander us says their aim is to brighten up everyday life. we inherited this post soviet greatness. that s why we want to bring color to today s world. because. despite the international success filespec to have maintained the creative ties that han collaborating with the russian chart toppers leningrad and then live to us . it s incredible a full house and unbelievable energy which you seem.
to aspire to have become the unlikely extra member of leningrad. they provide a visual installation for each of the $39.00 songs in the band set. by the i give my behind me as the model of the stage we developed for leningrad concert it s a crown which is depending on the song will project different things onto 2 huge screens sometimes it s a prefab building sometimes a piece of gum or a car which have to my beat. they take leningrad slots charge to the next level by playing on typical soviet imagery. but life always go expect me to plan oh. the distance. in this case we have a few tricks up our sleeve. for example the. endless loop here the 1st and the last
images must be identical and when it s played spectators don t notice the at it that way a video can go on forever. project to the audience s imagination around the world and in just a few showy it s still a spread have gone from a start up to an international agency. which i believe. we re pioneers in video projection. it may sound overstated but we were instrumental in the development of this multimedia marvel want to get them with. now we want to grow and conquer new markets. because we believe in russian creativity. and the russian design team but what i see ski. for us these kids were not poor but rather better than the rest.
of us said it doesn t lack self-confidence but then again why should they. all this week we re featuring some of europe s top latin culture today charles bridge in prague capital of the czech republic it is the main artery between the old town and what is referred to unfortunately as the less a town which you could say the little town but the prague castle anyway the bridge was originally built in the 14th century so it has been witness to have a 600 years of the city s history. the charles bridge is one of europe s gothic jewels and it has a special place in the hearts and minds of the czech people. holy roman emperor charles the 4th was said to have laid the foundation stone in 1357. buried money runs patrols bridge museum and has also had
a few historic river boats restored so sightseers can get a view of the bridge from the water that in the. similar survey recently asked the czechs what historical figure they think is the most important they thought. they answered king charles the 4th because he built things like the charles bridge and this in the joy he she was not a liver just get out of. the old town bridge tower one served as a victory arch bohemian kings pass through it on the way to their coronations. most of you know that when you study soul here you can see the city s patrons. kemas harald s king wenceslas and patron saints sigesmund procopius and vetoes. will beat. every day an estimated 30000 people walk across the charles bridge it s a favorite photo backdrop for newlywed couples from as far away as asia. here
buskers can also find an ideal stage at an audience. the charles bridge is lined with 30 statues of apostles angels and theologians but these are copies the originals are kept safe and sound in a museum the oldest is unique. that is that it looks the theme this statue was the 1st to stand on the bridge it was put here in $683.00 it depicts st john of neptune and it s the only bronze here. saint john is the patron saint of bridges the world over your money but especially in your own words i like him in particular most of all the protect people who work on the water. here on the rivers bank the 16 arches of the charles bridge dominate the view.
i like it morning early in the evening you know people it s a place where you call as you cross the bridge it s like you re taking a step back into time it s like you know every day i walk across the bridge to get to work. they should but it s not just a transit route to me and i m inspired by a spiritual as well it seems you re going you know makes me think about history as well as the future because liberals will still be. standing at the back money has made a little history on this bridge as well. at his initiative a festival is held every year in may in on are of the bridge and it s patron saint them the stars shine over on and around the charles bridge. and we ll be featuring more european live this week that sold out for this edition
of also. more about these topics of course another cultural news from all around the world on the web site at v.w. dot com culture myself the crew here in berlin thanks for watching. going to. take off.
come back. to the business season starts off. media and tell him you. must implant back. to the p.c. and bennett. and sometimes into home and the 1st weekend to. enter the conflict zone with tim sebastian faulks challenging those in power asking tough questions demanding. as comforts intensify i ll be meeting with kid players on the ground in the sun doesn t. cutting through the rhetoric holding the
couple to account facts the comfort zone. conflict zone with tim sebastian kong t.w. . welcome to the girl max channel. goldmine of story. with exclusive insight. and a must see concerning startup culture can your a. place to be full curious minds. do it yourself networkers. so subscribing. don t miss our.

James-blake , Music-business , Collaborators , Album , Dam , Album-lemonade , Pop-sensation , Duet , Kendrick-lamar , Spain , London , Love

Transcripts For DW The Day 20190807 00:02:00


campaign by coming down to later and saying that perhaps because they re criminals and murderers and rapists. by bigger readership just as this country has. encouraged you. i don t see where. it s tight i ve never seen it so close to the border that. i feel you can see 3 bodies. also coming up in china issues in starkest warning yet to demonstrators in hong kong saying their demands will not be met and that their violence may be met with force there has to be liberty and equality that is all that he is that in a beautiful way so every citizen when that. we want to end the hunt full of violent criminals and the meddling hands behind them that those who play with fire will
perish by it. and to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and all around the world welcome we begin the day beginning to bury the victims of america s hate it has been 3 days since a gunman opened fire at a wal-mart in el paso texas he killed 22 people as burial plans were made in the 1st of the dead are laid to rest the community avail passo is far from finding any peace tomorrow the u.s. president plans to visit el paso as well as date no hio where the weekend s 2nd mass shooting took place while some in el paso including a former congress member from that area say trump is not welcome and that he and his rhetoric are partly responsible for the increase in hate crimes across the country but others say it is the president s duty to assume the role of consoler in
chief we begin tonight with this report from a town on america s southern border wrecked by grief. a vigil to honor the rich weakest a high school student killed today in washington you know past only 15 years old bright light and quick on his feet that s how his friends remember he will always be there for me. he was a really our. he was a. positive person he was never and never negative. always happy. always trying to make you earlier. and i just said oh you don t. like us for. we have a really strong community and everybody here loves each other we re really big family. students parents teachers they came together at horizon high school just outside parcel trying to come to terms with what they see as
a terrorist attack against hispanics all over the past so residents are reeling after 30 days horrific events and they are hoping that the mass murder a crime committed by an alleged white supremacist from outside the town does not give a pass a bad name after all they say this is a diverse and tolerant place which has consistently ranked one of the safest cities in the u.s. for many years. a border city with an 80 percent latino population el paso has suffered under presidents trams and immigrant rhetoric and his administration s 0 tolerance policy at the border residents say christina garcia works for a local organization that helps immigrants and asylum seekers she says some of her clients are now terrified they feel like every client i ve had interaction with
they ve had to apologize for what happened this weekend and i have had to reassure them that we that we are going to be a safe community but for now they mourn the dead. every day people gather at the wal-mart store where the mass shooting took place president trump is expected to visit us on wednesday and we respect him because he s the president but to be honest when welcome him we don t need him this was a very different city and what happened there was the worst thing that could happen to us and i know a lot of people know that if we were kids going to bring a lot of people that really hate hispanic people. hate is not what should define us they say it s not what the united states is all about. hate in the u.s. my 1st guest tonight speaks with authority about the white supremacist movement in america because she used to be a member shannon vali martinez described herself as
a former violent white supremacist she was able to change her heart and mind she now works with the free radicals project to help prevent radicalization of young americans she joins me tonight from our washington d.c. studio you taking the time to talk with us tonight your story is is fascinating you entered the white supremacist movement when you were 15 years old what was it about your childhood that that made you susceptible. how it felt like i was the black sheep in my family i never felt like i had a really deep sense of belonging and then that expanded as i got older and then i would be sexually assaulted when i was 14 years old and the rage that came after that. had me looking for those who exhibited rage and the angriest people around me were the whites from siskind had sour around me your family was. i assume your
family was in a strong bulwark against that that. i didn t grow up in an overly are racist household. it was relatively dysfunctional but there was no overt violence for the most part my childhood echoes the childhoods of most of the people that grew up alongside me in the 1980 s. there was nothing that anyone would have seen in my life that would have alerted them at that point that my trajectory would go towards violent white supremacy and i understood when you were 20 years old you begin to leave the white supremacist movement. i ended up not really having a place to live and i was very luckily taken in by a woman who displayed courageous compassion and chose to let me come live in her
home and rather than seeing the violent hate filled creature that i had become chose to see me instead as a hurting and struggling young woman and the stability and unconditional acceptance that she gave allowed me to begin to disengage from this failed ideology that had been so much in my life for the last 5 years in those hydrogen and you describe yourself as a former violent once the bruises i mean were you waking up in the mornings thinking about which nonwhite person can i find today to to to her to do bodily harm to was that how your day s work. for those 5 years. very often yes towards the end it actually became more militaristic and we were training with arms and strategic maneuvers. you know we sought to do
as much damage as we possibly could and spread the message of hate white supremacy everywhere we knew it would be the most upsetting and did you ever have the order or did you ever have the. going to actually kill people i know and so i and much like today even though i ve been disengaged for 25 years it was still very much a leaderless. movement so there weren t sort of there was there wasn t a hierarchy of orders coming down that very much even though i lived with a bunch of other white supremacists it very much it was sort of an organic choice of things to do and often the violence that we undertook whether as fights or violent harassment of people who were targeted flyer. synagogues or places of
worship that a lot of times it actually just sort of happened spur of the moment. you tweeted a couple of days ago something about periods and children in the u.s. who want to show our viewers this tweet you write parents. of white kids you are not powerless to keep your kids from being radicalized into white nationalism all right or for right belief systems the government isn t going to so we must so we want what do parents in the united states what do they need to do you know. in addition to my past i also am the mom of 7 children my oldest is 22 my youngest is 3 and so this has been my life for the last 22 years how do i hope human beings. never look to the same things that i did how do i help them thrive so that hate and
violence is never part of their life. white people in america have got to look at our children and think my child is potentially a white supremacist terrorist and we have to just deal with that fact because we live in a white supremacist system that has been in place for hundreds of years and we still have not dismantled the realities and the systems that are in place with that but as parents we can talk about white supremacy we can talk about violence we can talk about systems of power and most importantly we can offer the antidote to the things that allow people to find resonance with those ideologies in the 1st place we can allow their voices to have agency and help them determine their futures we can honor the paths and identities that they are trying on as part of the
process of childhood now we can connect deeply with them that we can make sure that they always feel like they have a place to belong we can let them fail and falter and still support them and be in integral part of their lives we have got to talk to them about everything that our world is so complex and young people are starving for for dialogue about the complexities of the world that they face and we can give that to our children where you know what you re describing is what a good what a decent parent should do and as you say there appears to be a shortage of that in modern society i want to ask you about the government what is the government not doing that you think it should i mean have the republicans have they given up everything to try. i think that it s politically expedient to stoke fears
particularly creating fears of whatever group of people that you want to other so in america that is very often black people very very blatantly the hispanic population. still king those fears is politically expedient if people are afraid they re easily they re easily controlled they re easily manipulated it s easy to get them to vote against their best interests and so there is in some sense our real strategic advantage to not addressing the historic racism that s a part of our country and has written to you it hasn t it hasn t been done trump joins our response was yes will have gun control and we ll tie it to immigration reform yeah there s a lot more of the same more of the same but how copiable do you think he increased there we ve seen in the us of white supremacy violence well i think
his language is incredibly culpable not only that but other rightwing influencers in the mainstream media and the mainstream political realm have utilized conspiracy theories that are very popular amongst the far right and alright that they ve mainstream those ideas the words that we say affect how we think which affects how we act and so they re the strategic messaging that is coming out of the white house and many within the republican party. is incredibly influential probably in ways that a lot of people are not even aware of that language is influencing their beliefs and how they re acting. in the u.s. do you watch fox news. very occasionally i very occasionally it s not by any means my main news source but i do consume it
to understand and better have a finger on the pulse of what what the people who watch it are consuming let me ask you before we run out of time you know the president has opposed to travel to el paso texas to morrow some people have said that he s not welcome there others want him to try to be the consoler in chief should the president travel to opan so to more in your opinion. well as a mom one of the things that i have learned is to ask my children what they need for me do you need me just to listen would you like my input would you like my advice what do you need from me here if he is really going to be a strong leader finding out what the people of that city want would be a step of leadership if they are saying we are not ready and we do not want you here we are grieving then the best leadership he can provide is honoring that
request you know where we will see what he does tomorrow shannon foley martinez joining us tonight from our washington office is former white supremacist talking to us about how you can change the hearts and minds of people and you start with your children janet thank you very much we appreciate your time and your story thank you thank you for having me. well paso texas is now at the epicenter of america s domestic terrorism but it has ties to something else as well the city just across the border the city of ciudad juarez is considered to be one of mexico s most violent cities up until last weekend el paso ranked as one of america s safest places well this explains why you see it odd juarez has become a magnet and a waiting place for central american migrants seeking asylum in the u.s. but as our next report reveals that wait can be a miserable one. many of the emergency shelters on the mexican side of the border
a full but people continue to arrive the u.s. is sending migrants back here across the border until their asylum applications are processed. this is the detention center in el paso asylum seekers describe what they ve experienced there not always and throwing us they searched everything untouched just everywhere a woman next to me told the border guard to stop touching her but they just continued booking because here. they even removed posts on a tree pads to see if she was hiding something that they mean even though men were present at us think vietnam base. emily is 18 years old she would only talk to us after she was certain that no one was watching she seen a lot she fled guatemala on foot then continued by train in may she arrived in the
u.s. and was separated from my family because she s already considered an adult you know me a bit and there s my mother said no that s my daughter you can t take her away they answered by saying it s a different process for her now yeah you got my mother to tears and simply took me away anyway i didn t know what to do. you know even after being sent back to mexico emily and her mother can t stay in the same facility and really now lives in the border city of ciudad juarez along with thousands of other asylum seekers they re watching for their appointment with us immigration chicken pox is going around the center and despair is everywhere many give up only voluntarily. anyone wanting to enter the u.s. legally has to put their name on a waiting list in ciudad juarez alone around 5000 people have registered few of the new was to silence he could even get an appointment with u.s. authorities. i mean but as if it s amazing when i think the entire system is unfair
the migrants have to wait for their appointment here in mexico and they re ultimately rejected that s what happens in 9 out of 10 cases anyway. the sound of sopping echoes through the emergency center no v.m. out of sela is 33 years old she left us with the children and now finds herself completely alone. give me your help it s unbearable having to stay here my whole body hurts my back my arms and they just give me pain killers nothing else. but know of you is not alone. many people here say that the conditions are terrible the realities of migration on both sides of the border are brutal. china today issued starkest warning yet to protesters in hong kong a government
spokesman in beijing said that punishment for the protests is coming in only a matter of time beijing adding that protesters should not mistake the government s restraint for weakness well called. i would like to warn all those criminals don t ever misjudge the situation a mistake our strength or weakness him or don t have or underestimate the powerful force of justice in hong kong society to safeguard the rule of law and maintain peace and order we re earlier today we spoke with joshua wang he s an activist and he s secretary general of the pro democracy group democracy stuff this is what he had to say about that threat from beijing. we continue i will fight and we hope to let you know that hong kong people at the start democracy free election is the right and joy by lots of people in germany since last century and hong kong
people are still fighting for it of course we are all show what kind of price we need to pay $500.00 activists were arrested safety off down were prosecuted also quite yet made worse than 2 and still detained a hospital we are sure will and it was the 2 2nd fire still look but the will continue on to what they will have democracy and now is the long term bad go on to the rule of president xi g p r that was joshua wong speaking earlier from hong kong well as you heard the demonstrations there they show no sign of abating just yet our correspondent charlet chelsea until is in the midst of the protesters the police and the tear gas she sent us this report. was seen as we arrived the calle speaking it s. time for the program 5. per cent for the end of the world for. her
probably for. the world to see her tell their children run home. is the take as clear as protest is slowly returning. among them dozens of local residents. many joining charles demanding police retreat. furious bystanders watching on stunned at the scene unfolding in this normally quiet neighborhood the police call for more backup as the nude once again tense dog the showdown begins the boat was the one who was the outcome. the earth and brother are the other people was on that front all the ground was.
the each side waiting for the other to make this us me. but he s threatening to tip this standoff over the edge of the. place to midnight the police may be. sending people scattering. with the blockades cleats theorists began. but that was only the hour this is a residential area one woman screams people here when people wearing face masks site down. the. mall protest is a sweatshop as the police round on the struggle is really only in the early. one he wanted it to end this way all. those arrested face up to 10 years in prison if that challenge with riots in the north it s a heavy price to pay for a night on the streets the her room and the to her.
finally tonight life in death in the power of words we see all too often the legal consequences when the language of heat is applied to people who are seen as the other that is one reason why this quote from the american author toni morrison seems so salient today she once said we die that may be the meaning of life but we do language that may be the measure of our lives. well those words from toni morrison who passed away today she was 88 morrison was the 1st african-american woman to win the nobel literature prize back in 1903 she also won a pulitzer and the american book award for her novel beloved about an in slaves that woman who kills her baby to spare her other child from slavery or works were praised for shedding sharp courageous light on the african-american experience
she always said that for a writer the nobel prize was the pinnacle for an act that begins with pin winship and the hand and coleman a c. in composing a song for the soul but i think the pinnacle for writing. has got to be the nobel prize. for other kinds of things flawless. you know something like that and the lifetime achievement award is most well. toni morrison dead at the age of $88.00. and their reps of the day see tomorrow the. only.
thing going. to. come. close the phones are food we live in a world that s filled with plastic. and plastic garbage. the consequences for nature and the environment are catastrophic what can politicians and business and what can we do to fix this problem the world is drowning in plastic carbon. made in germany next to the long t.w. . the guardians of the amazon. to brazil s
indigenous yellow p.t. tribe the rain forest the secret their respective media the environment so protecting the forests has become an unrelenting struggle. they fight to preserve both them intrusive roundings time of their income. on behalf of the entire planet in 45 minutes long d w. d q you know that 77 percent. are younger than thanks to hot. stuff. me and me and. you know what time of course is. the 77 percent talk about the issues.

Criminals , Country , Readership , Murderers , Campaign , Rapists , Border , Where , Bodies , 3 , Violence , Demonstrators

Transcripts For DW The Day 20190806 20:30:00


is this the beginning of a digital package. will we be subjected to continuous state surveillance. took a high experts be able to agree on technical guidelines or will just technology create deadly new look thomas mucha systems. robot collapse starts aug 14th on t.w. . the us president plans to visit both cities tomorrow where gunman unleashed a violent killing spree last weekend while the motive in the ohio shooting is unclear the passo gunman wanted to kill latinos and prevent what trump has warned of many times an invasion of the us tonight some say trump is not welcome in el paso others say give him a chance to be the consoler in chief tonight i ll ask
a former white supremacist what she thinks what if anything should the people expect from this president i m burnt off in berlin this is the day. i didn t play my president since the moment he got into office the rhetoric that hate. well i think president trump is the big problem i truly feel that way. if he hadn t started his campaign by coming down that in a later inflamed techniques because they re criminals and murderers and rapists. i think that leadership is just of this to get our country has set the stage and is encouraged. i don t think.
it s tight i ve never seen it so close and. also coming up in china issues in starkest warning yet to demonstrators in hong kong saying their demands will not be met and that their violence may be met with force. every citizen one that we want to play and the one full of violent criminals in the measuring hands behind them that those who play with fire will perish by it. they hold official. got. them to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and around the world welcome we begin the day beginning to bury the victims of america s hate it has been 3 days since
a gunman opened fire at a wal-mart in el paso texas he killed 22 people as burial plans were made in the 1st of the dead are laid to rest the community avail passo is far from finding any peace tomorrow the u.s. president plans to visit el paso as well as state no heigho where the weekend s 2nd mass shooting took place while some in el paso including a former congress member from that area say trump is not welcome and that he and his rhetoric are partly responsible for the increase in hate crimes across the country but others say it is the president s duty to assume the role of consoler in chief we begin tonight with this report from a town on america s southern border wrecked by grief. a vigil to honor your work week there s a high school student killed today in washington you know past only 15 years old
bright light and quick on his feet that s how his friends remember he will always be there for me. he was a really our. he was a. positive person he was never and never negative. always happy. always trying to make you. know just how you don t. like us for. we have a really strong community and everybody here loves each other we re really big family. students parents teachers they came together at horizon high school just outside all pastoral trying to come to terms with what they see as a terrorist attack against hispanics all over the past so residents are reeling after 30 days horrific events and they are hoping that the mass murder a crime committed by an alleged white supremacist from outside the town does not
give a pass a bad name after all they say this is a diverse and tolerant place which has consistently ranked one of the safest cities in the u.s. for many years. a border city with an 80 percent latino population el paso has suffered under presidents trams and immigrant rhetoric and his administration s 0 tolerance policy at the border residents say christina garcia works for a local organization that helps immigrants and asylum seekers she says some of her clients are now terrified they feel like every client i ve had interaction with they ve had to apologize for what happened this weekend and i ve had to reassure them that we that we are going to be a safe community but for now they mourn the dead. every day people gather at the wal-mart store where the mass shooting took place president trump is expected to visit us on wednesday and we respect him because he s
a president but to be honest when welcome him we don t need him this was a very different city and what happened there was the worst thing that could happen to us and i know a lot of people know that if we will come his going to bring a lot of people that really hate hispanic people. hate is not what should define us they say it s not what the united states is all about. hate in the u.s. my 1st guest tonight speaks with authority about the white supremacist movement in america because she used to be a member shannon vali martinez described herself as a former violent white supremacist she was able to change her heart and mind she now works with the free radicals project to help prevent radicalization of young americans she joins me tonight from our washington d.c. studio shanon we freesheet you taking the time to talk with us tonight your story
it s fascinating you entered the white supremacist movement when you were 15 years old what was it about your childhood that that made you susceptible. how it felt like i was the black sheep in my family i never felt like i had a really deep sense of belonging and then that expanded as i got older and then i would be sexually assaulted when i was 14 years old and the rage that came after that. had me looking for those who exhibited rage and anger is people around me were at the white supremacist skinheads that were around me your family was not i assume your family was in a strong bulwark against that that. i didn t grow up in an overly are racist household. it was relatively dysfunctional but
there was no overt violence for the most part my childhood echoes the childhoods of most of the people that grew up alongside me in the 1980 s. there was nothing that anyone would have seen in my life that would have alerted them at that point that my trajectory would go towards violent white supremacy and i understood when you were 20 years old you begin to leave the white supremacist movement how did that happen. i ended up not really having a place to live and i was very luckily taken in by a woman who displayed courageous compassion and chose to let me come live in her home and rather than seeing the violent hate filled creature that i had become chose to see me instead as a hurting and struggling young woman and the stability and the unconditional acceptance that she gave allowed me to begin to disengage from this a failed ideology that had been so much in my life for the last 5 years in those
hydrogen and you describe yourself as a former violent once the bruises i mean were you waking up in the mornings thinking about which nonwhite person can i find today to to her to do bodily harm to a was that how your days were comprised for those 5 years. very often yes towards the end it actually became more militaristic and we were training with arms and strategic maneuvers. you know we sought to do as much damage as we possibly could and spread the message of hate white supremacy everywhere we knew it would be the most upsetting and did you ever have the order or did you ever have the task of going to actually kill people.
know how and why and much like today even though i ve been disengaged for 25 years it was still very much a leaderless. movement so there weren t sort of it there was there wasn t a hierarchy of orders coming down that very much even though i lived with a bunch of other white supremacists it very much was sort of an organic choice of things to do and often the violence that we undertook whether as fights or violent harassment of people who were targeted flyer. synagogues or places of worship that a lot of times it actually just sort of happened spur of the moment. you tweeted a couple of days ago something about parents and children in the u.s. who want to show our viewers this tweet you write parents. of white kids you are not powerless to keep your kids from being radicalized into
white nationalism all right or for white belief systems the government isn t going to so we must so tell me what what do parents in the united states what do they need to do you know. in addition to my past i also am the mom of 7 children my oldest is 22 my youngest is 3 and so this is my life for the last 22 years how do i hope human beings. never look to the same things that i did how do i help them thrive so that hate and violence is never part of their life. why people in america have got to look at our children and think my child is potentially a white supremacist terrorist and we have to just deal with that fact because we live in
a white supremacist system that has been in place for hundreds of years and we still have not dismantled the realities and the systems that are in place with that but as parents we can talk about white supremacy we can talk about violence we can talk about systems of power and most importantly we can offer the antidote to the things that allow people to find resonance with those ideologies in the 1st place we can allow their voices to have agency and help them determine their future as we can honor the paths and identities that they are trying on as part of the process of childhood now we can connect deeply with them that we can make sure that they always feel like they have a place to belong we can let them fail and falter and still support them and be in integral part of their lives we have got to talk to them about everything that our world is so complex and young people are starving for for dialogue about
the complexities of the world that they face and we can give that to our children you know what you re describing is what a good what a decent parent should do when as you say there s appears to be a shortage in modern society and when asked about the government what is the government not doing that you think it should i mean have the republicans have the have they given up everything to trump. i think that it s politically expedient to stoke fears particularly creating fears of whatever group of people that you want to other so in america that is very often black people very very blatantly the hispanic population. still king those fears is
politically expedient if people are afraid they re easily easily controlled or easily manipulated it s easy to get them to vote against their best interests and so there is in some sense our real strategic advantage to not addressing the historic racism that s a part of our country and has written to you it hasn t it hasn t been done trump. the response was yes we ll have gun control and we ll tie it to immigration reform yeah there s a lot more of the same more of the same but how do you think he is in the increased their we ve seen in the us of white supremacy violence well i think his language is incredibly culpable not only that but other rightwing influencers in the mainstream media and the mainstream political realm have utilized conspiracy theories that are very popular amongst the far right and all right that
they ve mainstream those ideas the words that we say affect how we think which affects how we act and so there the strategic messaging that is coming out of the white house and many within the republican party. is incredibly influential probably in ways that a lot of people are not even aware of that language is influencing their beliefs and how they re acting. in the u.s. do you watch fox news. very occasionally. very occasionally it s not by any means my main news source but i do consume it to understand and better have a finger on the pulse of what what the people who watch it are consuming let me ask you before we run out of time you know the president has opposed to travel to el paso texas to morrow some people have said that he s not welcome there others want
him to try to be the console war in chief should the president travel to opan so to more in your opinion. well as a mom one of the things that i have learned is to ask my children what they need for me do you need me just to listen would you like my input would you like my advice what do you need from me here if he is really going to be a strong leader finding out what the people of that city want would be a step of leadership if they are saying we are not ready and we do not want you here we are grieving then the best leadership he can provide is honoring that request yes well we will see what he does tomorrow shannon foley martinez joining us tonight from our washington office is former white supremacist talking to us about how you can change the hearts and minds of people and you start with your children janet thank you very much we appreciate your time and your story thank you
thank you for having me. well paso texas is now at the epicenter of america s domestic terrorism but it has ties to something else as well the city just across the border the city of seo dog is considered to be one of mexico s most violent cities up until last weekend el paso ranked as one of america s safest places well this explains why you see it as has become a magnet and a waiting place for central american migrants seeking asylum in the u.s. but as our next report reveals that weight can be a miserable one. many of the emergency shelters on the mexican side of the border a full but people continue to arrive the u.s. is sending migrants back here across the border until there are silent applications of processed. this is a detention center in el paso asylum seekers describe what they ve experienced
there you know they said during us they searched everything and touched us everywhere a woman next to me told the border guard to stop touching her but they just continued to make booking you can see it. even removed her senator e pads to see if she was hiding something that i mean even though men were present at us think yeah vietnam base. emily is 18 years old she would only talk to us after she was certain that no one was watching she seen a lot she fled guatemala on foot then continued by train in may she arrived in the us and was separated from my family because she s already considered an adult you know me a bit of those my mother said no that s my daughter you can t take her away and you answered by saying it s a different process for her yeah you got my mother to tears and simply took me away anyway i didn t know what to do. you know even after being
sent back to mexico and millionaire mother can t stay in the same facility emily now lives in the border city of ciudad juarez along with thousands of other asylum seekers they re watching for their appointment with us immigration chicken pox is going around the center and despair is everywhere many give up and leave voluntarily. anyone wanting to enter the u.s. legally has to put their name on a waiting list in ciudad juarez alone around 5000 people have registered few of the new was to solemn seekers even get an appointment with u.s. authorities. i mean but it s amazing when i think the entire system is unfair the migrants have to wait for their appointment here in mexico and they re ultimately rejected that s what happens in 9 out of 10 cases anyway but it does have. the sound of sobbing echoes through the emergency center novi. i m out a seller is 33 years old she left us with the children and now finds herself
completely alone. give me your help it s unbearable having to stay here my whole body hurts my back my arms and they just give me pain killers nothing else. but know if you re is not alone. many people here say that the conditions are terrible the realities of migration on both sides of the border are brutal. china today if you did starkest warning yet to protesters in hong kong the government spokesman in beijing said that punishment for the protests is coming in only a matter of time beijing adding that protesters should not mistake the government s restraint for weakness well called. i would like to warn all those criminals
don t ever misjudge the situation a mistake our strength or weakness him or don t have or underestimate the powerful force of justice in hong kong society to safeguard the rule of law and maintain peace and order we re earlier today we spoke with joshua wang he s an activist and he s secretary general of the pro democracy group democracy stuff this is what he had to say about that threat from beijing. we continue i will fight and we hope to let you know that hong kong people at the start democracy free election is the right enjoyed by loss of people in germany since last century and hong kong people are still fighting for it of course we are all show what kind of price we need to pay $500.00 activists were arrested safety off down were prosecuted also made worse than 2 and they were detained 8 hospital we sure will and it will be 2 separate fires to look but at what will continue on to what they will have
democracy and how is the long term battle on to the rule of president xi g p r that was joshua wong s speaking earlier from hong kong well as you heard the demonstrations there they show no sign of abating just yet our correspondent charles until is in the midst of the protesters the police and the tear gas she sent us this report. to. the scene as we arrived the calle speaking. to her her son. had sent her and her girl over to her her home for. the world to see her and tell their children run home. is the take as clear as protest is slowly returning. among them dozens of local residents. many joining chunks demanding police retreat.
furious bystanders watching almost stunned at the scene unfolding in this normally quiet neighborhood the police call for more backup as the nude once again tense dog the showdown begins oh my god oh god oh my god. her took the road was rock was on that front all right on the route of the. each side waiting for the other to make this us me. both threatening to tip this standoff over the edge. of the place to midnight the police may be. sending people scattering. with the blockades cleats theorists began. but that was the only way out this is
a residential area one woman screams people here want to wearing face masks site down 7. the mall protest is a sweatshop as the police round on the struggle is really only really. play one hey wanted it to end this way all of. those arrested face up to 10 years in prison if that charge with riots and on it s a heavy price to pay for a night on the streets the current normal the current. finally tonight life and death and the power of words we see all too often the lethal consequences when the language of heat is applied to people who are seen as the other that is one reason why this quote from the american author toni morrison
seems so salient today she once said we die that may be the meaning of life but we do language that may be the measure of our lives. well those words from toni morrison who passed away today she was 88 morrison was the 1st african-american woman to win the nobel literature prize back in 1903 she also won a pulitzer and the american book award for her novel beloved about an in slave that woman who kills her baby to spare her other child from slavery or works were praised for shedding sharp courageous light on the african-american experience she always said that for a writer the nobel prize was the pinnacle for an act that begins with pittman ship and the hand and coleman it says in composing a song for the soul. but i think the chemical for writing. has
got to be the nobel prize. for other kinds of things flawless carried. you know something like the. lifetime achievement award is most well. tony morrison dead at the age of 80. and their reps of the day see tomorrow.
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