[CSP 대본 001-005] 털사, 전기차, 쓰레기 보물, 인플레이션
001-005
001_털사_210929_210927_Anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre
002_전기차_211004_210901_Electric Cars
003_쓰레기를 보물로 1부_211011_210906_Turning Trash to Treasure - Part 1
004_쓰레기를 보물로 2부_211018_210908_Turning Trash to Treasure - Part 2
005_인플레이션_211025_210913_What Is Inflation?
001_털사_210929_210927_Anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre
YBM CNN 10
(210927) Anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre 털사 인종 대학살 추모식
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2171
CNN 10
(210528 / 02:20) The Origin Of Memorial Day | May 28, 2021
https://youtu.be/BrZaWdVxg44
Transcript
https://transcripts.cnn.com/show/sn/date/2021-05-28/segment/01
Transcript
CHRIS JAMES (CNN CONTRIBUTOR):
Hey Carl. I’ve come to Tulsa, Oklahoma, a city that’s been reckoning with their own painful history of racial violence. Right here on the ground where I’m standing, once stood the neighborhood known as "Black Wall Street".
One hundred years ago, this was a thriving and prosperous black community called the Greenwood District with movie theaters, stores, doctors, schools and even a pilot who owned his own plane.
Keep in mind during this time, it was illegal for black people and white people to freely shop and live in the same places. They weren’t even allowed to use the same water fountains.
Tensions between residents reached a tipping point after an incident inside an elevator, when an unconfirmed rumor began to spread that a 19-year-old black man tried to hurt a 17-year-old white girl. On May 31st, 1921, a group of black and white men confronted each other outside the Tulsa Courthouse. After the firing of gunshots, pure and utter mayhem ensued. A mob of angry white residents began to loot and burn black businesses throughout the Greenwood District. In the span of 24 hours, 35 square blocks were burned and over 1,200 houses were destroyed. It’s unclear how many people were killed but some historians have the number as high as 300 with thousands left homeless.
This Monday will mark the 100-year anniversary of what’s now known as the Tulsa Race Massacre. It’s one of the worst incidents of racial violence in U.S. history and for decades it was one of the least talked about in news reports and public-school textbooks. But now the city of Tulsa has decided to face its dark past to ensure a brighter future for all. And on Monday’s special edition of CNN 10, I’ll introduce you to the teachers and students leading the way. Back to you Carl.
002_전기차_211004_210901_Electric Cars
YBM CNN 10
(210901) Electric Cars 전기차
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2165
CNN 10
(210512 / 07:30) Pros And Cons Of Electric Cars | May 12, 2021
Transcript
https://transcripts.cnn.com/show/sn/date/2021-05-12/segment/01
Transcript
REPORTER:
In 2018, the number of electric vehicles on the world’s roads reached over 5 million, a 40 percent increase from the year before.
That momentum could continue. Prices for battery power have fallen rapidly over the last few years and are expected to continue dropping as more battery factories are built and manufacturing technologies improve.
But for now, there are challenges, slowing wider adoption of electric vehicles. For starters, they need more range, more places to charge and just more variety. Today’s electric offerings tend to fall on either end of the spectrum. On one hand, few hatchbacks that are still more expensive than their gasoline powered equivalents, on the other hand, pricy luxury cars. That said, all of this will change over the next few years as automakers bring more electric cars to market.
“Available as electric, hybrid, and plug-in hybrid.”
The good news is that the mechanical simplicity of electric cars, they have a fraction of the moving parts in a gasoline car, makes designing and engineering new model variants relatively easy. Plus companies like Volkswagen and General Motors are also backing rollouts of big, fast, charging networks. With all this on the way, some analysts predict that within the next 20 years, EV’s will make up the majority of cars sold.
003_쓰레기를 보물로 1부_211011_210906_Turning Trash to Treasure - Part 1
YBM CNN 10
(210906) Turning Trash to Treasure - Part 1 쓰레기를 보물로 바꾸기 - 1부
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2166
CNN 10
(210520 / 00:00) Turning Trash Into Buildings
https://youtu.be/Bs1wbaMyCgA
Transcript
CARL AZUZ (CNN 10 ANCHOR): Up next, the work of an architect and the structural engineer who specializes in trash, specifically using it in building and design.
Recycled construction materials may not be for everyone. They might not offer the options, colors and sizes that new materials do but they are an environmentally friendly way to turn something old into something new.
REPORTER: What do all these places have in common? That they’re all made partly from trash and designed by this man. Arthur Huang is a Taiwanese architect, engineer, co-founder and CEO of Miniwiz.
ARTHUR HUANG (CO-FOUNDER AND CEO OF MINIWIZ): ... the same page, right?
REPORTER: A company turning different kinds of waste like plastic bottles into materials for buildings and products across the world.
ARTHUR HUANG: In nature, we produce zero waste. Isn't that how the city should be?
Isn’t that how we should build our product? Everything should be circular. There’s no waste. Everything can be retransformed, re-upcycled into all kinds of beautiful architecture.
004_쓰레기를 보물로 2부_211018_210908_Turning Trash to Treasure - Part 2
YBM CNN 10
Turning Trash to Treasure - Part 2 쓰레기를 보물로 바꾸기 - 2부
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2167
CNN 10
(210520 / 01:06) Turning Trash Into Buildings
https://youtu.be/Bs1wbaMyCgA
Transcript
REPORTER: Huang has spent the past 16 years innovating such transformation.
ARTHUR HUANG, CO-FOUNDER AND CEO OF MINIWIZ: This is designed to --
REPORTER: His team has used waste to develop over 1,200 different materials for use in construction all over Taiwan’s capital Taipei and beyond. From the streets of Taipei to the Tibetan plateau, Huang and his team took their technology for a test drive in 2017 with the Trashpresso, a portable solar powered recycling machine designed to allow communities to recycle locally in places where plastic waste has become an increasing problem like China’s NianBao Yuze region in Qinghai province.
ARTHUR HUANG: Our mission shifted to say, how can we actually take many of these possible technology to the people who actually really need it?
REPORTER: Miniwiz has developed an AI recycling system to detect different kinds of plastic which the Trashpresso through heat and compression can transform into new products.
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, Miniwiz turned their engineering skills to a different kind of transformation. Huang worked with the FuJian Catholic University Hospital and other partners to develop the Modular Adaptable Convertible or MAC ward.
ARTHUR HUANG: During COVID time, most material cannot be shipped. So we are building medical parts, a medical ward system all out of local trash. All of aluminum panels is already made from 90 percent of recycled aluminum and even the handle of the shelving all the, like hand rests, these are actually already made by medical waste.
REPORTER: A portable version can be built from scratch in 24 hours Huang says.
ARTHUR HUANG: I think that is what pandemic forces us to become very innovative to coming up with the solutions to adapt to the current situation.
REPORTER: Adapting to a pandemic and also to environmental pressures, Huang’s work shows how to create a more sustainable future.
ARTHUR HUANG: We don’t need to create new things. We just need to use our ingenuity,
innovations and our good heart and good brain to transform this existing material into the next generation of products and buildings to power our economy.
005_인플레이션_211025_210913_What Is Inflation?
YBM CNN 10
(210913) What Is Inflation? 인플레이션이란?
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2168
CNN 10
(210605 / 00:00) What Is Inflation?
(210930 / 02:10) What Is Inflation? | September 30, 2021
https://youtu.be/TobrtlFecrk
Transcript
https://transcripts.cnn.com/show/sn/date/2021-09-30/segment/01
Transcript
RACHEL CRANE (CNN CORRESPONDENT):
Inflation is the textbook term for prices rising over time and purchasing power falling. Think of a trip to the grocery store. It sets you back $100. A year from now, you buy all the same items but they now cost $103. That’s inflation, three percent to be exact.
So what causes inflation? A rise in production cost is one scenario. For example, booming energy prices can drive up the cost of transportation or manufacturing. Rising wages can also contribute to inflation. If business owners have to pay workers more, they might also raise prices to cover those higher labor costs.
Inflation can also happen when the demand for goods exceeds supply, then businesses selling those items can increase prices. Prices going up slowly is generally considered a good thing, especially if wages rise too. It helps keep the economy dynamic and growing.
The U.S. central bank has even a target inflation rate, two percent.
But inflation can quickly get out of control when governments print too much money to pay for spending. When not enough real value underlies that paper, prices surge. That’s called hyperinflation. It happened in Germany, in Zimbabwe in the 2000s and most recently in Venezuela. And it’s the Fed’s job to make sure the United States keeps the inflation rate on track.
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