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tv   Episode 2  Al Jazeera  November 10, 2017 3:00pm-3:58pm AST

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but. back to new insights. and change the way we look. at this time. i really felt liberated as a journalist when i. get into the truth as if i were that's what is just. going on is a problem and the headlines on al-jazeera lebanese president michel aoun has told saudi arabia's on void that prime minister assad al-hadi must return to the country
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and has expressed concern of the circumstances of her to his resignation all of them on acceptable it is the latest in the escalating tension between saudi arabia and iran that's fueling a political crisis and lebanon saying a ha there has the latest from beirut. babylon is holding contacts with the arab and western diplomats seeking information about the fate of the resigned prime ministers had a heavy duty lebanon's president even meeting the fare of the saudi embassy in beirut the saudi diplomat did not make any statement but sources close to the president say that the president is concerned he is worried about the how did he believe how d.d. is under house arrest in in saudi arabia and it's not just the president the speaker of parliament as well they have both said that his resignation the prime minister's resignation will not be accepted until he returns to lebanon and it's not just how do these little opponents who are expressing concern his own political party have suggested and implied that they believe how did he in one way or another
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is being held against his will demanding his immediate return so the. disappearance if you like or his face his fate has brought the lebanese factions together this is a very deeply divided country a pro saudi camp of pro iran camp but all of them are talking about the need for unity and the need for had he to return because he is the prime minister who is really representative of the sunni community because there's a sectarian balance of power they share a balance of power along sectarian lines in lebanon and a strong man like him out of office many in his community will feel that iran would further strengthen its grip are its hold on lebanon and it amidst all this gulf countries yet again issuing a travel ban telling its citizens to leave the country of course statements like these are going to cause a further tensions people have heard them before it's not the first time they've made such statements but people fear that saudi arabia is bent on escalating this crisis further because they believe they were pushing lebanon to the center stage
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of the saudi iranian rivalry which is playing out across the region and other news talks to revive the free trade deal between pacific rim nations have been stalled after canada's prime minister failed to turn up to the apec meeting try. it is at the top of the agenda for leaders gathered at the summit in vietnam but don't trump a show in what appeared to be a sharp criticism of china's policies but china's president xi jinping told elegance that asia pacific leaders must work to improve a multilateral trading system. sure. we should build an open asia pacific economy and promote trade and investment liberalization facilitation we should make economic globalization more open and inclusive and balanced so that it can benefit different countries and people of different social groups we should support the multilateral trading regime and practice open regionalism to allow developing members to benefit more from international trade and investment as fairly as immigration minister has blamed
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refugees refusing to leave the closed mannus island prison camp for the deteriorating conditions there the venue in this training and run camp and pop when you get it was closed last month and power water and food supplies were cut off. the u.s. has joined the u.n. and more than twenty urging saudi arabia to end its blockade on yemen humanitarian groups warn that more than twenty million people need urgent help as food and fuel prices rise drastically they say mass starvation could be just weeks away. the whistleblower gore global leaks has released a plan by the united arab emirates to destroy cutter's economy and eventually take the twenty twenty two world cup away from the country was found in the email account of the u.a.e. to the united states use of apathy. the british government plans to officially set the time and date for its exit from the e.u. promise to tourism
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a want to pass legislation to leave the blog by the twenty ninth of march twenty ninth tain that negotiations are at a deadlock with the e.u. insisting russian agreed to a large financial settlement before discussing future trade agreements those are the headlines on al jazeera digital dissidents is coming up next. good. you know who was the war the person in the n.s.a. who did what he absolutely should have done. being a patriot doesn't mean you know obedience to authority. putting aside your obligations to your people to your country for the benefit of your government because the office he created is not. so sure it's
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reveals very concretely very strange accurate talking taishan how the us is our own records shows that it was involved in one way or another in the deaths of more than one hundred twenty thousand people in iraq and afghanistan between two thousand and four and two thousand and ten. and the u.s. government's response is maybe hypothetically as a result of this release of this material some afghan family or u.s. soldier. could face risks. we will likely. face is the cost in human lives on tomorrow's battlefield or in in some in some some place where we will put our our military forces. and result. that are forced to admit last year on the earth that a single person had been as a result of well. if you like all the rights for a moment you lost them for a lifetime and that's why this matters is because it happened and we didn't know
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what we were told. for some people there superheroes for others simply traitors whistleblowers like daniel ellsberg thomas drake william binney and edward snowden. hackers and activists like the wiki leaks founder julian assange and the former british secret service agent and emotional they want to support the complete surveillance of our society they oppose intelligence agencies governments and. corporations and for this they are threatened hounded and imprisoned. why are they so committed what drives them.
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the intelligence services are not the only ones monitoring communications and processing massive data. also private corporations like google amazon facebook and apple collect millions of pieces of information about us to analyze and monetize. the smartphone sacked. since there was stuff this i don't know and that's the law in v.h.f. and the slick not stuff tiger suit does also. we don't really know what exactly happens with their own digital trails our data is transferred invisibly to huge data centers. sublimating into a complex new identity creating our digital self.
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to get on a volt link to smith that's the sky near the highwaymen at the end of it doesn't make it on anything of then transferred into it so you see if you do there's often near the same bus start finish with. you if you know it's off these hours for the want and the it's not one for. much money not just. through an estimate it is against us but it's an awful and he shot the scene everyone gets smarter because of this technology because it's free or very inexpensive and the empowerment of people is the secret to technological progress. we are all participating in this enormous transition where billions of people are joining our party right joining our fun in joining our anxiety. misaligned
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a clue to michelle what i need to balance on individualism dotted shirts i modify had always started noir put looked at some of them given the new developments in machine intelligence will make us far far smarter as a result and this means everyone on the planet genetics revolution has a huge and positive impact on the way we treat disease progression disease and so and so on it's all basically because these smartphones are really super computers. and so i'm kind of gun something a friend as well you just telephone not just me or does this is a gotten him going to them and be nice to him and i'm from no one's a smartphone into who was in touch i have it so i can get out and then it would g.p.s. iseman him of would be a sin and has asked me how my knees keep dancing to i wasn't touching my mittens.
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with the advent of the smartphone we have become even more visible. so. that it's not just i phones that i was laughing i mean most small phones all these days smartphones capture our communication behavior along when where and with whom we talk. apps collect data about our user behavior even our health data in addition many people use digital data storage like clouds carelessly handing over their information. community. are being intercepted analyzed and stored automatically and that means that all of our years or expressions are associated
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with who we talk to who me who. is the old internet saying goes if it's for free and you are the product because the use of all those convenient digital online services are only seemingly for free because we pay with our data. we have neither inside nor overview about our digital self and absolutely no possibility to actively control it. then put somebody stole online as a sea of a community then. move his puts up a stand for vented about this problem is best dismissed so then you've got to spit sublist and you know it's an increasing v.h.f. making the atom do not deserve itself if you be at is that supposed capital zone
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fit right in internet you can. just will blame us this is a few men get to did some tests monday also went on to date a brokerage firm the size consequently a frenzy it must be a stand on one field sit under a few mit. beating such highest and allow french bison to quit says a hint accordions browser smit the hidden tustin talked in z. for i'm lawson for was a one off young victim cow of. want us. so it's better than i was vietnam as much you can watch fashion so owned by speed size of yet alpha it's like if you're off to buy an i was very informed unlike you didn't think the last test of been would see and you have fifty rushed us have been would soon come under hostile explicit seem to see feel like misunderstood bit since this matter and i'll go it's most unprofessional so far going on via even decent looks persecutes will get now too much of the kind committed to point out. the data we create assembling our
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digital self is also of interest is a juicy source of information for the intelligence community. so equipment is now being. placed on you asked networks infrastructure like trying to get a structure. tapping straight in enabled by critical partnerships before senate which have still been revealed to this day not even the snow disclosures eighteen t. for aizen and a number of others but that's where it started with the phone companies ok it was it was rapidly expanded to include e-mails and all related information internet usage and all related from ation and financial transactions. the revelations by edward snowden provide detailed insight into the relationship between intelligence
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services and private companies. telephone metadata and web browsing histories are of great interest to the intelligence community. see that's really industrial relations. they were tapping the fiber lines between the google servers yeah. they didn't even know this was going on google the dot ok so i mean that's the point they can tap lines anywhere in the world and when they do that they can get it between the servers of any but any company. from my perspective i think there's been massive collusion between the big corporations and big government you know with the big spy agencies the military security complex they have agreements between them where they will pay money for data if they produce data for n.s.a. or they will also pay for access unlike for example the the room in the a.t.t.
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facility in san francisco that has the n.s.a. . it's the n.s.a. room that has that happen on how they feed data and it's really eighteen t. that has them maintain that room facebook is evil in my view have been saying is he is it's the spies what dream it does we'll for up information and it's just they want to play to the spies to access and we know they do through back doors and things and yet that's what we have taken weeks or months together we're going into video they extend google of information to google has is nothing near what n.s.a. does for example they do not have they have access to the e-mails if if they're using g. mail for example but not all the other service providers and they don't so they don't have that data to do a composite view of what people are doing nor do they have access to all the fiber optic lines around the world nor do they see the banking transactions or the financial transactions or the phone calls they don't see that sort of vast amount
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of information that google does not have. so that's something that is leading to increasing concentrations of power and you get some smart people things for companies and then these contracts to the national security sector as contractors. so the crave viber. see. market capitalism is what i'm concerned about. many of the companies concerned reacted immediately to the snowden revelations they proclaim and advertise seemingly tap proof mobile phones and texting services followed by public announcements pleading that they will no longer
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put up with the pressure of the intelligence services. the way in which technology companies have reacted in the waiting lists they wouldn't. leaks means that the level of cooperation between technology companies and an intelligence agencies has gone down and that's that's that's added to the threat in some ways. it would be slightly bizarre if all the advances in technology in the use of bulk data analysis which are improving. the performance of business improving the health care. delivery and so on somehow national security was allowed to use and.
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it's not as if the more secure you get the less privacy you have all the more privacy you have the less security you have. you know in a free society like we joy in the west. your freedoms are guaranteed by security and so the job of western governments is to find the optimal levels of privacy and security supposed to maximize. as a consequence of the september eleventh attacks the technical capabilities of the intelligence services were massively expanded international collaboration of national spy organizations was also intensified not always without friction and problems they have similar aims like combating international terrorism they get they listen in on one another. after the nine eleven hit there was this perspective that germany had had screwed up that the security services crude up that they
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had harbored terrorists. cells and homburg. you have a number of the hijackers. transited through live their play and there. it was a significant cell there's no question about that and there's a whole history behind it and i think i think you know as i said i said this even publicly said this in terms of the testimony for the bundestag the germany within europe was declared. a target number one and i believe i believe. significant pressure but clearly out of the secret partnership and cooperation to be indian others was expanded and we know that now that again more evidence has come out there was a special agreement this secret and expanded sharing agreement basically gave the united states car blodgett but also it was there was a b.
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and a. not going to cooperate or going to help facilitate. this spring two thousand and fifteen a scandal erupts in germany regarding the close and secret collaboration between the german intelligence service be n.d. and the n.s.a. . the b. and d. cooperated with the n.s.a. to spy on european politicians and assisted the united states in attempts of industrial espionage. when the press reported that the chancellery had known about the scandal since two thousand and eight it peaked with the german opposition threatening to sue its own government over the b endianness a affair. as
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a. victim. now i am thus once it's become to this need to. marcus and sign misty deutsch and go in and as a cause an opinion catch dean and in and. from the indies and in these activities. give us a muslin to get opposite your own. vote and to move here of a city and what it conjures item of protect invasion one from deutsche. and forking and a foothold. since two thousand and fourteen an inquiry into the snowden revelations meets in the buddhist time for the first time i whistle blower from the usa reports to the parliamentary committee about the n.s.a. and its into relations with the german d.n.d.
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. lean body confirm the very close relationship between the be indian the n.s.a. to the commission of. a relationship that already existed during his time in the us intelligence service. as even if at the glance he enters. enough to shoot to kill films august was and it was office it was called in those lansing michigan this in the field for baseball but he hopes on denying took this via. get all the alpha and this instruments the
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parliament had it in control it an awfully thin thin stick unequal to move into an outfit that i didn't often things to fit in follow the seat. the aisle for something to sit so it's going to get involved and we hadn't to see here stuff taught in any moth eaten things that i get in the meat and if we could get out and see on the stuff it switched into parliament house to control clean them something from what i can see they had the same problem getting information from the b. and d. that the congress has from getting of getting information from the n.s.a. . it is the either won't tell them or they lie to them one of the other i mean that's what's been going on in the in the u.s. government the point is that now in our in our case we've been this snowden material has made it obvious that they've been lying to the government that's what intelligence agencies are they are they are tossed to do things in secret that are unlawful. or politically embarrassing you see intelligence agencies aren't aren't
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controllable unless they're really heavily monitored and there's a verification and unquestionable verification process they don't have that now that's the problem in our country too we do not have a an unfair unequivocal verification process that the agencies can't look can't can't corrupt. that we conclude this is team in the moon so they can things that this boost up element that is in control into leading is kicked out so and i can this commuters are going to parliament that is you can totally immune them into some talk when these talks are going to ongoing when i mean all governments seem to be in a position of having to trust their intelligence agencies telling them the truth. that it's questionable nothing will happen in terms of any self-regulation. there's organizations that are secretive too complex to walk back to his house that regular . the german chancellor in the
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bundestag parliamentary control committee are officially responsible for the control of the b. and d. . only with a more comprehensive and effective control of the intelligence agencies can civil rights and privacy be properly protected. what other options are there to prevent abuse or possible illegal activities by the spies. often only intelligence insiders are left to go public reveal institutional violations and become whistleblowers get there's disparity between these individuals on the one side and the governments and intelligence services on the other and so the whistleblowers an activist soon find out what happens when they
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challenge these organizations. as a world concern or maybe scott can be a given the tillage will have to go ohm's or me as us and good luck to get. this being bandied react to your own admission of being you were team whistleblower snowden fifty one on your king you but i didn't start and the un tried martin so your answer to answer is it's and. and for us to follow. they are to your own barrier give reasons snowden's and best suits are. the time that's that kind basically just out. get to to get out buy a class about us trust them it must see vincent you want for been given isn't very good. after his revelations in two thousand and thirteen edward snowden tried to flee from hong kong to south america via moscow but the u.s. revoked his passport he couldn't continue his journey from moscow and had to apply for asylum in russia. started had been criticized about ending up in
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russia headed up in russia because the state department canceled his passport and so he couldn't fly over i mean the incredible our goal why would they do that. that allows them to make the argument that he's working for russia and they can apply the nine hundred seventeen act why would they want to apply the nine hundred seventy because the nine hundred seventeen act carries with it the death penalty and they want to get in the death penalty the n.s.a. commission in the bundestag actually wanted to cause snowden as a witness many voices in the german public support the idea to grant edward snowden asylum in germany.
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tracing the fall from prosperity to financial ruin this is beside need a moment where we hear lies that nothing worse first will be in the way the devastating impact to save the banks means also save the deposits for ordinary citizens and the failure to prevent disaster banks and political leaders are the people who needed to learn the less i go or from democracy to the markets at this time on al-jazeera. the nature news as it breaks because you can see there in the distance of shia militia vehicles that you can see on the horizon there the peshmerga telling us are actually tanks with detailed coverage when the mine closed in one thousand nine hundred four many people lost their jobs daven thing is i thought making money from around the world this is supposed to last for a month but people tell us that it only lasts for a day if you look around this is the only ford available in this household. perks
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and you can i was told by the pakistani army to the americans and we got held in guantanamo the number of al qaeda and taliban detainees transferred to u.s. forces in afghanistan has continued to grow for years without trial they had a paper that said the group must work or whatever talk or scream would be beaten again a quest for a better life that ended in incarceration. of one town m o two thousand and two at this time on al jazeera. there's a problem and the headlines on al-jazeera the lebanese president michel aoun has told saudi arabia's on boy that prime minister really must return to the country
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one has expressed concern over the circumstances of her resignation calling them unacceptable it is the latest in escalating tension between saudi arabia and iran that's fueling a political crisis in lebanon and other news talks to revive the free trade deal between asia pacific nations have been stalled after canada's prime minister failed to turn up to the apec meeting trade is at the top of the agenda for leaders gathered at the summit in vietnam with donald trump showing what appeared to be a sharp criticism of china's policies but chinese president xi jinping told delegates that apec leaders must work to improve a multilateral trading system. so you. we should build an open asia pacific economy and promote trade and investment liberalization facilitation we should make economic globalization more inclusive and balanced so that it can benefit different countries and people of different social groups we should support the multilateral trading regime and practice
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regionalism to allow developing members to benefit more from international trade and investment as fairly as immigration minister has blamed refugees refusing to leave the close to man asylum present cat for the deteriorating conditions they're living in the australian run camp and papua new guinea was closed last month and power water and food supplies were cut off the u.s. has joined the u.n. in more than twenty aid groups and urging saudi arabia to end as a blockade on yemen humanitarian groups warn that more than twenty million people need urgent help as food and fuel prices rise drastically. there was a global leaks has released a plan by the united arab emirates to destroy cutter's economy and eventually sabotage the twenty twenty two world cup it was found in the email account of the u.a.e. even better to the us use a valid table the british government plans to officially set the time and date for its exit from the european union prime minister tourism a wants to pass legislation
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to leave the block by the twenty ninth of march two thousand and nineteen those are the headlines on al-jazeera i'll have the news hour for you in just under thirty minutes digital does it and continues next. to me peter but don't. get too into the matter snowden silly notion of becoming twenty. one was leaving that old sign one was certain sounded a little nothing on the. list just a list of it with snowden. a moment no my scene. here and i tell you that if you can for predicting in this case. i was leaving.
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somebody can i didn't you but i was stunned as if it involved as it was no did not touch on came in mr yet soon next model. could said ticking off the moment he had known to prove an opiate of couldn't this i was leaving i'm just looking still if somebody kind of. pushed interest in seeing. my name feelin it was no didn't. want to call me. a song for a month because he leaks it's my. name. on this dog. has gotten cells crushed didn't listen good night i was good father took a flute exam to sky him hydrants esteemed. blue sky but if the guns and diplomatic depression be of
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a monopoly is published on internet where he thinks is now an organization that is in conflict with the f.b.i. the cia the national security agency which is here to accept. an organization that is well known. to these agencies and in an organization that they are. i want to run for it this is kind of foggy does just my toast and seemed to be just as and it's not often seen as the diplomatic cables always come but intimate connotation is it of interest on just as a. as a. i listened to kid of us as we didn't cave it's come down but for the indignant and seventies it was when up to dusty the shiny book human intelligent of even does it stop just stop and. the us plot against julian a son came to light in two thousand and eleven as part of the so-called strat for hacks. strive
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for is a texas based consulting company developing geostrategic all strategies for the u.s. government jeremy hammond the hacker who copied a total of five million emails from the strad for server was sends to ten years in prison at the end of two thousand and thirteen. how means data theft included controversial messages by the vice president of stratford to the u.s. government they contained a multistage strategy proposal of how to deal with a songe two weeks after the hacker attack the accusations of rape surfaced in sweden. that this must inspect for a puppy and doesn't the traditional shooting going on to introduce could you to your own so it. fits again admitted this little circuit we get clients who potent with these a few digs up a book or nest but again because the typing julian since here the finish but
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talking before it as a negotiator talking to start to take it to you know we can take i'm sticking hutson and taking this with you could open it in time so hard but you did it because she did in sweden proceed dismissing the second vice just as i just got on a school officer in the mean dr. a son traveled to sweden in two thousand and ten for a series of lectures. years their investigation proceedings into sexual misdemeanors against two swedish women were open. a son said he was being subjected to a smear campaign and refuted the allegations when interpol issued an arrest warrant for him he went underground within twenty twenty four hours it had been dropped in vain assessed by the most senior prosecutor in stalking me if and i and dropped and she said that there was no crime at all. that it think it. so later on it came out in the supreme court here that both women are concerned i had not
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followed the complaint and that one of them had said that the police had made this up after a brief game of hide and seek the son transit himself into the london police in december two thousand and ten and was remanded in custody released on bail but with an electronic ankle monitor the son fought in court against his extradition to sweden on a number of occasions. the walls were closing in both from the from the us side us it could be ready. and from the. swedish side and from the u.k. . at the time. and june two thousand and twelve i had a lot of. surveillance and. also casey had to queue as a lady came out was spying on us and the national security agency on a bus so. there was
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a risk plane coming to the embassy to apply for asylum that that action would be seen and that i would be interdicted. but i was extremely well disguised well i i didn't look anything like i normally look. is it true that you have heard something of a week and still in the school. this group the stain in the shoe is correct yes. the clothing everything was different. and the reason you put this turn in your sure is to change your game because they're gay can be quite recognizable and that's not an issue if someone's to seeing you in the newspaper and that it is an issue for a surveillance team. since june two thousand and twelve the sun has been stranded at the ecuadorian embassy in london.
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at that time i said well i'll be happy to go to sweden provided there's a guarnteed of. exhibition to united states because the london independent had already revealed that the us and sweden were in informal talks about expediting me from sweden and be rendered you know we call that rendering. you know that's what the one of the dark side activities that we've been doing. taking people up the street anywhere in the world and sending them to different places for torture or in prison. escape isn't even in fog of a kind i leapt in for the. stop the cycle he isn't snowden.
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and julian bizarreness on julian guns guns thought this. a man from god to the guys to them for vicki dixon julian discourse. it's a whole bunch of to some of us that's my toes no one should be killing spend this wasn't long before this critter and not a preview of this thing guns inside the glider. five thousand seen on the time you and i will spend together for the killings i know. doesn't to some kind of sponsors thousand mimeo you know once the stories over the journalists get off and break the stories they've made their careers and their suppliers that time try having broken and created with no hope of proper employment again. you know having left behind your whole way of life your social circle everything and in the case of intelligence or supply of course you face automatic prosecution and conviction so it's a very high price to pay. well i mean the real threat came when the f.b.i.
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came into my house and when i was getting out of the shower and pointed a pistol at me. i was getting out of the shower getting dragged dried off and they came in pip pointing a pistol at me and also my family so it was a threat and it was hard to threaten people and then after that the department of justice attempted to fabricate evidence and and indict us i was very publicly indicted with a ten felony is a ten felony count indictment under the espionage act facing thirty five years in prison that was that was the final price you government or the inside the intelligence community there trumpeting these things they're holding these guys up it as examples to say look if you say what's going on you step on the line even if this even if you do it for the right reasons even if you do it at the right point there will be a record cautions you know they talk about internal channels and what not but these
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guys used in terms of analysts and they say people like thomas drake they ended up getting indicted and this is something that i paid very close attention and i learned a great deal from it was very rare in american history to get charged with espionage for non spied to vs in fact i was actually the only the second whistleblower charged a white man or the first was dana wellsburg when he went to the baltimore sun he did not reveal classified information you know they charged him with questions i had but that was a hoax she that was a fraud they reclassified material that they found in his computer which was not conscious right and he had every reason to believe that he would not be prosecuted for what he gave to baltimore sun he would lose if john. he would lose his clearance right this is very serious as judge depended on terrorists in fact most the judge he should have now would report or clear. so he was taking
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a very serious risk but i don't if you risk if he thought he would be prosecuted i don't i was blacklisted i was president i got i was radioactive no government agency would take me nor nor any contractor with the government it was off limits and n.s.a. made it crystal clear even though there were attempts by even prior to my indictment of fine work it all they would all come to naught so i ended up as a wage rate employee. one of the retail stores in the greater d.c. area where i still work but unable to find any other work at all of any kind that was the price you have no job you have no career you have no you have no pension all those years i served in the government i'm now a traitor and an enemy of the state. the
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price thomas drake and other whistle blowers pay for warning against the danger of a surveillance state is high loss of friends and family. flight into exile or long prison sentences under more stringent conditions. professional isolation and personal financial collapse.
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this is so here is so mirrors. here you dish everything is organized everything is. just. how far we go in our efficiency. or race the sovereignty of individuals. i see how far an institution would go to raise freedom. for a person's life. and the only way we can do that is to control them every single second of the day and measure it at the same time.
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i chose to vote myself inside the system. never imagining what i did. that i'd be charged with us or. for having defended the constitution protecting my constitution became a state crime. kak. a state crime. and we have the power. you don't. in the end all they had left to do was assassinate me. at the character that's all they had left. assassinate. which is the oath in the form. of control right. it doesn't matter what even the crimes against the state were.
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your unexceptable. you're not fit. to work in the government or see or be a citizen. yet you do not deserve prison. because you're the wrong guy. where we have that in history. that. you just described how the f.b.i. team interrogated me in a similar room and they played the good cop bad cop with themselves and they brought the chief prosecutor and he threatened me with spending the rest of my life in prison unless i cooperated with their investigation and he said you better start
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talking and i simply said i'm not going to be part of the truth. he says we have more than other evidence to put you away for a long long time i was declared an enemy of the state i committed crimes against state. but i'm standing here free and i can't begin to tell you what it means. so i'm thanking you for polina up the mirror to my own government ok it's all right because i'm free i did not end up in the dark hole ok right. now i'm glad the west won in that regard and yet how paradoxical it is that the technology of the west is now being used to mass surveillance on a scale of the stars he never could have imagined. i don't need one agent two
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hundred eighty quote unquote east german citizen. the computer takes care of it for me that's the real machine. that makes a lot easier to. publicly call for the dissolution of i to say you can't reform and the reason no reform possible the last thing left which is true is to cut funding. the problem is they weren't smart enough to understand what they were creating it. but they in fact were creating this master study network i mean this is like the study and super steroids the study had all these data all this data on a lot of people but it was all handwritten in paper and files and someone very difficult to manipulate also hard to keep up to date and hard to keep complete none
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of that is a problem any more or less especially with this electronic acquisition of information that makes it really simple so i referred to this is the study on super steroids you know and this is an n.s.a. i now refer to as the new stuff the agency time after time after time na surveillance as. wanting it has been unable to prevent so the most significant terrorists while these terrorist terrorist incidents of our day it never prevented the boston marathon bombing it certainly didn't prevent them the latest the charlie hebdo massacre in paris why is that i call these things data book failures simply because when you have x. keyscore and you send your people in to look at all this bulk data there there's just a non dated with information they can't get through it. yeah but he did he said as
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the folks voted for started by finitely list when this law is out is the a.p. feed him is this enough to take a photo started by putting its thought on the mason or the. parties thought of them even worth more than it is in this next hour of the alphabet on. about is just off the top and the of clear on this no v.c. here oh my. god oh my goodness that is nuts vic is the model for these and the effect. on flexible is that he moved on making one of the four pings that and so have. we the next big evolutionary step we will face the expansion of the so-called internet of things watches for ages but also our clothing will be equipped with internet connections to produce ever increasing and ever more precise data about us
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. through automation artificial intelligence an ever perfected algorithms machines will soon be able to predict our behavior. what happens to a society that is consciously aware of being primarily observed where every step every action leaves a trail. our lives in a surveillance society will be reduced to simmering in a convenience hell. can from is behaving self-censorship. consumerism labeled as freedom of choice. it's going to die it's a few and some in. the middle of most us money because i'm topos own with a mouse and a family feel. one of the inning disease needs to shouldn't come last night as i know even fair to all of us ministers who are gone and as a god the leaven and the seed died there were huge money for the above. but even
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nixon and he cuffed skiing negative or. as it's known to be a existing somebody the only aren't you have a very pretty our own security is to take it into our own hands we can't trust the corporations we can't trust our government and we send certain cannot trust the spy agencies to respect our privacy and respect the law so that's the reason to be hopeful small organization a very committed people. when even faced by a giant intelligence bureaucracy like the national security agency like to see a earlier case and the pentagon the jays they did bomb except for a can survive and even thrive. ok i could get a bloody nose doing it but but still stand up i'm not telling people to do i'm not telling you what to believe and you know and it's ok if you hear it's ok if you disagree with me it's ok for everybody you know to look at this because we have to
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decide how we feel right we've got to start thinking that what's on the news is the gospel truth what an official says behind the podium is exactly the right answer what i say is something that's really reliable i could be totally sold. you've got to figure out what you believe and stand for it you have to stand or enough and whether i'm a good guy or whether i'm of that whether i'm a hero whether i'm a traitor none of that matters criticize me hate me but think about what matters in the issues right think about the world you want to live in and then be a part of building that.
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by the springtime flower of a mountain lake. to the first snowfall on a winter's day. and either some ashar seem to be getting heavier and more widespread throughout most countries of south america or at least as far south as the origin time pampas and even here we got passing shout mon but the concentration is further north so it was only a more especially now out through parun towards ecuador and you know we had some pretty nasty landslide activity in colombia and that risk still exists of the next two days the rate this more useful is caught in reservoirs is down towards rio and sao paolo and that's the case come saturday a wet day but the usefully wet day north of the constant and as yesterday we still got cloud extending really from panama up towards his fan yota any of this could
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produce showers hopefully useful ones in jamaica eastern cuba haiti and beyond but there is a chance that we get more concentrated rain now in the flows in the wind flow in the yucatan peninsula and down towards honduras much of mexico looks dry but occasional showers seem likely even here but it's the time the showers should be dying down the time of the year we should be seeing winter tuckey and it's been doing that in the us a lot of this is just low temperature ground which the satellite picks up rather than cloud but that's definitely where the cold air sits. the way the sponsored by cat time.

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