tv [untitled] June 7, 2021 2:30am-3:00am +03
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which is done before the window does expertise. we load innovations alterations. but through the cute it obviously to the ranch house college built in 1899 is still standing. once a residential home is now an educational center and one of the oldest buildings in the city, for historians fighting to preserve more than a century of architectural culture. old buildings like this one prove cities can grow and develop, but not at the expense of the history. how do we tulsa algebra had? ah, let's have a check in the headlines here and sarah and the military wing of her masses released in audio recording of her claims as a captured israeli soldier. young person is said to be one of 4. israel niece has been held him daughter for several years, although israel says 2 soldiers dead. the group also released video of its 2006 operation to capture is ready. ship soldier shall eat,
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as well as video of him in captivity. so he was eventually released in 2011 and exchanged more than 1000 palestinian prisoners in an exclusive interview without a 0 deputy leader of cassandra gates. mon says the group wants to finalize another prisoner exchange deal. israel insists the reconstruction of garza the following last month. conflict be conditional on the return of the captured israelis. egypt as mediating between the 2 side problems punishing united men occurred has been released after is ready forces arrested her at her home in the occupied east. jerusalem on sunday, she's been at the forefront of protest against forced evictions in the neighborhood of shape shot us a highly divisive presidential run off election is underway and peru, the races between left when you'd is petra castillo. and right, when i keep up with morning, more than 25000000 people registered to vote and was predicted to be a close contact mexican diversity in the country's largest election. they're picking a new la house of congress, state governors and math. midterm poll is seen as
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a test of president manuel. nope. is open at all. dozens of candidates have been murdered by suspected gangs in the run. up to the whole us vice president common harris is heading to guatemala to discuss the root causes of migration. she will meet guatemala as president and non governmental organizations and discuss poverty corruption. climate change. one of africa's most prominent tell evangelists, has died nigerian evangelical pritchard c b joshua way on saturday from unknown causes. shortly after conducting a live broadcast tv, joshua was influential but controversial, the claim to cure illnesses and homosexuality. that's the deadlines. more news coming up here, not 0 right after the st. is a very bleak picture for a lot of americans out there. life supremacy, in fact, all of our, if you're putting more money into the hands, with some workers taking money out of the hands of other workers, everyone goes to their campus and it becomes the us versus down. this is
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a deal about constraining a nuclear program. the bottom line off, the big question. oh, now 20. the high a semi okay. on today's bonus edition of the stream, some of the best conversations we've ad on tv and a few we had after you de of us. i stopped watching like the time but active. it's linda. so saw an up front house mark lamont hill. got talking about the risk of being outspoken, supporters of palestinians. that conversation is coming up later. and we revisit the tulsa race masika of 1921. it was so bloody and shameful. the story of a white mob killing hundreds of african americans wasn't taught in school for decades. net starts in ethiopia, reports of rape being used as a weapon of war in the taker i region with
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a starting point for discussion of the stream. we always invite the office of if your kids prime minister to participate in the stream. unfortunately, the office has a policy if only taking part a one on one interviews and not engaging with discussion shows. but we know they what's the street is a c o p at episode. so after the live show about sexual violence in the take like conflict had ended, i also guess what message they would like to sent. i reckon to prime minister abbey admit, he is what they had to say. what's happening and to guy is a clear breach of international humanitarian law. so we would definitely call on all parties to the conflict to ensure that it's not me. my annual is not being breached for the mentor and organizations need on affected access to all the areas affected so that we're able to reach those civilians, especially women and girls, especially in the rural areas where we don't have access to to be able to reach them and able to provide support necessary as well. saying as
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a prime minister's office is watching right now what you want to tell them. what i would say is the time to heights that seen the law in order to grow the time you want after a room for 2 years without anybody, st mohammed will back to his power is imprison, doesn't care who died for you. i am president. i did that already, the time to hide and live over. it is a matter of time that you face the rather in star dollars in i love investigation for the country, not just into graph across the country with thousands of other people relinquished in prison. and you know, i think you must face the reality. i think you no longer can. he's a no peace prize winner, and he think he comes to write that. but those are wrong. got me to wake up maza and we know everything that's happening to the guy is and i subjugating us and denying all right. self determination, no matter how difficult and half the circumstances would continue to descend their
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right self determination. anything government, anything be there that one thing called susan would read lies the right and strength of this is nothing right and stumpage inside of the word that it has waged on the people. it would, the government would work to withdraw the warring forces that are in and give unsafe and unrestricted monitor access. so that the people i could have a chance to national inclusive benefits. so that conversation is continuing online across all of the streams. social media platforms, please keep shank thoughts with us, even if it means that you totally take care of my twitter notifications. we see you e, c o p. your feedback makes every show better. and now to the streams instagram, life series for a conversation about how a finance watermelons and celebrities play with me. it's all going to make sense off. can you see the reporters diary from out a 0 westbank correspondent need
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a brain not necessarily the case. many of them may not know a lot about palestine, but they know that there are people who are still dipping under israeli occupation . and for many 1000 in here, they would tell you that there it is important not because of the fact if they know what's going on or if they don't know. but because that has been for a long time, some sorts of a stigma that sticks too. people who are labeled as pro palestinian or the doors were exposing the reality of their occupation. this is why many palestinians, you know, i'm still sick that they're even on the agenda that they felt the for so many years . they were, their case was put on the shelf, and they wouldn't even relevant to the international community. because the fact that mir that the people are speaking about what's going on in palestine has been viewed here, has been what it comes here by many palestinians and viewed as a success. even if many of them might not know on teresa,
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your teacher account is at needa underscore e for him and in your profile. it says you leave to tell stories, love telling stories, pick one story you have told this year that you loved having just to point out that my story, my is the my sorry my twitter handle is add new the underscore jor. no j u r. i know i'm going to tell you something. there is a story that i'm dying to tell is that i'm still, i still, i'm still working on or you know, any doubt. but can you, can you put it out there because, you know, those correspondence out there, the sneaky ones, they're going to be writing this 1000. they're going to be doing that. do not need before you could even i you show you want to jerry, i want, i want to use escape. okay, so i'll tell you the report is out that it's about
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a representation of past the past, the new flag through a watermelon. so that be the story goes back to the 1967 or after these re patient and back. and then many palestinian artists weren't even allowed to show and portray that pass the new flag and one group of artists i've spoken to and they're in the 7th. and they were telling me that they, when they met with the israeli officer, who clues down their gallery for what he said with, with political work and political activism. he told them that it's, you know, they should be in the flour, is printing other things. and they and they said ok, what are we paying flowers, but they have the past in the flags, colors on them. red, green, black and white and he and the officer says,
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not even the water madam. so what, what one palestinian art is that i've spoken to his name is alex audi. he, when he was asked to do an upload and a map of palestine and talk about palestinians. it was called a subject to a class per pounds. each tooth, the watermelon. as a presentation of the flag to kind of lock these are any soldier who said that you couldn't be painting the past in their flag? what has been happening lately in these recent escalations is that young palestinian artists have took on the story and then they breathed more life into it . and now it became a symbol of palestinians resistance and passed the new struggle. so if you're seeing and you are many found that i think there's a watermelon going on right now. the water,
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when you doing that story. yeah, we're working on it. we're, it's gotta be soon on. i'll just data, hopefully. but yeah, it's for me it's the students told stories about palestinian life. it's not just about, you know, one second, then she didn't. what, of course this is a, i think we have to keep telling it. but we also have to keep the relevant that it's a challenge. so we try to always find ways to keep the audience engaged and interested to hear stories about what's going on here in palestine. need abraham on her mission to keep her reporting. interesting. thanks, meta. we stay in palestine for i look behind the scenes of a recent stream episode about the solidarity between the black lives matter movement in the united states and palestinians. after the live broadcast gas, linda saw mark lamont hill, talked about the danger of being outspoken, palestinian activists the most dangerous. you know, it's really interesting because when people ask that question i'm,
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i'm always hesitant. because palestinians pay such a high price every day. just being palestinian as a risk. and so the type of risk that many of us take professionally are significant, but they're, they're, they're relatively minuscule in, in comparison to the palestinians whose very live there on the line every single day. but when i think about dry history, some of the moments me think about andrew young meeting with the pillow in 1973 was fired as us ambassador. did he know that would be what that they i don't know, but he certainly took the risk. right. i think about the risk that candidates, bernie sanders have taken when they stand up and speak out in, in support of palestinian rights and saying that, hey, maybe just noted out here. maybe if israel continues to violate international
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law and human right. basic human rights, maybe we should condition our funding on them, not doing that. these are big risk when you run for president. and so i'm not saying break any of the biggest risk taker. i'm not saying that and yell was the, the biggest risk. i'm saying these are just examples of the kind of risk that we will take if you're watching this outside of the united states. and you have to understand that in mainstream american politics and mainstream american media, taking a position of criticism against the israeli government is a very, very unpopular opinion. the same level of consensus. we see in the international courts and in the u. n. and most nations against they settlement expansion or moving the embassy to jerusalem. it's the inverse, the united states in terms of support. if you want to be president used to say i what israel and no matter what, if you're going to sort of you want to some governor even like kissing a baby mark, right? yeah. if you just take it for granted assumption and it's, it's one,
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it's beginning to change it as, as linda said, when we see people like what we see people like or she did today. what was the people like general moment come up and speak a chord which the out? it's changing the dynamics for on the ground. i love that we have, we want to split screen because mark to speak from your perspective. linda, when i ask about risk, the risk that you take to be boldly unapologetically palestinian in the united states. that he's only just maybe, maybe maybe just understanding the palestinian cause for me for me. i think about a speech the doctor martin luther king gave a few days before. he was fascinated. he was telling the people that he may not get to the promised land that he sees the promised plan, but he may not get there. and he didn't get there. and i believe the same. i may not be a free palestine in my lifetime, but i know that the seat that i plan today will bear fruit for generations to come . being i wake up in the morning, controversial just for being palestinian. i don't have to say anything. i don't
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have to tweet anything, you know, doing this work is risky. it risks your livelihood. for me, it's risk my life many times and including the lives of my children. but i know that there are people who are counting on me. my great, great grandmother's, my ancestors count on me and if it's not for people like me and others in our community, palestine would continue to even be a thing because every single day our land is being stolen. every day we just have less than less and less of our land. so it takes people like us to continue this conversation and to continue to fight for the liberation of our people. so everything's worth it. my life is worth it for this. my life is worth it for black people. busy and for some of us, we're just not afraid. so i'm willing to, you know, be, have everything taken from me, and i will continue to speak truth to back to power no matter the consequences. that is what we've been taught here in the united states by the grades like malcolm x and also by the grades of a folk from around the world who have literally sacrificed their lives for freedom . a 100 years ago with months loves of white people attack black americans living
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in the greenwood district of tulsa, oklahoma. they ransacked and torch homes and businesses and fight that black people with machine guns, plains even dropped bombs on civilians. more than $10000.00 people were left homeless and hundreds were killed in less than 24 hours. it was one of the worst race massacres in the history of the united states. on the anniversary of the tulsa race massacre, i spoke to all that carlos marino. laura peter from human rights watch. and on elisa bruna and elisa's great grandmother mary jones parish wrote in a horrifying detail about the massacre in a family memoir. my great grandmother had been teaching and her teaching school for typewriting and secretarial services. my grandmother, the young girl in the window called to her mother, mother, i see me with guns, with a great urgency. my great grandmother sprang to her feet and she looked out and she
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saw people advancing with torches. people passing by an automobile with guns hanging out committing drive by shootings. actually there were plains overhead as carlos had mentioned. and my grandmother, my great grandmother, prayed to have guidance in a and what is what you can well imagine was a life or death. quandary should i remain in my home where it can be burned to death, or should i take my chances and amongst the flying bullets outside, she thought it would be better. she says to die in the street from bullet shot than to be subject of incendiary devices within her home. so she, she ran out onto the street. someone cried out, get out of the street with that child, or you both will be killed. she ran north, seeking refuge at a house of a friend farther up. and we do know now that the entire quarter was surrounded. we
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talk about the guard and the divisions that were deployed. they surrounded the entire district the entire quarter so that they could slaughter people as they ran for their life. so this was an act and a scene of warfare from above, from the st. machine guns were mounted on stand pipe hill, which just out into the northern part of the city, and people were mowed down on the street as they ran. this isn't event that was pre planned to tell some police deputized 200 people. the national guard supplied 2 branches, 2 divisions. to evacuate the neighborhood of greenwood, there were businessmen who supplied fuel for the airplanes that bomb to this neighborhood. and so all of this there were 3 detention camps that were set up to in turn, 6000 people. so we need to understand that all of this was planned ahead of time
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and all of this was done in cooperation with, with the city officials at the time. you know, 100 years later. the issue is, is that today we still do not have any repair or restitution for what happens following the massacre. the authorities did nothing to prosecute anyone for the violence that took place. no restitution was provided. the people sued to try and get the insurance claims that they had for their, their property and their belongings. they thought for years in court and ultimately lost that battle. but subsequent to the massacre, they authorities just tried to cover it up for 100 years and did cover it up for a 100 years. so that's why we don't have justice today. so a century later,
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the history that so many tried to bury is resurfacing us. president biden visited the green with district and promised survivors defenders of victims. that the true a full story would be made known. interestingly, he said, clear of mentioning anything about reparations. but why is the u. s finally openly discussing the total massacre and it impacts now? that's the question i posed to the gas when we started chatting after the chat. well, i was assigned to cover trump's visit last year to tulsa. and, you know, here's well, everything that president trump stands for and is visiting tulsa during the middle of a global pandemic on the weekend of june 18th, which is a sacred a celebration for african american communities all across this country. and i think that joe biden, so that it is a direct response and an appropriate one. and what i will be listening for from jo
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biden's visit is not just a desire to research the case for reparations. that research has been done, as laura pointed out, 20 years ago. it has been done day by the human rights watch. and so the research is done, the evidence is bare. the data exists. now is the time to do to take action and to do something. right. and, you know, and lisa, your great grandmother was such an inspiration to me. i write extensively about her in my book, the type of journalism that she was doing in 1923, was not well regarded in the nation until the work of hunter s. thompson and similar journalists and the 1900 seventy's and eighty's. and here she is doing revolutionary journalism work 50 years before it became invoke, so to speak,
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type of investigative journalism that mary parish jones did is something to be absolutely admired. i wouldn't be surprised if she receives a posthumous award for her journalism. she deserves it. thank you know what he thinks happening right now in this time. i mean, i do think they are the u. s. is having some kind of racial reckoning just around the massacre with regard to george floyd. you know, but we did see the concept of reparation. get a lot more attention even in 2019, which has the courage to divide in front of congress. and so, you know, i do think that there's, there's more focus and i think part of the reason is because white people are
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becoming more aware of what their wealth and, and their privilege is built on. there's just more awareness in the public space about that. and i do think there's more reckoning going on, not nearly what there needs to be, you know, there needs to be a real conversation about what's necessary to repair the harm. and the damage stemming from slavery and policies that were a legacy of slavery that went straight into you know, are straight continuing. today. here we are at the centennial. and in fact, you know, really there's been what's remarkable is there has been no repair and no restitution for 100 years. mean that's where really where we are right now. i think the shock of that maybe knowledge about that is generating more momentum for what needs to happen. but i do, you know, hope that shining a spotlight on it as we have with the centennial will you know,
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perpetuate more action. and you know that the spotlight will not fade as a result of the centennial. and i guess i'm going to give you 30 seconds to respond to a youtube comment. 30 seconds, and that's going to wrap us up. laura, you go 1st. when your finishes call us, you pick up and then anna lisa, 30 seconds. captain late night says i live 3 hours from there in texas, graduated in 86 and was not aware of it until a couple of years ago. captain, late night is talking about the total race. masika had no idea it happened. laura, i hope that he does more research and studies more because, you know, this country was built on slavery and, and, you know, the tulsa race massacre is just one of many incidence of,
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of horrible racial violence took place across this country. so i hope that he does more research and learns about this other info as well, and you know how the wealth of this nation has been, is built on, we really policies and slavery itself. yeah, i would agree. and i would also say we know a lot more today than we did even 20 years ago or even 5 years ago. and so i would even invite the viewer to take a look at and be inspired by the great lives of the people who lived in greenwood and learn about their legacy and learn about the great things that have come from greenwood, from its music to its culture. to its political and, and,
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and all the other influences that greenwood has had just not just on the city but on the country as a whole. what i'd say is we need to in the present day, be very aware and again very vigilant about the nature of the institution of public education in this country. and an agenda being pushed that sanitizers what, how we perceive ourselves as americans. we must learn the truth so that we can assess objective reality in a, in an efficient way. we look at nicole 100 jones who created the 161900 project and as retribution. she has been denied tenure in the journalism school at the university of north carolina, chapel hill. and we know that she takes a different view of the american experiment from the african american experience
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news news. news. news news break. some had been waiting for more than 12 hours, but was hospital out of beds and oxygen when people need to be her 70 percent of the people here are in debt, many for trying to find food. and the story needs to be told. there's no safety in my country. how can i go back there and live with exclusively, to be real fighting against them and i'll just 0 has teams on the award winning documentary. i'm like nice when match day arrived,
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the green army comes to life. but football is not all they shout about a club where societies disenfranchised the loudest voice, and political descend fixed center stage. they from a rocco's resistance, the shows of roger, casablanca defends, who make football. and i'll just be from the wells, most populated region, in depth. stories from across asia and the coaches have conflicting politics. and when i went on out there, we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter what, i'll just bring you the news and current affairs that matter to you. i'll just
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