tv Frontline PBS February 10, 2021 4:00am-5:00am PST
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>> narrator: two stories from the middle east on this special edition of frontline. >> us airstrikes against an iranian-backed militia led today to one of the worst attacks on a us embassy in years. >> narrator: they've attacked u.s. interests in iraq. >> three missiles hit near the us base in erbil and were about to talk to the group accused of that attack. >> narrator: and are allegedly killing those who criticize them. >> narrator: frontline correspondent ramita navai investigates. >> what can you tell me about
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these assassinations? >>narrator: iraq's assassins. >> narrator: and later in yemen the houthi authorities say they've got covid under control but doctors tell a different story. nawal al maghafi with an exclusive report inside a country devasted by war and the coronavirus. >> all these lorries are carrying food and aid supplies to be distributed across the north, and because of the blockade, not much of it is coming in. >> narrator: these two stories - on this special edition of frontline. >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major support is provided by the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more information at macfound.org. the ford foundation: working
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with visionaries on the frontlines of social change worldwide. at fordfoundation.org. additional support is provided by the abrams foundation, journalism...excellence in park foundation, dedated to heightening public awareness of critical issues... the heising simons foundation unlocking knowledge, opportunities and possibilities. more at hsfoundation.org. and by the frontline journalism fund, with major support from jon and jo ann hagler. and additional support from koo and patricia yuen. (sirens wailing) >> ramita navai: january 2020. for months, iraqis had been taking to the streets in nationwiderotests like this
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over the dire conditions in the country. (indistinct yelling) as the demonstrations grew, their anger turned to a new target. >> (chanting in arabic): >> navai: iranian-backed shia militia groups that were operating with increasing impunity throughout iraq. protesters set militia bases on fire, and the militias fought back. they were accused of unleashing a wave of assassinations against their critics. (car horn honking) ♪ ♪ i traveled into iraq in september 2020 to investigate the reports of growing violence by the shia militias, groups that had once fought heroically to defend the country from isis, but have since expanded
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into a powerful political and economic force. i headed to the north, where we'd made contact with a group of yng activists who'd gone in hiding after criticizing the militias during the protests. they'd all fled the southern city of basra. only two would show their faces on camera. >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: they told me that the militias had been monitoring iraqis like them, who'd accused the groups of widespread corruption and abuses, and they'd even heard of a militia "kill list" with the names of protesters on it. >> (speaking arabic):
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(glass shattering, car horn honks) lodya's friends started getting murdered. sara talib and her husband, hussein, were shot dead in their home. sara was several months pregnant. journalists ahmed abdul samad and safaa ghali were gunned down in the street. software engineer tahseen oussama was shot in his office. lodya worried she was next. >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: lodya told me she had been threatened by the militias before, after she attended a women's day event at the u.s. consulate with her best friend, riham yacoub. >> (speaking arabic) >> navai: a tv channel owned by an iranian-backed militia
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accused them of collaborating with the u.s. consul general. >> (speaking arabic): >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: in august 2020, lodya was getting into a car to go to the funeral of one of her murdered friends. >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: lodya's friend abbas, who was driving, was shot in the back, but survived. two days later, it was riham's turn, ambushed while driving down one of basra's main streets. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: i'd been tracking the rising power of the shia militias and their ties to iran for years. in 2016, i reported on their instrumental role in the fight to drive isis out of iraq. these shia militias were ordinary iraqis who had picked up arms to fight isis when government forces had crumbled. >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: they're pointing over there, and they're saying that's the black flag of isis.
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at the time, there were about 100,000 of these shia militia fighters, but even as they were being hailed as heroes for their role in defeating isis, there were reports of their lawlessness and abuses. i saw that firsthand when we snuck into a town called muqdadiyah. >> (speaking arabic), quickly. >> navai: a disillusioned shia militiaman had agreed to secretly take me into town. he told me some of his fellow militiamen had been taking revenge on the sunni population. so on my left here is a sunni mosque that, you can see, it's been completely destroyed. in all, he took me to six destroyed sunni mosques that day. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: by the time isis was defeated in 2017, the militias were technically supposed to be under government control. but many remained autonomous, and some, including the most powerful of the groups-- kata'ib hezbollah-- were controlled by iran. they began striking u.s. targets, and stoking conflict between iran and the u.s. (guns firing, people shouting) >> one of the worst attacks on a u.s. embassy in years. that group is known as kata'ib hezbollah. >> navai: the tensions got worse in early 2020. >> a u.s. drone strike killed one of iran's most powerful military leaders overnight. major general qasem soleimani... >> navai: the drone strike outside baghdad airpt also killed the founder of kata'ib
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hezbollah. >> abu mahdi al-muhandis, who was sanctioned by the u.s. for violence against americans, was also killed. >> navai: in response, kata'ib hezbollah and other militias stepped up their attacks on u.s. and coalition targets. including this rocket attack on a coalition base that happened while we were there. the latest attack happened just a few days ago, and this is missiles hit near the u.s. base in erbil, and we're about to talk to the group accused of that attack. the group is the 30th brigade, part of a network of militias known as the hashd. like other militias, they are notoriously suspicious of western media, but after being accused of the attack on the coalitiobase, their commander, sami bagdesh, agreed to an interview. who is responsible for these attacks?
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>> (speaking arabic): >> navai: why do you think people would want to attack the u.s. base? >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: but why would the americans attack their own base? >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: the hashd were considered as heroes, but public perception of the hashd is changing. what do you think of that? >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: it was hard to find public officials willing to openly discuss the militias with us. one of the few who would was faisal al-issawi, a sunni member of parliament. he told me that after the american drone strike last year, the iraqi parliament debated whether to expel u.s. troops. al-issawi and other sunni politicians wanted them to stay, but the militias wanted them out. we've heard reports that the shia militias have threatened mps before voting in parliament. what can you tell me about this? >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: who were the death threats from? >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: al-issawi was far from the only public figure in the crosshairs of kata'ib hezbollah. jy the coy wa stunned by the assassination of one of the prime minister's influential and widely respected counter-terrorism advisers, hisham al-hashimi. ♪ ♪ >> (speaking arabic) >> navai: al-hashimi appeared
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frequently on television and had become increasingly critical of the militias, especially kata'ib hezbollah. >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: his killing had a chilling effect. it was hard to find anyone willing to speak openly about who was behind it. people here are terrified, whether high-ranking officials, protesters, or just ordinary iraqis. and off-camera, they tell us the same thing, that the shia militias control this city and they've taken hold of power like never before. they say no one feels safe. ♪ ♪ (keyboard keys clicking) an official in the prime minister's office who knew al-hashimi agreed to talk to me, as long as we didn't reveal his identity. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: despite the danger, al-hashimi had been exposing the inner workings of kata'ib hezbollah-- identifying its secret leadership and tweeting his findings for the world to see. the militias were furious. >> (speaking arabic) >> navai: they circulated a video on social media accusing him of being a western spy. >> (speaking arabic): >> (speaking arabic): >> nav: five days before his murder, al-hashimi published a report that found 44 out of 67 shia militias took direct orders
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from tehran. and he outlined the ways in which these militias were destabilizing iraq. on july 6, 2020, al-hashimi was driving home. as he pulled up to his house, a security camera captured a gunman firing four shots. the gunman escaped on a motorbike as al-hashimi's children ran to their father's body. prime minister mustafa al- kadhimi vowed there'd be justice-- not just for al- hashimi, but also for the young activists killed in basra. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: despite the killings, i was hearing there were still some protests simmering around the country, even in basra. a senior government official told us we risked being kidnapped or killed without protection in the city. we're driving into the city of basra now and we've been met by a police escort, you can see them here beside us, and that's because foreign crews haven't been welcome since the mass protests and since the surge in assassinations of activists. ♪ ♪ basra is iraq's gateway to the persian gulf and neighboring iran. it is a hub for the shia militias, and has been plagued by violence. ♪ ♪ our police escort just stopped on the side of the road to give
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us extra instructions on how to keep safe, because they said they're worried about our safety. this is despite the fact that we are being escorted by eight heavily armed men. ♪ ♪ the morning after we arrived here, we slipped away from our police escorts and went to one of basra's main squares. this is where thousands of basrans have been protesting. they come here sporadically; they're not here now, but you can see the tents and encampments they've set up where they stay. you can see here where there was one big encampment, and it was burnt down by the militias. the site is maintained by dozens of activists like 25- year-old mustafa. he told me most nights, they're harassed by shia militiamen. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: but we've spoken to activists from basra who've told us they had to flee because they received death threats from the militias for criticizing the militias. >> (speaking arabic): (murmurs) >> navai: but it's clear tt these activists are being killed after they post on social media critical posts about the militias or iran, and they're all targeted assassinations. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: but we got a very different assessment from a senior security official in basra. he did not want to be seen with us in the city, or go on camera, saying it was too dangerous. he agreed to talk over the phone once we left. my colleague, mais al-bayaa, recorded her call with him. (phone calling out) >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: he said the militia "kill lists" we'd been hearing about were aimed not just at protesters, but businesspeople and politicianat all levels. >> (speaking arabi: (call ends) ♪ ♪ >> navai: as our time in iraq was neing an end, i still had questions about the militias' role in the killing of hisham al-hashimi. officially, the government said it was still under investigation. in bhdad, i was introduced to an intelligence officer involved in the case, who agreed to tk
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as long as we didn't reveal his identity. what can you tell me about the investigation into hisham al- hashimi's murder? >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: who are the people behind his killing? >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: which militia? >> (speaking arabic): >> navai: even if you find absolute evidence, will there be justice? >> (speaking arabic):
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>> navai: we were advised to not meet kata'ib hezbollah while in iraq because it was too dangerous. but after leaving, we presented questions to the group's spokesman. we never received a response. (car horn honks) as for iran, it officially keeps its distance from the militias, and has repeatedly denied being behind attacks against coalition and u.s. targets. throughout our reporting, we'd been trying to find evidence of the "kill list" we'd heard about. we were eventually given a document by a source with close ties to the militias. he said it came from kata'ib hezbollah itself.
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>> narrator: coming up next on this special edition of ext on frontline... >> they've lost their homes in the war. >> the one thing that that man was terrified of was that he'd doesn't know who is going to feed his children. >> narrator: an exclusive look inside a country ravaged by war, and the pandemic. yemen's covid cover-up, begins right now.
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♪ ♪ (bustling market sounds) >> nawal al-maghafi: this is sanaa, the capital of yemen. it's april 2020, and covid is raging around the world, but here the city markets are still full of people. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: when this was filmed, other countries were already under lockdown. >> (conversing in arabic): >> al-maghafi: they're selling qat, a stimulant. chewing the leaves is a national addiction. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> al-maghafi: the city seems to be in denial. >> (conversing in arabic): (man coughing) ♪ ♪ >> al-maghafi: three mths later, i'm heading to sanaa. i'm originally from yemen, and for the past six years i've been covering the devastating war here. this time i've come to see how the virus is impacting the dire
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situation, especially here in the north, which is controlled by the houthis, a rebel group backed by iran. >> (chanting in arabic): >> al-maghafi: there've been widespread reports of thousands of covid deaths in areas where the internationally recognized government is in control, but here in the north the houthis insist there have only been four cases. even before i arrive, doctors have been telling me the death toll is much higher. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: i'm the fst journalist from an international broadcaster to be allowed into the country since the pandemic
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began. when i get to sanaa, the houthis require me to attend a press conference on the covid situation. the health minister, dr. taha al mutawakkil, spends most of the briefing criticizing the houthi's enemies, the saudi-led coalition that supports the internationally recognized government and has blockaded houthi territory for years. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: he says very little about the pandemic or what the houthis are doing to fight it. (in arabic): >> (speaking arabic):
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>> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: i try to press the minister as he leaves. (conversing in arabic): ♪ ♪ >> al-maghafi: after the press conference, the houthis assign me a minder to accompany me wherever i go. i head for one of sanaa's main markets, bab al salam. i'd heard that one of the first covid cases in yemen was a shopkeeper here.
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there are signs telling people to wash their hands. but no one is wearing a mask. as we walk, we're approached by the man on the left. we soon realize he's an informant for the houthi authorities; he tells us not to film anything about coronavirus. a shopkeeper tells me i don't need a mask because covid's over. we're about to interview him when the man interrupts and tells him what to say. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: getting to the truth isn't going to be easy. (in arabic): the houthis use their network of local informants to exert control over the population. but some people are willing to speak out.
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i shake off my minder and go to meet dr. ehab alsaqqaf. i'm hoping he can help me piece together what's really going on. he says the first wave of coronavirus cases has passed but that its effects were severe. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: dr. ehab is an epidemiologist. early on, the houthi authorities appointed him to a team to test and trace covid cases. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: he says his team was reporting covid numbers to the ministry of health but that publicly the ministry continued to deny that the virus had even entered northern yemen. >> (speaking arabic):
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>> al-maghafi: dr. ehab was one of the few people who knew the true scale of the covid crisis, so when his own grandmother needed hospital care, he took extreme measures. he s up an intensive care ward for her at home. >> (speaking arabic): (men chanting) >> al-maghafi: the houthi authorities put out very little public information about the spread of covid, but they've promoted propaganda videos like this one from may showing them mobilizing against the virus.
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>> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: by may the 5th, the houthis had admitted to a single covid fatality. but social media would soon tell a different story. (car horn honks) >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: just 23 days later, this video, filmed outside kuwait hospital, showed how fast the disease was spreading. >> (conversing in arabic): >> al-maghafi: as soon as covid hit, the houthis banned journalists from hospitals. but after two weeks of negotiating, ty finally allow me in to one. accompany me.hat six minders
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the covid ward in kuwait hospital is supported by an international ngo, doctors without borders. it's staffed with locals like dr. rania jashan. though the hospital is well equipped compared to others here, she tells me it was quickly overwhelmed. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: dr. rania said she wasn't allowed to tell me the exact number of deaths; but she said that many of those who died were young, a group considered low risk in other countries. >> (speaking arabic):
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videos posted to facebook in may show armed men taking sick people away by force. >> (conversing in arabic): >> al-maghafi: here, a mother is separated from her daughter. >> (speaking arabic): >> (speaking arabic): (gunshots, men shouting) >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: doctors told me they'd heard about many people who died at home without medical attention. we found more cellphone footage that shows houthi teams from the
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ministry of health collecting bodies dumped on the streets. we also found facebook posts memorializing relatives and friends who died from the virus, evidence of a far higher death toll than the authorities were admitting. in one week in june, we tracked hundreds of them. like this one, from the jaralla family, who lost three brothers. after all i've seen and heard, i want to question the houthi heal minister who dodged me at the press conference. he finally agrees to meet me in the portity of hodeidah. the saudis have bombed this road many times. it's a dangerous six-hour drive. all these lorries are carrying food and aid supplies to be distributed across the north, and they can spend days queuing for petrol, and because
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of thelockade, not much of it is coming in. ♪ ♪ the saudi coalition has imposed a blockade on hodeidah's port for the last five years to stop the houthis bringing in arms. as a consequence, supplies of medicine, food, and fuel are largely cut off. it can take months for aid to reach people. (crowd chattering) i'm meeting the minister in hodeidah central hospital. he wants to show me how the blockade affects people here. >> (speaking arabic): (baby crying) >> al-maghafi: the emergency ward is overwhelmed with children, most of them suffering from malnutrition. >> (conversing in arabic): >> (speaking arabic):
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(car horns honking) >> al-maghafi: just before covid hit, the houthis did something that would worsen the impact of the outbreak. they threatened to tax foreign aid. the u.s. responded by suspending $73 million from programs it supports in the country. other countries and aid groups also cut funding around this time. (ambulance siren) i want to see the effects of these cuts. just north of sanaa, i'm allowed into the main hospital in the city of amran. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: 26-year-old tariq qassem tells me at the beginning of the outbreak he was
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often the only doctor working in the hospital's covid isolation ward. without proper protective gear, he caught the coronavirus. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: government doctors like tariq haven't been paid regular salaries since 2016. instead, they've had to rely on support from the world health organization. dr. tariq says he was getting up to $200 a month, until march. (in arabic): >> al-maghafi: the w.h.o.
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stopped paying doctors just as covid hit yemen. the head of the w.h.o. in yemen told us they had no choice due to their funding being slashed, and that their contribution was intended only to supplement the doctors' salaries, not replace them. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: with no pay and no protective gear, some doctors stopped coming to work. but others continued. dr. tariq takes me to meet his colleagues. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi (in arabic): >> (conversing arabic):
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>> al-maghafi: i head to a region that's been hard hit by the ongoing war between the houthis and the saudi coalition. it's called aslam, and it's 180 miles from sanaa. (horn honks) saudi air strikes have increased throughout the pandemic. in 2020, it's estimad that there were almost twice the amount as the year before. many involved u.s.-made bombs. (people chattering) there's just been one in a neighboring province. a coalition air strike hit a convoy of cars on the road, wounding 15 people and killing eight children. between the war and covi community health services here are in a desperate situation. >> (speaking arabic):
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(baby wailing) >> al-maghafi: nurse makiya al aslami runs the only health center in the area. it deals with malnutrition and maternity care. the aid cuts mean she now has more patients, but less money. >> (speaking arabic): (baby crying) ♪ ♪ >> al-maghafi: the fighting has displaced three-and-a-half million people across yemen.
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they're forced to live in makeshift camps like this one. i accompany nurse makiya as she does her rounds looking for covid cases. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: we find ali, a father of 17 children. he lost his home in an air strike aear ago. >> (speaking arabic): >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: nurse makiyah wants ali to be quarantined in the local isolation center. but he doesn't want to leave his children. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi (in arabic): >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: they've lost their homes in the war, they don't know where their next meal is coming from.
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the one thing that that man was terrified of was that he'd be taken to quarantine, and he doesn't know who is going to feed his children. at nurse makiya's clinic, there's a patient who keeps coming back. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: hassan is eight years old. he's one of an estimated two million children who are suffering from starvation. >> (speaking arabic): >> al-maghafi: severe malnutrition as a baby has affected hassan's development. he can't hear properly; he communicatesith his father in sign language.
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(laughs) ♪ ♪ >> go to pbs.org/frontline for the latest on the u.s. role in yemen. >> they've lost their homes in the war, they don't know where their next meal is coming from. and an interview with iraq's assassins filmmaker ramita navai. >> this is despite the fact we are being escorted by eight heavily armed men. >> connect with frontline on facebook, twitter and instagram, and stream anytime on the pbs app or pbs.org/frontline. >> ...continues to grapple with the impact of the ongoing pandemic... >> narrator: the truth is rarely black and white. >> ...protesters versus frontline workers... >> ...filled with so much uncertainty... >> narrator: but if we ask the hard questions... >> ...death toll tops 400 thousand...
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>> narrator: check the facts. >> ...the internet is disrupting... >> ...is amazon taking over the world a good thing?” >> narrator: dig a little deep. >> boom! >> narrator: and take a breath... the truth is closer than you think. >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major support is provided by the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant anpeaceful world. more information at macfound.org. the ford foundation: working with visionaries on the frontlines of social change worldwide. at fordfoundation.org. additional support is provided by the abrams foundation, committed to excellence in journalism... park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues... the heising simons foundation unlocking knowledge, opportunities and possibilities.
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more at hsfoundation.org. and by the frontline journalism fund, with major support from jon and jo ann hagler. and additional support from koo and patricia yuen. captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >> for more on this and other "frontline" programs, visit our website at pbs.org/frontline. ♪ ♪ frontline's, "iraq's assassins" and "yemen's covid cover-up" are available on amazon prime video. ♪ ♪
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-this whole notion that the black family has always been disintegrating, that is nonsense. his studies go up to 1925. the great bulk of black families were intact two-parent families up through 1925 and going all the way back through the era of slavery. so it is now only within our own time that we suddenly see this inevitable tragedy which the welfare system says it's going to rush in to solve. -it's been 40 years since the show aired, and thomas sowell's writings continue to illuminate. whether the topic is race, crime, immigration, or so many other subjects, his scholarship remains as relevant as ever. -races may prefer one race to another, but they prefer themselves to everybody else. -thomas sowell is a trained economist. he's a sociologist who has written books about virtually ery culture that's ever existed. he is a photographer. he is america's greatest contemporary living philosopher. -i'm jason riley. i'm a journalist and author.
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