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tv   [untitled]    July 16, 2011 7:00am-7:30am EDT

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in india closing is available in the movie the joint the hotel rooms the home of the lights the gateway hotel the grand imperial college the george west coast you can a little socialist good to see don't need to go and. read this and the colonel was hoto as a retreat. and failed stress tests for not being water tight enough to withstand another financial hammering falling the us time is running out and dealing with its swelling debt. rupert murdoch loses lieutenants on both sides of the atlantic as the screws tighten money media empire build on peddling sleeves and getting victims. and libya's a bank balance of power shifts as the u.s. joins others in recognizing rebel author dorothy and i lost them access to establish.
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this is r.t. line from moscow on reception a very warm welcome saying eight out of one thousand european banks have failed stress tests on whether they could withstand another financial crisis were in italy richard hopes might help the country to fend off aspiring that along with the seventy billion euro cuts which parliament passed on friday sarah reports there's only so much that can be done before the people take power back into their own hands. as the clouds gather. in the battle continue its dark times keeping our life ahead of. what everybody here. as for the future if you think countries like italy looking on increasingly unstable ground county you're a right out this financial still this is really something quite frightening if
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indeed italy. goes into big trouble on the financial markets this is certainly a totally new face of this euro crisis. dimension here a fairy tale with all too appealing countries chip saving themselves for a bite of the g.s.t. apple now many are left requesting taking the bait with that money. not bad i mean. after more than a decade of great businesses like badasses have been hit hard. things three in athens is still bustling the problem for the economy means that many businesses here in greece recently got on. to winning the year in many european prices and many of the members we could colonies it didn't mean european wages if one botched
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bailout after another year of skeptics who wanted danger from the start they have become the unlikely heroes in this tale just who the hell do you think you people are you are very very dangerous people indeed your obsession with creating this euro state means that you're happy to destroy democracy you appear to be happy for millions and millions of people to be unemployed and to be poor or other told millions will suffer so that your euro dream could continue if you rob people of their identity if you drop of a democracy but they are left with these nationalism and violence are now waking up to the reality of the nightmare their chances the euro is a political prism for four countries are true as greece and spain and they need to remember. rated for that prison recreate their own currencies have devaluation make their exports cheaper make it easier for tourists to visit their countries and they'll get back in on their feet griefs. portugal italy spain germany
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continue to topple the year in the. you actually ever so i three things. go well in you governments wind back spending to tackle the debt british union leader says workers won't stand for taking the heat in just over an hour from now markets so what occurred tells us how people will feel forced to strike back. and the idea is to build pressure so the government realize the working people the length and breadth of the u.k. are not just going to let them get away with what they're doing and we believe that pressure ultimately can force them to change direction the point is to change their mind and saying you won't negotiate just when they're having a chat with a few people in a room is one thing saying you want to go see you when there could be millions of people taking strike action is entirely another and we actually believe that the six million trade unionists plus the thousands and thousands or hundreds of thousands of pensioners and students all becoming
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a joint campaign is going to be poetically very powerful. and on the other side of the atlantic president obama has warned that the u.s. is running out of time to deal with its own debt crisis economist dr roger of one hundred work says that american politicians can't comprehend solutions to the deficit. there's a personality conflict between the majority leader and the president which is quite unique and this has been taken into the public avenue of discussion once that happens and trust is lost between the leaders it's far more difficult to secure an agreement behind the scenes if you cut spending you're going to also impede economic growth because the government is one of the largest employers if you bring troops home and stop the wars you also have a problem with employment as the servicemen and women come home these are classic economic problems what's required in the u.s.
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is a drastic program of infrastructure development and public jobs to guarantee wages and on interest loans for average americans italy defaults for instance in europe it will be impossible for northern europe to bail out italy that will take the u.s. over if the dollar significantly loses value when the u.s. is unable to help europe that will in turn take the u.s. down the japanese no more have do not have sufficient liquidity to help this time around as they did in two thousand and eight the euro is intrinsically weak that one is not a competitor for the dollar the ruble stands to be fairly stable given russia standing the major energy producer and natural resource giant on the world scene so the ruble should remain relatively stable the dollar however has nothing to go down against except the prank and if you look at the dollar and the franc that monetary relationship is an all time low and that portends trouble for the future the best two currencies probably other norwegian krone and the swiss franc at this point
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gold is over traded and as we saw in two thousand and eight there could be a paradoxical drop in the price of gold during a market market crisis so betting on go is a highly risky proposition. we would argue it's good to have your company today still have you in the program india's always on employees we report on how the country is steaming ahead with an extremely wide awake workforce also. the nine iron will of a russian not often he used his talent at seeing off to trace his long lost siblings these stories just ahead. media mogul rupert murdoch has said sorry to the family of a murdered british school girl whose mobile phone was hacked by a newspaper washee was still missing the revelation of the bestselling news of the world to be axed last sunday after one hundred eighty three years knox apology came as the embattled chief executive of his u.k. operation and the paper's former editor finally quit rebecca brooks still has to
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face a parliamentary committee on tuesday along with murdoch and his son james in another blow to the tycoon his long serving a right hand man in america is leaving as well as course also creaking under claims of how the phones of nine eleven victims but it's also used anastasio in the reports audiences appetite for sleaze means the tabloids will survive. sex drugs cheating and lies phony political scandal flashing dirty laundry be made out celebrity gossip and crime stories almost beyond human imagination. all this is served on a platter and sold for a couple of quarters by tabloids headless a man in a topless bar or something six months in the freezer. i called it veteran journalist michael musto is one of millions falling for the bait of catchy headlines even though he knows the business inside out in america we
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don't break the law per se but they do have sleazy tactics i mean they will slap a story they probably make up sources i mean when you read them a source. of a source said well who is it many times they can just make up the quote themselves . a lot of times i feel they're just inventing these quotes to back up the thesis of the story fascination with scandal is almost religiously observed in the u.s. and great britain we are both countries in both media environments where gossip sells and there's a tremendous interest in celebrity both countries are of was after rupert murdoch's news of the world newspaper phone hacking shocker broke in london his empire stretches far and wide across the u.s. as well let's not forget he owns the new york post the wall street journal and the daily at a protest outside rupert murdoch's big apple pad protesters demanded an investigation into his publication that whole we know what murdoch does in england because he was
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caught and we want congress to investigate what he's doing here in the united states we don't know if newspapers are backing other people in this country yet i see no reason to put it past them so how far from potential public embarrassment do american newspapers stand by the ones that are owned by rupert murdoch without question the new york post. is one of the most hideous deceitful. tools of criminals that there could be when it comes to getting scandal fooled in the u.s. counting on the reader short attention span is a common publishing trick jennifer aniston brad pitt has gotten together about forty two times so far this year and i haven't seen the photograph together since two thousand and six they're able to keep selling and repackaging the same story that isn't even a story no publication would admit to paying for. information but that's also off to a technicality what a lot of names three news publications can get away with doing is even though they won't explicitly give someone money in exchange for an interview someone might set
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up a terrible organisation and then the news will happen to donate twenty thousand dollars to that charitable organisation the culture of sensationalism in the press is putting the future of journalism on the line the anglo-american style is trashy it's ribald and there's just sort of this snickering tone is very american and you know we're a juvenile society we're young society i don't really know what the brits excuses i mean they've been around a long time but hey we blame it on them because we're their children while some will always remain fascinated by tabloids as rats continue to sell others have reached a breaking point and i don't have that great of a sense of what happens in britain but i know it's pretty bad here and there are a lot of people who are really upset about the culture of news in america and just how little information seems to get out in between all the gossip the press has to be vigilant and in the united states the press has fallen asleep and r.t. new york well it's easy for me to take the moral high ground over the murdoch
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papers suspect reporting what the truth is sleaze sells. people in new york if the news calls and night is enough to change people's reading. how did tabloid journalism become so influential and so popular in today's world this week let's talk about that i mean people like to read about other people's business. you know. newspapers have to try to compete with the internet. with up to date you know. dirt i think it's absolute trash it's nose space in this world for it all i hope they'll go in there but they're not going i'm sure they're increasing in power i don't believe that this is going to be the biggest takedown ever rupert murdoch is going down i think it's more
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a pop culture based audience and so the journalists kind of cater to that and in turn it's kind of fun for them to be secret detectives but isn't it terrible i mean it might be fun but it's still criminal acts it's horrible i hate journalists you know whatever that whatever it takes to get the story and her whoever they want you know do you ever do you have that attitude at your job no not at all so what makes journalists special they're not special they're the opposite of special they have no scruples we have of them are true because. people. you know if they like. but that's not what journalism specifically what's true but never believe the media's. going to keep getting worse probably do you think journalism like that is bound to spread around the world and become as rampant as it is in britain i do for troy and it really is that journalism i mean
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there is there is no logical reason. the bottom line is that if the rampant popularity of tabloid journalism in the u.k. is any indication the rest of the world should be. paired for their own gentle at them to get a lot david again. it's good if you can join us on a saturday here on arts he now of the united states and more than thirty other countries now recognize the libyan rebels as being in charge of clearing colonel gadhafi regime a legitimate alliance of nations working on the crisis announced it would deal with the opposition until an interim authority is in place the recognition by the contact group gives the rebels access to copies assets frozen by the u.s. but mideast peace expert dr franklin lamb told us that nato is just running out of options unable to oust the libyan leader. with a lot of questions about who these different factions who are arguably now fighting
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among themselves for power in the in the east what role ultimately be their relationship with the americans who have a often a long history you know judging their allies and going to themselves involved but i think all of this is because nato cannot accept afford a defeat nor can the white house so they're using this stumble conference to mock some eyes maximize pressure on the kentucky government. now a quarter past the hour here in moscow a special floating cranes are now at the site of the volga river tragedy to begin the operation of lifting the bulgaria which sank in the minutes just last sunday out of the two hundred and eight people who were on board one hundred fourteen have been confirmed dead while fifteen others are still missing two people since then have not been arrested in connection with the disaster the head of the company which operated the boat the inspector who certified it as fit to sail both face charges of negligence that led to their deaths arrest warrants have also been
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issued for the captains of two cargo vessels which passed the sinking ship without stopping to help the search operation continues in the area and on nearby islands more recovery workers police and volunteers have now joined the effort. well we have some video reports on the volga river tragedy on all sides. here from the captain of a vessel who came to the rescue helping the seventy seven survivors of a sunken treasure from so he tells us all five one family themselves lucky to have . all the news as well it all to come right now including security all sencha the russian mission to watch the web streaming on the answer.
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wealthy british. sometimes. markets. why not what's really happening to the global economy with much stronger for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into congress reports . with the end of the cold war and going the way of the soviet union many people thought that nuclear weapons disappeared. the risk is not zero that something might be going off by mistake especially the sounds of the nuclear
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weapons on hair trigger alert. the pacific institute using a day as its rate all of it but you know if you keep spinning a trillion dollars a year on weapons of eventually you're going to blow everybody. you know people are dying from these weapons but until we actually see it people don't make. the firepower of the second world war this. is the equivalence of fire power the world's nuclear arsenal today. is now every twenty minutes past the hour here in the russian capital the best in life you've got. something indians and i will too well they are reaping the
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benefits by working harder and longer than their western counterparts. joins the. it's a busy city with busy people india is a rising economic look so what's the driving force behind its success it could very well be that people like you and can now both are co-directors of a small one import can't we called divine and his indians have developed a strong liking for french and spanish languages young men are working overtime to fill their glasses you have to be very flexible with their working hours. it can be engineers who are going to globalization or because of oh you know you're interacting with so many people from abroad especially america or you know europe so. we can't be fixed by means where we can say we're only going well from one to five but people in britain for example can and do say that seven spends years working as a business consultant in the u.k. and he says brits watch that clock closely and britain people leave
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a five o'clock and they won't stay this is because i got a train to catch i mean for many years in britain and you're there is that some people don't work in britain people don't work weekends it's changing a little bit now particularly in periods of economic recession. but generally it's a monday to friday as recently as just two years ago india had a six day long week the government has put in strict regulations regarding labor hours but that doesn't stop people from spending more time in the office than needed notice of a more significant difference between the kind of work culture in india and in britain is the pressure of people around to work above and beyond their contracted hours. everyone will do this irrespective of really if there's work to be done if there is a small enterprise to run all state regulations go out of the window if sacrifices
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equal success then you have to make them i wouldn't twenty four seven. working at another level off. that it is going office working because a lot of the first thing that are being organized. is money but let me see my fine example of did occasionally actually be a drawback in the office environment i think people are expected to do the job of two or three people. even though the contract today was mostly one thing which isn't always such a good thing because if you work such long hours it's going to affect your performance well europe and the u.s. spend their money on fighting wars and their time on trying to figure out a way to get out of economic slump india is busy getting things done the indian way laurie punishes probably the most popular god in the entire hindu pantheon in india he is supposed to bring prosperity and success to those who worship him but the success of indian businessmen should not be attributed to its by help alone nine to
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five working hours just don't cut it here in the hospital long hours of hard labor but at the end of that hard work pays off it goes quite see new delhi. not as good as some other world news for you in brief this hour security crackdown as reported killed three people across syria during what is believed to be the biggest protest since the uprising began in march meanwhile syrian opposition members are holding meetings in damascus and istanbul to discuss ways of asked impatient. to shout aside or attempt to hold a national dialogue to quell the protests which was boycotted by senior official figures. a prison riot in northern mexico has seen a fifty nine. seven die in the violence half of those from escaped are drug trafficking complex or gang members five guards are also missing their thought will help the plot to break out the security forces have now brought the prison back under control it's the second job break in the past year one hundred fifty one
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prisoners escaped from the facility last december. china wants the you know. states to cancel a private meeting between president obama and the tibetans spiritual leader the dalai lama chinese officials say it could interfere with the country's internal affairs and china u.s. relations leaders are expected to discuss the dalai lama's tibet autonomous which they within china's. some pretty dramatic footage right here have a look from the netherlands a giant broadcasting mass that collapsed off for a mysterious fire halfway up about eighty percent of the country is now without f.m. radio after the two hundred meter aerial came down on top of its concrete supports our no one was injured as emergency crews had already evacuated the area it's not known how the fire started. leaving athletes are inspired to become the top in the sport but one russian golf prodigy has used his talent for very different ends to
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trace down his long lost brother and sister parties in court or gov now reports on the teenager's drive to use the fair way to find his family. he might have a smooth as swing but from the outside nicholai looks no different to the pampered junior players in this hyper exclusive moscow golf club but this couldn't be further from the truth nikolai come alecky was an eleven year old all for when he was adopted by an american family can never say that life is easy and basically there they make you feel like it's nothing you're nothing to me when i came to united states i had a lot of problems emotionally incredible young man he is someone who has taken on many challenges in his life and he's always overcome then came the gulf one day my desk being in a golf club in a backyard. i don't remember exactly but i had no idea what it was i just was a piece of metal and i asked him what it was. and then he asked me to he said what
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he didn't want to try and i tried it and i had it straight. and he said you're playing. despite making headway in sport because one thing nicholai could not get over when he moved to the united states nikolai was separated from his younger sister and brother i'm lost track of them he rejected several school scholarship offers at top years colleges to play for the russian national golf team so you can search for his siblings. during a talk junior tournament heard news about his sister. my whole life. my dad and we have paid a lot of money to different companies to try to find her and then i met family out of nowhere and they found there in less than two weeks so to me i never thought that i was ever going to see her again. reunited after last week a life sister understood was never adopted she's about to graduate from
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a school in a small town in southern russia. when i heard about my brother that i thought it was a prank my friend played on me. i don't remember much about him but i'm going to become close again she just goes that was nic i'm going to buy her a computer so that we can talk to each other all the time so that we never lose touch again of anybody dallas back in moscow nikolai has won the prestigious series tournament and will compete against europe's top young players later this year but he says now his priority is finding his brother we can only wish nicholai best in his dream to become a professional golfer what is how to overcome whatever happens next he is already a winner you go there are now. in moscow. i shot back with a recap of the top stories and not just a few. just
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so. it's. just so. vicious disciplinary punishment. should. the worst screw the penitentiary system transform a criminal into a law abiding citizen. and resumes life behind bars on
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r.g.p. . forty two thousand americans die each year from car accidents serious thousand. seven hundred thousand people murdered and thirty two thousand will kill themselves cancer in all its forms kills five hundred sixty thousand of us here part is easy even more devastating it shows over eight hundred seventy thousand americans every day here. a. wealthy british soil samples sometimes. margetts why not come to. find out what's really happening to the global economy in the cause reforged.

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