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tv   [untitled]    March 3, 2012 4:30pm-5:00pm EST

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party live here in the russian capital the presidential election gets underway here in russia with voters in the far east the first of the country's nine times and to go to the polls and record number of observers are also at the polling stations with almost two hundred thousand with cameras set up to monitor the voting process online. in another suicide bombing strikes in syria the latest in the chain of attacks against government supporters of the syrian national council fall from harming turkey bells to fuel the fire. plus u.s.
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president barack obama has called between those for and against a military strike on iran's nuclear sites just as he prepares to face the israeli lobby. that's it for me today the news continues with my colleague. enough money time because reporters next and this time next and stacy look at the differing treatment by u.s. authorities of internet freedom activists and wall street bankers. i am now stars or welcome to the kaiser report remember couple of weeks ago we were talking about the richest towns in america being within an hour's drive of washington d.c. and then most of those towns specialized in essentially spying on americans. max yes this is the data industrial complex otherwise known as dick and these dicks
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are in the news this week we have the hackers on one side and the hackers on the other side really strapped for is a joke and so is wiki leaks for taking it seriously so we know. we have this big data dump from wiki leaks which was data from strath for five million e-mails hacked by anonymous well the atlantic says the corporate research firm has branded itself as a cia like global intelligence firm but only julian assange and some over paying clients are fooled a friend who works in intelligence once joked that stratfor is just the economist a week later and several hundred times more expensive as of two thousand and one a stratfor subscription could cost up to forty thousand dollars per year dick's data industrial complex. just a charge a lot for the rehashing the economist magazine and who are the primary buyer of this rehashed information of course was you know wall street spends billions of
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dollars a year buying research which is another huge loss. anyone can push single up and say they do research and somebody in washington will buy it if they think that they're getting some. that's why i think this headline is wrong max stratfor is a joke and wiki leaks is a joke for taking it seriously yes strive for is the bimbo of the dick community. but the fact that our publicly subsidized them backed banks like goldman sachs and j.p. morgan take these guys seriously you know obviously the cia you can see in the e-mails treat these guys as a joke that you know these guys think they're like super high tech spies for googling perhaps or drinking a martini shaken not stirred while googling and that's what they think is like our spy is but one member of the in the case of wall street who buys the research these are the these are the wall street banks to get bailed out by the taxpayer exactly
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so the taxpayer get bailed out of goldman sachs or without without the largest of of warren buffett of the taxpayer an insider crony information dollar sized went bankrupt or reading but because of all the money that's through now they can use those money their money to buy worthless research but the fact of it doesn't mean anything as worthless as a motorist their money that they're spending their spending our money as you see in this next seven massive insider secret dealings scheme with strat for injury sacks maybe so the e-mails show that in two thousand and nine bank goldman sachs managing director shame moran's and stratfor c.e.o. george friedman hatched an idea to utilize the intelligence it was pulling in from its insider network to start up a captive strategic investment fund what struck cap will do is use our stratford's intelligence and analysis to trade in a range of geo political instruments particularly government bonds currencies and the like they said geo political instruments countries are treated like africans
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like derivatives and they use bogus information from. a wanna be to put on algorithm trades and high frequency trades and if it doesn't go right to outcomes one they get the supper type or b they just pull in the country they just destroy the country they'll go into iraq and goldman sachs will have a hand agenda. sockeye million good care because it's all priced into the stock price and the other reason why i give for a ride we should take this bimbo company stratfor seriously is look what happened with m.f. global was john corps lines intelligence had it worse not sure bet to bet on portuguese and greek and european debt was that from this bimbo company well yes this is they go to these retreats worst ahead of these banks they take off for their clothes they go into a sweat lodge they smoke cigars and they blow smoke up each other strange thing and
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they pretend to be masters of the universe and exchange inside information limit chalabi the start of the iraq war based on inside information that you can do a leveraged buyout of iraq you probably got that from strat for and some don't turn around goldman sachs proprietary dast and it was the result of million dead innocent people because of these frickin sadist and insider traders on wall street so the fact that goldman sachs is using stratfor we know stratfor source of information is google so we know therefore they were j.p. morgan if j.p. morgan were real competitor to goldman sachs could just create an algorithm to trade against the publicly available information on google to trade against goldman sachs exactly and this is where algorithmic trading and i frequency trading is that big is deutscher bourse wants to curtail algorithmic trading high frequency trading what they call capacity restraint trading where you've got these computers that are program not to make a market as lloyd blankfein argues but to break
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a market so they program the computer to attack the market like a stick attacking opinionator and they just attack it with hundreds of millions of trades per second to try to shake the candy out free money that they did not work for whatsoever is beyond even rent seeking it's just exclusion computerize extortion well max another hacker is in the news we had anonymous hacking strap for here we have. james murdoch quits as executive chairman of news international so just like strapped for the bimbo's that were hacked by anonymous here james murdoch has been hacking e-mails and order to get the stories of bimbo's around the world and now finally all of this information is coming out that in fact the trail leads right up to james murdoch he did in fact know about the hacking the eight thousand people on jerry no cares no plug and he was apparently handing over transcripts every single day of all these phones he was hacking and river gerrie
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nel care worked for a company called southern investigators kind of like a strat for and it was that x. policeman who is allegedly also an axe murderer and james murdoch is sitting there because he knows that he has dated a cell he's basically pushing advertising which incredible sort of julian a son ran a hedge fund and he used all this data to trade with inside information and algorithmic trading he'd be a billionaire today and people would accuse him of training on inside information but he would buy his way out of any legal problems and he would claim like lloyd blankfein of goldman sachs that he's making the market he's adding liquidity and they would say well you just do so if you're a genius we won a stickler for doing something interesting because you are god but then of course because he shows the information the public. share of the press these vilified
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because he's telling the truth and sharing information with the public he's an enemy for the worst murdoch who truly is an enemy walks around with this big breasts slashing them to the sun sunday audience hoping you can score some transvestite somewhere in some dark alley that if you look like this right here if you're anonymous if you choose to remain anonymous. most likely you're the most valuable of the advertised to audience advertisers want that eighteen to thirty four year old male market that's the price primo thing that's why we're doctors have failed enterprise ok he failed at my space where people willingly give you information and data about themselves and yet he failed at that company so he can't compete in the market where people the participants willingly give them the data so he has a strong arm or leg break and send the axe murderers to go hack the the bones of
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little murdered children. make money even if it's given to him he's a v a my space or causation in may for hundreds of millions then of course as we know from the facebook i.p.o. people giving you information is worth one hundred billion dollars or more my space was before facebook people were giving him information he thought was a way to promote his stupid movies and thought he didn't know what exactly what business he was even in now justin timberlake you know a car singer what my spaced out a program suit for like five parks in the garden it's already out you know it's already bigger than than than the wall street journal in terms of a business but the point is max ok your data as facebook is proving as google is proving its worth something your information is works that worth something and here's rupert murdoch his little son james murdoch and their acts murdering hackers that were stealing your information they didn't want to pay you
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a fair market price for your information. or he isn't even about getting a fair market price he what people were giving him the information he could lose with it sort of going bankrupt like it is now but he's like who i want to prove. well let's look at how the comparison here is rupert murdoch he's clearly breaking the law but there's no we can't find any information the f.b.i. hasn't arrested him there's clear. your evidence that murdoch right now today james murdoch right now today should be in the custody of the f.b.i. who is in charge of arresting people for foreign corrupt practices act the man has obviously brought foreign officials police officers and politicians in the u.k. but he was not arrested was interested because he's connected he's an oligarch listen to how somebody who is not one of these oligarchs is treated suspect and celebrity hacker case sorry for all of this christopher chaney thirty five a nobody from jacksonville florida is accused of hacking into the accounts of more
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than fifty celebrities including movie stars scarlett johansson a meal a community and singer christina aguilera a grand jury indicted chaney and nine counts of computer hacking for again eight counts of aggravated identity theft and nine counts of illegal wire tapping if convicted of all twenty six counts cheney would face a maximum of one hundred twenty one years in federal prison here's rupert murdoch who has been hacking celebrity accounts for over a decade quite clearly and what does he face nothing absolutely nothing is rewarded these liners he's considered a pillar of society exactly so and it's all because as long as he's part of the data industrial complex he's a dick he's one of these data industrial complex gone and he's allowed to get away with it because as long as you're selling this data to the advertisers and you you
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know are part of this game now finally speaking of advertising max i have this graffiti art here from the invader famous prison for feeding a closer look at her oh yeah well it's really. and i have a headline again from another. anonymous. i don't know what it is but i liken it banks see an advert in a public space that gives you no choice whether you see it or not is yours people are taking that out of you every day they butt into your life take a cheap shot at you and then disappear they leer at you from tall buildings that make you feel small they make slipping comments from pluses that imply you're not sexy enough and that all of the fun is happening somewhere else they are on t.v. making your girlfriend feel inadequate they have access to the most sophisticated technology the world has ever seen and they bully you with it they are the advertisers and they are laughing at you banksy he understood this is ahead
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of the curve yet instead they value being anonymous and telling the truth but that's why i think that anonymous is under attack because they are anonymous they are remove themselves from the advertising grid they are not advertised to though they are the prime audience for advertisers the young male i'm look at it and i say server thanks so much for being on the guy's record thank you all right i say right there what's more coming your way. we all make choices sometimes it's tough. but it can be an easy. choice can be left to fate. or it can be. limited.
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chums and. it's always personal. except. for the choice not yours to everyone. issues that so much of. which are. going to be going for the future in today's time the russians will go to the polls to elect their next president what is the nature of russia's political system policy change. i'm not going to new york city and speak with andy barack obama former executive doubt telling tolls in the u.s. chamber of commerce. only as part of the yes man of course you can find his work at the yes man and his latest film the yes man fix the world is available on d.v.d. and he pickled bomb welcome to the kaiser report thanks all right anybody for those who don't know for the international audience who are the yes man and what do they
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do in a word what the yes men try to do is make hoaxes make funny stories to give journalists an excuse to cover important issues that aren't getting covered enough . so we come up with whatever scheme we can that we think is funny that we think other people think is funny and we do it with the audience being journalists who will then take the information and make a story out of it getting more coverage for the issue in two thousand and four when we posed as dow chemical thanks to a b.b.c. error we gave a lot of journalistic skills to talk about the twentieth anniversary of the bhopal contester fee the biggest industrial disaster in history that has never been cleaned up chemical never took responsibility for the spill even though it bought the company responsible for the still and the victims in india meanwhile has gotten practically nothing in compensation for
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a lot of thousands of people and they've gotten cracked to clean nothing and the site has never been cleaned up right so the book all disaster famous incidents you are on the b.b.c. they mistakenly went to the website and brought enormous attention to this catastrophe in a way that cut through the media chatter it's everyone widely seen sees this as a really remarkable example of i guess what some would call culture jamming as well as unique form journalism but now the yes men of color not recently because according to the latest wiki leaks dump the yes men were monitored by a strat for a key. company that you could say isn't impersonating a global intelligence company they seem to be like a shadow cia so tell us about the fines or why you were mentioned in strat for stratfor seems to be a really creepy. there's a lot of really shadowy stuff that came out in the wiki leaks dump you know e-mails
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with the see no instruction da produced to control their subjects sexually psychologically and financially in order to extract information i don't know if that's what your lists usually do they claim to be a journalist and a media company but they they have these incredibly shadowy practices there's also what seems to be a really flagrant nasty example of insider insider trading where strapped for creates a thing called strata cap in collaboration with goldman sachs to capitalize on information that they had to tame presumably through a psychological sexual and financial control of their subjects. but with us it wasn't nearly so glamorous they were just monitoring public reports that we were putting you know the journalists were writing or the you know some some students were writing at colleges where we would appear and speak twitter feeds they they
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just monitored very carefully everything we were doing for years but it didn't surprise us we don't have much of a security culture we don't really care who reads our stuff we would prefer people not to read our private email although that seems to be a given that they're doing that as well but certainly reading public reports about us and trying to figure out exactly what we're up to is just the height of flattery really and we're we're very flattered well and even obama on the same day as these wiki leaks revelations we learned from the leveson inquiry in the u.k. that rupert murdoch's news corporation adding gauged in systemic widescale. bribery of corrupt police officers corrupt government officials in the u.k. so here you have rupert murdoch doing all the bad things that everyone is up in arms about in terms of what is being revealed through wiki leaks but somehow through word rupert murdoch's organization there's not that level of outrage your
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thoughts on the role of the media in maintaining this this dual standard system where murdoch is getting given so far a slap on the wrist for doing things for doing is spying illegal spying corruption where is wiki leaks which is doing actually a public good service is seen as somehow in bed with the terrorists well it's certain certain very big forces are attacking wiki leaks it would seem. the u.s. government for example there are you know people who really don't want we keep leaks doing what they're doing they're a major threat to something and that's why you see blockading any payments they can't you can't pay you can't donate money to wiki leaks through pay pal master card or anything like that all of those companies have mysteriously decided that we can lease must absolutely not receive any money they were getting hundreds of
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thousands of dollars a day and donations that went down to zero immediately because of this very effective blockade so somebody is very afraid of them and that might have something to do with you know why there's. not more outrage i don't want to get conspiratorial i don't think that's really the case but there is some something going on there but speaking of systemic fears and systemic. issues you know why is we could like such a threat it might not be just their immediate targets with us in the e-mail trove that they uncovered it seemed there. the dow. people or at least the stratfor people who were doing work for dow were really obsessed with one question and it wasn't so much were we going to mount a protest against dow for the bhopal issue they didn't seem to be too worried about that at least there isn't that much discussion about exactly what are they going to
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do oh no is something coming up it was more are they going to broaden the issue to an overall systemic critique of corporate power if they didn't use those words but you know a broader issue question extending from both paul to other bowl polls to a bigger question of corporate power of corporate problem they use that word there is lengthy email discussion about that and you have to wonder why why are they so interested not in their client's bottom line per se but in the question of what kind of critique is this going to. turn into and it's not just us that they asked the question about they asked the question about amnesty for example on the twenty fifth anniversary why didn't they expanded into this big critique of corporate problems why didn't any of the big n.g.o.s they ask these questions again and again and i'm not sure exactly why or what that indicates but it would seem to
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indicate maybe that that's a threat to them but the idea that the way that the rules can be changed and that could seriously impact the bottom line of a lot of their clients including would be if there were a real popular upswelling of anger against the corporate system such as we have it that could lead to rewriting of rules and financial impact probably this very tightly issue based focus on on bhopal and specifically doesn't have that kind of possibility to affect anyone's bottom line you know doubt. could technically. as we've said many times they could technically just pay some money and be done with the bhopal issue once and for all. it's not it wouldn't be that big of an impact on their bottom line but what it would do if they did that would be set a massive precedent that would mean that other companies couldn't do things like
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this and speaking about that and the big picture issues and how we really have to rewrite the rules of the game and not just go after individual companies anymore. talking about rewriting the rules of the game i think is is frightening for a lot of people who would rather the rules stay just as they are then maybe why occupy wall street has been so effective and so frightening to so many people and if you suppose refusing to adopt a simple list of demands and you know precise targets has been probably the wisest thing that any movement could do just saying no there's a serious problem here we have to rewrite the rules that allow corporations to get away with murder quite a little literally and a lot of lesser crimes as well oh it's a racket so you've got whether it's down jones or rupert murdoch they're part of a syndicate they're part of a mafia they're part of a racket that is connected at the hip to goldman sachs and wall street because goldman sachs applies the money the financing to the racket so that's
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a systemic risk that anybody who is looking at any individual component of the racket is being dirty they look at the the racket of goldman murdoch citi group you know the real mafia the real terrorists they see there anyone who's challenging that is a snitch and of course if you snitch on the mafia you know that's the worst thing that could happen because then you on ravel the entire unholy racketeering and war profiteering and basically you know what they've been able to do is to operate as a as a force and to overthrow and be stabilized entire countries like greece for example who's now having to suffer austerity to pay for the the crimes the racketeering the mercenaries the financial mercenaries so just you know it's not so much you can imagine this conspiracy angle as relates to murdoch i think really read them the bigger question is why wouldn't a wise murdoch rewarded for his criminal activity he's allowed to open the sun on
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sunday and you know his press is a failure he just shows women's breasts that's the sum total of his journalistic ethics but he's reward. it for this where is wiki leaks and julian assange was is doing the genuine work of journalism the genuine work of the fourth estate they're being penalized now you live in the united states you live in new york is it palpable this this this feeling of a democracy being shattered by corporate interests of course democracy hijacked by corporate interests or are shattered definitely though the way you put it the mafia it's exactly right there are very powerful people who want the system to stay the same and will do anything they can to make it stay the same it works very well for them as figures over the last ten twenty years have shown this incredible boon for the one percent and higher than the one percent and stagnating
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or dropping levels for the rest of us. and you know that is a very real conspiracy i mean there are these real conspiracies such as you've pointed out and that's why i it's a bit frustrating when when people try to go finding far fetched conspiracies and spend a lot of time inventing scenarios that can't be proved because there's this real conspiracy that is plain as day can absolutely absolutely be proved no one's denying it there's tons of evidence it's everywhere and that's what we've really got to be fighting we've got to change the the rules of the game that allow all of this conspiracy to exist and there is a lot of. anger and a lot of outrage at this and i think we're just going to see it increasing over the spring anybody obama time thanks so much for being on the kaiser report thank you max all right that's going to do it for this edition of the kaiser report with me
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max kaiser and stacy herbert and i thank my guest and evicted mom of the yes man if you are seventy now please do so at kaiser report at r t t v dot are you until next time x. guys are saying. it .
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