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tv   [untitled]    June 2, 2012 10:02pm-10:32pm EDT

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it quits it's people started to realize that perhaps the verdict wasn't what they wanted so what we saw was actually a mass arc grazier process egypt where people basically came to the streets are extremely angry about the fight a lot of people calling for a death sentence now so we still have several tens of thousands of people here with aunt and across egypt really very angry mubarak's the funny stories did actually lodge an appeal earlier as soon as the verdict was read he announced i mean that's one of the biggest fears the protesters are. fearing really is that you will actually. be successful with this you know such a week and up serving his full life sentence this is why people are still on the streets basically people to believe the distribution system is transparent so they think that perhaps that barak will be acquitted because that's what the regime the old regime was still in place once people are beginning to make the connections between what they consider to be the old regime and the new regime which the military council basically what they seen is mubarak get off lightly they want to
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hear they want to see the death sentence they wanted his sons to be put in prison at the same time in the background of elections where the barak's former prime minister which a feature is actually considered to be one of them i spoke to make the most popular candidates so people are pretty fairing is that this regime will never end and the revolution is in fact not worse petrik henningsen associate editor of the website in full was talk com says mubarak's trial and the choice of candidates in the coming election run up proves that the old regime is still in control. if you look at the charges that starforce is the acquittals you know if protestors were killed in trial here square it's likely the shoot to kill orders were not given by the president and you look at who stayed in power after the fall of mubarak you know the real power in egypt is those who are more in the military and security services and they were all found not guilty there is a scramble for power there between the old guard show feet and the muslim
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brotherhood north sea the only day the real story here is that how can you have a free and fair elections in a country that is still under a military dictatorship so according to election officials in the first round of elections the majority of votes are numbers were not cast for either show feet or morsi so what we have here i believe it looks like a staged a kind of a staged election that we're looking at when the real problem in egypt is the cycle of privilege and this is the problem that the if you gyptian is really want democracy and we're going to have to face the same problem that we have in the united states and european countries which is the same people who are involved with the security services as embedded politicians or privileged tramways and wealthy families have the same cycle of privilege to get out of that cycle i don't see it happening in the near future president vladimir putin has called for patients to
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let coffee announce peace plan work in syria resisting pressure to assume a tougher stance against the regime consensus of a nato as missile shield to end the euro zone's debt to was also came into play because as the russian leader met his german and french counterparts in berlin and paris to test us the last has been following the talks. they have talked about energy issues also in terms of increasing trade between the two countries let's not forget that the e.u. is the trading partner of russia the e.u. as a whole and that investment coming from this continent to russia is definitely significant and they also touched upon issues that concern them both such as that of nuclear nonproliferation and against dressing the fact that the two countries are indeed partners but in terms of that partnership there is of course still a tension especially when it comes to the anti missile defense first of all and had stressed the a position of france it accordance with its other international partners saying
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that b.m.d. is not aimed at russia however russia said that in the past they had had a god verbal promises but that is not enough. in the past we've often been promised that we wouldn't expand then we were promised that nato wouldn't put military hardware near russia but we've seen it expand and its bases spread we need guarantees but i'd like to say we're not going to escalate this discussion we've already invited our partners to engage in dialogue now syria of course is high on the agenda before of the to my putin went to berlin and to france at the paris there had been statements from the two countries saying that they will try to get moscow on board russia maintaining that it is not siding with assad nor is it siding with the opposition now this has come under fire from the u.s. secretary of state hillary clinton who said that by not taking sides that in fact will contribute to escalating the violence in the country well certainly this is not how it is or putin of use the situation. the tragedy in
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a syrian town where fourteen or fifteen people were killed some of them were actually tortured as well this is the world's media but how many civilians of actually been killed at the hands of the so-called militants have you looked at that body count though as far as laundered putin are concerned they both are stress that they are looking at a diplomatic solution that this is still the ideal and to solving the crisis in. syria however it has to be pointed out that there are differences there approach saying that more sanctions are necessary to put pressure on the assad regime or putin saying that this is ineffective citing past examples for example in iraq or libya was she was questioning the security level at this point today. and staying in the region a syrian opposition group is urging military action in the country by gulf states kofi annan warned at the arab league ministers meeting that syria is slipping into an all out war with violence already overflowing into neighboring countries
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political analyst camilla was named who talked to us from lebanon where his ten were killed in recent clashes said we're already seeing a domino effect. obviously it's a scary situation. so if you were. in war especially. around in your area a lot of people warn about this because this is a continuation of what is taking place in syria i think there's a lot of people in tripoli in northern lebanon been shipping arms to syria funded by qatar. been very counterproductive in this process and they've been given money and weapons. given all the protection for the opposition. we can see somebody doesn't want to provoke the mob and on a very dangerous situation and syria is facing the prospect of civil war this has consequences. will be definitely affected by it.
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still ahead for you this hour slashing california's debts a by stopping state killing her report on the millions spent keeping inmates on death row and how their cash could be better spent elsewhere also. our government has been borrowing money from private banks and putting us into debt and they're not doing anything about this me the twelve year old canadian girl whose economic accu man is taking the web by storm to talk to our team and give the solutions. a lead be a naval academy professor says he's been forced to leave his job after an interview with r.t. over the persecution of ethnic russians in baltic countries our correspondent. met with him to find out how and why it happened. i can only accept this policy of treachery to my friends from the russian minority we stood shoulder to
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shoulder to make independent now they're being treated like garbage. in february the. teacher at the leader's novel academy spoke to r t four months on the curate is looking for a new job it was made clear to him by the academy's management that his appearance on r.t. meant he had no future there. my boss called me and said this interview is harmful for our future students he made it look as if i made an act of aggression against latvia i told him i only spoke my mind which i have a constitutional right to do later my colleagues told me the academy's ric to audit the h.r. department to find a reason to sack me after the summer exams. a top level politician from another baltic country estonia also made comments on one of our stories and also found himself targeted by the authorities the vice mayor of dialin it was surprised to
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see himself on an annual report put together by estonia security police outlining actual and potential threats to national security he decided to take action while. i was blacklisted because of my civic duty is to protect and preserve russian schools here the security police believe this could violate as soon as sovereignty i have a different opinion and that's why i filed a lawsuit against the organization for me it's not only are both clearing my name but to stalk dangerous tendencies which undermine democracy in my country. that list also contained almost all russian t.v. stations including r t foreign minister sergey lavrov and anti-fascist activists from finland and a dozen n.g.o.s member of a stony as parliament dorma also one of the names on the blacklist wrote a letter to estonians prime minister demanding answers she believes such actions
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are illegal when you know what upsets us if we are not at war with russia or anyone else that's why. i have no grounds to list any organizations or channels the security police have been running this reports for many years but this time they have crossed a certain line and read the rules and they say this organization is all responsible for gathering information and then to all not publishing it to influence the public opinion in the two decades since independence the baltic states have been trying hard to bury their communist past ironically putting people on blacklists was one of the methods used by the soviet special services so with more people being scrutinized for speaking their minds the wish of the baltic countries to follow a democratic path may come into question those who have found themselves under pressure from the authorities for speaking to the media find it especially surprising that things like that happen in morden they say they never wanted to harm their homeland but they want the democracy to prevail after all. the r.t.
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reporting from latvia and estonia. and is growing among american taxpayers who see a millions of dollars spent each year and keeping inmates on death row and that has us schools and universities their faith billions in cuts. question of a has been in california hearing growing calls to end the death penalty. but in his twenty years as district attorney of allie county john van de camp was involved in the conviction of a good number of people who were sentenced to death he says with the years of legal wrangling keeping people on death row doesn't come cheap and is a constant drain on resources to try to death penalty case you have to. go to trial which takes a very long time to go to jerusalem to go through the jury process you also have to
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have special counsel will point to another as an automatic appeal there's a cost of appeal all of these procedures make the death penalty a big and expensive business for the state since nine hundred seventy eight taxpayers have spent more than four billion dollars in capital punishment in california alone or about three hundred eight million dollars for each of the thirteen executions carried out since that and with the average costs of keeping a person in prison at around twenty to fifty thousand dollars a year this coming november california is set to vote on whether to scrap capital punishment in favor of life without parole to day in times of deep economic recession the debate is shifting from traditional arguments about the morality of x. a kill shot and focusing instead on the cost effectiveness of the state's death penalty program ronnie sound deval is among those californians who stand for an end to the
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death penalty or phrase in the justice system was shattered when her sixteen year old son arthur was wrongfully convicted she now believes the money spent on capital punishment can find a better use put more cops on a mystery put more police officers trying to solve crimes i mean there's a lot of places where we can go to we're actually benefit the community activists. claim dropping the death penalty puts california on track to save one billion dollars in the next five years the money desperately needed by the state now running a sixteen billion dollars deficit however some say dropping the death penalty could provide difficult because of the special interests involved in what's being dubbed the prison industrial complex that's an industry that is the only state right now except for special interest we're up to the point where if we continue to keep this . justice what we're going to be doing is cutting those people off the honorable
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law enforcement people from their pensions with the state of california facing bankruptcy it seems its moral compound is being guided by the draw of cash not affix much in the course of the r.t. reporting from los angeles california. now the internet is supposedly the people the platform but increasingly web users are lived livid over what's seen as growing censorship artie's been asking people in new york whether they see it as protection or restriction. the internet has only been around for a couple of decades now is it our right as human beings to be able to access it freely anytime we want this week let's talk about bad absolutely the internet is for everyone it was constructed to bring in information that we should all be able to drive out of what about children in porn or i think that's of the parents to
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control the government so you are in control of what you access on the internet not anyone else sure of always will pick up whatever book i want to be governesses on concert yes anything they want but maybe not at work so there should be restrictions of where you view what you're viewing so i think the efforts to stop it bring in the government and everybody else to try to regulate i don't know that you can be done right they're just going to muck a. up even more probably that's what i'm thinking but i'm thinking you're thinking right now that maybe there should be warnings you know like that video came out about syria recently and before i watched it on you tube they said you know be careful if it's you're going to see a lot that you may not want to see so that is a type of regulation it is ok so maybe a warning just to let people know what they might be in for right but other than that i think people should be able to post whatever they want to be should be able to act as misinformation and porn as you are absolutely and be the judge of it yourself you know let people make their own decisions you know some people are
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idiots but most of us aren't. here do you think that the internet makes you more idiots out of us than if the internet weren't around. that's a good question because zero or sometimes the information you get from the internet isn't as reliable as it would be from a book people don't proofread which appears often as they probably should but you've got to it also teaches you to be a little bit more. to take everything you hear with a pinch of salt right it's or it all comes together i guess it is very free and that's going to be you know free speech and all that good stuff too i guess and you think it'll remain that way forever yes even though it's just in its infancy don't think people are smart enough to figure out how to make money and control it. and know it's too big a big no you know whether or not you think the internet should remain free an anonymous forever the bottom line is that's probably unrealistic so you might want to practice responsible googling now.
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and now and look at some other headlines from around the world suffering with news just in that at least eight people have been injured and one killed by gunmen in a toronto mall police evacuated the complex and say the shooter is still at large we'll bring you more details on this developing story as we get them. in other stories at least ten people. courted killed when a cargo plane crashed on landing overshot the runway and collided with a bus on a nearby road in ghana's capital the plane smashed through caught international airport perimeter fence and police and troops cordoned off the area all four crew members survived the incident but suffered injuries and have been taken to hospital . at least eight people all police officers were injured and more than seven hundred people arrested after violent clashes between near nazis in the n.t. now two groups in the north are in german city of hamburg the left wing is
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a put up barricades of burning trash bins and i take their opponents with cryo words and stones the police used water cannon to control the riots and disperse the crowds. twenty people were killed and more than fifty wounded in a wave of violence in villages near nigeria's capital of boojum according to a red cross report of the fighting began on friday and around six thousand villages have been displaced from their homes the central region of the country is often the scene for clashes between groups from the christian south and the muslim not. and tens of thousands of britons have gathered in london's hyde park to launch when elizabeth the second diamond u.p.d. celebrations the eighty six year old one of chose the epsom darby as a starting point for marking sixty years on the throne as seriously as will last for days with the high point on sunday a river pageant on the thames the royal barge will carry the queen as she leaves
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a flotilla of more than a thousand boats the biggest river gathering for three hundred and fifty year. economists around the world are struggling to create solutions to the financial crisis but a twelve year old canadian things she knows what needs to be done granted to the internet by storm overnight after a video of her slamming canada's bank for robbing the people went viral. what i discovered is the banks and the government have colluded to financially enslave the people of canada want to give you a mortgage which literally means death. or alone they don't actually give you money they click a key on a computer and generate the fake money out of those who come painfully obvious even for me a twelve year old canadian but we are being a friday and robbed by the banking system on a composite government what we do to stop this crime. and my colleague bill dog
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talk to victoria grant and her mother marcia not just about her take on canada's banking system but her own ambitions in life as well what's been bothering me is that our government has been borrowing money from private banks and putting us into debt and they're not doing anything about this so they're just standing by and watching the private banks make us pay compound interest you just twelve years old what do you think you understand what's wrong with the economy that you have the world leaders don't well i've been researching and watching documentaries and like reading books and it's not that hard time your stand once you start researching world leaders they probably know what's happening is just they're just they're not doing anything about it i think they don't care because they're benefiting from what they're doing to us did you really come up with all these ideas yourself me
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and my dad had them watching documentaries so i'd be taking notes and then you know like we'd write it down and then we put it into my speech what are your ambitions do you want to be an economist you want to be a prime minister. i want every an interior designer but i'm definitely going to keep studying monetary reform. well from a wonder girl to a simple grand and the age defiance of into one year old woman has become one of russia's most traveled cyclists having crossed the world's biggest country over a dozen times and as a rena galicia reports she's back in the saddle with her sights set on europe. she took up biking twenty years ago right after her fiftieth birthday a physical education teacher of ulemas high look said she had to do something after her retirement so she learned to ride a bicycle in a week and a half these days seventy one year old yulia feels comfortable enough on the bike
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to ride right across russia i think she's accomplished no less than sixteen times averaging almost a triple year traverse in the world's biggest country there are gold yet you every day from dusk till dawn i'm cycling i do take rest stops what they used to last novel too and now there are only half an hour a rest while i eat and then get back on the wheels again. this here she's heading in a different direction yulia is riding her bike from tir to paris to commemorate the march of the russian army in his defeat of napoleon in eight hundred twelve the only thing she had to conquer was a visa let's face it for most of us taking a mile long walk is already an accomplishment and a four and a half thousand kilometer bike ride forget about it but you only assess around ten kilometers every morning in the winter and the sort of the snow melt she's back on her bike so this trip should really be
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a piece of cake because. i often get asked why don't i take anyone along with me but how can i would you come with me i'm not sure you'll be able to see through and i'm sure i will never go to see a doctor i never get sick in the seventeen years i've been doing this i only take a first aid kit some bandages and antiseptic but comment here is somewhat of a celebrity local politicians believe her exceptional physical shape and enthusiasm are just what people of all ages need in this day and age of a drive through fast food traffic jams and to be marathons but it's. safer as the sport of. cycling in our city we're putting a lot of effort into developing the sport here bicycle parking spaces bike routes and basically want to turn into the bicycle capital of the country and she says it's a great example but you'll be his biggest supporter is her husband also
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a physical education instructor and he believes his wife is an example hard to follow the premier not everyone can lead this lifestyle you have to be brave and determined and possess enormous willpower she has it but a lot of people don't. you know it has to means it will take her around two months to get all the way to paris across europe she intends to sleep in a tent on the roadside just as she has done dozens of times before if you don't stop with dr gronow i can talk to the wild for the first three years in villages by a river. one such time a man approached me and said i was observing you for a long time everyone is leaving and you're staying for the night on the beach he said come along to our house don't be scared i'll leave with the wife i told him i'm not afraid of the devil himself so if you happen to see is privately levy on a bike as you travel across europe in your car this summer do say hello but don't
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offer a lift she will most certainly refuse it it even goes to be a region. there's always more online at our t.v. dot com here's a sample of what's waiting for you tension is rising in asia as the u.s. has announced that sixty percent of its naval fleet is moving to the pacific region how could this military ships affect the u.s. china relations you'll find analysis and comment online. and it's been raining she brought on any stray and how we recently and not in a good way go to r.t. dot com to see how drivers coped with the unexpected. and stay with us for more financial revelations in the later as kaiser reports in a few minutes but before that i'll be back with the headlines as they change.
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child missing. police in effect. lost. every single meter of the forest lawn jurors found the girl. it was too late. now a score of lives saved money is voluntary scouting force is the biggest memory of the one life.
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you're watching our t.v. just in time for a recap of the headlines egypt's ousted president hosni mubarak begin serving a life sentence for his part in killing hundreds of protesters last year meanwhile tension escalates outside the fold on time periods crowds radio games what they say is living in sentence. involved to do all he can to prevent syria from sliding into civil war insisting russia is not taking sides in the conflict the missile defense shield an economic cooperation those who came into focus as russia's president visited his german and french counterparts. and having no say on our team could get used and the stony i'm especially if you come out in defense of
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russians several people who call for equal rights have ended up on security blacklist including foreign minister sergei lavrov. taxing snags god bridges treasury cheve into trouble. really make him feel the heat next in the kaiser report. max kaiser this is the kaiser report unbelievable controversy surrounding a hot pastry stacie over it's a hot pasty max hop it's actually this one's kind of cold i deserve a rebate on that yes george osborne forced into pasty tax u. turn while we have been here the tax was twenty percent on an.

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