tv [untitled] March 9, 2013 2:00am-2:30am EST
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those world leaders pay their last respects to the late charismatic leader at a state funeral. egypt's military takes over security from the police and ford say yes the turbulent city braces to see if twenty one death sentences over the deadly stadium ride in twenty eleven will be of help. now look and a look into how life began russian scientists find identify the tyrian while talk to some glacial legs which may have been isolated for millions of years. this is art to you live from moscow i'm marina josh and welcome to the program which of us is delegate a successor nicolas maduro has taken the reins of power in venezuela until
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a presidential election is held next month thousands gathered for chavis a state funeral at a military academy in caracas there's a felon from his video agency ruptly was also there. his body will remain in state for an extended seven days because of the shit amounts of people people from the barrios the poorest neighborhoods in the cities the countryside and across the country who want to see him for the very last time today is the first official day for the ceremony of the funeral of chavez when fifty five heads of state from around the world are attending the ceremony and the cuban leader raul castro showed up last night the brazilian the the duma rousseff is here by the former brazilian president who like this so but as a russian delegation and also the iranian president mahmoud ahmadinejad is here he has said that to vez is a martyr who lost his life serving the venezuelan people and preserving human and revolutionary values now of course chavez and i didn't judge well very close allies
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and really that relationship was an example of how chavez used the power of this country which is not to be based on its very large oil reserves to extend solidarity to countries that are targets of saber rattling economic interventions and threats of military aggression by the united states and i the western powers now there's also very much a sense of anger amongst many people here at suggestions by some senior western political figures and media figures that somehow chavez's death is a cause to celebrate that somehow it's a good thing for the venezuelan people and for the world of course the grief very much continues amongst the people here in caracas who have come to see him sections held in approximately thirty days time now of course the outcome of that election is very much unknown but at least amongst the people here that very much determined that maduro must replace chavez with one of the most popular chunks have being with chavez the people say they feel and what's he got i guess now the opposition of men
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as well as boycott of the swearing in ceremony for a nicolas maduro calling it fraud but latin america acts for it steve ballmer says they still fall short of gaining the people's trust. the opposition and understands that it will not win elections just on the base of the middle class the opposition has made it difficult to appeal to poor people and the campaign for the presidential elections in october last year the opposition candidate. in the. way nobody spoke to the poor people and that was the main thrust of his campaign there is a great amount of distrust among the poor people if copy of no matter what the people he says pretty much that the social programs that were so popular and were so politically successful. will be abandoned if the opposition return returns
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to power the key to all this is that what do we not have any trouble with in the upcoming presidential elections he is closely associated with chavez you know when she was left venezuela to go to cuba he called venezuelans and his people in particular to vote for the door to support her in to elect him president if the situation came to that now there will be no burial for his a body is to go on permanent public display and he's now it looks at the tradition of turning late leaders into lasting symbols. many controversal figures live on after their deaths through legacy but for a handful that's not enough for those they leave behind lines still form on red square here in moscow at lennon's muslim where the former soviet leader has lived in bomb since the twenty's there are still movements and debates today pushing for
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the tomb to be dismantled and lenin laid to rest stalin was also involved in actually laid next to london for eight years but the communist party congress decided to remove his body and bury him outside the kremlin walls there's a clear communist trend here china's mounted dong is still on display in tiananmen square though he did sign a proposal that calls for all leaders to be cremated ten years before his own death he was embalmed though in one nine hundred seventy six min is on display in hanoi vietnam despite his wish to be cremated as well but latin america has had only one major figure involved and she is. there is quite a story surrounding her remains the argentinean first lady's body was meant to go on display much like a lenin when her husband was overthrown in a military coup in one nine hundred fifty five and fled the country for prose body disappeared while in one nine hundred seventy one it was revealed that the remains were in fact in milan in a crypt under a different name if it is
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a body it was exuma been flown to spain where her husband and his third wife kept the remains for a while apparently they kept the corpse in fact in the dining room on a platform then when one of her own came out of exile and returned to argentina he became president for a third time and if it was finally returned and buried after his death in one thousand nine hundred seventy four in buenos aires twenty two years in total from death to her final resting place. after failing to quell the angry mob of anti-government protestors an edge of sports aid police are letting the army sort things out the military is now in charge of security just as the city expects a final court verdict on last year's football stadium massacre the latest violence flared after twenty one locals were initially sentenced to death for involvement in a deadly riot in two thousand and eleven belcher reports. the clashes raged on through the nights but finished after the dramatic withdrawal of the police force
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the army came down and secured to secure its security directorates behinds me putting up the tanks lining around the building this was meant positively by protesters and people outside the building you largely see police brutality is at the crux of the issue and i saw people today even hugging on the offices posing for pictures with them wanted to boycott on an army camp because they said they'd come here the military come here to protect the people from the police this is of course after days of fierce street battles between anti-government protesters and the police over this contentious verdict which is due to take place today and as i said said there has been a lot of mornings people reflect over the violence of the last days of the area surrounding security directorate is strewn with take us kind of says a bullet casings and rocks and indication of the level of the bloody violence that has taken place here two funerals that were also conducted with people weeping as
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they went towards the cemetery a chanting against the president and one group of people called for the execution of the president however there has been some fear is that with a military takeover it will not be calm to very long speaking to key activists here they say the track record of the military when they were in power during the transitional period after the housing market steps down i was not a good one there were many human rights violations and so many protesters killed they saved the verdict doesn't go the way of the residents they will see a clashes between the army and the people and in this instance one activist said to me this could see even higher levels of violence. and give across what's happening and port st was our correspondent there you know first to get the news from being battled city by following her and twitter a bell true. the
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u.n. says it's prepared to detain group of twenty one peacekeepers from the syrian rebels later on saturday a few hours ceasefire has reportedly been brokered between the militants and syrian government forces in the area to allow the observers to be evacuated and u.n. officials says the are now taking precautions to make sure that no more of their staff are caught in the conflict. the united nations has been in contact with the syrian authorities to secure the release of the peacekeepers arrangements were made with all the authorities involved for their release. team list dispatched to their location but due to the. late hour and the darkness they felt that it was not secure enough and so they were not able to reach it but efforts will be made again to do that but the fighting in syria our peace keepers are caught in the crossfire very concerned for them and we are doing everything we can to make sure that they are able to continue working and. conducting their
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mandate in a peaceful manner to move some of the peacekeepers from a post eight of them out of eighty eight in the area of separation into another area just to make sure that they could be secure. the rebel group holding the peacekeepers has backtracked on earlier claims took them hostage as human shields change of rhetoric came after the central rebel command stepped in and pressured them syrian journalist allen muhammad believes radical factions dragging the country. if the west succeeds helping regime change in syria. countries would like us to believe as a goal as this opening of the syrian people we weren't actually known as it goes through this horrible job the syrian crisis and this is something that we need to understand and the syrian people already understand who is working on regrowing to the local my on going nobody can control your actions which is a very alarming sign but we really were thinking here more of the opposition
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coalition the friends of the order and demographics you know he comes on here and he lies to the public just saying to deface of. this is not like it's nothing we're just putting forward before going to his. post if you're on you tube so be it now and the. one of the accuse them of supporting this is the person who supposedly if he said i wanted. you to see it you know people have. the wool and you know i mean the companies would like to be the going to look at it the syrian people have to billion twitter posts are still worried at the u.s. library of congress every day it should be a treasure trove or at least terrorists not and the and get their hands on it though we explain why in just a moment it's also. taking dated bus lines in other words bus services only
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full time students coming in and out of the waistband driving divisions israeli officials claim their new boss policy will make job trips easier but passengers say it's blatant racism born dead very soon. john kerry made his first major verbal gaffe as secretary of state by mixing the nonexistent country of courage to stand in one of his speeches of course it is funny when politicians misspeak george bush was pretty good at that but i can say that we all make mistakes when we speak trust me it is very easy to butcher the pronunciation of someplace on earth like course to low voltage or walla walla washington the thing is he didn't just misspeak his speech was written correctly and if you look at his eyes as he said it he wasn't really looking at notes or something he was reading it off of a teleprompter right now i'm reading off
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a teleprompter but i put every word there myself which is probably why john kerry is spelled with a q but my question is would kerry and prompter mr obama just read anything put in front of them to the even really know the realities of the tiriel they're reading in their speeches if you're deeply versed on some subject that you should need to read word for word from the teleprompter to give a speech just try writing some notes and speaking with your brain. maybe your heart like in the good old days but that's just my opinion.
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thank god. it is far below ground there could be traces of life in our planet's most harsh environment at least that's what russian scientists believe they have found and are in target after digging deep into the subglacial lake vostok artie's maria phenomenal looked into watch they have discovered. more than three and a half billion years after life first appeared on earth nature is still springing surprises on those who have spent their lives starting it on thursday russian researchers say they've discovered d.n.a. traces of previously unknown bacteria in the waters of the subglacial lake will stalk the bacteria they think they found does not belong to any existent class it's
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one of the only living things on earth that's managed to survive in such harsh conditions law temperatures no light enormous pressure and a high concentration of oxygen with little nutrients talk is a unique and isolated body of water which sits beneath almost four kilometers of ice and is the largest of on top because nearly four hundred known subglacial lakes it's named after russia's only station on the frozen continent in february two thousand and twelve russian researchers became the first in the world to reach the lake after more than two decades of drilling through ice they finally managed to read up forty liters of water that had remained untouched for more than twenty million years to avoid contaminating the lake special technology was developed in st petersburg which meant the people of drill automatically we drew as soon as it struck water the discovery of russian scientists could provide an incredible insight into our planet's past and certainly those working in the harsh conditions
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of antarctica deserve major good os and that's what art is bill dot discussed earlier with our correspondent sean thomas on knows from experience exactly what it's like. this all started back in the one nine hundred seventy s. as a project to research global warming what they were doing was they were drilling through the glacier to take core samples and go back layer by layer to find out small changes in the earth's atmosphere during years going back millions and millions of years then as they were drilling they found a way the ice is changed this is no longer glacial ice this is frozen water this is lake ice so they've discovered lake vostok then the everyone else said ok we've done our job russians are like wait what's down there and so they were the ones who continued to drill this bacteria that they found living in such extreme circumstances in extreme cold glacial ice it can give us a look back into our past as to maybe possibly where we even came from because it's so many million years old and also look into the future possibly to mars and how life can thrive in such extremes are going to have this really is relevant to what
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else is yes sometimes i just think this is yeah just get excited about exactly this is the most extreme part of the planet and the fact itself is considered the cold pole if you will in fact the coldest temperature ever recorded is minus eighty nine degrees centigrade that was back in one thousand nine hundred three in fact victim a highly that who is the chief of the station where i was working he was actually on the expedition that brought equipment to the last off base in that specific year and was there for that recorded temperature so these people are working in credibly extreme temperatures incredibly extreme situations just to get the science done how cold is it when you get up in the morning you have to go out and look and it's just . i was there in the summer and it was still incredibly hundred freezing to get out there you know you wake up in the morning it really is like being on a different planet if you've seen star wars it's like being on hoffa the ice planet because very limited no vegetation only aquatic life it is so different so
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extremely from anything else that you see anywhere else on earth and then animals are not afraid of you very interesting just to be completely surreal to be a part of that. some more news now add to the sour word from around the world a taliban suicide bomber has struck near the afghan the fans' ministry building in kabul at least nine people are reported dead police say the attack her was riding a bicycle and unaided he's devised near the main and and friends of the building it happened as new u.s. to fancy that were chuck hagel this is the country although he was not a city of the explosion marriage is in the process of withdrawing its troops from afghanistan with local security forces taking over instead. ratings agency fitch has downgraded italy's credit score by a notch to triple b. it said the move is a result of the country's political uncertainty following the recent election as well as its rising debt fab year is a vote produced no clear winner and no stable government is expected in the coming
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weeks. meanwhile in the heart of italy to the vatican's papal conclave will start a formal selection process to fill the vacant positions on tuesday is the first time in six hundred years the cardinals have been convened to replace pope has died to have been excused from the vote one for health reasons the second head of the scottish catholic church resigned after admitting inappropriate sexual conduct towards priests. now there is a shadow of apartheid in israel palestinians commuting from the west bank are now urged to board special buses they were launched this week by the transport ministry after some jewish settlers fear their safety was a risk as well as the racist overtones policy reports now on how the roots of the problem go deeper. on the first of december one nine hundred fifty five a black woman by the name of rosa parks made history by refusing to give up her
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seat in the so-called colored six in of a crowded bus in montgomery alabama that incident became a formative event in the u.s. civil rights movement and again this week israelis and palestinians are remembering that incident as the transport ministry introduces segregated bus lines in other words bus services only for kind of stimulus coming in and out of the west bank the move has created the most of reaction both for and against it both inside and outside of israel the israeli transport ministry justifies it by saying that the move is an attempt to alleviate the distress of palestinian passengers having to travel for long hours in and out of israel but the truth is that behind the scenes there was a lot of noise being made by israeli settlers who refused to travel with palestinian passengers they say because they're afraid now newspaper editorials have had a field day with criticisms that israel is acting in line with apostate that this smacks of racism and it echoes of the segregation policies back in the united
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states decades ago the palestinian passengers on this bus saved leaves a bad taste in their mouths but the irony is that it cuts they travel time as they no longer have to travel through the settlements the ticket is a lot cheaper and the whole travel journey is a lot less stressful seven age it's very hard to live with this you can call it a racist action or whatever but it makes it even more impossible for both sides to understand one another. we're supposed to be working in a civilized country separate not without i feel like israeli people look at as a second class who are not equal today. with. i feel very bad it is not acceptable at all but in the end of the strong side decides what happens when we have to deal with this reality but the segregation here runs much deeper than just separate bus services we're talking about different. eagle systems for israelis and palestinians we're talking about different allocation of resources and
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preferential treatment to name just a few policy r.t. on the way from qalqilya. now the chinese foreign minister says beijing is committed to cooperating with the u.s. in the asia pacific region a young g. she stressed that washington needs to respect china's interests and concerns on kong city university professor joseph chang says that while regional tension is on the rise all sides will try to avoid open conflict china still valueless very good relationship with the united states because it understands that this still needs a lot of time it needs a peaceful international environment to concentrate on this modernization and he will continue to work hard to avoid serious conflicts with the united states but since the twenty eighth ten chinese leaders are increasingly increasingly worried about american even when all of them and even the territorial dispute in the asia
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pacific region may need to do you tie ireland is filled with a pan and the dispute of the countries china is concerned that he returned to asia strategy on the part of the obama administration coincides very well with the hedging strategy on the part of these asian countries i think wow there will be a lot of postering there will be considerable escalation of tension but all countries concerned do not want a military conflict and they will carefully to avoid incidents of military conflicts but. certainly if your continued to enhance tension concerning the military concerning the territorial disputes. journalism and post arab spring libyan feels a force controlled armed militias in tripoli doesn't storm a t.v.
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station or its office windows and kidnapped and stay out as we report online also there are new had it for the operators of the disasters for which she went to clear power plant involving hundreds of tons of groundwater leaking into the damaged reactor building every day. twitter as one of the fastest ways share your thoughts online and could prove a huge to resource for future generations to study of the sides agreed for the massive archive of micro blogs to be stored in the u.s. library of congress for research purposes but two years on and it's still and accessible as liz walls finding out. it's part of the social media landscape that has revolutionized the way we communicate. twitter allows users to broadcast their thoughts one hundred forty characters at a time. from the very first tweet to declaring historic presidential victories
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to the downright dumb all of it has been stored at the library of congress well the popularity of smartphones and i pads users can tweet pretty much anywhere at any time and the library of congress is taking note of the way people are communicating and expressing themselves along with journals and other publications social media is being stored as a part of history it began in two thousand and ten when twitter agreed to hand over to the library every tweet since the social media site launched and the tweets keep being stored with an estimated half a billion tweets per day it's a massive undertaking basically taking this body of information about cultures country and putting it into some kind of storage well we're talking about one hundred fifty. well now that the library has collected this massive archive it's not clear what they're going to do with it how do you search that how do you how do
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you how do you catalog that and split it into searchable pieces of code and they haven't been able to figure that out yet. the libraries blog says quote although the library has been building and stabilizing the archive and has not yet offered researchers access we have nevertheless received approximately four hundred inquiries from researchers all over the world so far the library tells us the goal is for researchers to have access to the database not the general public and we asked are there any limits to what information the library can distribute the library tells us they've sent a few no tweets newer than six months old will be handed over to researchers and the tweets can. be used for commercial purposes and researchers can make a big chunk of tweets available for downloading on their website still questions remain if you delete a tweet does the library still store it and how easily come on foresman obtain your tweets of people worried about privacy i'm pretty sure the n.s.a.
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and homeland security has already coped through up of that stuff so perhaps the takeaway as they think before you tweet because it's going to be stored right here at the library of congress and washington let's wall r.t. . well i'm exercisers of the financial war pass and his latest revelations are right here after the break to stay with r.t. . you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else you hear or see some other part of it and realized everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm target market is a big issue. i
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think i'm. i'm . max keiser welcome to the kaiser report boy it feels great to be a bit trying millionaire i'm loving it eight months ago and if you recall on the show and on the alex jones show i said that there would be a major financial catastrophe of the next line months and we've got it bitcoin.
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absolutely triumphed as the dollar has crashed ninety percent against a bit coy as bitcoin is set to take on the world and root out the bank's stirrers as we we sorely need we sorely need it stacy. yes max we're here in new york city that skyline right behind us the booming city has all the cities of the world where all the too big to fail banks are home. based because this is where the quantitative easing is flooding in the dow hit an all time high the very same day bitcoin unmanipulated free market of bitcoin hit an all time high forty six dollars and i want to turn to this head by max the target value for a big coin is not some fifty dollars or one hundred dollars it is one hundred thousand two million bitcoins value is an all time high again its market cap is now twice what it was at the two thousand and eleven peak it is nowhere near its potential.
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