tv Headline News RT April 24, 2013 4:00pm-5:00pm EDT
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well coming up on our t.v. investigation of the boston boston marathon bombings continue and many questions are still left in the air especially what might have led to the suspects planning the bombings in the first place we're going to take a look at the motivations in the report from the from boston in just a moment. and play chicken with energy policy in kansas to block drilling a for the fracking expansion environmentalists to come up with an interesting argument some that has the energy industry crying foul we'll explain in just a moment. and the senate is discussing a bill that would tax certain internet sales some critics claim that the tax would hurt growing online commerce while supporters argue it would help states with new revenue will dive deep into the debate later in the show.
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well it's wednesday april twenty fourth four pm in washington d.c. i'm margaret how old you're watching our t.v. we begin today in boston more than a week and a half ago two explosions at the boston marathon new information is coming to light about those allegedly responsible for the attacks now brothers terrell and joe hart's the knives are she is correspondent and stasia churkin is in boston with more. a terror act that shocked the u.s. the suspects a nineteen and a twenty six year old that's are not of brothers joe hart was a u.s. citizen to milan on his way to becoming one but both of chechen origin the older brother to milan is said to have traveled to dagestan in russia for several months . just on the show to make these things together.
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despite the media reach these locations remain unknown to some a lot of people are confusing it with check with a vacuum and. yeah whatever it's called i know i. assume that the majority of americans. young at the time of the bombings that star nine have spent the last decade living in the u.s. . and while the origin and yet again religion are already largely blamed as the root of all evil the investigation is only in its first stages so. maybe there. are. those who knew the two brothers see the media is taking it over the top they can't always be trying to rush to be the first one to break a new piece of information local blogger luis vasquez knew both brothers while he was here since he was little and if you didn't know the hard name you would just assume that he was an american around here we have
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a very diverse community and it's normal to hear for someone to go back to their country he says over sensationalizing that's our knives background doesn't get any answers to the question why being answered and even from coaching with his brother they would never go around pounding their chest about their religion the most. conversation i've had about about their background is them telling me where they're from that's that's and then after that all this talk about boxing let's talk about lines that said samuel went to high school. joe hart who has now been charged with the use of weapons of mass destruction the media has a way of spinning things of course and with regards to his nationality to me it doesn't matter. it shouldn't matter what his religion is when i graduated there were forty five languages spoken just in my graduating class alone it is not unusual in fact it is very common to hear a foreign language he reminds us that the only suspect alive after the bombings has
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lived in america since the age of eight having come here at a young age you know from everyone that they will tell you and they have told me on certain occasions you know this person was part of the community the attack feels even more personal and devastating for samuel because he knew the brother is responsible but pointing fingers he says at places of birth or religion is far from crucial what is solving this case and bringing justice that takes time time and effort we need innocent people feeling safe again security in this country seems like it's more for show than for anything a lot of times unfortunately. that needs to change while the media pick apart every single detail they can lay their hands and ears on it seems that what should matter after the tragedy is tackling terrorism a global threat that has no upbringing or religion but has become the curse of the twenty first century not just here but all over the world and our key boston massachusetts well earlier this year the city of los angeles when it's
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a lockdown mode while the police were in hot pursuit of a cop killer christopher dorner a former los angeles police officer went on a weeklong killing spree back in february now he's been fired from the police department back in two thousand and eight and valid a secret. he was eventually tracked to a cabin in the california mountains and died after a police shootout and fire in the cabin he was hiding it. during the manhunt two women who were delivering newspapers early one morning were mistaken for dorner. seven l.a.p.d. officers fired over one hundred rounds into their truck now forty seven year old margie kurt kerry. and her seventy one year old mother emma hernandez were injured but both survived now it's time for the police department to pay up and an attorney for the city says that the women have accepted a four point two million dollars settlement now the mother and daughter involved were originally promised that the l.a. police would replace their truck pal thoughtful of them it's nice to see that the
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city and the police department are finally admitting their mistake now hopefully police will think twice before opening fire on innocent people again. and which came first the drilling or the ag well that's the question that soon it may not be an issue down in kansas as natural gas continues to be the main component of the obama administration's quest for u.s. energy independence concerns over the method of extraction for acting private corporations and environmental advocates at odds now artie's meghan lopez has more on how fracking may not be for the birds. it's the battle of energy versus the environment. on one side or oil and gas companies that. you know on the other activists worried about the consequences of america's thirst for fuel and now a new opponent is ruffling the feathers of the energy industry. this is the lesser
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prairie chicken a bird that could change the energy landscape in five states dwindling population numbers have made wildlife authorities consider adding this bird to the endangered species list so how can one small species of bird take on an entire energy industry in five states well it turns out these chickens are a little chicken when it comes to choosing a place to live they prefer to be able to see everything around them so a big oil rig like this to be rather intimidating they prefer to live in really low grasslands just high enough for them to be able to hide but still low enough for them to be able to see everything around them and that fact has the energy industry scared because putting these chickens on the endangered species list could shut down oil rigs like this kansas is a top ten oil and gas producing state both in awhile and in natural gas production meet ed cross director of communication for the kansas independent oil and gas association and one of the lesser prairie chickens natural predator and i think the
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species and things like that could very well impact. production in the energy production of this nation adding the lesser prairie chicken to the endangered species list could cost the kansas economy three billion dollars in annual family income income for an industry that oil farmers describe as mom and pop shops far from the reaches of b.p. or exxon mobil or got a company called burr petroleum and what we all were drilling and exploration and production company and we keep these stripper wells in kansas running we've got five hundred sixty wells in the state and. we've got to about four hundred plus barrels of oil a couple million him put a gas in the oil and gas industry isn't alone if they list them it's going to make it more difficult. for the wind energy to develop it could change where. transmission lines go through which would increase the cost for transmission
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lines it would also hurt the farmer since the lambs these birds nest on would be protected the range of land that the lesser prairie chickens nest on has decreased eighty four percent from its historic range so with the support of all five governors the energy industry has hatched a conservation plan to protect the chicken population all won maintaining oil and gas output and that is good news for small game expert jim pittman who has monitored the chicken population for years but even he has issues with the data and the idea of listing the animal all together the effects of those other features like coal and gas secondary roads when turbans for those particular features when we have fairly sparse data or or it's nonexistent altogether and that fact has the energy industry crying foul so what is so important about these birds that they need to be protected in the five state region there are a gallon nations game burn specifically of progress species that has a really unique maybe strategy called the luck electing species that's right mating
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rituals that's what makes the lesser prairie chicken a state treasure their game bird first of all and we represent sportsmen exactly while life lovers like jim pitman are fighting to save this bird because we have particular interest in game birds and we want to make maintain those populations of game birds in sufficient numbers to to sustain the hunting season saving the birds so that they can live to die another day in wichita kansas meghan lopez r.t. but for many people looking at energy policy in the. us chickens are the least of their concerns the environmental protection agency is up in arms over the state department's latest her view of the keystone x.l. oil pipeline which would transport eight hundred thirty thousand barrels of oil to texas refineries from the oil sands of alberta canada now a state department report from february downplayed the environmental concerns of the project saying that the pipeline would not have an impact on the greenhouse
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effect but because the state department has the final say on keystone the report suggests that the project will get the green light from the obama administration however the e.p.a. called calls this report insufficient no the environmental agency recommended that the state department take a closer look at the effect of the greenhouse gas emissions from from the extraction of the tar sands before continuing with the keystone project for more on this i'm joined by jamie henn communications director at three fifty dot org jamie tell me more about this a.p.a. statement. well good to be with you you know this statement is a big black eye for the state department and a big blow to the keystone x.l. pipeline the e.p.a. basically reaffirmed what environmental groups and scientists have been saying for a long time that this pipeline is dangerous because it's guaranteed to spill over some of america's richest farmland and most important freshwater that it will cause
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massive amounts of pollution in the refinery communities which are already bearing the brunt of the fossil fuel industry is dirty energy and third that it will have a big impact on our climate the state department's been trying to argue that it doesn't matter whether whether or not we build this pipeline that that tar sands will be developed anyways the e.p.a. went back and said look that isn't true this pipeline is a critical piece of infrastructure and if it's built it will have a big negative impact on our climate and sea jamie so you mentioned water out what impact could this crude have on the waterways you know how is it going to affect this valuable asset and others as it travels down. well we've seen a little bit of that in mayflower arkansas where exxon just had its big spill and we saw even more of it a couple years ago in kalamazoo michigan when a different tar sands pipeline spilled hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil into the kalamazoo river the keystone x.l. pipeline would run over one of our largest sources of fresh drinking water in the
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united states the ogallala aquifer still there would be like a b.p. disaster on land would be absolutely devastating not only for farmers and ranchers along the pipeline route but for the entire midwest region that depends on that water and depend on that land for a lot of farming and a lot of jobs so as we've been saying all along and it's farmers and ranchers have been saying the brassica this pipeline really is just all risk and no reward so it's good to see the p.a. coming on board with that and it's putting some wind in the sails of pipeline upon i say so for environmentalist the e.p.a. statement it sounds like a good thing but the decision is of course still in the hands of the state department how much of this is going to have an effect on the ultimate decision ever whether they ultimately ok the project or not. well i think we'll have a fairly large effect what happens now is that the state department will be going back to finalize its environmental review on ourselves a mental environmental review on the pipeline it then goes into what's called a national interest determination phase where it tries to look at all the different factors around this pipeline and determine whether or not they should recommend to
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president obama to approve it let's remember the ultimate decision is on president obama that he needs to take what the e.p.a. and the state department and other agencies have been telling him and ideally what the american people have been telling him and make a decision on this pipeline over the last few weeks environmental groups and average americans have sent over a million comments to the state department opposing this project now it's up to president obama to choose whether or not he's going to side with big oil and with the companies pushing this dirty project or with the american people who i think it made it pretty clear that they don't want this pipeline to be built i see so jamie there's certainly been a debate in this country over whether this pipeline is going to have a positive or a negative impact on both the local economies and the national economy is it going to affect either well i think if that's the beta bill you know when we looked actually into the numbers in terms of the jobs that would be created by this pipeline it looks about thirty five permanent jobs would be created you know that's
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something that would be good in some ways but the risk from the project is so much larger than that both in terms of what it could do if the pipeline ruptures like what we saw in mayflower arkansas or just what the impact of climate change that this pipeline would worsen continue to have in the american economy so i think there's a pretty clear case to be made that despite the few jobs a pipeline would create we have so much more potential to move towards clean energy and create more jobs and renewable energy so keystone agree on all the risk is so keystone creation you know the argument was for domestic oil prices going down could we see domestic oil prices in fact rise even with keystones creation is that a possibility. yes that's exactly right the interesting thing about keystone is it's mostly for export that's why they're so desperate to get this oil down to the gulf of mexico so they can sell it overseas and what that will do is drive up the price of oil all along the pipeline route including in the midwest where a lot of oil is where so you're exactly right people in the midwest could actually
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see their gas prices go up if that was built rather than go down so this argument that it's good for gas prices or good for energy security is completely bogus it's good for neither so it's keystone of really going to impact our dependence on foreign oil do you think well if anything it keeps us hooked on oil instead of really putting money towards the types of solutions that could get us off oil and really solve that problem like this oil is designed to go to the international market and the price of oil is that they're building more pipelines won't really do much to achieve that goal the real way to do is to move towards clean energy cheney we have to leave it there thank you that was jamie hand communications director at three fifty dot org. well the senate finance committee met today to talk about the opportunities and upcoming challenges that the u.s. faces when it comes to the trans-pacific partnership of the trans-pacific partnership is a proposed free trade agreement that would have bald nearly forty percent that involve nearly forty percent of the entire global economy now the tepee
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negotiations have been underway between the us and ten other countries along with the bush administration and senators who expressed a desire to come to a final agreement by the end of this year now japan is the latest country to join the negotiating table but two senators at today's hearing expressed concerns over the country's participation in t p p particularly when it comes to the auto market now senator bob casey says that the japanese auto market is nearly impenetrable for the american auto industry also in order for the t.p. to work that aspect must change depends on market is all but closed to or automated fractures and i realize they've made some recent. commitments. but i think we have to measure those and also continue to stuff questions about well another area of concern the dairy market and the new zealand's alleged monopolistic industry structure now exports at the hearings are concerned that the t.t.p.
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agreement would cause a surge in dairy products in countries like canada and japan from new zealand so much so that the u.s. wouldn't be able to compete with new zealand state funded dairy production now senator casey when so far as to call the issue the perfect storm of dairy now dairy farmers also expressed concerns over the naming and classification of food considering different countries and regional standards but perhaps the greatest concern coming out of the hearing today was the need to protect american intellectual property now the president and chief executive officer of global intellectual property center for the u.s. chamber of commerce david hersman says that strong support strongly supports a t p p but that all participating countries need to agree to data protection and i p standards. the five million american jobs depend on natural property they pay thirty percent higher wages on average and most importantly for this hearing seventy four percent of our exports are tried to intellectual property over the
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industries that create these exports are facing challenges all around the world ip matters for two reasons one it will maximize the benefits of the greens both for the u.s. and its partners but it's also important to remember that some countries are moving in the wrong direction in terms of advancing innovation and ip the mr hersman and the other panel members agreed that the best way to ensure an open market is their international transparency however critics are doubtful that transparency will come about since the u.s. government has already kept so many aspects of the t.p.a. negotiating negotiation itself a secret. well states are standing up and saying that they want to cut the internet sales tax and bills the bill that's before the congress that would allow them to impose taxes on these businesses they want those taxes rather the marketplace fairness act it's in the final stages of consideration before the senate today and is based on a procedural vote this afternoon now it looks like it will win approval later this
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week then it will head to the house of course will internet sales have been growing over the past decade now if one in ten sales are made online palace's new tax going to change how we shop. will take a look at this chart it says that the quarterly growth of retail e-commerce sales steadily rose from two thousand and three to twenty twenty twenty twelve with the new online sales tax and posing a codify tax and force meant opponents say that this trend could stall or reverse now proponents for the tax on the other hand say that states are losing l. because they are currently getting the money that they would get from the sales if someone was shopping in their stores and should be up to the people to pay this tax or not well there are currently many variations in the rates of the tax the m.f.a. will impose an across the board sales tax and streamline the online sales tax for more on this i'm joined by jerry assessor excuse me says carousel he's the senior
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vice president of government affairs for direct marketing association and founding member of trust a coalition a coalition seeking tax simplification jerry what's on the table here well what's on the table is the lowing states to reach across their state lines to enforce non-citizen companies to become their own paid tax collectors and the marketplace proves that really doesn't go down far enough for simplification there are ten thousand taxing jurisdictions and so we're going to little marketers would be open to audit from forty five states plus the district won't be and so that's what's at stake is that huge administrative. burden on internet sales i say so you found a coalition of trade associations that oppose this new online tax can you tell me a little bit about that sure we represent lots of businesses that are in the e-commerce space and also in remote sales including catalogs and t.v. sales informer szell's all of them would be now subject to state regulation to
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collect the sales tax for those ten thousand jurisdictions moment and that would be a huge administrative burden and congress is granting the states that authority in this bill if it does pass all the way through without really requiring significant simplification to make it easier for these companies to collect and to even compensate them for collecting what's your take on the bill and how it's going to directly impact as if it. will be an increased on the bottom line cost remote selling including the internet it also creates a new barrier to entry for new entrepreneur says they start to grow they're going to be suddenly faced with ten thousand taxing jurisdictions in audience from all those states so there are some real impact on the companies and of course those costs will go and pass through to the consumer ok gerri so is there an alternative
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that you can give us that maybe you know states could exercise because they obviously want this money what are some options for them well i think there are some options in the bill or a fine one would be to have one audit one national audit once they were your home is do the audit so you have some political power that would remove some of the problems a computer program that would calculate all the taxes would tell you what the different different definitions are you know a twix bar with flowers food in one state and candy in another so the different tax rates so they can they can do that and allow us to. in compensate compensate these companies who have to keep their processes open all the time and trying to integrate a new system is very expensive say so amazon and wal-mart both backing up this tax why are they doing that well they are i don't want to speak directly for them but wal-mart is located everywhere if you're located in the state even if it's
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a remote so you have to collect the tax wal-mart has this system set up amazon is collecting in many states and they are they want to do that too and think that it makes sense to. have everyone pay pay that tax so it looks like this bill is going to pass later this week yes can you tell me a little bit you know do you think that the house is still going to question it or are we going to see this being pushed through there we understand that there are some questions in the house and i don't think it will be as easy a run through in the house this is all on simplification the states have had twenty years to train simplify they haven't done it so i think that will be a major question and debate within the house represent the city so how many companies do you think who are against this how much money do you think they've spent lobbying congress to make sure that this doesn't pass probably not anywhere near as much as the companies that are lobbying congress for it we really it's hard to tell you say how much we have a relatively small budget so that we haven't spent the millions of dollars that
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others have i see so you know tax is definitely a touchy subject for people i hate to go back over the same question with you but alternatives to the tax thing online so you know if states don't get their money they've got to get it from somewhere gerri is there something fairer that we could maybe you know something that would be a fairly traded what i think a fair trade would be to have them collect their sales tax not not get rid of it but to make it simpler so you take away that administrative cost for jury service so company a brand new company. and it would be easier for them to do it and then everyone will be paying taxes the states would get their their money which they are due and i don't think there has to be there have to be major changes in it with a new tax and make the internet nontaxable to change it so that it's easier for companies to collect c there was a supreme court ruling in one thousand nine hundred that said you know the states
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actually they can't you know that they have to have a physical presence in the state for them to tax talk to me about that yes this is the sales tax is a night in one thousand thirty days tax where you walk in the store you buy you get you're good and you pay the tax in the states tried in one thousand nine hundred to one catalog sales to force a catalog or was not in the state to collect for them there was north dakota in this case and the supreme court said is that burdensome so don't force them congress has the can give them the right to do it i know you're very that a lot of information on the table thank you so much that was very fair a fellow a senior vice president of government affairs for direct marketing association and founding member of trust a coalition a coalition seeking tax simplification. and now to an update to developing story of journalist matthew keyes this tuesday keyes pled not guilty on charges of conspiring with a hacker group anonymous by granting them access to the web site of his former employer the tribune company in order to attack them the key is despite these
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allegations is saying that his involvement with the group was purely for professional reasons and he acted as an embedded journalist he's pleading not guilty which is coming after as a dismissal from his current post as deputy social media editor reuters now initially suspended the company decided to let keyes go citing reasons unrelated to the indictment among them his unofficial coverage of the boston marathon bombing but keyes was very vocal of the process posting the following on his personal tumbler saying quote i told the company my tweets were sorest to police and or dispatch audio when i asked the manager on call what information was and correct the manager was unable to say i offered to send the company recordings of the dispatch audio from friday morning so that they could match it with information in my tweets the company so far has not taken me up on this offer we'll keep you up to
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speed on the latest surrounding this case as it continues to unfold lots that's going to do it for now for more on these stories we've covered go to youtube dot com slash r t america check out our website will see you back five. technology innovation. developments around. the future of harvard. because no one.
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supplier of oil to the united states is the eight large six power of oil on the planet but in the niger delta region that produces hundreds of millions of dollars in oil and gas each year the average person lives on less than one dollar per day there are no business school no good roads no good hospitals every year over three hundred oil spills contaminate the region and constant flaring of precious natural gas pollution the ecosystem. companies and corrupt politicians reaping norma's profits the inhabitants of the niger delta live in poverty. under these circumstances there was no surprise to me that a conflict has ignited which militants pipelines sabotage closed haitians and kidnapped foreign oil workers. to leave. who took the lives decide lies who come to depend on me. mrs leslie.
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the truth is i always tend to root for the underdog and i felt an attraction to these men who were taking on the world's largest oil corporations and the corrupt government of africa's most populous nation so i took my camera to nigeria to try to meet them. yet. bob as bad. as. you thought i bought your new book. and you feel you i'm going to tell you through. all who got you into so i got it all why do.
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i decided to follow the camp commander's advice traveling with some fishermen i set out to see for myself what life is like in the niger delta and hopes of understanding the conditions out of which the militancy was born. my brother such a life is sweet it's just that there is no money. to live and manage a good life is not easy. but i had to keep a low profile numerous foreign journalists and documentary filmmakers had already been expelled country. government sources told the greeks and gone on a mission to combat the militants and protect the oil from illegal. and many in the niger delta field as the oil companies and the federal government were robbing the region of its oil.
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we passed by bonnie island or multinational oil companies like shell. and magic happened at the thirty six billion barrels of oil beneath our feet. and i find myself in each of the tiny fishing village that is frequently visited by the. militants from a nearby camp. as. well as. i said. i think it's deserved it. the government we have been ugly in the event not to god not to him. not to know about. and i joke. or. do you think they're no longer here.
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but i beg go out of office were. the stronger voice. why can't they find somewhere else to stay. far away. what are they doing. it looks like they've carried some people in this big bed that they meant to. but doesn't it. is the cargo hold my decision it'll be bad for them if they run out of bullets what a world we live in is this an urban life or rural life which i was a new born in and. are they dragging the other speedboat along so they're using their guns to signal a child. even in the midst of the conflict so ordinary life takes its course and its twenty three
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year old named mom goes into labor for. so. i'm ok mom a has come. i'm going to miss when you're done eating please check her stomach moment. when she is slow to deliver her father feeds her roots and black pepper a traditional remedy to help speed the birth. how bad it is it is not a minute you're going to want to give you this route to choose to. take it in sure you come on. to it stand up. the way this thing is no better take it with the pepper and chew it no doubt identical love it take it quickly come on. my stomach hurts if you are cheering it you latest initiative already done. all this once and then was gone then this is. all of them does not speak to you but
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did that if i did he. is the cause is a need to wish he would and knows how to give us his i love you. just given space. it's all a mate no complications arise as mom is such a lover. god let it live wanted to come out now god you can do it do it now doing to zeus the baby emerge with him bill court is wrapped around his neck and he is not presumably good son got. a lot of. life. is that enough do you need sun. done too long or too down i do it to first do it to. take take the sun.
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bring more bring more what's happened. once. the baby has come take him out take him out. enough way out then a few planes during the delivery name a pain once the baby. love you guys it was like you said it. was never. forget it was. during my time in h.r. career i've gotten a taste of the tenuous life in the creeks the vast disparity between the region's
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immense natural wealth and inhabitants access to basic necessities like clean drinking water or modern medical care. methods aside the niger delta cause to which the militants had laid claim seemed just. but i wanted to learn more about why some young men choose to enter the ranks of the militants and about the leaders to draw them into the struggle so i made my way to the camp of the notorious to take a tom cruise niger delta patriotic force as one of the strongest in the region. israel to record high of one hundred thirty three dollars per barrel and some might add to the movement of the ever to grace of the niger delta the all until recently launched the salvage on development company late monday. state governments every day are next to enjoin the people. known to be terrorizing the area that people had allowed to carry out such as generally being killing and maiming and he said people
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. i would. want to. but it would. take a time had been driven into hiding by nigeria's truck taskforce he retaliated with an attack on the presidential hotel nevertheless he and his boys are fated to hide out as fugitives and a handful of camps they maintain in the creeks awaiting a resolution to the continent for a deal that would permit them to return. about . this my wife. we had in mind i thought if you don't fight the house so we need development schools i just all walk pounce you know the government should do something about
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some. group of local journalists permitted to visit to take his camp for a press conference. a little while i go. to go home so. there are some boys with guns telling to cover their faces. very minute i'm not going to nobody tell them to arrange themselves i've got men does. and i just wouldn't move on. to that. i will fit it.
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well. science technology innovation all the latest developments from around russia we've got the future are covered. the worst if you put on a long white outfit for the day and a radio guy and pull out of a minute for any coffee i want you to watch quote for a budget deal because you've never seen anything like this i'm telling. you.
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and then i would john lego's and i got it out of those one the one you don't so i wanted them to use on one that even when i got it. again if used to do that's what may be a very sad it's become something you've done for charm and properties i was fights back i was fights all fights and everybody should go we are gods is dead governments i do wonder how program with me i'll fight. so when we got back when if i didn't i would not tell you it's going to. how can you have peace if you don't do that without just when you forgot governments and. all that is common but when you see sincerity you know if you would just this instead of me what forms of you know i know. the president no don't like like life as i like like everybody you know what is involved. is not what's got his you ok ok.
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for the last. sixty. but you should see him do to live. up to the you know there are some records from. where you from. my life did not revise that. well. i will go you. know what i'm going to be i mean i didn't go off i want to. say how long you've been here and we can. tell you've done. this with. an album where you stay. i don't know two governments called excuse. to go and you've also been lost or so i.
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am and if. your country congressman i would just first. nothing but i mean. i'm not going to. come from us. i'm from. we are facing a lot of problems in the night. because no one thought to drink. no good school. no developments when you've been is as far as. well but. on somebody like. what. is a human rights activists. is that rudolph.
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was for how many many names. some people knew him two or so of the blue he do know that the. enemies used to call him and to. this man if it is my. own and we if you. is amanda they kill of do not judge. them and they don't often voice. when i first met jayma they resided mostly on the outskirts of the camp or at home among the militants and with his true family he believes he found a father and a tech and where his own father fell short. for the. rice
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each and then also the dots and i might think of i think. if i want to lose that it is game it's. not for me until. i had never eaten flying from it most it's. called movietone dissolved. and part of a word or way into i don't. have a ham. and to me yeah i think from from here. p. m. one hundred nineteen. it's just that i didn't gave it to him but he's my child i hold it was
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a good one i don't it and i trained him. says i have six children three boys three goes. is a good kid the wise hardworking. in since do. i want to see him. in mother wasn't even here until he did his primary school and he went to. his father. and later he left when i saw him last one day i was in the hospital and when he came out that was when the market was operated as i came into my life i really want to see. to my operation was the last time i saw him so i would like tina to come back so i would see him. and i work on my friends and family you know. it's good if you go there. but
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his mother was working on the farm. and i'm a jew and i want to i thought he was dead. i've gone to port harcourt to look for him i didn't see him i said maybe he's dead. if you went any other place i don't know. you know i was i don't know but i know there was a highlight. some of the things. that i was that matter how do i go about how i was. valid. id. going going going i didn't get out of
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that i was you are. yet to top it i needed. to be. there to protect. my god i got i decided. to stick it on a mobile. phone on the phone. for me over the phone. about what. was going on. what they mean the time to do its thing to far as its morning afternoon evening that is drink for you that is signal for you to smoke so use this event that you. food is not one of the money is not. the. have all the time oh god no i doubt it is god like you. know not that i cannot
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gather you might as well know what i do but then that is one of the what i'll tell you about well you know how much have you been on the job like that i'd like to have you be identical don't want one thing that was i was not marriageable with you know not yet somehow you know you're right now go back and i'm feeling a little bit louder than i was going off about that it's awkward i thought i was a good. example that well you. if you listen to the bible. i just want to know what i know there's. an idea that i'm not going out there. when i do not. feel. so good that i've. got to do what it ought to be to avoid the. you are not of the idea that i do it that way they just find that i have been. what my guides five of them have done i do not have and i think if you don't know about it i can't
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fire. next time i know. i should and i think there's a lot and i'm not. a. very good. mother and. who knows. what might not. i lived i was over the load was. the. album the end you know and that was the one that i knew that i know. was on the other clothes. was. done was there was a. load the here was.
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the. week he got up and he said he. believed he. i mean and then some voice doesn't. work. for life and tries to leave. if i wanted to come down with a golf. to do boosh. for my own science domicile much of a lot of. time that these god's will is the one god thing that. is not divine i would be in the prison yard to be. wealthy british style. sometimes.
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